Many of the naturalists were really quite religious. I mean, the Abrahamic religions, to a great degree, don't consider nature important. It's not like they have theories about how water gets to the leaves in trees or the mating habits of mongooses. There are some things in the Bible that created tensions with astronomy and evolutionary theory. But most of nature is not described, so no contradictions exist. At least not for most modern people. Me, I'm a panpychist, so I think current science has filters, but that's another story. I'm old enough to remember the huge resistance the scientific community had to animals having consciousness, intentions, etc. Talk about filters. You could destroy your career believing in that in professional contexts. Right now plants are on the cusp. I think the most damaging filter is reductionism. Now no one goes around saying they are a reductionist. So, it's a pattern - that is also extremely useful - that inhabits a number of belief systems. Now science, of course, in general has been fixing the imbalance with reductionism and holism in recent decades, but it is still there, especially when we look at application - anything from psychopharmacology to genetic modification as examples in the life sciences being applied. The we look at emotional pain, through the filters of psychiatric distribution of psychotropics and via the pathologization of individual emotional suffering is a huge and extremely damaging filter. And gm is playing fast and loose with all of us, since, amongst other things, those companies control their own goverment oversight and can create research results per order. Apart from their incredible lobbying and campaign finance powers, and then also connections to other powerful industries. The viewing of all life as modular individuals with replaceable parts and as chemicl machines we should tweak and are capale of tweaking without catostrophic risk is a filter that worries me much more than the Abrahamic filters.You're right about that. I just can't think of any other filter that has so much more effect in distorting the observation of nature as religions. In my estimate, it is at least ten, maybe hundred times more potent a filter than the next closest one. — god must be atheist
I also said that I think that sometimes negative feelings in response to speech are a problem with the person with the negative feelings, not a problem with the person who said whatever they did to cause the negative feelings — Terrapin Station
Right but you said all we hate we forbid. That was the part I was disagreeing with. I could have been clearer.Not all we hate are immoral. — TheMadFool
I don't think you get to tell me what these people felt. And as public figures they are going to present themselves strategically - which could take lots of forms. We don't know for sure what they felt or thought. I do know from communication with people in the Civil Rights movement that despite being non-violent many felt a great deal of hatred for the systematic abuse. I know people feel things that fit the dictionary definition of hate, which I quote earlier, in situations much less abusive than what they experienced then. These are not people who are pathological in any way. Of course hatred can be a part of problematic patterns. But it need not be. And it often is not. And being raised in de facto apatheid situations or other situations with systematic discrimination or oppression, it is not problematic to have feelings of hatred arise, even with some regularlity.You can’t blame reality for being real, just because you don’t agree with it. And you won’t change external reality by hating it. Lincoln, Rosa Parks and MLK understood that. — Possibility
The claim you and GCB are making here is that hatred can sometimes be justifiable, and you keep watering down your definition of hatred to include frustration and anger in order to support your argument. — Possibility
hate noun, often attributive
\ ˈhāt \
Definition of hate (Entry 1 of 2)
1a : intense hostility and aversion usually deriving from fear, anger, or sense of injury
b : extreme dislike or disgust : ANTIPATHY, LOATHING
had a great hate of hard work
We are social mammals. Our limbic systems are inextricably involved even in our rational thinking.Natural, yes - it is an animalistic tendency. If you were incapable of abstract thought or of understanding how another person might feel, then yes - I could understand that you were unaware of the destructive nature of responding hate. But I don’t believe you are that ignorant. — Possibility
I think it is very unlikely that she did not hate the laws and at times hated her treatment. If you google 'rosa parks hated' you will find that people who have written about her think that hatred of the systematic racism was with her since she was a child. You don't have to be a violent person to hate, and when you are regularly treated with hatred, and for a black of that time, afraid to express yourself in so many ways and afraid to do so many things for reasons having nothing to do with who you are hatred is a natural and understandable response. Just as the body will swell up and become red if you are slapped hard. Once might induce anger or frustration. Systematic 'slapping' will lead to something stronger.I was arguing against the particular claim that Rosa Parks was an example of someone who acted on hate. — Possibility
Yeah, that doesn't change anything for me. I think it's good if the immoral assholes are open about it. It makes navigating the world easier for all of us. And if they say things I consider immoral, that's useful information and helps us all navigate.One thing we might be missing here, re making it explicit (I was assuming this would be understood), is that morality isn't just preferences about interpersonal behavior (more than significant than etiquette) towards oneself, but generalized, a la "how people treat each other, whether I'm involved or not."
Right but I think it would be strange to call someone with terrible hygiene or a brown recluse spider assholes. You said immoral was a greater degree of judgment than immoral. Here you are different categories of things that make you want to pull away from people.And just anticipating this response, it's not just because other people want to be around some of the stuff I'm talking about that I'd say it's not immoral. The vast majority of people, including me, wouldn't want, say, a brown recluse spider as a pet, or wouldn't want to hang out with someone who only showers once per year but who goes to the gym every day, etc. but I don't think those things are immoral. — Terrapin Station
I could try a new line with this one, why people can't express themselves with this kind of communication. A communication that seems assholish, but nothing compared to trying to hurt people by lying to them, but hey, that's me. At least we've found that you will censor.But I'm not in favor of banning anyone unless they're spamming in the sense of flooding the board with threads or posts that aren't at all conversational.
How did you measure that?Hate and acting on hate - by and on behalf of slaves - did more to fuel the fear and hatred that sustained slavery, than it did to abolish slavery. — Possibility
I didn't say anything about acting on it. If we are talking about slaves, they had very little power, so it was whites fighting and arguing against white practices, then actually killing people over it. It took the deaths, by intentional killing, of thousands of people to end slavery. Now most of the soldiers on the Northern side were probably not haters of slavery, except the black regiments, who while brave and serving well, played a small role in the whole project. But I am sure many abolitionists had hatred for the practice of slavery. Along with compassion, sense of justice, empathy and other motivations.You cannot argue that slaves who hated their masters and acted on it furthered the cause to abolish slavery in the US one iota. — Possibility
And again, sure hatred can lead to serious problems. So can 'good intentions'.One of the biggest fears of the slave states was a violent uprising similar to the one in Haiti from 1791 - the only ‘successful’ slave rebellion that established a free state ruled by former slaves (and was maintained by slaughtering the entire white French population in 1804 - hardly a justifiable act of hate). Hate drove all sides of the conflict in Haiti, and resulted in so much cruelty and violence. — Possibility
AGain, how do you measure this? determine it? If we talk about Rosa Parks and the Civil Rights movement, we are not talking about being motivated by frustration. Of course there was frustration in there. And of course there was yearning for something better and other motivations. But there was a lot of hate in there also. It is perfectly natural when one is treated as a rule in a hateful manner, over long periods of time, and this includes treatment of your children in this way, to hate back. The problem is not in that responding hate. Yes, sometimes this hate can lead to actions that are not ok. But the problem is not the hate, it is the cognitive elements - that revenge is good or even will help you, for exampe, is one cognitive element that can lead to acting out in certain ways. To tell those blacks that if they hate it is unhealthy and wrong, is just adding more oppression on them. And MLK himself was extremely pissed off towards the end of his life. Listen to his last speech in that church where he keeps saying 'If I should die...' There's rage in there. He got frustrated with the government and whites and since he was not just anti-racist but socialist he has a lot of issues that had gone from frustration to at least very strong anger.Frustration is sufficient to motivate positive, courageous, intelligent and realistic action towards a better outcome — Possibility
It's a reality that we respond to certain kinds of treatment with strong anger. That is a reality. We are social mammals with limbic systems tightly involved in our reactions to treatmetn by others. THAT IS REALITY. Many people tell us that we must accept the reality of what is outside us, but the inside we must suppress, detach from, radically control, judge. But the inside is real also. I can't see how I can come to love others if I hate parts of myself as my starting point, especially in the face of mistreatment.The situation is a problem, yes - but more so is hatred when it arises. The situation one is in may be extremely unhealthy and seem impossible to avoid. That the situation occurs is a reality, whether or not we want it to occur or think it should occur at all. We have to accept that reality first - whether we like it or not - before we can begin to address it. Hatred arises from a refusal to accept the reality as it stands. There are no healthy patterns of hatred. — Possibility
I agree that hate is likely not the only factor, but it would be one. I don't think frustration would be the main reason either. I was contrasting hate with frustration in relation to slavery.I’m not denying that slaves may have hated their mistreatment, or even hated the slave owners. I’m denying hate as the reason for the change, and I’m denying ‘acting on hate’ as the cause of change. To credit hate with the abolition of slavery or civil rights is a ridiculous notion - likely driven by fears over the rise of the conservative right. — Possibility
If you stick with any emotional reaction it isn't healthy, even the so called positive ones.Hatred may appear to be a ‘natural’ response, but it isn’t a healthy one, and it isn’t justifiable in my book. — Possibility
depends on what it takes to get a better one. Hatred comes up, when it is not pathological, in situations where one is extremely threated, judged (say, as not really human), mistreated in some extreme (for the standards you are used to) way, plus there are power issues or it is very hard to simply avoid to tune out whatever is doing this to you. Hatred, is a very strong version of anger and it means that the attack has been going on for a long time (or is perceived to have been) or is very intense. And we need a large mobilization of energy to do something. So, we get a huge motivation in the form of hatred. Slaves hated their masters, I would assume with great regularity and we understand that since they were insde systematic hate aimed at them, and then also direct mistreatment. They are many situations in capitalism (and communism of course) where it is not easy to just change jobs, get out from under the thumb of mistreatment. It is understandible that people will hate sometimes. It is not healthy to be mistreated with regularly, but the problem is not the hatred when it arises. The problem is that we are in that situation. Of course there are unhealthy patterns of hatred. I am not arguing that hatred is always a natural and/or healthy response to situations. And one can fixated on an emotional/attitudinal position. One can also feel comfortable hating when one actually is, deep down, confused or scared or both, and it feels easier to blame others. What I am disagreeing with is the idea that per se hatred is bad or unhealthy. This is like blaming the immune system for redness and swelling around an infection, at least, on many occasions.If you have to hate your dead end job or your boss before you will act, then you’re doing yourself a disservice. — Possibility
Perhaps I am wrong, but it seems to me truly intelligent people know they are smart and know they are smart than most other people, but this isn't their focus when engaged with learning, problem solving. Their focus is on what they do not know and what they need to know. When waxing comparative, it would be odd for them not to realize they are much smarter than most other people.Everyone always forgets about the other half of Dunning-Kruger: people who truly know a significant amount about something, enough to know how much they don’t know, tend to think lowly of their knowledge, even though it’s much greater than others. — Pfhorrest
The authors' findings refute the claim that people are generally prone to greatly inflated views of their abilities, but support two other tenets of the original Kruger and Dunning research: (1) that self-assessment skill can be learned, and (2) that experts usually self-assess more accurately than do novices. The researchers noted that metacognitive self-assessment skill is of great value, and that it can be taught together with disciplinary content in college courses.[16][17]
To strive to change the status quo in favour of something better is not hate. Frustration, sometimes - but not hate. — Possibility
Here, you say there is a difference in degree between asshole and immoral. A difference in degree. This is why you would not use the term 'immoral'. But you would use the term asshole. But here you argue that you want them to express themselves, so you wouldn't use immoral since this would imply that you don't prefer them to express themselves. Asshole implies this also, though according to you, to a lesser degree.Other than that, sure, I might say someone is being an asshole, too, but to me, "immoral" is stronger than just "he's being an asshole." — Terrapin Station
I like people to be honest/to honestly express themselves/to be existentially authentic. So if being an asshole or a bitch is how they authentically feel, I think they should express that. I'm just not going to be hanging out with them if it's a way they regularly are.
In fact here you are willing to call the latter behavior immoral. Unless you meant literally 'push', iow use physical force, this would have meant verbal manipulation and pressure. And of course would also potentially be covered by contract law.I wouldn't say it's a "moral flaw," no, although I suppose often enough it leads to behavior that I'd classify as immoral. For example, an asshole might be more likely to hire someone to do work for them and basically wind up ripping them off a bit--maybe they'd short them a bit, or push them to do something outside of the context of what they hired them for without additional compensation or something like that, for example.
OK, so now we know that they can still express themselves, even if I or we judge them immoral. So, again, why is it harder for them to express themselves if I call them immoral rather than asshole or mean or bad or say this is someone to avoid.It doesn't. What I was saying is that it's not undesirable to me for people to express themselves. It's rather desirable. — Terrapin Station
<yes, most people want that. Even the people, in most cases, who lie, say, to be cruel. Calling someone immoral, for me, means that I think their behavior is bad or wrong. Calling someone an asshole would mean this too, though it has slightly more, hm, personality connotations for me. Like a cruel liar might present themselves quite pleasantly. Whereas most people I would call assholes would tend to be more openly mean. But each carries a serious judgment of the person. But the word immoral seems to inhibit expression of the people labelled that way, for you, and I don't know how that happens. I say it seems to inhibit their expression, as if this is an objection to the them getting labeled immoral. How does it stop them from expressing themselves?You had said, "Well, sure. But I want to be able to trust people." — Terrapin Station
Of course. But I haven't said anything about some system to make them be trustworthy. I said it was immoral behavior. You brought in the issue of enforcement. Why does judging someone immoral entail enforcement? while judging someone an asshole does not? I don't think these things should be legislated against.It's certainly not going to be the case that everyone's trustworthy of their own accord. — Terrapin Station
Of course. I am not sure how this is relevent. I wouldn't use either asshole or immoral around etiquette issues. Or mean, the adjective in question.Not all behavior that one makes a judgment about is a moral issue. — Terrapin Station
When someone is described as being mean or as a mean person, intent to be cruel in pretty much implicit. And it is certainly in no way a contradiction.. Meanness is categorically different from malicious intent. — Possibility
Sure, we want to be able to trust people, but we often can not, and there's no way to enforce that everyone is going to be trustworthy. — Terrapin Station
Funny because that's bringing in force. I was talking about people making a moral judgment.Keep in mind, by the way, that re some stuff you're bringing up, I would still have contractual law much as it is now. People could still be liable for contractual fraud/breech of contract. — Terrapin Station
In what sense. That seems like a moral judgment via an expressive label. He's an asshole, he does asshole things, but he's not immoral seems odd to me. Unless you don't believe in morals. But then if one doesn't believe in morals, there is no need to distinguish between speech and other behavior.Other than that, sure , I might say someone is being an asshole, too, but to me, "immoral" is stronger than just "he's being an asshole." — Terrapin Station
I don't think that holds. 'a bit' is a vague term. One could be a bit skeptical, but also foolish not to react when lied to about a fire in a building. About a doctor saying your child is going to die. About misinformation in other areas of life. The asshole who is spreading lies to try and hurt people, means that that bit of skepticism has to be a bit more. It leads to us having to be more skeptical, and that is a cost or pain for social mammals. Your vague 'a bit' gets increased for every asshole.I'm someone who wants people to express themselves as they feel like expressing themselves, and who thinks that we need to not put too much weight on things that people say/we need to be at least a bit skeptical of things that people say
Well, sure. But I want to be able to trust people. If I am paying them for that communication or it if is integral to work I am doing or if I have a close relationship with them, or if it would be cruel to mislead me and you are a stranger - iow to knowingly make me waste time.Yeah, not immoral to me.
I'm someone who wants people to express themselves as they feel like expressing themselves, and who thinks that we need to not put too much weight on things that people say/we need to be at least a bit skeptical of things that people say. — Terrapin Station
I think this is odd. That guy is dishonest and manipulative - perjorative terms - but not immoral - pejorative term. Could you parse that for me`? To immoral is a larger category, in which one subset of behavior would be dishonest and manipulative behavior.I don't feel it's immoral for people to express whatever they want to express, even if it's dishonest, manipulative, etc.--again, be at least a bit skeptical of what people say.
If one thinks in moral terms, and calls someone 'mean' I can't really imagine how that person has not acted from that meanness and thus been immoral in what ever that person's moral system is. It can't just be nasty thoughts. And even something like meanspirited...it seems to me there would be actions. I could imagine saying 'that guy feels mean or hateful or something. But to call someone mean, I think, needs to be coupled to prior acts.although I suppose often enough it leads to behavior that I'd classify as immoral. — Terrapin Station
I would say hatred has a cognitive aspect also, so this is a good point. Rage can come cathartically, hate for me entails at least a temoporary categotization. A though that goes along with the emotion. I may have focused too much on the emotion and not this part and this could have been part of us talking past each other.Rather than the definition "shifting" I expel it ONLY when it has exhausted it's usefulness (which yours.. I do not find adequate), in philosophical, social-political, in other contexts outside of just "just an emotion" (i.e. Psych) - or fixating on "just language" ("I hate people"), which I find simply distracting and trivial. — Swan
I found this a little tricky to understand. If I missed it my apologies, but could you go into the kinds of reactions that I brought up a couple of times, where people feel hatred for employers or other people with power, where they cannot really confront the person and there is something abusive or chronically disrespectful on the employers part (or the employee thinks so). I think similar dynamics can occur related to issues of sexism, homophobia, racism, where for me it makes sense to say that these patterns elicit hate. In a sense hate in response to hate or prolonged disrespect. I would also say that longer term relationships, especially where there is an eventual split, say in a divorce can have significant periods, and repeated moods of hate. I think this is what the people say. In my own experiences - around friend's parents, relationships I have been around, and once for me - this is not just anger or rage or disgust coming in quickly and leaving.To here is where I draw a distinction between "hate" (some form of stress relief) and "hatred" (in practice), the latter that does not necessarily have to entail "rage" - or prolonged periods of "rage" but only necessarily corresponding behaviors, and the former not making any meaningful distinctions between (especially culturally) between other stress relief words and phrases, or reactions such as 'disgust', distrust, repulsion, etc. To where I personally don't find it interesting anymore. — Swan
I wouldn't use misogynist for a person who blurts out that they hate women. I agree it would have to be part of a long term pattern. At least, I think I am agreeing with what you wrote. I am not talking about short moments of catharsis. And in fact I am glad that misogyny came up, because I do think it is fairly widespread in society, but would not consider using it for what you are saying above does not count as true misogeny. IOW I see this as rather widespread and that many of the patterns brought to light in the me too movement are signs of a hatred of women and also, given that women have often had to experience this in unequal power situations, a cause for hatred in response.A similar phenomena has happened for example, with the word "misogynist" - which, by the book, is just "a hatred of women" but the definition begins to become inadequate when we venture into the men that practice misogyny - rather than just say, "wow I hate women" (e.g. making misogynistic statements) after a trivial break-up as a form of a psychological catharsis (rather than a guy that genuinely just "hates" women) or people labeling all others that express controversial opinions of women misogynists, etc., but examining further, we can discern and see this is not the case, and such words have lost it's significance and must be re-defined to where they are useful once again, because obviously, the definition does not adequately explain anything - nor give a sufficient reflection of what is being said. — Swan
I don't think you did what I asked for above. I think we might be able to reach each other. But here you are saying I quoted you, but then responded in a way that showed I hadn't read what you wrote. What I was asking for in my previous post was an example of this kind of thing. Maybe I missed it in your latest post. But it seemed like you repeated your position again, in a new way.If you read the text (which is also Cohen's problem), you could figure that out on your own. The reason I did not want to respond in the first place, because even then there was no point, as he isn't even reading - let alone understanding, because he quoted something, and responded in a fashion to where the quoted passage, DOESN'T EVEN SAY THAT. (Talking at me).