A Conversation for The Freedom From Faith Foundation
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Fragilis - h2g2 Cured My Tabular Obsession Posted Aug 24, 2003
Hello, fellow members. Pardon my interruption of the current topic. I have two brief things to note. First, I'm back and kicking at h2g2. I left in disappointment during the time of the great Moderation. I've decided the water is warm enough again now to rejoin. So hello again to those of you who remember me. Second, I seem to have been engaged to answer a philosophical question I feel unprepared for. I suppose this is what I get for writing about agnosticism. I might be able to rack my brain and/or read some things to answer properly, but I haven't the time right now. Perhaps someone else would like to discuss whether it is possible to believe in nothing at all, and if so, how. The question is here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/brunel/F54981?thread=309792
Stopping the spin
Noggin the Nog Posted Aug 24, 2003
Not so fast, Fnord. There is a difference between a perfect crystal and an imperfect one, or between the perfect tool for a particular job, and an imperfect one. But that's the rub - these things are perfect relative to something specific; their perfection can't be generalised to some abstract concept of perfection. And humans are simply too multipurpose for a generalised perfection. We have to manage with better and worse aspects of what we are.
As for the controllers - spread the system to encompass the limits of its connections, and all control lies within the system, mediated by positive and negative feedback and feedforward connections. After that it gets complicated.
Noggin
Stopping the spin
Mal Posted Aug 24, 2003
When people say that, in other words, they don't mean the abstract Perfect, they mean that it's a better crystal, a better tool. You can't get an abstractly Perfect crystal, one from which all other crystals derive their form, at least not in this physical world. So when perfect and imperfect can describe the same thing, they can mean the same thing, too.
(Now we begin to see the advantages of hardcore solipsism)
The control system you described isn't true control at all.
Stopping the spin
azahar Posted Aug 24, 2003
A 'perfect' crystal is still only a matter of opinion, is it not?
Or did you already say that?
az
Stopping the spin
Mal Posted Aug 24, 2003
If we didn't, it was implied. But let's not get back into the "everything's relative" old chestnut.
Stopping the spin
Mal Posted Aug 24, 2003
Even though it is.
*Especially* though it is.
'lo, Zucchini. Haven't seen you around for a while.
Stopping the spin
Noggin the Nog Posted Aug 24, 2003
For a crystal of a given substance there *is* such a thing as a perfect crystal. It will not, of course, be a perfect anything else, since its perfection is relative to its being a crystal of a given substance, which has an agreed definition. There's no agreed definition of a perfect human being, or perfect nothing in particular, though.
Noggin
Stopping the spin
Zucchini Posted Aug 24, 2003
'lo Fnord. Yeah I've been quiet - I've had almost no interesting comments or thoughts to make for two months now. Either I've gone stupid, or I've had a revelation and realised that nothing makes any sense.
For example:
Crystals, you say? Perfection, eh? Well, there you go.
Stopping the spin
Noggin the Nog Posted Aug 24, 2003
In what sense would a truly flawless diamond be imperfect (as a diamond)? There may, or may not, be such a thing, but there is an agreed standard, so the term has meaning, a concrete application.
It'll pass Zucchini; I had a spell like that myself, recently, but I seem to be getting over it; although whether anyone else thinks I'm making sense again (again?) is a moot point.
Noggin
Stopping the spin
Mal Posted Aug 24, 2003
Are we going to get onto Whatitsface's Theory of Forms, here?
Stopping the spin
azahar Posted Aug 24, 2003
<>
Yes, but it is still a subjective concept, an opinion. And so perfection cannot actually exist except in the mind of the observer. So there is no such thing as objective perfection. Is there?
az
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M.A.L -3 Posted Aug 24, 2003
I don't see any agreed standard. As Azahar said, it's subjective. What's whatsisface's theory of forms?
Stopping the spin
Noggin the Nog Posted Aug 25, 2003
Whatshisface is presumably Plato, who believed that the things we perceive are shadows of perfect forms of said things that exist... somewhere or other.
What I'm proposing is much more modest - merely that for a small class of things (crystals was a concrete example, perhaps of a geometrical form) we can define (though not prove the actual existence of) perfection, such as a perfect circle. What I'm arguing *against* is the possibility of some universally applicable general concept of perfection - Perfection as Absolute. Perfection here is objective (small O), rather than *merely* subjective, because there is a standard outside of the individual, but I'd agree that it's not Objective (capital O), because it's an assigned property, not an inherent property.
Noggin
Stopping the spin
Noggin the Nog Posted Aug 25, 2003
Oh yes. And what is "true control", hmm?
Noggin
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azahar Posted Aug 25, 2003
hi Noggin,
What do you mean by 'true control'? Can you give an example?
az
Key: Complain about this post
Stopping the spin
- 3641: Fragilis - h2g2 Cured My Tabular Obsession (Aug 24, 2003)
- 3642: Noggin the Nog (Aug 24, 2003)
- 3643: Mal (Aug 24, 2003)
- 3644: azahar (Aug 24, 2003)
- 3645: Mal (Aug 24, 2003)
- 3646: azahar (Aug 24, 2003)
- 3647: Zucchini (Aug 24, 2003)
- 3648: Mal (Aug 24, 2003)
- 3649: Noggin the Nog (Aug 24, 2003)
- 3650: Noggin the Nog (Aug 24, 2003)
- 3651: Zucchini (Aug 24, 2003)
- 3652: azahar (Aug 24, 2003)
- 3653: Noggin the Nog (Aug 24, 2003)
- 3654: Mal (Aug 24, 2003)
- 3655: azahar (Aug 24, 2003)
- 3656: M.A.L -3 (Aug 24, 2003)
- 3657: Noggin the Nog (Aug 25, 2003)
- 3658: Noggin the Nog (Aug 25, 2003)
- 3659: Madent (Aug 25, 2003)
- 3660: azahar (Aug 25, 2003)
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