I am just trying to understand if I can possibly record what goes through within us at every moment. — Ayush Jain
Bushmaster" is an ironic name for an Australian tank, isn't it? — Arcane Sandwich
As we keep imagining and exploring, the universe unravels itself. In your day to day life, I don't think the black hole sitting in the center of our galaxy has any direct impact. you will be indifferent to its existence.
But its there now since somebody has observed it. If nobody would have, it might or might not have existed?
All of these thoughts intrigue me a lot. What do you think? — Ayush Jain
“The moral principle that it is one’s duty to speak the truth, if it were taken singly and
unconditionally, would make all society impossible. We have the proof of this in the very direct
consequences which have been drawn from this principle by a German philosopher, who goes so far as to affirm that to tell a falsehood to a murderer who asked us whether our friend, of whom he was in pursuit, had not taken refuge in our house, would be a crime.”
Most Australians I know drink imported beers like Asahi or Corona.
— Tom Storm
You're in Melbourne, then. — Banno
Environmental issues are an important issue, indeed, but I think every country of the world should promote their national products. I — javi2541997
Lawson vs. Patterson was a part of the culture wars in the eighties. — Banno
Why should you fallaciously appeal to the authority of a Kant expert in order to bypass or overrule my counter-argument of that critique? — Arcane Sandwich
I think that Crocodile Dundee created the stereotype, — Arcane Sandwich
but the first Australian thing that comes to my mind is Foster's beer, not AC/DC. — javi2541997
Is that right? — Arcane Sandwich
I think that Kant is right in the universal context—for me the mistake he makes is transferring that truth to all particular situations as a rigid notion of duty. — Janus
I'm betting on the 5th or the 12th.
↪Tom Storm? — Banno
And can you see how this notion doesn’t take away from science the usefulness that we know it has in our lives? People tend to go into a panic when you suggest his to them, as if the ground has been pulled out from under them and suddenly cats will be mating with dogs and murderers will run rampant in the streets. But accepting this idea of science as contingent artifact leaves everything exactly as it has been. It just gives us further options we didn’t see before. — Joshs
I don't think it's so black and white—either this or that. We formulate the laws of nature, but we are constrained in those formulations by what we actually observe to be so. We see regularities and invariances everywhere we look. We encounter number in our environments simply on account of the fact that there are many things. — Janus
I think there is confusion around the term 'platonic realm'. There is a domain of natural numbers, right? Where is it? — Wayfarer
why is it that mathematical predictions so often anticipate unexpected empirical discoveries? He doesn’t attempt to explain why that is so, as much as just point it out.
— Wayfarer
Apparently he has some ideas concerning why that is so.
Wigner wrote:
“It is important to point out that the mathematical formulation of the physicist's often crude experience leads in an uncanny number of cases to an amazingly accurate description of a large class of phenomena."He adds that the observation "the laws of nature are written in the language of mathematics," properly made by Galileo three hundred years ago, "is now truer than ever before.”
I myself am a critic of ‘scientism’, the attempt to subordinate all knowledge to mathematical quantfication, but I don’t think that invalidates Wigner’s point.
— Wayfarer
If Wigner’s point is that the laws of nature are written in the language of mathematics, then that’s precisely what I’m trying to invalidate. It’s the human-constructed norms of nature that are written in the language of mathematics, not anything to do with nature ‘in itself’. — Joshs
I guess Argentina would just be Spanish Texas then, or something like that. — Arcane Sandwich
Then it's oxymoronic because it can't be dysphoric and be good. — Hanover
There simply is no good logical explanation — Hanover
I'd respond by saying that we shouldn't allow the Nordic person to be accepted as Asian. If you don't agree with me, why not? — Hanover
I'm glad to hear you experience this differently. — Benkei
The OP maybe is as much about my own biases as anything else — Benkei
How can more options lead to more people being unhappy with their selves? — Benkei
Gender dysphoria is on the rise and this is not driven by the availability of sex-change operations; and that's for me the main hint something is not going well. — Benkei
Nowadays, nobody is allowed to be ugly. If you're a teenage boy and don't have a six-pack and spend 3 days a week in the gym, you're not meeting the expected standard. — Benkei
When I say that violence of war is out of date I am thinking of how many people see the use of war and violence in religion as being something to be avoided. — Jack Cummins
It is natural in that way, but could be seen as a rather outdated approach to life if it is about literal violence. — Jack Cummins
There is also the evolutionary possibility of people thinking of avoiding destruction. — Jack Cummins
All goodness, even the good of mere appearances, is a reflection of the Good, like light refracted through different mirrors, some more smokey than others. We see now "through a glass darkly." — Count Timothy von Icarus
The transcendent, to be properly "transcendent" cannot be absent from what it transcends. Likewise, the absolute is not reality as set over and against appearances, but must encompass all of reality and appearances, both what is relative and in-itself. — Count Timothy von Icarus