Arguments are different than things that aren't arguments. The very idea of fallacies doesn't even make any sense outside of the context of an argument.
At any rate, circularity isn't even a cut and dried fallacy when it comes to arguments. See the post I copy-pasted above.
Aside from the fact that I have no "classification rules," no.So you don't think it's a problem that you can't effectively communicate any of your classification rules to me?
You'd need to have a completely delusional notion of my opinion of you to this point to think that I'd feel it's a problem that something can't be (apparently) communicated to you, where I should be worrying about defining terms like "significance" etc.
A and A? No idea what you'd even be talking about there. Are you talking about that stupid thread from Eoh-whatever his name is?This is peculiar to me. Do you think A and А are the same sort of thing?
lol that that's what you would have gotten from what I wrote above.So in your view, there's something more important than the necessary conditions for X.
lolYou don't even believe that.
Someone doesn't get the idea of subjective dispositions. That I think that importance is subjective doesn't imply that I don't think that particular things are important. It's just that it's subjective. It's something I think, a way I feel, a disposition I have. It's not something external to me that I'm perceiving etc.If living is not necessarily more important than Philosophy, then go kill yourself and come back and lets do some Philosophy.
There may be no other consquences of note other than a disposition changing. (And the fact that the person tells us that it changed if we ask about it, etc.)So if a non-causal disposition changes what are the consequences of that change?
I didn't at all say that people do not act on their dispositions. Obviously sometimes they do. But they don't NECESSARILY act on them. You can have dispositions that you don't act on. I certainly have some that I don't act on. A good example of this is an alcoholic who is currently on the wagon. They're not acting on their disposition to drink, but they definitely have the disposition to drink/to be an alcoholic.Terrapin Station wrote: ↑Tue Feb 16, 2021 9:05 pm Then how the fuck could your notion of morality ever work?!?!
And people can obviously act in ways that are contrary to their dispositions, where they feel guilt later, where they have cognitive dissonance about their actions, etc.--all sorts of complicated situations can occur.
The way that morality actually works is that there are all sorts of competing views and interests and it's very complicated and messy, etc.
The point is that the morality part is the stuff about behavioral assessments and recommendations. Whether anyone is murdering anyone else isn't in itself morality. If we're talking about animals--let's say something like spiders, where (a) they have no mental phenomena, but (b) they sometimes kill other animals (of the same species), then we could say that they're "murdering" each other, but there's no morality involved in any of that for them, because they have no mental phenomena re judgments of the behavior or recommendations about it. The way that morality works is that people make these value judgments and recommendations and so on. The behavior in question is what morality is about, but morality isn't identical to the behavior. It's identical to judgments, recommendations/normatives about the behavior. (And just because I think there was some confusion about this before, this is the case whether we're talking about a duty-oriented approach, a consequentialist approach, or whatever--it's still judgments etc. about behavior, just there can be focuses on consequences versus obligations, etc.).