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Old 04-14-2003, 12:52 AM   #31
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Red face to wit is to unphilosophize

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Yes, but this is not the sense in which I started using the word appearances. All we have is appearances, even the "true motive" is what appears so to the observer.
Painfully incorrect. The word “appearance” has its own antonym in the history of philosophy: reality. Within this assertion you are gambling on a philosophical position of your own, i.e. phenomenalism or subjective idealism, similar to what the good old Bishop Berkeley espoused or Protagoras.

Moreover the “true motive” is an inference from the appearance to the observer, not what is “apparent.” What is apparent may be good enough for the uncritical thinker, who is comfortable with taking things at face value, but not for the philosopher, or the subterranean thinker who rejects the prejudices of his day and explores deeper, backwards, further. Try again!

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...Because your claim excludes people that appear humble, not because they wish to do so but because they all p[eople as equal and see their place in the world less egotistically than you seem to assume.
Dig a little deeper, and stop pulling up short and be so quick to settle for less, Page. Look past that apparent lip-service to democratic or liberal principles and you might be able to locate the herd mentality at the origin of those egalitarian doctrines.

My claim is that whoever promotes any form of egalitarianism has a certain psychological motive to see distinct people equally.

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Just as much as Russell and Witty.
Don’t be shy, and explain yourself.

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I don't understand. Please provide an example of an impure appearance.
Idioms.

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No, but I am prone to bob when accused of overstatements.
Perhaps I am taking your statements at face value, now, aren’t I?
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Old 04-14-2003, 07:56 AM   #32
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Default Re: confusion of the term sacrifice

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Originally posted by Tyler Durden
The word 'sacrifice' has been misused in about 99 percent of the time. If it is to mean a loss, and its antonym is gain, then one never truly sacrifices anything in acts of supposedly altruistic nature.

One does not sacrifice his life to save his family unless he values his life more than his family's.

If i thought my life is more important than my entire family's then killing myself to save theirs is accurately a "sacrifice."

As it stands, there are no such altruistic actions.
If I die to save my family and I value them more than myself, am I not sacrificing 'my experience of my better family', and thus making a sacrifice, ie, my death is also my loss of something better than me (loss of the family to me), hence a true 'sacrifice'?
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Old 04-14-2003, 08:09 AM   #33
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Inconnu,

You are pressing the same thought that I am pressing (I am waiting for an answer to my last post) against Tyler Durden. I am not sure that I have a clear understanding of TD's definition of "sacrifice", but it appears to make not only altruism (if altruism involves sacrifice) impossible, it makes sacrifice impossible.

His definition is supported by the dictionary definitions he says, though I don't see this either.

As I said, I am waiting for a response-- we will see.

Bob Stewart
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Old 04-14-2003, 08:47 AM   #34
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Cool Unphilosophize? Impossible, to wit.

Bathroom Tyler:

Quote:
Originally posted by Tyler Durden
The word “appearance” has its own antonym in the history of philosophy: reality.
Appearance and reality are not opposites. Do you agree that we cannot know "reality" directly?
Quote:
Originally posted by Tyler Durden
Within this assertion you are gambling on a philosophical position of your own, i.e. phenomenalism or subjective idealism, similar to what the good old Bishop Berkeley espoused or Protagoras.
I don't see how you reach this conclusion. (My position, therefore, may not be what it appears to be. )
Quote:
Originally posted by Tyler Durden
Moreover the “true motive” is an inference from the appearance to the observer, not what is “apparent.”
That's why I put the term you used in quotes.
Quote:
Originally posted by Tyler Durden
What is apparent may be good enough for the uncritical thinker, who is comfortable with taking things at face value, but not for the philosopher, or the subterranean thinker who rejects the prejudices of his day and explores deeper, backwards, further. Try again!
Again, how is it that you know reality directly?
Quote:
Originally posted by Tyler Durden
Dig a little deeper, and stop pulling up short and be so quick to settle for less, Page. Look past that apparent lip-service to democratic or liberal principles and you might be able to locate the herd mentality at the origin of those egalitarian doctrines.
What "apparent lip-service to democratic and liberal principles" are you talking about? I thought we were talking about altruism as a behavioral trait, not whether anyone's princples makes them altruistic or not.
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Originally posted by Tyler Durden
My claim is that whoever promotes any form of egalitarianism has a certain psychological motive to see distinct people equally.
Are you saying that an egalitarian attitude is a precursor to altruism? Consider the economic benefits that accrue from increases in cooperative/group behavior.
Quote:
Originally posted by Tyler Durden
Don’t be shy, and explain yourself.
Haha. I can't - why do you think I'm philosophizing?
Quote:
Originally posted by Tyler Durden
Idioms.
So, an impure appearance is a statement whose meaning is not clear (when compared to the dictionary definitions, due to common usage) whereas a pure appearance results from using literal meanings only?

BTW I've always wondered what the difference is between a literal mening and a "real" meaning.

Cheers, John
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