How is protecting the people from their own and their neighbours' stupidity turning against them? How does it "suit the authorities" to lose revenue while they're having to expend enormous resources on saving people's lives?During the covid fiasco I can’t think of any law that prevented tyranny and despotism. Rather, through the dictate of those who thought they knew better, it was used to prevent people from the most innocent of social activities, like going to church and visiting loved ones. Such an event proves that even in the most liberal societies the law will be turned against the people should it suit the authorities. — NOS4A2
Like those who pre-empt or voluntarily comply with medical advice during epidemics?At any rate, good faith (and manners in general) is a kind of law in itself. But it can only be self-imposed. As such, to implement it one must be somewhat independent, self-reliant, — NOS4A2
Expressing amusement at a second face is not a breach of faith.That your good faith is so quick to disappear in a thread on good faith is disappointing, but kind of proves the point. — NOS4A2
If you refuse to share and others are hungry, that's exactly what will happen. You can get upset, and a fragmented, selfish society will shrug and walk past you: "Finders keepers, losers weepers." That same society will send designated law-enforcers after the thief if he takes the fish from your kitchen. But a caring community would ask the one who took it why he thought his need was so much greater and yours, and ask you why you didn't offer a hungry compatriot some of your fish, then decide who is in the wrong.If I spent all day fishing and put my haul down for a moment to take a slash, I'm gonna be pretty upset to find my fish missing when I'm done. — flannel jesus
They can be quite protective of their food, especially treats, and whatever toy they happen find interesting at the moment. But once they're bored with the toy, it's fine for another ape to have a turn.Even apes have a sense of ownership. — flannel jesus
But before that, there was a point - a quite large splotch, in fact - when people were happy to work, in teams or individually at all the tasks required for the welfare of their community. That's the big difference: in a sharing society, you never work for a stranger (there aren't any) and you're never underpaid.I don't think there's any point in homo sapiens history where someone is happy to lose their days work to a stranger for nothing. — flannel jesus
Which certainly proved historically true. There is also another aspect to amassing treasure: it had to come from somewhere - through somebody's effort, or somebody's loss - and those people are naturally motivated to take it back, along with maybe a strip of your hide.He was saying that when cities pile up riches, they're practically asking to be raided. — frank
Quite true. Hardly anyone is tempted to take another person's clothes or tent, unless they're in dire need of it. A mindful society makes sure that doesn't happen, simply by providing for all its members. Treasure amassing is partly a result of the lust for power. Once society is stratified enough to isolate its wealth under the control of a few people, it becomes the highest ambition to be one of those people - not the strongest, wisest, most skilled or best loved, but the richest. Another large part of amassing is compulsive or pre-emptive: the urge to grab everything you can before somebody else does. That's symptomatic of an indifferent society.I guess another way to put his point is that there is no theft until there is ownership. — frank
Yes, that's right. People have always killed one another in various mental states, for various reasons and by various methods. Some forms of killing were socially condoned, or even mandated (as in ritual sacrifice or dispatching a dangerous enemy) and some were forbidden and required atonement, restitution, treatment or banishment. Such cases of private killing were usually considered by a meeting of elders and the outcome decided case by case, as each such incident is unique.And there's no murder until someone invents a law that defines murder and says it's disallowed. — flannel jesus
I expect both skill and effort from an artist, and a little subtlety doesn't go amiss. I've never understood the appeal of de Kooning or Pollock (though his scribbles are more interesting, why keep making them?) or Rothko.Compare these two items by William de Kooning and Louise Nevelson. — BC
And there's the tragedy. It's not enough to produce novelty, or shock or disgust, even to make a social statement. Anyone can do that with a placard or public display. Without artistry, what we get instead of works of art are vials of feces and piles of plastic garbage. Those exhibitions seems to me contrived for effect, inauthentic, as well as without aesthetic merit.Duchamp's route to a social statement was more vulgar and direct, but it worked. He helped move art forward and legitimize alternative means of expression. — Baden
Pretty much. "The Arts" is a very broad classification of enterprises. Some of the products that are categorized under that heading, I don't consider art.But are you saying in the final analysis Idol doesn't fit into any category even of "the arts" but is rather, an assortment etc. ? — ENOAH
Not really. 'Good' and 'successful' are not synonyms. Some of the best television programs I've seen either didn't make it to a second season, or were ruined by a change of direction to make them more successful."Good programs" mean large audiences (eyeballs) and profit for the platform (CBS, Netflix, whatever). Bad programs have paltry audiences and little income. — BC
The masses must prefer Velveeta (or even caca) or they would support PBS.Now there is a difference between Great Performances on PBS (high quality cheese) and schlock on the networks and cable (Velveeta). But networks don't want to feed the masses with high quality French cheese. Let them eat caca. — BC
No. It's true of reality shows that feature performances by non-professionals. Talk shows, news magazine shows and comedy shows are in their own categories. Scripted fictional stories are another category. That one can be considered under the art form Cinema, and judged by the same criteria as Woman of the Dunes and Howard the Duck.Isn't that true for most programs? — BC
That's only because modern media can produce entertaining art and artistic entertainment.Personally, I have a hard time separating art, including mediocre art, from good entertainment. — T Clark
Americal Idol probably is not art but the individual performances may be. — T Clark
I want your house, Benkei. I'll be open to negotiations once you grant me your living room. Will you negotiate with me? — BitconnectCarlos
In this instance, unreservedly.Again, it seems like America is the way it is because of competitiveness and with that its most cherished activity being capitalism. Would you agree with my assumptions here? — Shawn
It can be criticized as a television program. Television programs have their own separate criteria to consider them good or bad. In that category, American Idol is actually pretty good - or was, back when I watched it.If it is art, then it can be criticized as art. Is American Idol "good art"? — BC
What is Israel supposed to do? You tell me. — BitconnectCarlos
Which "Arabs"? When? Coz, if you want further back, we can consult Deuteronomy.We can go further back: the Arabs colonised Palestine too. — neomac
It's not going on in my neighbourhood. People out here usually get 'round, sooner or later, to doing whatever they contracted to do, usually do it conscientiously and efficiently, once they get started, but then, like as not, forget to wait for payment. Our snow-ploughing guy never invoices us at the end of winter; we send him a few email reminders, then nothing happens until the first big snowfall, when he shows up and quotes a surprisingly low figure for last season. You can't get better faith than that.Yet, what about all this "hustle culture" stuff going on? — Shawn
Yes, I do. I know of no plausible alternate source for feelings.do you think addressing feelings as their neurological processes are the only correct way? — ENOAH
Representations are not 'real' in the same sense as the things being represented or the entity making the representation; however, the media in which art is physically expressed are real. The internal visualization is real to the imaginer, but does not exist in the world.Do you think that the representations generated by our brains are no less real than the neurons which generate them? — ENOAH
It's not. It's a representation of reality in some altered form.I am amazed that art, which is a representation of representation, — ENOAH
Not the body. Our reaction to art, or any external sensory input, is through the receptors (mainly eyes and ears) to the brain, and whatever emotional response the brain then produces may or may or may produce some physical reaction.can so profoundly affect the body to feel, — ENOAH
What does that mean?without having to have recourse to any immediate constructions. — ENOAH
It's not just art has that effect; it can be nature, speech, action in the environment. That's because the neural functions are very fast. We're not aware of how much information is received, sorted, processed, stored and transmitted by our brain in a single second.The directness, and the potency of art's affect on reality (I.e., us) moves me. — ENOAH
The show format or a specific performance? They're separate entities. Each performance by a contestant is artistic, even though the show itself is not.I must unashamedly confess, at moments, it profoundly moved me, — ENOAH
I don't understand your premise. I don't understand all that palaver about mind being unreal, etc.You must accept my premises to really appreciate it in the way I'm trying to describe. However, I respect that it is difficult to accept. — ENOAH
The concept of bona fide, which is sincere intention to be fair, open, and honest in interactions, still exist in society and human interactions? — Shawn
Mind is not reality.
Mind is, at best, reality, once removed.
Art is "lower" in the "hierarchy of truth".
Art is Mind, once removed; reality, twice removed.
And yet, like Mind, art triggers reality to feel/act. — ENOAH
Of course it is. But nobody seems satisfied with an objective definitionIs art objectively identifiable? — ENOAH
the expression or application of human creative skill and imagination, typically in a visual form such as painting or sculpture, producing works to be appreciated primarily for their beauty or emotional power.
If Gaza became a state Hamas would be able to import whatever it liked. — BitconnectCarlos
The Israelis currently see a two state solution as infeasible because of the current palestinian gazan government/populace which are committed to the destruction of Israel. Give Israel a viable negotiating partner that isn't committed to its destruction and Israel will talk. — BitconnectCarlos
Still, I'd argue much of our core "driving factors" remain the same. Fears, desires, motivations, and whatnot. More refined, tailored to the specific going-ons and happenings of the modern world, existential anxieties and concerns of not seeing a tomorrow all but corralled to the back of one's subconscious, of course. But in essence, much of the same. — Outlander
They cemented their bonds with ritual, just as we do. For us, however, the various rituals are isolated - one for family, a different one for the workplace, for the male or female friends, for sporting events and mass entertainments, and that special, set-aside, encapsulated one for worship. For them, drumming and dancing around the fire included all those social and spiritual aspects of their community.Certainly agree with earlier society, those fortunate enough to have such, being more connected with one another out of necessity of proximity to life-sustaining goods and services and other "tight-knit" circumstance contributing to the resiliency and defense of said society's existence, in contrast to the modern world and it's "just text me" or "add me on Facebook" norms of interaction. — Outlander
The distinction is profound and lasting. Primeval man had no shoes and very little assurance of a tomorrow. His barefoot world was unrecognizably different from the plate-glass and styrofoam world of modern man. His anxieties and aspirations were different. His world-view and dreams were different. His Purpose was to survive and, at a stretch, to keep most of his loved ones alive, but he was not at odds with or alienated from his environment and community. He was never alone or adrift.Put yourself in the shoes of primeval man, or even modern man, a distinction I find to be quite fleeting to say the least. — Outlander
That's 40 million people, of whom how many are women of reproductive age? I don't know the particulars of employee health coverage, but it's probably worth closing any potential loopholes.All ACA (affordable care act) plans require prenatal coverage even when coverage is sought while pregnant — Hanover
The 'conservative' states are still fighting battles that were won in the 1960's. African Americans are still fighting battles that were supposedly won in the 1860's. Can't take our eyes off the ball for a minute!You're fighting a battle that was won in 2014. — Hanover
Pregnant women are not sick, but they still need care. I think it makes sense that that care is provided through the medical care system. — T Clark
It sure works for "Bibi". "We're at war!" has kept more than one corrupt politician in power and out of jail.It's as if they're trying to turn the israeli public against their cause and push them more to the right. i do believe this is hamas's strategy. — BitconnectCarlos
If you were LGBTQ and you had to live in a random Muslim dominated country or random Western country, which would it be? — RogueAI
Not in its first thousand years, while Christianity was being a huge drag on Europe.I think Islam has been a huge drag on the development of the Arab states — RogueAI
Obviously. Whatever threat a military or militant organization is created to counter, religion has a great deal of influence on recruitment and popular support. That worked for Israel.and a huge factor in the development of groups like Hamas and Hezbollah. — RogueAI
Except that the factions in Ireland didn't include big international players like Russia and the US. Britain may have given the lands of Catholic peasants to imported Protestants, but a foreign world power was not constantly pumping enormous quantities of arms and money into Ulster.If the absence of Islam, I think we'd be seeing something more akin to Ireland's troubles. — RogueAI
You think we'd be dealing with the same issues if Muhammad had never been born? — RogueAI
Actually, it might be a contributing factor. What about the Israeli woman who beats her husband?And when a Palestinian man beats his wife it is surely the Jews' fault as well. It's because of the occupation. — BitconnectCarlos
There is nothing simple about that process. Even more complicated is the fact that most of those people are not insane individually, in their daily life, even while holding insane ideas to be worth defending with their lives.That's the typical way people describe Civil Wars: that people simply became insane. — ssu
Maybe some other catastrophe will intervene. More likely a major climate event than Mars attacking.Never happen. — RogueAI
Even the biggest trees fall if their pith is chewed by enough termites. Government agencies are vulnerable to funding and political appointments, as well as loss of public confidence. It's easy enough to promise the people a better health insurance and more social security. Don't have to deliver...The federal government is too large and has its fingers in too many pies. — RogueAI
It depends on whose land you're scorching.Are such "scorched Earth" tactics a war crime? — BitconnectCarlos