FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Wed Aug 27, 2025 4:19 pm
peacegirl wrote: ↑Wed Aug 27, 2025 9:16 am
FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Wed Aug 27, 2025 3:04 am
That's a complete other empirical test where everybody in the world has to join your cult and then find out if that prediction there is true. It's an article of faith for you, but not really for anybody else.
It’s not a cult. Are threats of punishment a cult? Why would no threats of punishment be a cult?. It just has to be shown that when all hurt is removed from the environment (and you have no idea how this will take place),including all authority and control (even by government), and when the fear of losing one’s standard of living is also removed, we are compelled to move in only one direction (not two) and that is never to strike a first blow.
We don’t need to speculate on every motive. All that needs to be true is that in living one’s life, the motive to hurt others, that is rampant today, will no longer be, because conscience will not permit it when the causes that give the justification to hurt others, or the risk of hurting others, is removed. That’s how conscience works.
Then I must be a permanent failure.

There may be unconscious motivations that are not on the surface but this still goes back to someone having been hurt. How can someone be motivated consciously or unconsciously to strike back when his cheek has never been struck, giving him the justification to retaliate? And it is testable.
FlashDangerpants wrote:I shall try to get through to you that I am not making things up to spite you by quoting from Simon Blackburn's Ruling Passions. Note that normally what is described here as API is BDM to me (a term borrowed I think from Jerry Fodor):
"It is a 'constitutive' rule, or a principle that governs the very essence of mental states. It is not open to empirical rebuttal: it is a tautology, or principle that defines its subject-matter. Writing in a form on which we can focus, we have an a priori principle of interpretation (API):
- (API) It is analytic that creatures with beliefs, desires and other states of mind, behave in ways that (best) make sense (and not in ways that make no sense)m given those states of mind.
States of mind behave in ways that (best) make sense (and not in ways that make no sense) given those states of mind. And...?
FlashDangerpants wrote:The idea behind calling this a constitutive rule is that it tells us what it is to have beliefs and other states of mind. According to API, then, it is analytic that creatures conform to the normative order. A creature which appears not to do so is either a creature that we have misinterpreted, or a creature that has no mental states, but merely exhibits movements."
I can agree that creatures conform to the normative order which is a very strong motivator.
Constitutive rules and regulative rules are both types of rules that govern behavior within a specific context or social setting. Constitutive rules define the fundamental structure or framework of a system, setting the boundaries and parameters within which individuals can operate. In contrast, regulative rules dictate specific actions or behaviors that individuals must follow within that system.
FlashDangerpants wrote:An analytic proposition is one that is true by definition. This is in contrast to synthetic propositions, validation of which require more than an understanding of the meanings of the terms in use.
An analytic proposition may be true by definition, but definitions mean nothing where reality is concerned. The meanings of the term must have reference to REALITY, otherwise definitions can be misleading... like the standard determinism of determinism.
FlashDangerpants wrote:An A Priori proposition is a statement that can be known to be true without needing any experience of the outside world. If we needed to do any investigating to find out that animals move from one place to another because it in some way conforms to their best efforts to attain their desires, that would make it an A Posteriori proposition.
Where do you think his claim came from? Outer space? I don't care what you call it, a or post priori, it came from his careful observations.
FlashDangerpants wrote:As I hope you can finally grasp, there is no market for a "discovery" that animals move from one place to another in pursuit of satisfaction, that is an a priori tautology that cannot be proven.
You are wrong FlashDangerpants. It is not a priori if his observations came from observation. It wasn't just a made-up definition that had no reference to the real world.
FlashDangerpants wrote:Any effort to prove it or discover it is redundant. Any effort to use a discovery of such a tautology as the basis for some other claim is unfounded.
You are completely off-base using the term "tautology" to mean "unimportant" or "redundant." It is not unimportant or redundant. Free will states we could have done otherwise. That is the basis for this worldview. You didn't have to kill that person, you had the free will to do otherwise, and now you're going to pay by going to jail. That is the cornerstone of our civilization. I don't think you read one word of what I posted. Not one.
Animals move when life pushes them to move, just like humans. That is the motion of life itself, otherwise, we're inanimate objects like rocks. Animals are obviously influenced by their tribe and where they fit into the established hierarchy. I'm not even disputing this. I am only trying to get across that if animals are content with what they are doing (such as a bird sitting on a branch or a dog eating his evening meal) they will not move away from what they are doing (e.g., eating dinner or sitting on a branch, etc.) until they have the urge to do something else, whether it be taking a nap, playing with a ball, or flying with a flock of birds to their next destination. I don't even see where your argument applies to what I'm talking about. It feels like a strawman.