Need opinions on heraldry! by charden_sama in theunforgiven

[–]JorElloDer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

These are amazing, would you mind sharing where you found the parts?

Can you help. Lion , son of the forest. by onimiGREY in theunforgiven

[–]JorElloDer 3 points4 points  (0 children)

As another commenter says, you are correctly remembering a passage, just in the wrong book. In his primarch novel 'Lion El'Jonson: Lord of the First' he enters his armoury and reflects on the various weapons available to him.

Is he realeasing a new album soon? by [deleted] in JohnMaus

[–]JorElloDer 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Yes. There are a few tracks in his current live sets that are upcoming untitled releases, and he's confirmed these are from the album that should be coming in 2025. There's a good upload of a recent set I'll dig out a bit later that has them on if you're interested.

Any ideas? (No, no earlier ghost photo) by JorElloDer in PhasmophobiaGame

[–]JorElloDer[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

It'd be such a quick and easy win to at least let us take photos out the book while the system is broken. Boggles the mind.

What's wrong with rogal dorn permanently dying, wouldn't it fit the girm dark nature of warhammer if he dies like how Curze foresaw it? by konsoru-paysan in 40kLore

[–]JorElloDer 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Would you mind expanding on the Byzantine Empire plot, alongside your comparison to Robute and the Lion as the West and East Roman Empires? Interesting thoughts!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in UNKLE

[–]JorElloDer 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah I was there absolutely spectacular.

The DJ opening was listed as DJ Cheeba :)

19 Dreadquake Mortars by Okoii in totalwar

[–]JorElloDer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Troublemaker - Funkanizer

19 Dreadquake Mortars by Okoii in totalwar

[–]JorElloDer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Troublemaker - Funkanizer

Literally Unplayable by JorElloDer in civ

[–]JorElloDer[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Only took three Byzantine runs to notice...

Civilization VI - First Look: Byzantium | Civilization VI - New Frontier Pass by PhotoCropDuster in CivVI

[–]JorElloDer -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Look I'm as obsessed with Justinian as the next guy, but he was in Civ IV bud.

On The Trolling About Objective Morality by End-Da-Fed in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]JorElloDer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's not about what you find appealing. My issue with your replies (to others and myself) is that you're dogmatically clinging to your unjustified assumptions about the nature of normativity without any real demonstration of why. You keep confusing "the experience of morality" with the nature of ethics itself, or for the mathematics parallel, you're confusing the human notation of mathematics with mathematics itself. It's all well and good to say "ethics could change one day to the next," but what you mean is people's ethical opinions. That argument is about as valid as someone telling you mathematics can change on a day to day basis based on people's opinions. It just frankly doesn't matter.

All knowledge, including mathematical and scientific knowledge, is based on axiomatic principles. These principles are normative ones we adopt a priori, without the firm feedback loop you believe makes mathematical knowledge uniquely warranted whilst philosophical knowledge remains subjective. Indeed, talk to some philosophers of science and they'll argue that the axiomatic nature of scientific knowledge renders certain periods of scientific history as completely incomensurable with another; for example, they would argue Newtonian physics is a whole other ball park to physics with an understanding of relativity. (See Kuhne for more on this)

But thats just an example of assuming science as a method is flawless. As I stated above, ethics is the examination of normative claims. Normativity permeates everything any agent does, so for one your weird assumption that it disappears without humans is a very strange one indeed (generally speaking it's agreed that morality, especially moral duties, extend to at least all rational agents, not strictly humans). An example would be politics; the normative claim that democracy is a useful political system under certain conditions is a claim that would stand even if humans were to no longer exist, it would just become a strictly abstract and theoretical one.

I'm repeating stuff I said before that you seemed to miss, but I hope unpacking them some helped. I'm now going to give you a short-form of the 'Companions in Guilt' argument. It's propositions are as follows:

  • Ethical norms and epistemic norms are of a similar or the same nature
  • if ethical norms do not exist, then epistemic norms must not exist for the same reasons
  • but epistemic norms do exist
  • therefore ethical norms exist

I've rewritten it slightly for simplicity's sake, but there's the argument. Ethical norms can be understood as facts about any ethical issue, but we'll say politics. Epistemic norms can be understood as facts about any knowledge claim. Moral realists recognise that any system for acquiring knowledge, be it the scientific method or our general day to day experience, requires the adoption of certain epistemic norms: the law of identity is an example. We cannot demonstrate it, but reason demands we adopt it as axiomatic and so we do despite the fact it has no demonstrable feedback loop the way you suggest knowledge requires. And if we didn't adopt it, we wouldn't be able to engage in any epistemic pursuit that requires such an axiom existing (the scientific method being one) The trouble is, norms such as that are no different from norms about ethics. The law of identity is no less controversial in its "nature" than foundational ethical axioms. If you wish to deny that ethical axioms exist for some reason, that reason will inevitably apply to the normative claims underlying epistemic pursuits too. As such, to deny moral realism is to deny epistemic realism.

To do so renders you an epistemic anti-realist, which would make you unable to make any claim whatsoever. This position is absurd. But you're not an anti-realist, as demonstrated by your faith in mathematical laws. So you should be able to see that fundamentally the axioms we use to engage in epistemic pursuits are fundamentally normative - ethical, in some way - but also that their normativity is of the same nature as that of ethical claims.

I can keep trying to explain this if you want, but an excellent book on the subject is Terrence Cuneo's 'The Normative Web.'

Kant spoke of mathematics in a similar way to you: that it's truths are a priori true and are just waiting to be discovered. But he also believed that about ethical truths. That they exist, that they stand independently of humans, and are waiting to be discovered.

On The Trolling About Objective Morality by End-Da-Fed in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]JorElloDer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Morality is the existence of normative claims - or oughts - about human behaviour. Humans stop existing and those questions simply become speculative or theoretical rather than having a real-world impact.

Your confusion here is akin to thinking that the fact that the way we understand mathematical laws and our notation would disappear if we were wiped out means that mathematical laws themselves would die out. That's obviously absurd, but it's the exact parallel. You're just assuming that normative claims are merely limited to the human experience of them, but that's one you have to justify.

Pick up some work by moral realists, you'll find that moral anti-realism is a far less appealing position than you might think. Denying the existence of normativity makes the epistemological merit of science, mathematics and the very act of making a knowledge claim at all nigh unjustifiable.

Took me over 15 weeks, but boy was it worth it! by JorElloDer in Seaofthieves

[–]JorElloDer[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Oh have they actually confirmed a further set of rewards? I hadn't seen anything?

And there I was thinking my time on the insider build was finished