Why a paradox is useless - or, God and the omnipotence stone
Someone recently threw this at me... I got tired. No need to do anything more.
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Someone recently threw this at me... I got tired. No need to do anything more.
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Hello, reader. Yes, I'm addressing you. I'm posting this here so I no longer have to keep this dialogue in my head. It's often said that one's greatest enemy is oneself. That's why I started writing on this blog. Writing isn't just about writing for others. In my quest for philo…
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Aikido consists of techniques with weapons and bare hands using the opponent's force, or rather their aggressiveness and will to harm. These techniques aim not to defeat the opponent, but to reduce their attempt at aggression to nothing. I've spoken of my sad tendency to follo…
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We're in 1985. All of phi- Sorry, wrong start. I hate captious reasoning. One of my acquaintances recently pointed out to me, and rightly so, that being so stressed makes me easily adopt reasoning that appears attractive and true... without realizing it. I dedicate this post to …
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Article translated from English from J. Chastek's blog. Proposition: If beliefs are proportioned to evidence, commitments are proportioned to evidence. Commitments are either beliefs or have them as an essential principle. Proposition: If commitments are proportioned to evidence…
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It's been a while since I've written. For lack of clarity, vision, time and motivation. And because I need time to lay out a reflection, stretch it in all directions, properly appropriate it and be able to understand it. And there are so many interesting subjects that I really h…
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If you frequently read my posts, you've probably already noticed this quote from one of my favorite thinkers several times: "Deus itaque nescit se quid est, quia non est quid." "God does not know what thing he is, because he is not a thing." John Scotus Eriugena I dare hope th…
Read more →"We are in 1642. January 6, to be exact. And that's when the miracle occurs: the great scientist Galileo Galilei, also known as Galileo in France, has just died for the second time, in his villa in Arcetri, in Florence. Why die for the second time? Because he had already died in …
Read more →Motivated by one of my discussion forums where a contributor spoke about Democritus and his phrase about chance and necessity, I let myself reflect on this latter. It was popularized by Jacques Monod, known as a great French biochemist, in his preface to Chance and Necessity. He …
Read more →What if we talked about finality? I can already hear people grinding their teeth. Oooooooooh, the nasty finalist! To the stake, to the stake! Obscurantist! Papist! Patagonian zulus! Werewolf with buttercup grease! Dishwater corpse!1 We're going to talk about finalism, finality, t…
Read more →"Hey, do you know Epicurus? Why aren't you Epicurean?" I'm often asked this question. I'll take pleasure in answering it, not in a thorough way, but directly: for a true critique of Epicureanism, in due form, I encourage you to delve into the classic refutation of utilitarian hed…
Read more →More precisely, by what scientific criterion can we say that an element of a physical network is (im)material? Since the scientific method works by studying effects to infer causes, how can one distinguish at the scientific level a material cause from an immaterial cause? One of …
Read more →Yoohoo! After a small survey of several months, I was finally able to establish the list of the main (=there are surely others!) reasons why many young people my age are not attracted to religion. Reasons for unbelief "I understood the theory of evolution." "There's no need for …
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