I should be so stupid to get dragged into such a pointless activity.
I can't even give you a concise definition of conciseness.
I should be so stupid to get dragged into such a pointless activity.
Don't you know how conceited you sound! Each and every human being is the product of his culture; Socrates, and Jesus for that matter, are gigantic influences on all who know about them, their lives and their work.Skepdick wrote: ↑Wed Apr 09, 2025 12:43 pmDon't listen to Socrates either. There's a time and place for Socratizing; and a time/place to call it out as performative nonsense.Belinda wrote: ↑Wed Apr 09, 2025 12:38 pm Yes, one should be broad -minded. I too dislike dogma. There remains the criterion of the life-affirming qualities of theories of existence. You say "harm". The ultimate purpose of philosophy ,not excluding metaphysics, is the good life.
When empiricism and rationalism come to dead ends we must stand with Socrates who claimed he knew nothing; Socrates died because he would not recant his human right to love truth and honesty.
Random Greek: Hey! I like what you have to say! What's your name?
Socrates: I don't know.
I am the guy who agrees with this...
There are things beyond abstraction; and therefore - beyond precision.“The purpose of abstracting is not to be vague, but to create a new semantic level in which one can be absolutely precise.”
― Edsger W. Dijkstra
Henry, once more you confuse fatalism and determinism.henry quirk wrote: ↑Wed Apr 09, 2025 12:53 pmIt was, several times, by different folks, in this thread. Mike will have none of it. He's utterly determined not to.
What "things" are beyond abstracting ideas from?
Ethics, morality, justice, compassion all came into our world — originally — by men responding to and heeding imperatives coming through realization of metaphysical principles. That is I think “simply a fact” no matter where one stands on the issue now.BigMike wrote: ↑Wed Apr 09, 2025 7:28 am When I think of what’s valuable to humanity, I don’t think of vague metaphysical posturing—I think of ethics, morality, justice, compassion. And those don’t require mystical foundations. They require honest recognition of how the world actually works—including the undeniable truth that human behavior is caused, not chosen freely.
I like how you slipped that in!including the undeniable truth that human behavior is caused, not chosen freely.
Of course you don’t!When I think of what’s valuable to humanity, I don’t think of vague metaphysical posturing
How may human behaviour NOT be caused?Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Wed Apr 09, 2025 1:02 pmEthics, morality, justice, compassion all came into our world — originally — by men responding to and heeding imperatives coming through realization of metaphysical principles. That is I think “simply a fact” no matter where one stands on the issue now.BigMike wrote: ↑Wed Apr 09, 2025 7:28 am When I think of what’s valuable to humanity, I don’t think of vague metaphysical posturing—I think of ethics, morality, justice, compassion. And those don’t require mystical foundations. They require honest recognition of how the world actually works—including the undeniable truth that human behavior is caused, not chosen freely.
They all have “mystical foundations”.
What interests me is that “ethics, morality, justice, compassion” in our real present cannot actually stand or hold up as values because they are no part of— no part I tell you! — of nature nor the world of nature. There is no justice or compassion in nature, just brute force battling it out within the constraints of ecological relationships.
I like how you slipped that in!including the undeniable truth that human behavior is caused, not chosen freely.
If I did not like you I'd not bother replying to you.
Maybe that's how you and IC see the world due to your conditions. We, normal humans, can actually feel things like morality and compassion, without involving any mystical hoopla. And that's the fact of the matter.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Wed Apr 09, 2025 1:02 pm Ethics, morality, justice, compassion all came into our world — originally — by men responding to and heeding imperatives coming through realization of metaphysical principles. That is I think “simply a fact” no matter where one stands on the issue now.
They all have “mystical foundations”.
Belinda, no—we don’t “prove” determinism. That’s not how science works. We don’t prove gravity either. We try to falsify these models, and until someone succeeds, we continue using them because they consistently explain and predict reality.Belinda wrote: ↑Wed Apr 09, 2025 12:18 pmDavid Hume already did it. Constant conjunction of events is what causal determinism is empirically based on. Rationally, however determinism is not so much a "myth" but more part of a theory of existence among other theories of existence.Skepdick wrote: ↑Wed Apr 09, 2025 11:40 amIs this bullshit vendor still at it? How much harm are we willing to tolerate from his metaphysic?BigMike wrote: ↑Wed Apr 09, 2025 7:28 am
Dubious, that line you quoted—“what is metaphysical has provided everything that is valuable to man”—actually reveals Alexis’ fundamental flaw.
When I think of what’s valuable to humanity, I don’t think of vague metaphysical posturing—I think of ethics, morality, justice, compassion. And those don’t require mystical foundations. They require honest recognition of how the world actually works—including the undeniable truth that human behavior is caused, not chosen freely.
Alexis clings to a morality built on the outdated and false belief in free will. And what does that kind of morality demand? That we hold people personally responsible for their actions—regardless of what caused those actions. That we blame instead of understand. That we punish instead of prevent. And that, in its extreme form, leads to hatred, revenge, conflict, even war. All of it built on the lie that someone “could have done otherwise.”
But they couldn’t. No one could have. That’s what a deterministic understanding makes clear: people act as they do because of causes—genetic, environmental, psychological—that shape them entirely. If we actually care about reducing harm and improving the human condition, then the only moral response is to change the causes of harmful behavior—not moralize about it.
Alexis romanticizes the metaphysical because it allows him to preserve a sense of “meaning” rooted in outdated notions of human agency. But the truth is, real moral progress comes not from defending myths, but from dismantling them. The only valuable metaphysics is the one that can survive contact with physics, neuroscience, and reason. Everything else is a beautifully worded excuse for doing harm.
When are we going to dismantle the myth of determinism?