5/26/2010 8:18:28 AM
The question of ownage aside, that shitty wheel metaphor he deigned to go along with makes everyone involved in it look foolish. To wit:
5/26/2010 8:29:38 AM
GrumpyGOP pulls a Souter ITTgettin cookies from liberals. very compelling.
5/26/2010 8:30:12 AM
Its impossible to wholly quanitfy religion's effects as negative or positive. To do that you would have to consider all the potential evils/goods that weren't brought about due to religion; eg wars that weren't fought, the peoples that weren't enslaved, the scientific advancements that weren't made, etc. Religion's main focus is, after all, "don't do certain things". Who is to say that more was "done" than "not done" due to religion?Instead, we should be isolating the current problems religion is creating and critically examining those. Despite what you may hear from extremists on both sides of the issue, you CAN separate good religion from bad.
5/26/2010 8:51:47 AM
5/26/2010 8:53:36 AM
5/26/2010 9:12:14 AM
5/26/2010 9:20:14 AM
5/26/2010 9:46:56 AM
you idiots have no respect for the huge benefits that religion has given us over the generations.you'd think with as much as you slavishly profess your devotion to science that you'd at least give some goddamn credence to the theory of natural selection.[Edited on May 26, 2010 at 9:47 AM. Reason : s]
5/26/2010 9:47:03 AM
disco_stu, while I agree it would be better if everybody were rational, everybody is not rational. Belief in mysticism might be "flawed" but it really depends on what that mysticism is driving toward, doesn't it? Belief in mysticism is what prompted Greeks to invent and develop abstract mathematics. It's not necessarily a bad thing.
5/26/2010 9:47:29 AM
5/26/2010 9:52:33 AM
I'm not certain that I buy that belief in mysticism prompted the Greeks to develop abstract mathematics. Any more that I would think that belief in God prompted Lemaître to develop Big Bang Cosmology.It is bad. We exist in reality and decisions that affect reality should be based on observations and experiences in reality, not delusion.
5/26/2010 9:56:07 AM
[Edited on May 26, 2010 at 9:56 AM. Reason : double post]
5/26/2010 9:57:14 AM
5/26/2010 9:57:39 AM
5/26/2010 10:01:23 AM
"Wholly logical thinking" is how I would characterize the behavior of an animal.
5/26/2010 10:08:04 AM
That's a very simplistic nihilistic view of logic, to say the least.[Edited on May 26, 2010 at 10:09 AM. Reason : s]
5/26/2010 10:09:09 AM
5/26/2010 10:09:28 AM
5/26/2010 10:15:48 AM
5/26/2010 10:16:55 AM
5/26/2010 10:24:23 AM
No, I am not kidding. There is no reason to believe that human beings were applying metaphysics before they were applying rationality (albeit, as I said, in a crude form). Indeed, as I said, religion itself is a product of rationality. It cannot, therefore, come before it.
5/26/2010 10:42:25 AM
5/26/2010 10:44:10 AM
5/26/2010 10:47:24 AM
One does not have to be able to describe rationality in order to be at least crudely rational. Even my dog makes rational decisions based on previously observed data. Early religions, if we can even call them that, were crudely rational theories based on completely insufficient, but nevertheless observable, evidence. That their practitioners could not define "theory" is totally irrelevant.[Edited on May 26, 2010 at 11:09 AM. Reason : sufficuent/efficient]
5/26/2010 11:05:58 AM
5/26/2010 11:10:30 AM
You're being ridiculous.
5/26/2010 11:15:41 AM
You're being ignorant as fuck and you're just upset that I'm calling you out. If I didn't, then you could play whatever stupid game you're playing and get to pretend that you know things. Wouldn't it just be easier to read books than continue embarrassing yourself publicly?
5/26/2010 11:18:11 AM
I'm not certain what the point of this Classics lesson is.Great, original rational thought was based at least partly on the belief in mysticism. Does that mean that modern belief in mysticism has anything useful to other regarding rationality? Lay out the point you're trying to make for us plebes. Because math was based on Greeks who basically made it into their religion, Astrology is useful today?
5/26/2010 11:18:23 AM
5/26/2010 11:26:12 AM
5/26/2010 11:33:39 AM
5/26/2010 11:37:26 AM
So they made an inference based on what they saw?Oh, come on. After all that bluster, you can't possibly back down now.[Edited on May 26, 2010 at 11:44 AM. Reason : ]
5/26/2010 11:43:00 AM
5/26/2010 11:43:56 AM
I will give McDanger license to bow out. He's clearly wreaked a vast amount of pwnage in the past couple pages.
5/26/2010 11:46:14 AM
He's certainly dropped a lot of names.
5/26/2010 11:47:15 AM
he's not just dropping names, son. He personally knows every one of those philosophers.
5/26/2010 11:51:47 AM
lazarus, was I incorrect regarding rationalism? It seems like McDanger is taking it overboard because of the use of the word rather than the intended meaning.
5/26/2010 11:52:56 AM
I'm basically done here, but since there still seems to be legitimate misunderstanding (rather than just grand-standing and empty chest-thumping), I'll post again.
5/26/2010 11:55:31 AM
man fuck them jews for trying to build that shit near something they caused to happen
5/26/2010 11:56:00 AM
5/26/2010 11:56:31 AM
What definition of empiricism or mysticism are you using where the two are not contradictory?Definitions that disco_stu is using:Empericism: actual knowledge about reality is only obtained through observation.Mysticism: actual knowledge about reality can be obtained through sources which cannot be observed.Rationalism: synonym for empiricism.Like I said, it seems like these terms mean something different to you (and probably justifiably so given your knowledge of classics), but what it boils down to is semantics.
5/26/2010 12:03:02 PM
every goddamned sentence anyone uses boils down to semanticsthat's why most of us try to communicate using a common set of definitions unless we get face-pwn by a McDangerthen we fall back on invented or awkward definitions in order to boil everything down to semantics.
5/26/2010 12:08:30 PM
5/26/2010 12:11:43 PM
McDanger is the one who launched himself into a brazen exercise in semantics here. Logical inferences based on observable facts would fall under any dictionary's primary definition of rationalism. And I'd be willing to bet that not a single one of them mentions fucking Xeno.
5/26/2010 12:16:37 PM
5/26/2010 12:21:35 PM
5/26/2010 12:23:54 PM
McDanger how can you rely on historical records when it seems so obvious that early cavemen would be rational thinkers??I mean, seriously, we exist in reality and conclusions about that reality should be based on observations and experiences in reality, not delusion.
5/26/2010 12:25:19 PM
The problem is that McDanger is using the philosophical definition of rationalism when we are using the practical definition:the principle or habit of accepting reason as the supreme authority in matters of opinion, belief, or conduct.With reason defined as: a sufficient ground of explanation or of logical defense; especially : something (as a principle or law) that supports a conclusion or explains a fact Which is actually concurrent with empiricism in that the only valid explanations for things in reality are that which is observed in reality.Before I start replacing rationalism with skepticism I just want to make sure that I can use that word without offending McDanger's philosophical sensibilities. Is there something I should know about ancient skeptics that would somehow make skepticism and mysticism cooperative?
5/26/2010 12:42:00 PM