T
Think_About_It
Guest
The expression and experience of love is totally subjective (you agree with me that far). The definition is operationalized within a range of criteria, and is not limited to or inclusive of every concept of love. Your concept of love may contain self-sacrifice, where my concept of love doesn’t necessarily (but only potentially). When you’re working with potentialities, you’re not working with objectivity.Do you mean the definition, expression and experience of love is totally different for each person? We certainly express our love in different ways but we cannot do it by torturing, mutilating or killing some one! Doesn’t love imply a desire for, and efforts to ensure, the welfare and happiness of others?
Not seeing the problem here. The objective fact is that we experience them, the subjective fact is how. A social necessity is only necessary to the end of our social benefit, and there is nothing objective in that we must attain this social benifit. Nothing is implied beyond the mind, whatsoever. Where are you getting this?I still don’t understand how subjective experiences can be social necessities unless they are based on objective facts. A social necessity suggests a relationship between individuals which exists beyond the mind.
Fair enough. They are entirely subjective then. As molecules, there world be no such thing as justice for us. As primitive, hundred-cell organisms, there would no such thing as justice for us. The only point, you now see, when we can suggest that justice exists is when we can say that it does, thereby making justice, freedom, goodness, or whatever, a subjective thing; it only exists because we say it does. That you acknowledge things like justice don’t exist in the animal kingdom is evidence that it is something of our own devising.“fairly” suggests an objective element.So does the fact that the basic tenets are found in many cultures - which can hardly be a coincidence. Could they be truths that are discovered rather than constructed? We soon discover when we lose our freedom, are treated unjustly or suffer as the result of evil…
You’re confusing important for and important to. Love is important to us as social creatures; love is not demonstratably important for anything, at least as it acts as a means to an end.I understand and agree but “less important” does not mean unimportant.Love cannot be irrelevant to the OP because it is one of the most important aspects of reality (if not the most).
I think I’ve successfully refuted this point above.Like justice, freedom, and goodness it exists whether we recognise it or not. Denying that they exist doesn’t make them disappear!
Okay, I was including testimony in with my experiences. I do rely on testimonies, especially for those demonstratably subjective experiences like love. A love, for example, that is forced to rely on speculations as to the reciprocation it desires is understandable, but a love that relies on speculations as to the existence of the beloved is hogwash. Science is based, likewise, on those testimonies - but testimonies that can be verified.From the testimony of others and the principles on which all knowledge is based.
What is science based on - apart from observation?
Many potential permutations are possible, I agree. What follows from that except that we are more advanced than animals? it’s not like animals are igonorant of the world around them, but their understanding is certainly primitive compared to ours.I mean we can understand a lot about its physical and chemical structure but it need not be so. We could be like animals which know nothing about atomic particles or evolution. It is also possible the universe could be so disorderly that very intelligent persons could not make sense of it.
Well, continuing on with the love example. I believe that my wife-to-be loves me very much, but I can’t confirm it as truth. How much less so if I couldn’t see, hear, smell, taste, or touch her? I have no problem speculating about experiences that we have in nature and in real time. I don’t have any reason to speculate about things outside of it.It is an assumption that is very difficult to dispense with. I’m glad you leave a loophole, implying that there are other truths apart from that which we observe.
My point was that our thoughts lead us to believe that we have knowledge, which, in the strictest sense, can never be confirmed. We can make guesses based on the world around us (and some of us make guesses based on possible worlds beyond us). I just stop one world shorter.And what about ourselves? Is our knowledge of our thoughts only apparent? Surely our knowledge is based on our thoughts…