Conscientious teachers do try - if informally, as part of the normal classroom procedure - to instill a sense of fairness and tolerance. In a diverse society, these are the most important values. And this is exactly what privileged education does not do.I kind of agree, but how would you teach 'the good' in a world where there is no agreement on what the good is or if it is anything more than perspectival. — Tom Storm
There are not many such societies anymore. Perhaps none.Education would seem to be lot easier in a culture where pluralism and diversity don't exist. — Tom Storm
All power to them. — NOS4A2
But you absolve parents from the responsibility of rearing their own children, institutionalizing them, leading to the very conditions you fear. Not to mention it is immoral to take and raise another’s child without their permission. — NOS4A2
Seems to me that history, politics and critical thinking remain important. How to teach those in an environment of tribalism would be challenging. — Tom Storm
In 1641 Descartes published the Meditations on First Philosophy, in Which Is Proved the Existence of God and the Immortality of the Soul. Written in Latin and dedicated to the Jesuit professors at the Sorbonne in Paris, the work includes critical responses by several eminent thinkershttps://www.britannica.com/biography/Rene-Descartes/Meditations
Yes, I think that's been covered.It's not a two tiered system. There are workers, managers and owners. — LuckyR
Indeed. Lots and lots of slots in the ramp, kissing up, kicking down.And share holders, and board members, and founders, and outsourced workers and companies, and interns, and... — Lionino
That's a good solution — Patterner
He bent some little way to accord animals sensation and emotion, but still considered it legitimate for humans to use them like objects.Descartes famously thought that animals were merely ‘mechanisms’ or ‘automata’ – basically, complex physical machines without experiences – and that as a result, they were the same type of thing as less complex machines like cuckoo clocks or watches. He believed this because he thought that thoughts and minds are properties of an immaterial soul; thus, humans have subjective experience only because they have immaterial souls inhering in their physical bodies. However animals, reasoned Descartes, show no signs of being inhabited by rational souls: they don’t speak or philosophise, and so (as far as we can tell) they lack souls, and minds.
Another down-side: employers would cut lunch hour to 2 minutes a day.Today there are pills to provide the vitamins we need, which leaves just the pesky issue of caloric intake. An adult typically needs about 2000 calories per day, and even the most concentrated source (pure fat) can't make that many calories fit into a single pill.
If we are talking about tribes like the Amazonian and Congolese tribes before contact with Europeans, and San tribes today, yes, they are not civilised by any metric. — Lionino
but fails to explain what it considers highly developed, complex or spiritual, nor why it considers complexity a prerequisite.a human society that has highly developed material and spiritual resources and a complex cultural, political, and legal organization;
However, too radical a change in economic structure would be catastrophic. Accidental catastrophe is bad enough, and no one wants to deliberately cause a catastrophe. — BC
yeah, the grey and black only look seems optional. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The religious ones are certainly the longest-lived, even if we don't count monastic orders. I suppose a shared faith and ritual practice has a stabilizing effect. However, that may also alienate some of the youth, so that they either need to over-procreate or recruit mature members in order to keep the community going. I suspect modern mainstream people would balk at being denied birth control, and very few women would voluntarily have six or seven kids.The ones I am aware of are Christian communities, but I see no prima facie reason that such communities couldn't be grounded in some other sort of practice. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The whole paper is worth reading, though I skipped over the history part, having read it before in other articles.I have observed that intentional communities follow a developmental pattern similar to that of small businesses: many more are imagined and planned than ever start. Of those that do start, about half collapse within two years, with perhaps half the remain-der collapsing before the end of five years. Most small businesses and intentional communities that make it to five years prosper indefinitely.
The negatives are optional. We can choose a wholesome diet and eat in moderation, just as we can choose to imbibe alcoholic beverages in moderation. The positives include far more than physical nourishment. Our bodies are constructed to use food: I wonder what would happen to the digestive system if it were deprived of substantial material to process.I wanted to imply that you get all the negatives without getting the positives. — Lionino
But the role of a contemporary employer/manager is less dictator, more team leader. Especially in fields of work where the employees are more educated or specialized. — jkop
I agree wholeheartedly! My SO was constantly frustrated as an employee. Contracting still meant having to deal with inept managers. When we set up an independent business, our household income dropped by 60% and our family wellbeing increased 200%.One might as well work as a consultant, self-employed, or join a company that works as an economic democracy. — jkop
I think managing is a skill itself, and like any skill it benefits from practice, and not everyone is good at it. — flannel jesus
We eat together 2 or 3 times a week. — Tom Storm
Very possibly. But would the managers need to be an upper class over a lower worker class?I think that if someone were to devise an optimal company, or even an optimal society, it would still have that division, there would still be managers and workers. — flannel jesus
Yes, and - at least in Canada - they are no better off financially than employees. However, I have some anecdotal and personal indication that they are happier.There are sole traders of course, self-employed individuals with no employees, but broadly you are right. — bert1
Calling the objective reality "God" is unpopular today, — Brendan Golledge
Historians don't tend to get stuff right when it comes to things that are not events far into the past — Lionino
In that case, I need a Newspeak dictionary. Nobody promised that economic and military imperialism would never backfire. Ask the Islamophobic French nationalist political faction, and they'll say the present ethnic problem in their country was caused by the EU's magnanimity. Ask a historian, and you'd get a very different answer.Imperialism does not imply empire — Lionino