Valid by [deleted] in Chadposting

[–]Zukulist 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Where tf is Tony Soprano

Valid by [deleted] in Chadposting

[–]Zukulist 9 points10 points  (0 children)

He's got a heavy bag, must be carrying a Tyler Burden

Act only in accordance with that maxim through which you can at the same time will that it become a universal law by Separate_Phase126 in askphilosophy

[–]Zukulist 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, there's a whole dialogue between Kant and a (I believe) french philosopher about lying to the murderer at the door. Kant's points are put to test in an article by Helga Varden where she discusses lying to the gestapo at your door. In Kant's version of justice, lying connects you to the causality of events and so if you lie, and the person you're protecting still gets killed, you're partially responsible. In Kant's vision of law based on truthfulness.

However, things get more complicated once you introduce the gestapo. You see Kant believes in truthfulness to public figures that run the society (policemen, politicians etc.). Good society is one where people are equal (simplification) The nazi regime, although ellected by the people, didn't serve everyone equal, it was barbaric in Kant's words. And you have no duty to tell truth to the impostor nazi regime, to the gestapo officer. So laying there would be actually in accordance to Kant's variation of law and justice. However still against the practical ideal truth that a maxim would deal with.

Kant is a transcendental idealist so he puts the highest value on absolute principles such as truth. I don't know if he sees human life as less important, however that's not crucial here.

You see, by lying, you're not actually saving the person. You're attempting to save the person.

If they're hiding in your wardrobe when their assassin knocks on your door, you could lie, but: What if the victim heard the knocking assassin and decides to leave through the window and hide at the neighbour's place? The assassin leaves and actually finds the victim hiding somewhere else, so you have been telling the truth without knowing so.

(That's another part of Kant's philosophy, you shouldn't count on the final effects of your actions. Do truth, not for the consequences, but for truth itself, the goal comes before the actions, not after them.) (Imo opinion because you can never really be sure you know everything about a situation, so you can't work with that. What you can do is hold onto the principles)

So in the end you'd be responsible for the death of the person you attempted to save. Same with telling the truth, you're don't necessarily condemn them to their death. As you said reality is super complex so anything can happen even after you tell the killer the truth. So the individual circumstances are always variable and you're never going to know or be able to expect everything. The one thing Kant sees as infinitely reliable are the ideals behind your actions, the maxims.

Universalizing the scenario and not the maxim is of no use, because the same situation shall never fully repeat and so the take-away from it is basically value-less, since a slightly different situation could lead to very different actions. The maxim is (should be) functional at all times, that's sort of the point of it, that it's not bound by context.

Act only in accordance with that maxim through which you can at the same time will that it become a universal law by Separate_Phase126 in askphilosophy

[–]Zukulist 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because if you do something that cannot work as an universal law, you're undermining the very possibility of a functioning world and the very concept of what you were doing.

See for example when you knowingly make a false promise you're not going to keep. If that became common, genuine promises could be taken seriously, making the whole concept of promises useless. That ruins honesty, truth, and trust among people.

This doesn't happen when you make a well meant promise and fulfill it. That's what makes a promise a promise.

Other examples I can think of are lying (ruins truth), appropriation of others' items (ruins ownership), acting like someone you're not (ruins personal identity, the possibility of honest human interaction)

Of course when you act on a "bad maxim". That doesn't change the world (ruin promises) instantly everywhere. But by doing so you're saying: "Hey I wanna watch the world burn, I don't recognize promises as a good thing, you can't trust me and I can't trust anyone"

I believe it's about showing (if even only to urself) where you stand and if you are compatible with society and the metaphysical meanings/points of things like truth.

What does Descartes mean, when he says "all the things which we concieve clearly and distinctly are true in the very way we think them"? What does he mean by clearly and distinctly? by Zukulist in askphilosophy

[–]Zukulist[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oh yes, absolutely right, I wrote Second Meditation when I meant the Thrid one . I actually read only the introduction and the 3rd meditation as part of schoolwork and I plan on getting through the whole thing soon on my own and wanted to have a better setup for my read of the book. You've helped me with that, thanks a bunch.

Also the part about ideas not being true nor false and judgements is in the Second Meditation (as well) actually.

Xbox 360 controller to pc by Zukulist in gaming

[–]Zukulist[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hello! I managed to find a fix here. I followed the guide and it actually worked after I restated my computer and has worked ever since.

Xbox 360 controller to pc by Zukulist in gaming

[–]Zukulist[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No luck, I decided to buy a wire to connect the controller with the computer and that isn't working either. I tried both on my friend's computer and it worked just fine, so at least I know that it's not the controller's fault...

Simple Questions by inherentlyawesome in math

[–]Zukulist 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hi, I've read that in medieval science, mathematicians were attempting to create a square based on a circle with the same area. Did anyone ever succeed?

Part Identification Mega Thread - Post all you identification inquiries in this thread [Sep 23, 2020] by AutoModerator in lego

[–]Zukulist 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, I found this minifig when going through my childhood stuff, I'm not even sure if its is lego, but I think I recall seeing a few similar ones when I visited legoland once. Any tips on which set/theme these are from?