About the tree, thing, I say trees can hear stuff, so... yeah. But I guess it won't make a sound thanks to my rule. "If something exists but no-one knows about it, how can it exist?"
Logic fail.Whobajube said:Exactly. To humans, the sound wouldn't exist... but it certainly exists to the dog! Our ears can't pick up on the vibrations at the frequency, thus they will never reach our brain, and it will not interpret them as sound.Fearzone said:How about this one:
What if a dog whistle is blown, and a human is there and a dog is there. Does the dog whistle make a sound?
Dark matter is not perceivable yet probably exists, as the LHC will prove or disprove. If it doesn't exist then physicists will have to rethink our understanding of mass and gravity all over again.Catkid906 said:About the tree, thing, I say trees can hear stuff, so... yeah. But I guess it won't make a sound thanks to my rule. "If something exists but no-one knows about it, how can it exist?"
I'm sorry then, let me clarify:vdgmprgrmr said:That logic is appalling.Cucumber said:You might consider looking at the question from another perspective:
Usually, humans consider something to be non-existing until you or someone else have seen it and can confirm it. It's just like religion.
Did someone ever hear the tree fall? No.
But did the sound exist? Apparently, yes?
Try and apply this logic to another case:
Have someone seen God before? No.
But does god then exist? Apparently, yes?
It does not work kinda right...
We wouldn't say god existed, but the sound from the tree did. Why do we think like this? It might be because of we're used to the idea of a falling tree producing a sound, because we've experienced it before. God doesn't, because we've never seen him before?
To draw a little conclusion from this one, I'd say that;
For something to exist, there must be someone else to confirm it's existence. If no one is there to acknowledge that 'something', it simply wouldn't exist in human eyes.
How do we know about... for example... that the big bang ever happened? We actually don't know, but we think it as possible because of we acknowledge that theory.
For something to exist, someone has to observe it? So you're saying that if a person doesn't see or hear something happen, it never happened? I generally avoid saying things like this to people here, but that's just fucking stupid.
I mean, by that logic, one could reasonably conclude that the human species has discovered everything in the Universe and have discovered every species on the planet and know everything that is possible to know, because if they haven't seen it, it doesn't exist.
Depends on how loud the tree yells.PSYCHOxDRAGON said:"If a tree falls in a forest, and there is no-one there to hear it, does it make a sound"
Yeah... I've got nothing.fullmetalangel said:Capable of being heard and being heard are seperate concepts. Extremely high frequency sounds aren't "capable of being heard" even if people are standing nearby, but is it a sound? Of course.Spaggiari said:most of those definitions mention "capable of being heard" in them which makes them inapplicable.
Definition 1b is viable however. I'll have to think of a valid refutation later.
Whatever, first point's not important.iain62a said:I wasn't putting philosophy and science at odds, I was just saying that humanity will always achieve more with Science than with intelligent discourse.Spaggiari said:Philosophy is the foundation of modern science and was the first field to formalize logic.iain62a said:Why can't rational thinking be part of philosophy?John_Doe_Damnit said:Rational thinking > Philosophy
But your right. I'll take hard evidence over metaphysical ramblings any day of the week.
Nicola Tesla > Friedrich Nietzsche
People are the only ones who can improve themselves. They can get all the self-help dvds in the world, and it'll do bugger all. The key to becoming a better person is self-discipline, and the drive to make something more of yourself.
Just a thought.
I don't know why you're putting them at odds.
Also the scientific method fails to provide any answers for this question so there goes the whole "science > philosophy" argument.
I'm not quite sure which question you're referring to either, and how this question invalidates my belief that science will ultimately achieve more than philosophy.
You do know, That Nietzsche spoke about making something more of yourself right? How every human should seek knowledge as their end goal in life?iain62a said:Nicola Tesla > Friedrich Nietzsche
The key to becoming a better person is self-discipline, and the drive to make something more of yourself.
Just a thought.
Bah, if philosophy can create microwaveable pizzas then i'll be more than happy to convert.Chiasm said:You do know, That Nietzsche spoke about making something more of yourself right? How every human should seek knowledge as their end goal in life?iain62a said:Nicola Tesla > Friedrich Nietzsche
The key to becoming a better person is self-discipline, and the drive to make something more of yourself.
Just a thought.
All Tesla did was go on about science and a bunch of other useless drivel when compared to a man as great as Nietzsche himself. I doubt very much Tesla ever gave hope to the hopeless and courage to the down trodden.
P.S Science is a useless tool of distraction to the human mind. It corrupts the ultimate destiny of every person, Which should be to acquire knowledge and spread it to others helping them. Not sitting around with your 1's and 0's.
In fairness, that's one of the major differences between western and eastern philosophies. Neither is necessarily more correct (and it's mostly up to personal tastes). Science and rationalism aren't inherently connected. If one takes the arguments of the Voltaire (among others) to the logical conclusion, happiness born of ignorance isn't real happiness. But, I would argue that you're creating false dichotomies. Does science in and of itself remove happiness, or does it (at worst) change it? Do you have to prioritize knowledge or creativity, rather than holding them both as important parts of the same whole of intellect?Jenny Creed said:Are measurable scientific achievements more important than happiness? How do you generate validity in your life? Is knowledge more important than imagination? There's some philosophy for ya.
Zen koans aren't valuable to the rational mind. Answering them doesn't get you any points. Searching for answers is the point. It's a whole other ballgame than science, and you'll have to adapt a mindset not based on science for it to begin to have any meaning.
Just throwing it out there.