BCSbunk wrote:
You can have policelike entities and laws without a governing body.
I'd be curious to hear how you would think this to be possible, apart from an idealistic, practically impossible Utopia concept (which would then defeat the purpose for needing such protection).
ernest_t_bass wrote:
The biblically described "authorities" that you are supposed to respect, are those that watch over you. I believe that perhaps some sort of "governing body" is need to provide the public with information, and "safety nets" when needed, but simple things, like smoking ban for instance, are not things for which our "governing bodies" should have control to take from us.
They did their job, they told us it was bad. Now it's up to us to make the choices. The "governing body" too often feels that the public is too stupid, so they MUST make the decisions for them.
I don't buy one bit of this.
How did we go from a school within epistemology to something that might be moved to another forum?
If you are indeed interested in Existentialism, I encourage you to first do a little research on epistemology (the study of why we believe/know what it is we believe/know) in general. Decartes undertook the challenge of finding what could be known without taking any blind epistemological assumptions, which is when he came up with the famous line: "I think, therefore I am."
In this, he simply said that because he could even ponder the question, he had to exist in some form. He didn't assume that it was physical, as there was no authority to which he might appeal that would prove his sensate experiences weren't one giant hallucination.
It's interesting stuff, to say the least. If you live in the Akron area, I have some reading on the subject, to which you are welcome.