4/4/2006 2:33:25 PM
My arguments against Socrates are way outside of the scope of this thread.Some things that philosophers say are important because they deal with our internal states.One thing that does not need verification is knowledge of our own internal states. The information conveyed in these states might be faulty, but the states themselves are without question -- they're foundational.
4/4/2006 2:41:33 PM
For the record I am an atheist in the sense that I don't believe in God -- but I do think I could be proven wrong about it. I just think it's unlikely and don't worry about it much further.McDanger: Following your reasoning I agree that I cannot prove or disprove existence of God, and earlier I showed that you couldn't do either with mathematics because it is a human invention. I want to go a step further, though, and say that I cannot prove or disprove existence of jack shit, because all I see are my ideas, and those are my inventions. In some sense I need to have faith in my senses in order to be sure of anything. And, since I agree that faith is fundamentally unreliable ("world's biggest con"), I think my senses are fundamentally unreliable.At the very least I am convinced that my senses are not accurate to reality. Here's an example:http://plig.org/things/optical/tn/rotsnake.med.gif <-- It doesn't actually animate.I think this is different from the argument you've been having with Grumpy. For example, I can amass evidence toward the existence/nonexistence of my left hand, but not toward the existence/nonexistence of God, is your standpoint (right?). Others around here would say that you can stack evidence toward both of those things. I would argue that you can stack evidence toward neither.Wut u think homeboy[Edited on April 4, 2006 at 4:05 PM. Reason : wrong fkn word]
4/4/2006 4:00:08 PM
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4/4/2006 4:14:13 PM
4/4/2006 4:21:44 PM
4/4/2006 4:31:55 PM
I think whatever I come up with is just going to look too reflexive atm. Maybe later. Back to work..
4/4/2006 4:45:28 PM
4/4/2006 4:53:35 PM
4/4/2006 5:26:46 PM
I don't see why you don't believe that a chemical is behind seeing god/aliens. The most likely explanation for this type of thing is the spontaneous release of dmt IMO. What does it matter how it gets to your brain? It's going to pretty much do the same thing once it gets there. You discount people seeing god on lsd, dmt, 4-HO-DMT, etc, but then when someone sees god "sober" (BS) it's completely believeable? Just because you didn't intentionally consume a psychedelic doesn't mean DMT can't be spontaneously released. If you believe this shit is real, why aren't these chemicals just helping you perceive other realities/dimensions? [Edited on April 4, 2006 at 5:34 PM. Reason : I shouldn't have bothered, I keep forgetting that you don't even know what psychedelics do.]
4/4/2006 5:30:12 PM
"Atheists cited as America's most distrusted minority"The fact that people often dislike minorities doesn’t necessarily reflect poorly on the minority. The thread could have stopped there, although the search for god on the internet is proving to be interesting.More ppl should add to the poll, & ppl interested in discussing God(s) might be interested in check out the thread http://www.thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=390004&page=9
4/4/2006 5:30:35 PM
4/4/2006 5:40:52 PM
i think therefore i am.
4/4/2006 7:59:23 PM
4/4/2006 8:17:46 PM
4/4/2006 8:19:42 PM
4/4/2006 8:35:30 PM
Everyone knows the FSM is the supreme being.[Edited on April 4, 2006 at 9:08 PM. Reason : s]
4/4/2006 9:07:47 PM
im way too tired to read all of that.i took phi 340. biggest pile of bullshit i have seen in my time at state. i have taken classes where i have not learned anything, but i think its the only class that i thought was a complete waste of time for everyone involved.mcdanger, your posts make me think you "learned" something from that class. if thats true i feel sorry for you.
4/4/2006 11:07:15 PM
I took 340 and 440, and this kind of philosophy is a big time hobby for me.You're going to have to justify your viewpoint further instead of just insulting it.
4/4/2006 11:12:15 PM
4/4/2006 11:13:47 PM
because its not philosophy. you can't say "Your knowledge of your own current internal state is true by definition." after speaking so highly of the religious experiences of others.look im sorry but anyone who says that socrates' philosphy was destructive and pointless ranks below dirt in my book. not just because of personal preference, but because everything you think really is just a footnote to him.
4/4/2006 11:19:29 PM
4/4/2006 11:45:08 PM
4/5/2006 12:02:09 AM
4/5/2006 12:19:02 AM
If a universe is born and 1 and 1 add, and no one is around to think it, does it equal 2?
4/5/2006 12:26:30 AM
4/5/2006 12:31:26 AM
Yes.
4/5/2006 12:32:57 AM
lol. You disarmed me with the comedic option.
4/5/2006 12:33:56 AM
7 8 9, WHAT!
4/5/2006 12:38:49 AM
1, +, =, 2 all point to abstract representations and we use these symbols to represent them. So if I do not exist and none of humanity ever has, sure, the symbols will not exist, but their function is still true.
4/5/2006 12:38:51 AM
4/5/2006 12:41:36 AM
Yes.But, we simply don't have a clear picture of reality. Never will. But we at least hold a piece of it, logic and math. Which we represent using funny squiggles.And that abstract piece of reality is true without us.[Edited on April 5, 2006 at 12:43 AM. Reason : s]
4/5/2006 12:43:21 AM
4/5/2006 12:44:22 AM
well, we will have to simply disagree on that part. You can not prove they are approximations nor can I prove they are exact representations.
4/5/2006 12:46:28 AM
Math can describe a perfect circle, though they do not occur in nature. Zoom in far enough and it stops being perfect.Nothing perfectly follows a mathematical formula. Some people argue because they're gross approximations, and that if we had all of the math we could properly predict it. This is possible.Math is perfect because it's an idea, but reality is far from perfect. We cannot perfectly describe our surroundings because we are created by the same stuff -- our brains are both the beginning of thought and the upper limit of thought. Every bit of information that you have at your grasp exists in some represented form in your brain. What you think you know is an approximation of reality, filtered through your senses, and then stored in a format that your brain can easily understand. It's a very compressed format, and a hell of a lot different from the reality it's derived from. However, this format is useful -- it HAS to be. We're animals, and thus we are built to interact with our environment in such a way as to survive.
4/5/2006 12:51:04 AM
They're clearly approximations. I can think I'm looking at solid objects around me all the time, but the objective truth of the matter is that in any given moment, somewhere between 90-95% of what I'm looking at is actually empty space.
4/5/2006 12:56:59 AM
But it's a damn good thing you see the objects you do, because they're helpful approximations.
4/5/2006 12:57:36 AM
No...see you are talking about the "Use of math is an approximation to describe reality" where as I, am saying math in an of its self exists period. With or without us. And is perfect in it's representation of things wholely math based. Not, math describes reality perfectly. I'm simply saying math is a self truth. Our use of it however is, yes in the case of describing reality, an approximation.
4/5/2006 1:00:04 AM
Good from a survival standpoint, sure. Otherwise we would've evolved into creatures capable of perceiving the individual atoms and empty space within them.
4/5/2006 1:01:11 AM
I think our argument is a semantic misunderstanding at this pointMath can be used to describe the workings of natural law, ie how the universe works "just because" (Carroll's definition. Not kidding).Natural law exists and happens. We can see it every second we're alive, we're immersed in it. However, any attempt to predict or describe it is an effort of math -- which is an approximated form. It's a way for humans to explain it. Who knows, there might be a different way to do it that we cannot fathom at this point. We have very basic mental operators that are hard to break out of and beyond (because we simply don't have the necessary hardware). There is a "logical" operator of the brain. Causality is one of those sticky things that we're COMPELLED to believe, but that we cannot properly define.
4/5/2006 1:03:47 AM
4/5/2006 1:09:27 AM
Things certainly appear causal, and seem to act that way -- but it's one of those funny things; nobody can define it properly.
4/5/2006 1:10:15 AM
I attribute it to the linear perception of time (itself an illusion) and post-hoc reasoning, myself.
4/5/2006 1:25:04 AM
All this shit is kind of a mind-fuck to talk about and consider. We too often take all of our perceptual experiences at face value. The other weird occurrence is when people are immersed in abstract mental constructions instead of perceptual experiences.
4/5/2006 1:44:05 AM
where in god's name did you get:
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4/5/2006 8:28:14 PM