Demagogues don't generally threaten anything. They gain support by making promises, discover that they don't actually have the power to change anything, resort to race-baiting to explain their failures, and retire to obscurity. That's how American demagogues usually do it.Well, I don't think I've been particularly hyperbolic about it. What I said was the Trump fits the definition of 'demagogue', and nobody has taken issue with that. Consequently, I think his presidency is a threat to civic freedoms, the economy, and the environment; it puzzles me that there are people who can't see that threat. — Wayfarer
Well how do you put a little detachment into your life?(But I'm no model of philosophic detachment, as I am frequently reminded by my wife.) — Wayfarer
He was very forceful, doing a full-court press on behalf of his policies. Bear in mind, though, that he had the "oil trust" (like Standard Oil") as a principle opponent, and they didn't play nice either. — Bitter Crank
In any case this question of objectification has been very much in my thoughts and what much of my recent reading has been concerned with, so Heidegger's Nietzsche may not turn out to go against its general direction, after all. — John
I'm not sure that putting it into my own words is a way of answering the question I indicated, which was a question about how other people have used the word, or its closest relations in other languages, across various cultural contexts.
As I've suggested, I haven't heard any generally applicable conception of "legitimacy" that I find philosophically satisfying, and I don't have one myself. I find talk in terms of legitimacy to be quite problematic until we take for granted -- for the sake of conversation, or with respect to something like a national constitution -- some more or less arbitrary characterization of the term. — Cabbage Farmer
Taken at face value, the word "legitimacy" suggests that something legitimate is something legal, something made or done in accordance with law. — Cabbage Farmer
If you mean to ask what values and principles of political organization do I personally consider most relevant to judgments about the legitimacy of laws, governments, and institutions, I’ve given some indication already, in this laundry list:
"justice", "liberty", "consent", "popular sovereignty", "prosperity", "pacificity", "humanity"
— Cabbage Farmer
and I suppose we could add more terms to the list and discuss the meaning or relevance of any item in the present context. — Cabbage Farmer
I suppose that etymology can be of use if you are interested in the history of ideas, and in particular in exegesis of old philosophers, which is what much of academic philosophy seems to be about. — SophistiCat
Heidegger wrote a four volume treatise on Nietzsche.
https://www.amazon.com/Nietzsche-Vols-Knowledge-Metaphysics-Nihilism/dp/0060637943/ref=pd_bxgy_14_img_2?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1&refRID=5PAVDVVXKY69QV5BG674 — John
I find etymology useful for breaking the sedimented semantic resonance of words. — StreetlightX
In what way was Nietzsche's theory "based on etymology"?
Was it his “theory” that was based on etymology, or only his interpretations of philosophical texts, or merely his own use of words and phrases? — Cabbage Farmer
That exegetical task is complicated by the fact that different speakers, especially those from different times and places, may have disparate etymological resources at their disposal -- a difficulty a philologist like Nietzsche might hope to resolve. — Cabbage Farmer
Then again, from a broad enough point of view, the last option is only a variation on the middle way. — Cabbage Farmer
No.But I wonder whether the word "legitimacy", or some very close term in translation, has always been used in every time and place, — Cabbage Farmer
Good question. How would you put the meaning of legitimacy into your own words?or if perhaps our concept doesn't necessarily map on to linguistic terms in every culture in the same way. — Cabbage Farmer
"Protestant work ethic" is as lazy as the "derogatory black stereotype". From Luther, "all work is holy" and all work is dignified, whether it is the work of a priest or the work of the lowest class of laborer. — Bitter Crank
Right. We can't be too idealistic, and aim to reject, instead of improve, each and every imperfect institution.
How does that pragmatism guide us in defining terms like "acceptance", "tolerance", and "legitimacy" in this conversation? — Cabbage Farmer
It's hard for me to imagine what a speaker as sober as Chomsky might mean by a statement like "all civilization is fundamentally evil." Can you expand on this attitude and its place in Chomsky's late thoughts? Is it somehow connected to "anarchosyndicalism" or to "left libertarianism"? — Cabbage Farmer
What do you mean by "abandon legitimacy"? The phrase could mean: Abandon talk of legitimacy, for instance if we found the term to be fundamentally redundant or ungrounded; perhaps replacing talk of legitimacy with talk in other terms for about the same purposes. For instance, we might use terms like "justice", "liberty", "consent", "popular sovereignty", "prosperity", "pacificity", "humanity"... to evaluate institutions in ways that align with our current use of the term "legitimacy". — Cabbage Farmer
Or that all the speech and other action of each individual contributes to the future successes and failures of that individual, as well as of the communities in which he participates, including the community we call "humanity" and the community we call "all sentient beings"? — Cabbage Farmer
A king with no supporters is no king at all. — Cabbage Farmer
And I'd expect you'd even admit to the real benefit of getting out of the rut of dependency and directionlessness when you secured a challenging job. — Hanover
I thought the absurdity of the statements in the paraphrase might shed some light on the significance of the original passage (pushing especially on the role of "actual acceptance" in that passage). I continued commenting in this manner with analogies to lying and strangling. — Cabbage Farmer
I'm inclined to resist the whole line of thinking, despite the mollifying effect of that vagueness. — Cabbage Farmer
I know he's a narcissist and a pathological liar, — Erik
Is this definition in common use? To me it seems quite strained.
As if one were to say, the "factual legitimacy" of oppression and coercion consists in the persistence of oppression and coercion. Or, the "factual legitimacy" of an act of aggression consists in the victory of the aggressor. — Cabbage Farmer
In political science, legitimacy is the right and acceptance of an authority, usually a governing law or a régime. Whereas "authority" denotes a specific position in an established government, the term "legitimacy" denotes a system of government — wherein "government" denotes "sphere of influence". — wiki
Sound then, is resolutely anti-Platonic, to the degree that it militates against any notion of timelessness, eternity, or ’the unchanging’ — StreetlightX
I don't want this to happen. — Banno
Lorn has developed tendrils that have wound their way down into the depths of my psyche. I think I should probably notify the NSA, but I don't know if it still exists. Rone too.That's really an amazing tune. — Question
This is a curve. What are we using the x-y axes for?I suspect curved relative to distant objects occupying the space-time continuum. — Question
That humans can't conceptualize curved space. — Question