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Author | Topic: John could I talk to you? | |||||||||||||||||||||||
John Inactive Member |
quote: Pretty much how I view the issue as well, with maybe a tweak or two which I'll bring up if it ever becomes important. ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
quote: Ok. Fair enough. My major philosophical problems with Christianity are different from the major reasons I care, so I'll start there just for clarity. I care because the dogma permiates most of the world I inhabit. For the most part, this isn't a problem. There are large portions of that dogma which are functionally necessary to a society, any society. Things like prohibitions against theft and murder, for example. The problem is that the dogma goes far beyond functionally necessary. It reaches into areas like sexual preference, family life, medicine... pretty much everywhere. It permiates the legal system in the form of, say, marriage restrictions. Christians invariable don't see this, in my experience. It also permiates the social structure at other levels. For example, it effects the funding of science. It effects the funding of arts. In effect, this equates to censorship of knowledge and speech. It can be dangerous to not be christian, or dangerous to violate christian principles. It can be dangeous, even, to be the wrong kind of christian, just read some history. On the subject of reaching far beyond functional necessity, the OT can be and has been used to justify all manner of things. You likely don't want to admit it, but slavery is condoned. Instructions are given as to how badly one can beat a slave. Instructions are given as to how to sell your daughters. Racism is condoned. The sum total of the OT is an account of a massive race war. I think the religion promotes warped values such as blind faith and a perverse ethnocentrism. It takes the responsibilty for ones actions off of the individual and places it on GOD or the devil-- holy war or demonic intervention. Anyway, that should give you something to chew on. I know that your first objection is going to be that I can't blame the religion for the actions of the people, so you might as well go ahead make your case. ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
quote: It can be a bit hard to get a handle on Hume. One's intellect tends to revolt at the thoughts he thought. That said, Hume wrote his A Treatise of Human Nature in 1739-40, and as far as I am aware no one has been able to clean up the mess he made. Imagine a TV screen and playing on it is a sitcom or National Geographic Special or whatever. For the time being, imagine that the only sense we have is that of sight. There is an image on the screen but it isn't substantial. The images are illusory flashes of light on a screen. Imagine that screen to fill your entire field of vision wrapping around on all sides. Now imagine this screen capable of producing the appearance of depth. At this point it becomes impossible to infer the existence of the television that is producing this image. It is impossible to 'go behind the scenes' and infer a substrate upon which these images play. Thus, all we have is the illusory flickering images. This is the vision Hume had. Just add that not only vision, but all of the senses included. Hume then attacked causality. Look at the screen, there are no real connections between any two items any more than a billiard ball on a TV screen actually strikes another ball on that screen. We can't infer a substrate, remember. There are no identifiable connections, nothing solid upon which to pin the ideas of matter or motion or energy. Hume then looked for the self. And never saw it. His thoughts turn out to be more images on the screen. Have a nice day. ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
quote: Then you aren't getting it, no offense. Hume's Treatise is a huge book and honestly, it is about ten times longer than it has to be. But Hume was smart enough to know how people would react, so he wrote case after case after case to illustrate his point. He took every angle he could think of taking. You really should read the book.
quote: He made some errors in Treatise, but none that are critical. Actually, I think he wasn't as radical as his premises demand.
quote: The only snag I see is that Hume was logical, and it can be argued that logic is derived from the idea of causality, which Hume undermined. Thus, the argument defeats itself. It is internally inconsistent. The other side of the coin is that Hume perhaps wasn't reasoning, just looking.
quote: Cogito ergo sum is a circular argument. I know you like Descartes, but he was wrong-- very very wrong. Basically, HE wasn't doubting HIS existence. There is no HE to do the doubting. This is the point Hume made. The assumption that there has to be a thing that thinks or a thing that sees is unfounded. What is a thought? It is a picture or a sound which appears to be inside our heads. Just like any other image or sound. You cannot infer behind the screen to a substrate. Emotions are in the same boat. ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
quote: Hey!!! Progress!!!!
quote: Careful. This is exactly what Descartes did. Don't you just hate those intuitive truths? You, like Descartes, are assuming an agent or a self, right off the bat. But where is the evidence? The more you look, the more you find images -- memories or imagination-- or sounds -- voices in you head. But no self. When you 'get' Hume, your jaw will drop. I promise. ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
quote: As I said in the beginning, the intellect revolts at the thoughts Hume thought. Hume didn't say we should toss out our whole packet of experience. What he said is that we've made way too much of our experience. Hume re-analized the inferences we've made from experience and concluded that most of those inferences are invalid.
quote: Ok. But care to elaborate?
quote: Is this in Treatise? If so, can you tell me what chapter?
quote: It is hard to comment without having the context. He could be merely making a definition, or using a common definition of the time.
quote: Again, I need the context. It would be very Hume-like to pick on a particular metaphysic.
quote: What? I don't recall Hume ever relying on probabilities. And probabilities can't account for anything unltimately. The probability of rolling a one on a die doesn't ACCOUNT FOR the result.
quote: Like I said, I don't recall Hume ever relying on probability.
quote: Two hundred fifty years and he is still ahead. ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
quote: Perception.
quote: I assume that what you refer to here is the logic, or reason the Hume used. If logic is said to be derived from perceived causality, as I think it is, BTW, then Hume may have a problem. But it doesn't help the metaphysical state of affairs.
quote: The rules of evidence used in a courtroom don't apply to most other area. The rules of evidence are strongly weighted for the defendant in order to prevent the imprisonment of the innocent.
quote: Well, keep me posted. If you find the argument, or feel you can make one you wish to discuss, let me know.
quote: This doesn't make sense as something Hume would have argued for the simple reason that Hume ended up denying that natural law exists. ------------------
No webpage found at provided URL: www.hells-handmaiden.com [This message has been edited by John, 12-15-2002]
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John Inactive Member |
quote: I think this is tied into moral philosophy. Hume concluded that we could know nothing physical with certainty. He had, however, what I consider a peculiar opinion of morals. My hastily constructed nutshell synopsis is that morals aren't really a problem because, well, they are all our opinion anyway. They are all made up. Our consensus is all that is required. I found a copy of Enquiry online, but haven't had a chance to read it-- don't remember if I've read it before or not. ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
quote: Yup. Most people are average... duh!!! I do agree with joz though, that IQ tests don't really measure intelligence. ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
quote: It seems to me that they measure one's exposure to facts and ideas, and the quality of one's memory. I'm sure both are factors in intelligence but the two are not sufficient as a measure of intelligence. ------------------
No webpage found at provided URL: www.hells-handmaiden.com [This message has been edited by John, 12-16-2002]
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John Inactive Member |
quote: Don't you find that to be a bit of a disturbing admission? I mean, equating high IQs with disbelief? And the converse? ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
quote: It looks like exactly that to me, even after reading your response.
quote: So... are we equating high IQs with sin now? Otherwise, I can't figure out why this is relevant.
quote: Does that mean God chose you to confound the wise? ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
quote: Hey, chill man. Just trying to figure out what you did say.
quote: So, basically, what zipzip said is accurate? That makes a lot more sense. You aren't talking about IQ, but pride. Pride tends to increase with IQ, but it isn't a direct correlation. ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
quote: I have to agree. ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
quote: No way man. I quite see my arrogance. Maybe it works like insanity? If you think you are insane, you're not? ------------------
No webpage found at provided URL: www.hells-handmaiden.com [This message has been edited by John, 12-17-2002]
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