peacegirl wrote: ↑Mon Sep 08, 2025 2:44 pm
FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Mon Sep 08, 2025 1:43 pm
peacegirl wrote: ↑Mon Sep 08, 2025 2:48 am
I don’t know what you asked that I did not respond to and I’m not scrolling back.
Here's the same link again to the same post containing the questions you are avoiding. I look forward to your next excuse instead of addressing them.
FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Sat Sep 06, 2025 3:09 am
Click this blue arrow to be taken to the questions you ignored...
I don't see any question of yours. Spit it out FlashDangerpants, so we can either move on, or not. It can't be that hard.
OK, I'll just paste them again for you.....
peacegirl wrote: ↑Sat Sep 06, 2025 1:55 am
peacegirl wrote: ↑Fri Sep 05, 2025 11:00 pm
In reality, we are carried along on the wings of time or life during every moment of our existence and have no say in this matter whatsoever. We cannot stop ourselves from being born and are compelled to either live out our lives the best we can or commit suicide. Is it possible to disagree with this? However, to prove that what we do of our own free will, of our own desire because we want to do it, is also beyond control, it is necessary to employ mathematical (undeniable) reasoning. Therefore, since it is absolutely impossible for man to be both dead and alive at the same time, and since it is absolutely impossible for a person to desire committing suicide unless dissatisfied with life (regardless of the reason), we are given the ability to demonstrate a revealing and undeniable relation.
FlashDangerpants wrote:Please expand on the claim in this paragraph that mathematical reasoning is required. You are the one who gets it, please explain it.
It is very clear, even a child can get it. It says exactly what it means. Every move we make is away from a spot that has become dissatisfying or uncomfortable in some way, or we wouldn't make any move at all. Movement is life itself otherwise we would be dead. We cannot move against what gives us greater satisfaction when we are confronted with options. Moving in this direction does not always involve contemplation. We move in this direction all day, every day. I just changed position because my arm fell asleep. This movement is part of our everyday life. This observation is more than a tautology, but if you are bent on calling it that, then at least admit that tautologies can be informative and add to our knowledge.
That doesn't answer the question I asked you. It doesn't even acknowledge the question I asked you. Do better.
peacegirl wrote: ↑Sat Sep 06, 2025 1:55 am
Steve Patterson's perspective on tautologies challenges the traditional view that they are merely true by definition and do not contribute to knowledge. Patterson argues that tautologies are foundational for critical reasoning and provide a basis for an accurate worldview. He emphasizes that tautologies are not trivial or redundant but rather essential for understanding the structure of propositions and the nature of truth. Patterson's work challenges the notion that tautologies should be dismissed as empty of content, advocating instead for their importance in philosophical discourse.
https://steve-patterson.com/tautologies ... dismissed/
Why did you put that text there? What has it got to do with the question?
peacegirl wrote: ↑Sat Sep 06, 2025 1:55 am
peacegirl wrote: ↑Fri Sep 05, 2025 11:00 pm
Every motion, from the beating heart to the slightest reflex action, from all inner to outer movements of the body, indicates that life is never satisfied or content to remain in one position for always, like an inanimate object, which position shall be termed ‘death.’ I shall now call the present moment of time or life here, for the purpose of clarification, and the next moment coming up there. You are now standing on this present moment of time and space called here, and you are given two alternatives: either live or kill yourself; either move to the next spot called there or remain where you are without moving a hair’s breadth by committing suicide.
FlashDangerpants wrote:Please explain the phrase "life is never satisfied". Is it intended to
reify life as some sort of force or something that exists, or is the author merely noticing the banal fact that living things move and the more mobile ones move towards things they desire and so on?
He was establishing a point that life IS movement, and movement always involves dissatisfaction with the present position. It is what propels us forward.
Again, nothing to do with the question. I asked:
Please explain the phrase "life is never satisfied". Is it intended to reify life as some sort of force or something that exists, or is the author merely noticing the banal fact that living things move and the more mobile ones move towards things they desire and so on?
peacegirl wrote: ↑Sat Sep 06, 2025 1:55 am
peacegirl wrote: ↑Fri Sep 05, 2025 11:00 pm
“I prefer. . .”
Excuse the interruption, but the very fact that you started to answer me or didn’t commit suicide at that moment makes it obvious that you were not satisfied to stay in one position, which is death or here, and prefer moving off that spot to there, which motion is life. Consequently, the motion of life, which is any motion from here to there, is a movement away from that which dissatisfies; otherwise, had you been satisfied to remain here or where you are, you would never have moved to there.
FlashDangerpants wrote:And here... why are we doing this at all? Why are we defining life, and why are we defining it as this movement? This isn't stuff that we typically need to do, so just doing it out of the blue to support the argument you want to make is called
begging the question.
It is not begging the question. It is not circular. He was trying to establish the fact that satisfaction is the only direction life can take. It cannot move against itself by moving in the direction of dissatisfaction, which Atla thought he proved. This is important as it forms the basis of one side of the two-sided equation.
But what is the basis for all of this? The basis please. I am not asking for your delight at the conclusion, I am asking for the basis of the reasoning. Basis. Please. Why are we defining life at all? Why are we defining it as movement? What is mathematical about any of this? Why do we need to do this step? I don't mean why does the argument need the step, I mean why do people who aren't pushing the argument need to do it? The whole thing seem gratuitous.
peacegirl wrote: ↑Sat Sep 06, 2025 1:55 am
peacegirl wrote: ↑Fri Sep 05, 2025 11:00 pm
Since the motion of life constantly moves away from here to there, which is an expression of dissatisfaction with the present position, it must obviously move constantly in the direction of greater satisfaction. It should be obvious that ...
FlashDangerpants wrote:Please explain this move. Are we deliberately anthropomorphising sunflowers that point at the sun, or are we at risk of doing so by accident, or is this talk of satisfaction that is somehow inherent to just movement and life all a bit of a hyperbolic overstatement? You are the only one who knows how to read, so tell us how to read please.
It is not hyperbolic overstatement. It is important to establish that we cannot choose what we like less than what we like more is available. It is not an equal playing field. You cannot choose B if you like A better or vice versa, because anytime there are meaningful differences, you are compelled, by your nature, to pick the one that offers you greater satisfaction, not less. You will see why this important as time goes on, if I stick around.
You are talking about what you want on behalf of your argument. I am not asking that. I am asking what aspect of logic compels us to see things int he way that suits you here? It is again gratuitous. I see no reason to describe an unthinking object as pursuing satisfaction. Why do I need to anthropomorphise a daisy just to help your argument? Why would I do that, or more importantly, why would I be mistaken not to attach human emotional drivers to brainless plants? There is no persuasive power to this argument, it's mystical.
peacegirl wrote: ↑Sat Sep 06, 2025 1:55 am
peacegirl wrote: ↑Fri Sep 05, 2025 11:00 pm
...our desire to live, to move off the spot called here, is determined by a law over which we have no control, because even if we should kill ourselves, we are choosing what gives us greater satisfaction; otherwise, we would not kill ourselves. The truth of the matter is that at any particular moment, the motion of man is not free, for all life obeys this invariable law. He is constantly compelled by his nature to make choices and decisions and to prefer, of whatever options are available during his lifetime, that which he considers better for himself and his set of circumstances.
FlashDangerpants wrote:Yeah, that law isn't really needed though is it? So where is it proven to be the case that it is a real thing rather than just a convoluted way of referring to beliefs and desires which motivate sentient creatures to move, and an anthropomorphic extension of that to flowers?
That may be true but as you try to understand the reason he makes a point of this, you will see its significance.
Significance? That is just a way of telling me that you are relying on this thing for your argument. I might care later, but right now there is the open question of why I am wrong not to buy this argument. It being useful to you later is a shit reason. Give me a good reason please.