Most "anarchist" ideals are utopian, and would only "work" in small, voluntary groups of people with some measure of morality and respect for one another, — IvoryBlackBishop
What is your response to the burning fawn scenario with respect to God? — Wallows
That's a long phrase to solve a problem I don't think I experience. In what contexts are you thinking we should substitute something like that? And if we really think we KNOW, that would not be conveying what we mean. I am not forced to take them at their word, but it does give me a clear message about they own assessment of their assertion. If someone I respect a lot says 'I know X to be the case' that is taken by me in one way, from a stranger another and so on. But it gives me a clear mess about that person's sense of what they are conveying. WE all know that people can think they know when in fact they don't have good ground for it. I don't feel compelled to accept what they say, but it does provide extra information. If someone goes out of their way to say 'to the best of my knowledge' I will think they are less certain or that's how they want to couch all their assertions. I won't know which until I get to know them. So, it's still not clear. And if it is someone I know, then I have a good sense of their thoroughness. I see no loss in the current common use of 'I know'. If I was naive and felt compelled or their were rules that I was compelled to accept any assertion starting that way, well, that would be a problem. But that's not the world I live in. If they say 'I think...' that conveys something else. And people can manage to convey their utter certainty and that one would be stupid to disagree with them when using 'to the best of my knowledge'. Just imagine that said in a condescending way. I don't think people should start using this long phrase that in itself might be incorrect. Perhaps they have actually seen counterexamples to what they are asserting so it isn't to the best of their knowledge, but they stubbornly believe. Any formulation is going to still be problematic if we conflate what the person means and the truth value of what they are saying.Usually, when we want to do this, we look for less ambiguous phrases to get the point across. The ambiguous "I know", can get substituted with "to the best of my knowledge", which seems to encapsulate the phrase into something coherent or palpable. — Wallows
When a person says, "I know", what do they really mean? — Wallows
Once an artist accepts his work as being good enough, he fails to improve it.There is always room for improvement. We will benefit more by striving for perfection. — Wittgenstein
Could you give an example of a kind of qualification that might make you think an assertion was less vague?Well, that's an observational statement about something within the world-view of any participants of the conversation. Rather scientific and exact. But, most of the language isn't like that, so we might assume this as a statement immune to the sentiments of the need to qualify statements that are quantitative. — Wallows
It may, sometimes, be used in this way, but I hear it used in contexts that do not fit this criticism. I see it used in reaction to petty judgment that has nothing to do with mediocrity. Further The most amazing people make mistakes. In fact many of them make more mistakes than other people. To find new things: inventions, innovations, works of art - you have to make mistakes. If you do not make mistakes you are not taking risks and this will lead to mediocrity.It is an excuse for mediocrity. — Wittgenstein
I found this a bit hard to understand but you can let me know where I misunderstood.-Actions are considered good or evil (right or wrong) based on their goal which is being accomplished by the consequences of that particular action.
-If the goal being accomplished is good then something is considered right.
- As I stated earlier, we need context to judge an action.
-That context is a goal, which shows why someone did something.
-Therefore, we measure actions based on the goal being accomplished.
-The ends justify the means. — Lawrence of Arabia
That's a terrible use of that phrase, and, of course, many people use this idea idiotically. But in the context where something more easily forgivable, an error in judgment, for example, is the issue, it could be a useful phrase. And it could be a gentle reminder to the person that they have done some crappy stuff also, in their time.If I tell you how my family member verbally abused me, does a response of "Well, nobody is perfect.", — chatterbears
For a starters, no immigration officer anywhere in the world has never asked me or anybody else at the border for any such diagnose. — alcontali
and there can be testing by doctors involved, see article.Mental Illness a Barrier to U.S. Immigration?
It's not uncommon for immigrants with a mental illness or mental disorder to be deemed "inadmissible", and barred from entry to the U.S.
It was rare, but then perhaps the leader ape's behavior had been rare. Justifiable homicide is fairly rare also, but it still falls inside moral norms. I suppose even the leader's behavior might have been at an extreme end of norms. IOW I think, in general, humans can murder, but not animals. Unless they have been clearly part of devastated societies and they have societies. LIke the elephants that have been raping even Rhinos, but they've come from devastated packs and had no parenting, this due to humans. I think humans, with their ability to coldly calculate long term gains and so on can decide to go outside the norms of the group and murder. I think it can make sense to speak that way about us. Animals - and I give animals more credit than most humans do for being capable of things we are - I don't think have criminals in the same sense we do.rom what I’ve read actions like this are not within their norms. — Brett
Meaningful work, good social connections, time in nature, enough sleep, the lack of stress created by social media are all things that can eliminate the need for medication (or, really, show that the medical model is confused) in many many cases. A great book on the subject is...Can you provide your thoughts about the specific type of change that would allow those with mental disorders or issues to lead a more fulfilling life? — Wallows
I have no idea what this means. To me rational is an adjective referring to the process via which one decides or concludes something. One can even rationally decide something that, it turns out, is incorrect. This happens in science, policework, everyday life. Good things would either refer to things that are Good in and of themselves, whatever that means or they are things that are good for someone, from their perspective. To me this is all apples and bicycles.Let's take for example the notion that;
What is good is rational. — Wallows
The art is often bad and I think part of the problem is that people think the verbal thinking aspects of the art are enough. It is a symptom, but also like the phrase 'do over' in a game of chess or something. If you are thinking any move you make can be taken back by calling out this phrase, you will not put as much effort into that move you are going to have to live with. If you think you can make your work meaningful by telling people what to think, you are not going to focus as much on the non-thinky parts of the art. In general. I am sure some do. See, something you know you can or will do in the future can affect what you do now, while making the art and while conceiving of what makes it powerful or beautiful or great.And if the art is bad, who cares about the labels? — unenlightened
If the art is good, the artist saying the meaning can and I think will in most cases detract from the art, since it will be seen through a narrower lens. I also think that it is part of the same wave as the NOT paying attention to the sensuous values. If people did not think they were going to make their art work through explaining what it means, they might realize they need to make powerful art in and of itself, and this power will include things that are not related to verbal thinking.If the art is good, who cares about the labels? — unenlightened
This sounds a lot like speech affecting things. IOW if libel cannot cause harm, how can abstract disccusions and writing about objectification be problematic or influencing the opinions of other generations. Or if you allow that presentation of certain ideas can influence opinions of other generations, how would this be a problem, since it cannot be responsible for any behavior. so, some ideas are floating around in some minds, that's not a problem. It certainly doesn't affect you in a problematic way and it cannot be blamed for any behavior since behavior is caused by other things. Just as any harm caused by someone saying that so and so was a rapist in the south of that time was not causal, so ideas about objectification or how women are presented in pornography cannot be causal in any way that causes harm.It seems a far bigger problem to me to see a focus on sexual appeal as a problem--and that's what tends to happen. Any focus on sex/sex appeal/sexual attactiveness/etc. is seen as "objectification" (and usually as "misogyny" etc.) It's disheartening how people let rhetoric like that take hold so that it winds up more or less becomes unquestioned and simply accepted as a norm for an entire generation, to an extent where it even starts influencing the opinions of other generations. — Terrapin Station
And presumably writing doesn't either. So, what is problematic about these coming generations having a certain attitude. I suppose you could argue that you dislike these people having wrong attitudes in their minds, but since these wrong attitudes cannot cause harm or behavior, I don't see the problem. (I just realized it almost reads like a kind of dualism - thoughts in a transcendent realm where they cannot be causal (along with words and speech) and matter where harm can take place. Or at least matter where direct causes can happen and verbal communication which cannot be causal.) But perhaps you are feeling empathy for these coming generations, that their minds will have false ideas. But then this cannot be harm. If it were harmful, then saying wrong ideas would be harming people. It would be a kind of weapon, directly causing people to suffer having the wrong ideas in their heads.Speech doesn't directly cause other actions, or at least it can not be shown to. — Terrapin Station
↪Coben So I can talk about art as long as I am not talking about my own art, or as long as I am not presenting art, or something? Seems a bit arbitrary. — unenlightened
I would have thought that the problem is not that the artist says something about their work, but that the work is not worth talking about — unenlightened
I would use it in a certain way - I don't want to make the claim that everyone does. I would use it to describe the following:So, What does Scientism actually mean? — Pseudonym
Here's the thing...So you don't even know what the instruction means? How do you know how to treat your neighbours, the needy etc if you don't even know what "do good" means? And why are you advising people on what their obligations are in society when you don't have sufficient expertise, I thought people just making stuff up based on what they reckon was all "systemless bullshit" to you? Is that what you're engaged in now? — Isaac
As you seem to be interested in particular details of Islam, I was simply referring you to religious scholars who will be more than happy to answer your questions. As I wrote before, Islamic law limits unilateral individual obligations to wider society beyond the extended family to a very reasonable burden. Therefore, if you want something from other people you will generally have to compensate them. — alcontali
If this person does not provide us with an objective procedure that allows us to verify his solution, then it is completely in accordance with reason that we do not trust his solution. — alcontali
I'm not saying the medication is flawed.
I'm saying the law that forces medication (in the UK at least) is flawed. It treats too many cases the same way, and could be improved. There's a wealth of knowledge we're missing - I hoped to change that. — Qwex
Modern psychology includes hundreds of approaches, different opinions about treatment, diagnosis, causes and more. I would also say it seems like your posts are more concerned with psychiatry than modern psychology in general.Is modern psychology flawed? — Qwex
What do you mean by 'mental malfunctioning'.Psychologists pin all mental illnesses on mental malfunctioning. — Qwex
Mental illness could be both mental malfunctionng AND statistical anomolies.My argument is that mental illnesses are, most of the time, statistical anomalies. — Qwex
Though compared to pre-Reagan, not very many. What country are we talking about?Mental Health laws force medication on some mentally ill people. — Qwex
You are saying that in your particular case, the treatment you have received, in this case a medication, is not working for you. Unless we are expecting perfection, this does not mean that psychology, or pharmacological treatments for mental illness, is flawed. I mean, I am extremely critical of the current over-medication of people and the general use of the chemical imbalance model for treatment emotional pain and more. But, it seems like you are trying to draw very broad conclusions from a single case. Your own.Evidence: antipsychotics target a neuroreceptor called Dopamine.
Evidence: I'm on antipsychotic medication by law.
Partial Evidence: It has done nothing. Try a different one would be psychology advice.
Conclusion: it's a flaw in psychology. — Qwex
If res cogitans is unreal or 'less real', then conclusions based on it are even less tenuous. Which should make people laugh, but it tends not to. It's really biting one's mother's teat rather than being grateful.Fruit of the poisonous tree (objection) is a legal metaphor in the United States used to describe evidence that is obtained illegally. The logic of the terminology is that if the source (the "tree") of the evidence or evidence itself is tainted, then anything gained (the "fruit") from it is tainted as well.
Though since adhd medications are generally uppers, I am not sure we have solved a problem, but perhaps shifted it down the line.For example chronic constipation can lead to mental health problems (due a build up of toxins) and some depression is caused by conditions like ADHD and the person recovers by being given ADHD medication. — Andrew4Handel
Diet, contact with nature, meaningful work, friends, physical activity, as some examples, have all made incredible changes in the emotional experience of people and not using medication. A great book on the subject is....There have been some strange solutions to mental health problems where the cause was unexpected. — Andrew4Handel
yes, which is fine, but then given the words apparant position-taking on substance, it would probably be good to change the term.What 'physical' comes down to a lot of the time is, 'what science might agree to exist' — Wayfarer
Most belief systems start with a default. Then consider this default as not having an onus in the way other defaults do. This is fine if we view such options as generative, and science has generated incredible knowledge, but problematic when it is considered confirmed ontology.Scientific analysis 'brackets out' the subjective — Wayfarer
If 'physical' has no definition, then nothing is necessarily beyond the physical sciences.We embody cultural tropes, archetypes, potentialities, and so on, that are beyond the purview of the physical sciences as such (although not necessarily in conflict with them.) — Wayfarer