All of Nick5's Comments + Replies

Nick500

It may be my personal ultra-pessimistic spin on what is otherwise topic full of diverse interpretation, but I've never had a positive view of living forever, and the idea of living for what could theoretically be millions of years with any number of unpleasant stimuli being simulated in this ad-hoc cognitive mechanism is, to say the least, disturbing.

I suppose hypothetically I could tolerate the mere existence of such a strange physical phenomena so long as it wasn't me waking up in that situation, although if there's a positive spin to be given to it, I suppose I could find myself in some sort of wonderful heaven. Either way, it's more than a little unsettling to me...

Nick520

Would I be the only person here occasionally terrified by the idea that they might 'wake up' as a Boltzmann brain at some point, with a brain arranged in such a way as to subject them to terrible agony, for an indeterminate period of time? I would really appreciate a response on this...

Nick510

I find this question kind of funny. I already feel that "that everything is permissible and nothing is forbidden", and it isn't DEVASTATING in the least; it's liberating. I already commented in this under "Heading Towards Morality". Morals are just opinions, and justification is irrelevant. I don't need to justify that I enjoy pie or dislike country music any more than I need to justify disliking murder and enjoying sex. I think it can be jarring, certainly, to make the transition to such extreme relativism, but I would not call it devastating, necessarily.

Nick5-10

There is no ought. I see only arbitrary, unjustified opinion based on circumstances that are organic, deterministic, and possibly irrelevant. I have a lot of difficulty 'getting into' the elaborate constructions of moral philosophy that I see; it all feels like looking at the same thing from different angles. I don't see how any 'authority' can exist to settle any matter on morality; What authority exists to declare something as unethical, or ethical, or how ethics themselves operate? Who has the authority to declare that others have authority, or have aut... (read more)

-2Peterdjones
Who needs authority where you have arguement? it's a matter of fact that people have been argued out of positions (particualry wrt race and gender).