but the only example you've given fits into this. Can you perhaps give an example of something logic can't apply to, has a meaningful answer, and isn't overanalyzed gobbledygook?
The nature of God. Lots of meaningful answers there. (And I'm both too lazy to come up with a new one, or to throw Godel at you)
The hell, here it goes: give me a consistent formal effectively generated theory including basic arithmetical truths and also certain truths about formal provability, that includes a statement of its own consistency while remaining consistent.
Nature of god is like asking to explain the wonder of a statue. "nature" as an adjective or adverb is a gobbldegook word, and means effectively "fill in the blank with whatever concept you care about", thus it has no correct answer. The answer would have to be overanalyzed, and yes, gobbldegook.
Godel... (insert wikipedia research). A theoretical mathamatician? seriously? Well my largest barriers as of right now are (a)I have no idea what a "formal effectively generated theory" is, (b) I have no idea what "truths about formal provability" are, (c) you're specifically asking for "a statment of it's own consistency while remaining consistent" otherwise known as circular logic. If I did understand those, I might give you something.
From what I read on wikipedia though, those requests are doable (even if its' circular logic). The problem comes when you want them to be complete as well.
We are considering it
I'm glad we agree (yes, I'm totally ignoring your tangent from the original question there)
Ignoring the point of the sentence, so you can take something out of context and misrepresent my opinion? Haha... alright then.
Found again here: http://www.generationterrorists.com/quotes/abhotswh.html
Cool, thanks! That's... logical. I guess. Except that it's probably... Unfalsifiable. Like God. Also, where do the photons go in that equation? They're energy without gravity.
I disagree that wisdom is connected to solace though. This might be a difference in our definitions of wisdom. I'd follow the version on wikipedia, which has nothing to do with comfort.
You mean the version above the "Contents" block? Because that's ones very wide and incorporates both our definitions, I think. There's a plethora of definitions and theories on that page. Let me put it this way: King Solomon was wise, Stephen Hawking isn't (or at least, not much above average).
See, I would consider Stephen Hawking as wise, and King Soloman as a fool. He may have been wise for his time and culture, but that's not saying much. Honestly, he famously solved the problem of who was the mother of a baby. what woman doesn't know the child
they gave birth to? were they not paying attention? Then he used psychology to see who would be willing to kill the baby. If the women were smart they would both say "that's heartless", and the trick wouldn't have worked. I wisdom constently produces optimum results or the desired outcome, then you and I are wiser than that I would hope.
The problem is when faith interferes with science, which happens ALL the time.
Yeah, not to mention terrorists. You can't blame the interference of a few on the many. It does NOT happen all the time. There's a lot of people out there who can actually tell the difference, they're just the ones who also know how to shut up properly.
This isn't the interference of the few, its' the interference by anyone who believes any part. The more they believe, the more likely one of their beliefs will interfere with a line of research. For example: When are babies considered alive and just as important as 20 year old people? If you believe in the immaterial soul being the source of life, then it makes sense that all the signs of life in a fetus mean it has a soul. It's perfectly logical to think that the soul inserts as soon as the fetus starts growing even. Thus they legislate a specific lack of support for harvesting and studying these embryonic stem cells (which are generally discarded after abortions or miscarriages).