There Will Be Peace by David Roberts (2005)

Poetry, Science|Religion|Philosophy No Comments »

There Will Be Peace

when attitudes change;
when self-interest is seen as part of common interest;
when old wrongs, old scores, old mistakes
are deleted from the account;
when the aim becomes co-operation and mutual benefit
rather than revenge or seizing maximum personal or group gain;
when justice and equality before the law
become the basis of government;
when basic freedoms exist;
when leaders – political, religious, educational – and the police and media
wholeheartedly embrace the concepts of justice, equality, freedom, tolerance, and reconciliation as a basis for renewal;
when parents teach their children new ways to think about people.

There will be peace:
when enemies become fellow human beings.

David Roberts (2005)

Faith by S.E. Kiser.

Poetry, Science|Religion|Philosophy No Comments »

Faith is not a passive thing–mere believing or waiting. It is an active thing–a positive striving and achievement, even if conditions be untoward

Faith is not merely praying
Upon your knees at night;
Faith is not merely straying
Through darkness to the light.

Faith is not merely waiting
For glory that may be,
Faith is not merely hating
The sinful ecstasy.

Faith is the brave endeavor
The splendid enterprise,
The strength to serve, whatever
Conditions may arise.

S.E. Kiser.

Conclusion: The End of Physics, by Lindley

Science|Religion|Philosophy No Comments »

We are already at the point where experiments are becoming impossible for technological reasons and unthinkable for social and political reasons. An accelerator bigger than the supercollider would be a vast technical challenge, and even if physicists are willing to try it, the likelihood of society paying the bills seems faint. Thermodynamics, however, is stronger than any political force; as the universe winds down, energy will become unavailable at any cost, and physics itself, in the form of the venerable structures of thermodynamics, will make it impossible for physicists to do any but a tiny fraction of the experimental work that would be needed to test a theory of everything. Read the rest of this entry »

Plato

Science|Religion|Philosophy No Comments »

Definitions

  • abstraction: is the rendering of the general case from which an instance occurs. It is the process of removing detail to expose the essential features of a particular concept or object
  • lacuna: is a gap in a manuscript, inscription, text, painting, or a musical work
  • polemic: a controversial argument, especially one refuting or attacking a specific opinion or doctrine
  • prima facie: at first glance, on the first appearance. In legal contexts prima facie evidence is considered sufficient to establish a claim in the absence of counter-evidence; hence, in this context prima facie evidence is relatively strong. In much philosophical writing, however, it is most often the case that reasons or evidence is called prima facie as a rhetorical preamble to presenting counter-evidence or counter-argument. Thus, in philosophical contexts
Tags: , , , , , ,

Plato’s Rationalism, and Aristotle by Stewart Shapiro – 3. MATHEMATICS ON PLATO

Science|Religion|Philosophy No Comments »

Definitions

  • abet: act of abetting; aid; To assist or encourage by aid or countenance, especially in crime; To support, uphold, or aid; to maintain
  • dialectical: is controversy: the exchange of arguments and counter-arguments respectively advocating propositions (theses) and counter-propositions (antitheses). The outcome of the exercise might not simply be the refutation of one of the relevant points of view, but a synthesis or combination of the opposing assertions, or at least a qualitative transformation in the direction of the dialogue.The presupposition of a dialectical dialogue is that the participants share at least some meanings and principles of valid inference, even if they do not agree
  • reductio ad absurdum: The method of proving a statement by assuming the statement is false and, with that assumption, arriving at a blatant contradiction

Notes

  • As Gregory Vlastos ( 1991: 107) put it, Plato ‘ was able to associate in the Academy on easy terms with the finest mathematicians of his time, sharing and abetting their enthusiasm for their work’.
  • Plato notes in passing that mathematics is ‘universally useful in all crafts and in every form of knowledge and intellectual operation-the first thing everyone has to learn’ (Republic, 523).
  • Plato realized that one needs intense and prolonged study for any ‘form of knowledge and intellectual operation’. Especially philosophy.
  • Everyone does only what he or she does best. Philosophy too is left to the experts-the Guardians. To rule well, the Guardians need to turn their focus from the world of Becoming to the world of Being. Thus, a crucial part of their education has to ‘turn the soul from a day that is as dark as night to the true day, that journey up to the veritable world which we shall call the true pursuit of wisdom’ (Republic, 521). Mathematics ‘draws the soul from the world of change to reality’. It ‘naturally awakes the power of thought…to draw us towards reality’-at least for the few souls capable of such ascent.
  • Plato saw mathematics as the gateway into the world of Being, a gateway that must be passed if one is to have any hope of understanding anything real. Recall the sign at the entrance to the Academy: ‘Let no one ignorant of geometry enter here.’ Mathematics, the prerequisite to philosophical study, demands a long period of intense study. No wonder that most of us have to live our lives in ignorance of true reality, and must rely on Guardians for direction as to how to live well.
  • Mathematics proceeds via proof, not mere trial and error.
  • In the Meno, Plato uses geometric knowledge, and geometric demonstration, as the paradigm for all knowledge, including moral knowledge and metaphysics.
  • In sum, for Plato the fumbling but exciting and egalitarian Socratic method first gives way to the elite rigour of Greek mathematical demonstration. This is then replaced with an even more elite ‘dialectical’ encounter with the Forms.
Tags: , , , , ,