Quote from: Prehisnake on July 25, 2015, 12:22:09 AMQuote from: Mmmmm Napalm on July 25, 2015, 12:21:21 AMQuote from: Prehisnake on July 24, 2015, 09:51:23 PMQuote from: I_IRONMAN_I on July 24, 2015, 09:48:31 PMA religion-bashing book?That's a crude way of putting it. But I haven't read it.But that's clearly what it is. The damn cover says "how religion poisons everything.""A religion-bashing book" is probably the most clear and concise manner in which to summarize the book.Not necessarily. "Bashing" has connotations of incoherence and irrationality, which I'm sure is absent from Hitchen's book."religion poisons everything."That's a pretty irrational and unfounded statement to me, which thus leads me to believe the book is going to ignore any and all good religion serves, and go out of it's way to put religion in the worst light possible.
Quote from: Mmmmm Napalm on July 25, 2015, 12:21:21 AMQuote from: Prehisnake on July 24, 2015, 09:51:23 PMQuote from: I_IRONMAN_I on July 24, 2015, 09:48:31 PMA religion-bashing book?That's a crude way of putting it. But I haven't read it.But that's clearly what it is. The damn cover says "how religion poisons everything.""A religion-bashing book" is probably the most clear and concise manner in which to summarize the book.Not necessarily. "Bashing" has connotations of incoherence and irrationality, which I'm sure is absent from Hitchen's book.
Quote from: Prehisnake on July 24, 2015, 09:51:23 PMQuote from: I_IRONMAN_I on July 24, 2015, 09:48:31 PMA religion-bashing book?That's a crude way of putting it. But I haven't read it.But that's clearly what it is. The damn cover says "how religion poisons everything.""A religion-bashing book" is probably the most clear and concise manner in which to summarize the book.
Quote from: I_IRONMAN_I on July 24, 2015, 09:48:31 PMA religion-bashing book?That's a crude way of putting it. But I haven't read it.
A religion-bashing book?
It has to be recognized as an imposition by the subject. Unless you can provide some examples showing otherwise...?
The pain experienced at death is distinct from death itself, though.
I'm not quite sure what you mean by that... an imposition is an imposition, regardless of whether the person acknowledges it or not.
It's a dangerous line of thought, that followed to it's logical conclusion, could be used as justification for genocide.
I worded that poorly. Not acknowledged, necessarily -- just that the imposition negatively affects them in some way.
Unless you're arguing that the cessation of experience is itself negative, which doesn't bode well with your efilist views.
I'm saying that if you want to defend a categorical proposition, you need to refer to some empirical ends. So, "killing is unethical" because if everyone went around killing each other we'd have some serious problems. It could never be a moral absolute, though, in the sense that "suffering is intrinsically bad" is an absolute.
But again, impositions don't have to negatively affect someone to be impositions. As long as things happen to people without their consent, I would consider it an imposition.
You're simply stating that the assertion "imposing death is wrong" is not always apt, right? That killing could, in some instances, be justified? Whereas the assertion that "imposing suffering is wrong" all of the time. Because I agree with that 100%.
Quote from: Prehisnake on July 25, 2015, 06:08:43 PMBut again, impositions don't have to negatively affect someone to be impositions. As long as things happen to people without their consent, I would consider it an imposition.I don't see how that would be a moral issue, though. I really do need an example for this =/
Quote from: Pendulate on July 25, 2015, 06:23:03 PMQuote from: Prehisnake on July 25, 2015, 06:08:43 PMBut again, impositions don't have to negatively affect someone to be impositions. As long as things happen to people without their consent, I would consider it an imposition.I don't see how that would be a moral issue, though. I really do need an example for this =/I steal your money and gamble it all away, with the intent of making you a millionaire. It just so happens that I win. I give you all my winnings, and make it clear that I had no idea that I was actually gonna win.this is an imposition, despite it having a positive outcomei had no right to do that, but are you gonna complain?...
Well, no, I wouldn't call that an imposition. And I wouldn't call stealing money from someone who is none the wiser is an imposition either.
Quote from: Pendulate on July 25, 2015, 06:45:39 PMWell, no, I wouldn't call that an imposition. And I wouldn't call stealing money from someone who is none the wiser is an imposition either.Who said you wouldn't be the wiser? You would be the wiser.
Obviously, what's being imposed upon you is poverty (albeit temporary). I don't think I should need to spell that out.
Someone lives a perfect life, totally free of pain and suffering.Still an imposition.Because you didn't ask for it. Simple.
Quote from: Verbatim on July 25, 2015, 06:53:49 PMSomeone lives a perfect life, totally free of pain and suffering.Still an imposition.Because you didn't ask for it. Simple.I didn't ask for a million dollars, either. But I'm hardly going to call it an imposition when you give it to me.
Because of its negative connotation--not its actual definition. You would be well within your right not only to call it an imposition, but to be upset with me, because I took such a colossal risk at your stake and without your permission.
The breach of consent is what defines impositions--not the outcome. That's all I'm saying.
Life is only an imposition to those who deem it an imposition
Of course suffering in life isn't merely a risk; it's an inevitability. Assuming a pain-free life was guaranteed, though, I don't think you could call it an imposition. Do you?
You think stealing from someone is an imposition even if they never realize they've been stolen from? I'm having a hard time understanding what you mean by "imposition", because as far as I'm familiar with the term it requires someone to be imposed upon... and that can't happen without them being affected in some way.
No, no, that's not what I mean at all. I'm saying that for something to be an imposition there needs to be a subject imposed upon; negatively affected in some sense. For example, say you're on a diet, and I sneak into your house in the middle of the night and inject extra calories into your food. You eat it, gain weight, and become depressed. You have no knowledge of why you're gaining weight, but it's fair to say that my deviousness is an imposition for you, right?Or say I drew an offensive picture on your forehead while you were asleep. People throughout the day point and laugh at you and make you feel really insecure. In this scenario, you're not even aware of any change in your appearance or surroundings; yet my actions have, again, been an imposition for you.Does that make sense?
Drifting back towards books and religion, Metro 2033 got a good few points on religion oddly enough. Not in any in-depth-analysis shit, but enough to satisfy given the whole scenario that the book portrays.
Quote from: SuperIrish on July 25, 2015, 10:32:56 AMDrifting back towards books and religion, Metro 2033 got a good few points on religion oddly enough. Not in any in-depth-analysis shit, but enough to satisfy given the whole scenario that the book portrays.yeah man. I actually did a big paper on the Christian symbolism that one can find in Glukovsky's world in my last year of school.