Cerpin Taxt
Lifer
- Feb 23, 2005
- 11,940
- 542
- 126
Time is a subjective thing, too, y'know.Originally posted by: Vic
Of course reality changes. It's called "time."
Not really. This all depends on the definitions of "dead" and "alive," and under certain definitions a person never dies, they simply transform. The point is simply that you're misusing the term "absolute." Reality is that which is not predicated of anything, yet you're attempting to predicate reality when you describe it as "absolute". As soon as you predicate it, you're no longer talking about reality, but your ideas about reality.But if a person dies in a plane crash, then they are absolutely dead, whatever perception of the experience that person may have nonwithstanding. That is absolute reality.
Like I've already said, reality simply is, it is not "true" or "false" or "absolute" or "non-absolute." These are attributes of statements that we make about reality.
Given your penchant for error and misconception, I think I can safely take this as a complement.Honestly, I don't care about your opinions of ANY other person. My impression of you thus far is considerably less than favorable.
No, they can't. To a solipsist, another individual does not actually exist as a living person[/quote]Two solipsists can meaningfully communicate, despite her claims. Like I said above, they only need to establish agreed-upon definitions. The reality is that we are all solipsists pretending that we're not, yet we communicate.
That's not necessarily true, and it is why your argument fails. Like everyhting else it seems, you do not understand solipsism. To a solipsist, the figments in his mind are what are called "living persons."
Again, not necessarily. There is nothing inconsistent about the solipsist deciding that the figments in his mind are "not him" and holding meaningful conversations with them.therefore any "communication" is the equivalent of an individual talking to himself.
Sure it is, except where you define "communication" as "something a solispsist cannot do." You need to realize that in order to rationally examine a solipsist's perspective, you must leave your prejudicial concepts like that one behind. Communication may still happen, it just means something different than it does from a non-solipsist's perspective.That is not communication.
I'd like to see you try to prove that solipsism is false, incidentally. Absent that, you can't prove that you're not just talking to yourself right now, yet you still call it communication. It would be the same for a solipsist.
No, it's not. You're just fumbling about trying to prove that I wasn't right when I characterized you as a layman.I expected this argument from you, and it is flawed.
The difference is that I realize that there is no such "recognition." There is only presupposition.If you are unable to recognize that other human beings are actual real consciousnesses like yourself, then you are not living in reality, but a fantasy.
Facts have a way of being forceful.Your argument style is pure force.Furthermore, I am a moral subjectivist, and I do not feel "morally entitled to force men 'for their own good,'" nor do I feel that "there is nothing to oppose {me} but their misguided feelings." Obviously, then, her claims are falsified.
-Garth
Well, again, and still, you are wrong.As a moral subjectivist, I can only assume that your politics border on the socialist, and THAT is pure force.
Again and still: wrong.For example, if you truly are a moral subjectivist, then I think I can safely assume that you would support a ban on smoking.
I do. What's inconsistent about that? There are no derivable moral beliefs from the statement "I am a moral subjectivist." I could (subjectively) hold individual autonomy as the highest moral ideal, so why would I want to ban anything in that instance? (why do I have a feeling you will avoid answering these questions?)After all, it's for the smokers' own good, so who cares about their feelings?
Sure I am. As in every previous instance, you simply do not know what it means to be a moral subjectivist. There is nothing implicit in moral subjectivism that requires them to desire to impose their beliefs upon others.Or substitute banning smoking for some other similar issue, if you so choose (there are many, so you know the one that fits you). If there is no such issue, then you quite simply are NOT a moral subjectivist as you claim.
No, I just don't make claims that I don't know are true, and I don't contest arguments that I don't know are wrong. You just see so much of me because you are wrong so often, and I know more about it than you do.I think it's safe to say that the one absolute in your subjective perceivable reality is that you are never wrong.
It only takes one counter-example to falsify a hypothesis. I am that counter-example.After all, you went so far as to broadly proclaim that Rand's was falsified on the basis of the singular anecdote of your personal opinion.
Yes, you would think that, because as it seems, you habitually decide to believe exactly that which is contrary the real state of affairs.Far fetched to say the least.
Quite frankly, you validate her claims completely.
-Garth