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Re: Fobo's "Philosophy..." (part 1 rough draft) | ||
Posted By: Forrest of B.org | Date: 4/12/04 8:13 a.m. | |
In Response To: Re: Fobo's "Philosophy..." (part 1 rough draft) (Yossarian) : Although it's logically "safe" to assume the negative, it is
Maybe you can help me rephrase this then... The assumption of the negative came about from observations about behavior between theists, atheists and agnostics. Agnostics have a tendancy to act like atheists, being strictly science-based and such, except where presented with "evidence of the supernatural", and even then they take a science-like approach to that. Basically they seem to act only on what has been proven positive (since you can't prove a negative), and behave as though everything else is by default negative. With no proof that God exists, why should I take concerns about him in my plan of action? I can't always think "What if I have invisible elves in my pockets?" whenever I'm not actively looking in them; if I did that I've be constantly considering "what if..." the infinite variables that could be, which would be impossible to do. It's best just to assume those things aren't so unless you have some reason to think they are. : Everything a person CAN know *is* everything to that person, not *your*
: If there is something you think about in your life that I have not, then it
But if you tell me "something is..." and that is something outside my reality, I am now AWARE OF something that I haven't yet experienced. : Why? : Reality only has informational aspects when human minds apply them. Would
: If we continue under the assumption that each one person has his or her own
: But the "set" is dependent on you, and is a creation of your brain,
I subscribe to many physicists' point of view that since math seems to so accurately describe the most fundamental workings of the universe, that it's likely that math IS the most fundamental working of the universe. I believe math is discovered, not invented. You seem to feel that math is an invention of human minds that conveniently happens to describe, more or less, what we experience around us. : And this is where both theists and atheists take refuge in Faith. You can
Except that you can never know everything... not only because of the set problem, but because the universe has to be infinite at some level... something else I intend to prove in a later version, but I can do in brief for you soon. : I'd merely say that god is irrelevant, and whether or not he exists is a
Nihilist. : Are you trying to objectively define what would be best, or are you trying to
Well this comes down to something else I intend to add to a later version: you cannot actually KNOW anything, just make a best guess based on logic and experience. I am trying to make a best guess of that type as to what is, generally, better for the whole. : And what is the best for the longest really the best? What about complacency?
Again, hence the time clause. If going a lot of good now will cause more bad later... (whether for more time, over more people, or just worse things) then it's not really a net good. Of course we can't know the future any more than we can know anything else (less, even), so the best we can do is try to make a really good guess. : No. Before making any moral assumption we must assume the negative. A logical
I agree. Do nothing unless you have reason to think it will have a net good effect. Consider the negative reprocussions of your actions first. : I agree that variety is important, where would we be without it? Evolution
: Again, I can agree. But balance need not be 50/50. I do not think there is
I agree completely, hence why I have both variety and balance. Think of it like a bell curve, while variety would be a flat random distribution and perfect balance a line in the center. |
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