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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby _________ » Sat Oct 08, 2011 2:54 pm

phyllo wrote:
P.S. Monooq, you are not Lawrence of Arabia.
Huh? where did that come from?

In compiling a list of Monooq's errors, I happened across him saying "I am a river" five times across six pages. It is quoting Lawrence of Arabia, hence my comment.
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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby von Rivers » Sat Oct 08, 2011 3:30 pm

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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby phyllo » Sat Oct 08, 2011 6:54 pm

In compiling a list of Monooq's errors, I happened across him saying "I am a river" five times across six pages. It is quoting Lawrence of Arabia, hence my comment.
That's not Lawrence, it's Auda ibu Tayi (Auda ban Harb al-Abo Seed al-Mazro al-Tamame abu Tayi, also Auda ibu Tayi, Awda abu Tayi) as portrayed by Anthony Quinn in the movie 'Lawrence of Arabia'.
275px-Auda_ibu_Tayi_colorized.jpg
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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby _________ » Sat Oct 08, 2011 11:19 pm

Close enough.
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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby Faust » Sat Oct 08, 2011 11:33 pm

Mathie, while Monie is unable to defend himself, let's talk about definitions. Monie is using extensional definitions, of the ostensive flavor. These work well enough for the object-language, for most purposes. I am giving an ostensive definition when I point to a dog and say "That's a dog". And if I keep pointing to more dogs, I have defined the class, dog.

But science describes dogs much more thoroughly than we usually have use for, and the philosopher is often called upon to provide better, more thorough descriptions and definitions than we need in ordinary speech. So, google up "dog" and see what you find. You will probably find a different kind of definition - what i call a taxonomic definition. There's a technical name for this, which escapes me.

Taxonomic definitions are hierarchical, where extensional definitions are not. With the latter, an object is in the set or it is not. Taxonomical definitions are arranged like a family tree. They describe objects that have similarities, but also differences.

Now, Monie assumes that we always know when we are perceiving a work of art, and likewise we always know when we are describing a moral act - and by moral, i mean an act that is within the purview of morality, right or wrong. The objects under consideration belong to their respective sets, or they do not.

I think he's in trouble from the start, then.

The first question many had was about simply looking at an object and knowing if it's a work of art. Monie claims that we can - that we just look to the world and we will see - work of art, and its aesthetic attributes. Likewise - look and you will see moral acts and their moral attributes. And so thousands of years of debate over this issue is simply ignored. Unargued.

What he's also ignoring is that taxonomic definitions allow for shades of grey, just as there are grey areas when thoroughly considering what a dog is, despite that we are, most of us, unconcerned with that when we talk about dogs. Now, the scientist is concerned about those grey areas, and I am of the view that philosopher should be, too. Because both the scientist and the philosopher are doing the same thing in their respective fields - trying to resolve gray areas into black and white ones. But not by simply ignoring those grey areas.

Now, there are these several kinds of definitions - intensional, extensional and their subsets of - oh hell, I'll look them up.......genus-differentia (taxonomic). Evidently. And the ostensive kind and.......well, there are some others.

My point is that dictionary definitions point to usage. What the philosopher usually wants to use is a (highly) descriptive definition, or maybe a stipulative one, but the latter has to be argued for. Really good descriptive definitions are like the genera-differentia kind. That's because they provide.....context. They necessarily employ a model. You can argue about whether a fox is a dog, if you use a taxonomic approach. Monie has a very poor argument because he hasn't allowed himself a versatile enough model. He's just pointing and shooting.

The paradigm for the object language, and for ostensive definitions is purely mechanical - point, name, point, name, point, name. Another way to to say this is that it''s arithmetical. Just count up the objects, and you've got the set. There's not much to talk about.

The taxonomic model is by nature argumentative, algebraic. Objects exists as functions of each other. If you really want to connect with the real world, choose algebra. You'll find that ideas can be related to each other - that even art and morality is related, but not mechanically, as Monie claims. They are related through their creators - people.

Lots of times, we will want to use more than one kind of definition - they are not mutually exclusive. Sometimes we want to appraoch an idea from different angles, to see which one works best. Monie is using one angle only - he's coming at the problem with a dictionary. Coming back with one only plays into his hand, for what he wants is to play Chicken - to force any comer to veer off the road rather than admit that rape and murder is not wrong. Chicken is a very simple game - there's only one winning stratagem, which, as it happens, can be the losing stratagem, as well.
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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby von Rivers » Sun Oct 09, 2011 1:33 am

I think my next post in this thread will be something like a summation of my arguments, what I take to be the failed criticisms, the lack of opposing arguments, and some general comments about...reality, or something. Whenever I'm in this thread, I feel like I have to be doing that game where you smash the gremlins that keep poking their heads up, from a number of different holes. And when you smash one, another gremlin head pokes up... and so on. Until your quarter runs out.

Math,

Plato has taught us that one of the ways that you can benefit a person is by exposing an inconsistency in their thinking. It's like cutting out a cancer. You've claimed to have seen a number of them in my thinking. Exposing them would benefit me. I'm wondering why you haven't, already. And knowing you, I really am surprised that whatever you have hasn't been dumped and splashed in a series of massive posts for the rest of us to sort through and try to make some sense of, and with your appropriately scathing and incoherent rhetoric, that we're used to. What are you waiting for? What's going to happen, I think, is what happened last time you tried this. Remember--when you tried to prove that I had claimed to have seen through the eyes of a fish? This was all in the context of my claim that fish cannot do math, I believe. I'm going to end up benefiting you, by sorting out your own confusions for you. I'm happy to do so.

Anyways,

I'll make my summation in about a week.






I am a river to my people.
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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby _________ » Sun Oct 09, 2011 4:20 am

What's the point, if you fail to grasp that I did in fact prove you wrong?--that you had mistakenly answered my question to the affirmative, unaware of what you consented, and then proceeded to play it off as if I had asked a different question? If you believe you're the "King of England" or, more commonly, a character from a movie, how am I supposed to convince you you're not--if, from the outset, you believe, against all evidence, that everything in the world is pink? Is to do so my right or duty?

If you dismiss my arguments because you fail to grasp the coherent, yet (in your eyes) apparently abstract, obscurantist, or otherwise unintelligible vernacular I employ, what hope can I possibly have? It follows that my time is spent more wisely playing piano or reading (things I enjoy) rather than striving to enlighten a stream of urine imagining itself to be a river. I find the entire undertaking futile because, in short, you find no fault in making statements like:

“You can't refute someone by simply claiming the opposite. And you can't tell me that I'm writing "nonsense", or don't understand the difference between simple distinctions, just because you insist on misunderstanding what I've said.”
before proceeding to do just that. Or making an argument based on a composer you've "never listened to"...incidentally, I know you've heard at least on movement of his Four Seasons at least once. Spring is the default ringback tone for Verizon.

Why humor a self-declared "hedonistic utilitarian" (who happens to be more of an authoritarian--an ego maniac of one) who, when arguing under less than amiable circumstances, proceeds to run around his opponent's unrelated threads, making a ruckus, intentionally off topic and malicious a la Rage Against the Machine at the 2000 VMA? Why attempt civility when only vulgarity is returned, especially regarding a "question" raised during some "deep chit-chat" over beers?

I don't philosophize to tell other people they "are henceforth banished from any thread I create or participate in, for all the reasons already discussed." I certainly don't philosophize for the purpose of declaring incommensurability before making statements like: “I'll play you the sound of some nails on a chalkboard, and then Chopin---we'll both agree which is objectively more beautiful, and we'll be right, I say.” So honestly, I might as well be saying something like the following paragraph.

Q bht'u kfjdnsidnfks bg cdss nxzxg bghf "bhb nfksfgnhom vdhrnksd mvbn end bcgut Q cbdhe ng fkdnusujdkf ng, djg bfr nhn churytd bchdnjt nkgmvudte." Q cnightish nkf'h kfjdnsidnfks fng cjd okfjdei ht cnfjdnjcn jdksmfjsbfuzcdxcsx pxbcudh cbdizx cbzxcbdhbx cbdz: "Q'gh zdnx vjf vnf xjfkv zx pfjn xnfif fu r vnfprnsldj, aid idje Dhgifj---fh'dh dbht dnjso zfjnv zn vnfjshufsle bifr fnsofjeur, dnw ij'fh hr cnifh, Q fji." Df ojgmidjg, Q sdofk sd okef ko sdfoke poekzxcdf vmks lkf xcklcmvfx mxfxlflxm.

Of course, you say, "Why, that's just the previous paragraph using the same number of characters per word but making the characters themselves random so as to turn a series of sensible sentences into something unintelligible, undecipherable!" My, my! What a perspicacious reader you are! Does my dilemma make itself apparent? Have I been understood?
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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby von Rivers » Sun Oct 09, 2011 6:17 am

Emotional. Hypocritical as well (--Do you deny that?)

I don't think your post deserves more than that. You write as if someone else was wearing the same dress as you at the party. Take a lesson from Faust, and myself, about how to control yourself.




I'll get around to my summation when I get chance to review the thread and think about it.
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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby phyllo » Sun Oct 09, 2011 2:28 pm

Take a lesson from Faust, and myself, about how to control yourself.
Chuckle. Your posts are full of insults, profanities and attempts at intimidation.
A very great part of the mischiefs that vex the world arises from words. - Edmund Burke
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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby iambiguous » Sun Oct 09, 2011 6:03 pm

Monooq wrote:
I am a river to my people.


I am still rather baffled by this assertion.

So, given the list of folks below how would you rank them least to most like you as a river to their people:

* Mahatma Gandhi
* Jesus Christ
* Vladimir Lenin
* Dr. Martin Luther King
* Ayn Rand
* David Ben-Gurion
* Mao Tse Tung
* Genghis Khan
* Mother Teresa
* Adolph Hitler
* Simone de Beauvoir
* Barack Obama

Or choose your own list.
I'm sick to death of this particular self. I want another.

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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby fuse » Sun Oct 09, 2011 6:08 pm

iambiguous wrote:
Monooq wrote:
I am a river to my people.


I am still rather baffled by this assertion.

I'm baffled by the fact that Monooq likens us to his people.






...I am an ocean (period).
I am a man, nothing human is foreign to me.
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[T]ruth needs time to mature, and attention to many details.
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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby _________ » Sun Oct 09, 2011 6:43 pm

This is interesting. Am I the only individual here believing themselves to be human?
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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby von Rivers » Sun Oct 09, 2011 8:13 pm

I asked you to post some inconsistency in my thinking, for my benefit. Instead, you wrote a long and unnecessarily dramatic insult piece. So, I asked you if you thought you were a hypocrite. No answer. Now you're asking a question that nobody here would know why---about being human.

Wake up. Toughen up. It's as if you think your offended feelings are a refutation.
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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby iambiguous » Sun Oct 09, 2011 9:33 pm

Monooq wrote:Wake up. Toughen up. It's as if you think your offended feelings are a refutation.


What may be particularly fascinating here is this: That you actually believe discussions of this sort can lead to denouements able to be refuted...philosophically?!

Unless, of course, your entire point revolves around an exercise in irony.

Now that Nietzsche has introduced us to the world sans God how, regarding relationships like this, can a mere mortal not become a Richard Rorty ironist?

Language here takes us only to an abyss that is its own limitations. And beyond it it does not appear able to go. Aside, of course, from analysis, the logic of which is predicated on a looping circularity that is a world of words.
I'm sick to death of this particular self. I want another.

Virginia Woolf


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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby _________ » Sun Oct 09, 2011 10:05 pm

Monooq wrote:I asked you to post some inconsistency in my thinking, for my benefit. Instead, you wrote a long and unnecessarily dramatic insult piece. So, I asked you if you thought you were a hypocrite. No answer. Now you're asking a question that nobody here would know why---about being human.

Wake up. Toughen up. It's as if you think your offended feelings are a refutation.

My "long unnecessarily dramatic insult piece" was my reasoning that exposing such inconsistency is futile, as you will simply deny it regardless of its validity. If you fail to grasp the difference between experiencing the consciousness of a fish and experiencing a conscious fish, what is the point? If you did not understand beef is to hotdog as empirical is to judgment, how shall I proceed?
“I think it can be objectively true that you find a painting beautiful. But that doesn't mean the painting is objectively beautiful.”
"Disagreement doesn't prove relativism or subjectivism---it just shows one person is demented.”
"And everyone may disagree. ---None of that would affect the objectivity of beauty. It just means that the beauty of the two things is incomparable, or incommensurable.”
“I'll play you the sound of some nails on a chalkboard, and then Chopin---we'll both agree which is objectively more beautiful, and we'll be right, I say.”

In summation, if your entire point in these forty pages was "beauty is a characteristic that is subjectively viewed in an object, but as it refers to an object, it is objective" then you just wasted everyone's time.

Oh, and so you don't think I ignored your questions: No, I don't feel it was hypocritical and the question regarding humanity is aimed at you considering yourself a river and Phyllo, an ocean.
Last edited by _________ on Sun Oct 09, 2011 10:11 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby _________ » Sun Oct 09, 2011 10:09 pm

iambiguous wrote:Language here takes us only to an abyss that is its own limitations. And beyond it it does not appear able to go. Aside, of course, from analysis, the logic of which is predicated on a looping circularity that is a world of words.


"If you say, I love you, then you have already fallen in love with language, which is already a form of break up and infidelity."
~Baudrillard
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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby von Rivers » Sun Oct 09, 2011 11:02 pm

MathIsACircle wrote:In summation, if your entire point in these forty pages was "beauty is a characteristic that is subjectively viewed in an object, but as it refers to an object, it is objective" then you just wasted everyone's time.

Oh, and so you don't think I ignored your questions: No, I don't feel it was hypocritical and the question regarding humanity is aimed at you considering yourself a river and Phyllo, an ocean.


Good then. In my summation, I'll address these points, and make some comments about your own behaviour in this thread. Look for that, it's forthcoming.
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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby _________ » Mon Oct 10, 2011 3:27 am

Monooq wrote:Good then. In my summation, I'll address these points, and make some comments about your own behaviour in this thread. Look for that, it's forthcoming.


Groovy, I'll set my calendar. *psyche...evaluation...by...Monooq...forth...coming* Alright, it's a date. :D
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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby von Rivers » Mon Oct 10, 2011 9:54 pm

Yea, a tentative date would be about a week, week-and-a-half from now--before I get a chance to go back and recount the goings on here. It may take me some time, too... since this thread is 40 pages now. And there is much to say. I expect my comments to be fairly cutting to those who've taken extreme positions. Or, to those who recognize that they cannot keep themselves from an extreme position, but hold to their ideas anyways. If you take an extreme position, you should have to be prepared for an extreme rebuttal.
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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby _________ » Mon Oct 10, 2011 9:58 pm

Good stuff, I'm sure you'll put all us extremists in our places.
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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby aletheia » Mon Oct 10, 2011 11:34 pm

I am just giddy with anticipation.
'The daemonic genius is the only thing capable of surviving the odds of existence versus no existence... because of what it empirically tolerates though fundamentally defying it, the deepest existence is satyrical. The grin on a primordial sailor, grim to all things human, his enjoyment in the uncertainty. He knows himself by this very factor. Valuing the uncertainty of the universe as an extension of oneself - this sailor is the primordial being.' [Source]


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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby von Rivers » Sat Oct 15, 2011 5:38 am

Contents:

I. In which is rendered the outline of the original and significant philosophical question, with thoughts left-open for discussion.
II. Of what transpired during the initial engagement with the original post and an account of the progress Monooq made toward sorting and combating Faust's confusion about 'objectivity'.
III. Of what befell the ambitious Faust upon deciding to reject an important distinction after its having been adequately clarified for him.
IV. In what fashion Monooq creatively improved upon the form of an example introduced by the jester Chester, with pictures included, and the first of a series of embarassments for the blackguard and hardened relativist iambiguous.
V. In which a trifling argument is opposed to mine and in what manner it was refuted as nonsensical as necessary to a true understanding of the history of this thread.
VI. In which is recorded the thought experiment which shifted the burden of proof for the relativity of judgements into the subjectivist's court.
VII. A continuation of the embarassing episode of iambiguous and with mention of how Faust and iambiguous formed an unlikely alliance, which ended with grave pronouncements by both.
VIII. In which is presented the argument that remains unblemished to this day.
IX. On the first sally forth of the noble thinker MathIsACircle.
X. Which tells of the corruption of our noble thinker and what strange things he began to say.
XI. In which is concluded our short history which contains more truth than wisdom.
XII. Other notes.

- - - -

Prefatory Verses:

O book, if this were but your pur-pose,
To reach the wise and virtu-ous,
He won't say, the babbling boo-by,
That your fingers are awry:
But if your loaf is not a-cook-ing,
To cram the maws of all the ass-es,
Look how their fingers they are suck-ing
To show that they are in the know-ing
And ready to gobble the fare you've giv-en.

(Alonso Alvrez de Soria)

- - - -

I. In which is rendered the outline of the original and significant philosophical question, with thoughts left-open for discussion.

In my original post, I presented what seems to be a problem for proponents of an objective conception of beauty. The problem is that atoms and the periodic table (or whatever the constituents of a scientific outlook) do not seem fit to capture a thick concept like 'beauty'. I ended with the hope that someone would explain to me how such a view might work.

II. Of what transpired during the initial engagement with the original post and an account of the progress Monooq made toward sorting and combating Faust's confusion about 'objectivity'.

A few initial comments attempted to explain the objectivity of beauty with reference to the concept 'elegance'. I then patiently counselled those posters, on behalf of the rest of us, that to explain 'beauty' in such a way would be to exchange one problematic term for another, and get us no closer to understanding. At which point Faust entered and laid forth a number of his initial confusions about the concept 'objectivity'. Faust wrote, "An 'objective property', huh.......No idea what that means, but I am, after all, an ILP mod, which puts me at a disadvantage" (1). Faust's confusion provided a good opportunity to get clear about objectivity, early on.

Faust initially thought that nothing could be objective because supposed objective properties "are descriptions, which means that someone has to be doing the describing" (1). To this claim I adeptly explained that properties are actually attributes of a thing—using 'thing' in the most non-committal sense. If beauty were objective, then "it would be like an attribute that the world possesses, and you can sense it—but its existence doesn't originate in your head. Or it could 'supervene' on other properties (like natural ones—kind of like people say the mind 'supervenes' on brain" (1). And with that, I provided the grounds for the definition that I was to use throughout the rest of the thread.

III. Of what befell the ambitious Faust upon deciding to reject an important distinction after its having been clarified for him.

After having made the subjective/objective distinction clear to Faust, in typical Faustian fashion, he decided to reject the entire thing; "the dichotomy gets us nowhere in the end" he says (2). At the time, I was worried that next he'd want to eliminate the distinction between left and right, or up and down. (Which, as a matter of fact, he later tried to do). Uglypersonfucking, more temperate person that he is, stepped in to tell us what "intersubjectivity" was. At which point, I explained to the both of them that the world was not flat, when everyone thought it was flat. And so, I washed my hands for a while.

IV. In what fashion Monooq creatively improved upon the form of an example introduced by the jester Chester, with pictures included, and the first of a series of embarassments for the blackguard and hardened relativist iambiguous.

Image
Image

iambiguous does recognize that most will view one woman more beautiful than the other (5). Now what we want to ask is why that is the case, and whether there are any good reasons for supposing that it is not because one woman actually is more beautiful than the other. Later, iambiguous argues that the woman that you see to be less beautiful is actually possibly more beautiful---just in case she was your mother! I see no reason to argue against iambiguous on this point, as he has sufficiently done that against himself, in the form of a reductio. Recall that in all of this we are trying to decide what we have good reasons to believe about the objectivity of beauty, not a demonstration of absolute truth---which is likely impossible in any area. At the time, I took this to to be an empirical claim---I wrote, "Empirical claims are objectively decided. They refer to the world. I made an empirical claim" (6).

V. In which a trifling argument is opposed to mine and in what manner it was refuted as nonsensical as necessary to a true understanding of the history of this thread.

Someone (e.g., phyllo) might present a bunch of pictures for which we are not sure whether to call them beautiful or not (6). The question was raised; What should we take these pictures to be an example of? The answer, I suggested, was just that we're not sure whether to call them beautiful---and nothing more. If beauty were objective, that would not imply that we know everything about it, or that people could not reasonably disagree. For a long time iambiguous took up the mantle of this sort of argument. It may still not have occurred to him that disagreement is not a proof of subjectivity any more than disagreement about whether the earth heating up is a proof that facts about global warming are subjective. It was to this end that I introduced the concept of 'incommensurability', from my wealth of philosophical knowledge, in a generous effort to help iambiguous understand. I failed in that regard, but that was no fault of my own.

VI. In which is recorded the thought experiment which shifted the burden of proof for the relativity of judgements into the subjectivist's court.
Monooq wrote:Imagine someone who risks his life to save a helpless suffering person, when no one is watching, and no one will hear about it. Should we call that brave? Yea, probably. Is it just our opinion? ---Doesn't seem like it, does it?

Imagine someone raping and killing while he makes their loved ones watch. Should we call that cruel? Yea, probably. Is it just our opinion? ---Doesn't seem like it, does it?

The point: There are very clear cases where we want to say that our judgements are more than mere matters of opinion. Moral judgements are often like the above. AND: there are less clear cases, where we're not really sure what to say, about whether our opinion is doing the deciding. The reason we're not sure in those cases, is because people disagree. However, the fact that people disagree is no reason to think that all judgements are relative---only that it's "too close to call", that the values in play are incomparable, or etc. BUT: In clear cases like the ones above---it becomes obvious that the burden of proof is in the relativists court---that should be clear! So, offer an explanation as to how the above cases really are a matter of opinion---that'll put the burden back in my court. Although, be careful how you argue it... you know, reputations, and so on...


VII. A continuation of the embarassing episode of iambiguous and with mention of how Faust and iambiguous formed an unlikely alliance, which ended with grave pronouncements by both.

Having read my thought experiment, Faust proceeded to declare that someone may call the rape righteous, and the brave man stupid (8). I was stunned. Iambiguous caught a whiff of the rotting nihilism and joined the fray. Faust is a cultural relativist, (He wrote, "But since my personal view is that morality is a social construct, it's up to a given group to decide" 9).
Once again, iambiguous had found a friend—he again repeated his old mantra, "every behavior can be rationalized given a particular frame of mind" (9). At this point, d63 joined the conversation to imply that there was something dangerous about beauty being objective—and not the flagrant relativism in the air. I was surprised and disappointed. Thus, the three amigos were banded together upon a self-contradictory and morally reprehensible dogma, and began to spout other really unfortunate things. For instance:
1. Iambiguous claimed that Kant's moral theory led to "killing fields"—and never bothered to justify it in anything but a nonsensical way. Anybody who has actually read Kant (which iambiguous hasn't) will think lowly of iambiguous for that pronouncement.
2. Faust claimed that the only 'ism' that applies to his view, is logical positivism—which was surprising, since he self-applied a number of isms before.

VIII. In which is presented the argument that remains unblemished to this day.

The Argument:
P1. If you attempt to describe a "beautiful" object (e.g., painting), then your description refers to cognitive beliefs about objective (mind-independent) facts in the world. (E.g., the colors, the brush technique, the canvass, etc).
P2. Your description of the "beautiful" painting will not make reference to your subjective mental phenomena (i.e., desires, wishes, past history).
P3. Therefore, (from P1 and P2) the simpler explanation of "beauty" will make reference only to cognitive beliefs about objective (mind-independent) facts.
P4. Ockham's Razor---The simpler explanation is the better one.
P5. Inference to the best explanation (from P3 and P4)---The best explanation of "beauty" is that it refers to objective (mind-independent) facts about the world.
C. Therefore, 'beauty' is objective.

It was my own humility that kept me from giving my full assent to this argument. Nevertheless, what we are debating is whether or not we have good reasons to think that beauty is objective—and this argument stands, with the thought-experiment, and with the case study of the pictures, as the only good reasons presented on either side of the debate. The response to some fumbling objections are there for anyone to see, on page 12. Ask someone why they find 'beauty' in the object that they find beautiful. In every case---every single case---the person is going to refer to publicly accessible phenomena. The color, the symmetry, the brush stroke, the canvas. Nobody is ever going to say, "my mother used to beat me".

IX. On the first sally forth of the noble thinker MathIsACircle.

The new participant begain by claiming that, Beauty, i.e. the objectively pleasing quality in all art is generally centered around The Golden Section/ Fibonacci sequence" (16). That was an original contribution to the thread. A page later he rehearsed my claims about incommensurability, and argued for beauty in Tchaikovsky---the same tact that I had already taken with my pictures. This is all fine. More examples lend more plausibility to the case for objective beauty. Shortly thereafter, the noble thinker began to get pissy with iambiguous (18) because his argument was being ignored. I believe it was being ignored because his argument had already been agreed with---when I presented it, earlier in the thread.

The noble thinker asks iambiguous, "Iams, are you even trying to understand what I'm writing? … Do you think for yourself, or are you an erudite parrot?" (19). On top of referring to his argument as "dog food" and "semantic tautological bullshit pedantry" (19).

X. Which tells of the corruption of our noble thinker and what strange things he began to say.

At this point in the thread (page 25), I was talking to phyllo who asked me why genocide was wrong. I gave him the obvious answer; suffering, etc. I hope this would remove the piece of idiotness that thinks morality is bunk without a god. Fact is, we only need morality because there is no god. Unfortunately, it had the opposite effect. Phyllo replied to me by writing, " A group becomes powerful, they portray themselves as superior, they portray the victims as subhuman, they exterminate the others. It's good, it's essential, it's necessary, it's right" (25).

To my total shock, MathIsACircle then claimed, " I do not approve of genocide; I find it revolting. Whether or not it is "wrong" is an entirely different matter" (25). This confused me, because I have never myself found something revolting unless I thought it actually was revolting. To this day, I have not been able to locate the exact point where the noble thinker became corrupted. Within the space of a few pages, there was objective beauty in Tchaikovsky, but not even genocide was objectively immoral. Perhaps there's just a divide betwixt beauty, and morality. Though, that can't be the case---because he's also claimed, now, there's nothing objectively beautiful about Tchaikovsky.

XI. In which is concluded our short history which contains more truth than wisdom.

This brings the reader nearly to page 30. I assume the rest will be fresh enough in his memory not to need to be recounted.

XII. Other notes.

A straightforward exposition of my theory used in this thread can be found here: viewtopic.php?f=1&t=176400&p=2251144&hilit=fictionalism#p2251144

1. On page 3, you can find argument that, if Faust is a perspectivist, then he is either a subjectivist, or a solipsist. This was significant, because Faust thought he was neither.
2. In light of #1, on page 4 it is discovered that Faust is not a perspectivist, in any normal use of the term.
3. MathIsACircle has often held me to the position of hedonistic utilitarianism----based solely off of this comment intended to be funny: "I was once a nihilist, before a pair of tits made me a hedonic utilitarian." (4)
4. On page 14, you can find iambiguous arguing that a bowl of diarrhoea is more beautiful than a tuna nicoise.
Last edited by von Rivers on Sat Oct 15, 2011 5:59 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby Faust » Sat Oct 15, 2011 5:43 am

What?
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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby von Rivers » Sat Oct 15, 2011 6:00 am

Faust wrote:What?


It's my short history of the thread...
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Re: In which is discussed a topic of some importance to a va

Postby phyllo » Sat Oct 15, 2011 2:16 pm

Can I play Loki in this opera?
A very great part of the mischiefs that vex the world arises from words. - Edmund Burke
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