Would you accept a change to, "a moral right to all income of any kind or amount cannot be reasonably held"? If I labor in my small garden I should like to suppose I have a defendable right to at least some of that produce - sharing of course with the local rabbits.a moral right to income cannot be reasonably held. — Benkei
The problem with mental health care is a part of the deconstruction of the hospitals and other state institutions that has been done under the idea that such work could be redirected to community level support. This process has been under way for decades. The fallout is perhaps now forcing itself into a wider public awareness. To be clear, this does not resolve into any particular political agenda. It is an intellectual failure of our society as a whole. — Paine
Then you shall have to draw your line with care. And care to note I referred to practical choice. As to action, there is no ultimate. Excepting perhaps gravity, under the influence of which I'm obliged fall, I don't have to do anything, although perhaps being subject to persuasion.An ultimatum forces a decision, not an external act. Here there is the very large difference between choice and coercion. — Leontiskos
Just think necessity. Necessity forecloses on (practical) choice, which is the species of choice I think you're referring to. And necessity imposes ultimatums every day for everyone all the time.What makes for an impactful moral dilemma? For me it is the "Ultimatum." — Benj96
who decides and enforced what is true and what is false? Personally I can’t think of any people, alive or dead, fit for such a task. — NOS4A2
Because disinformation is not information. Information (presumably) comports with truth, disinformation everything and anything but (else it would be information).Why should we worry about misinformation? — NOS4A2
Not much, I should think. I wonder what odds Zeno might give.What should be the payoff if you bet 1000 euros on Achilles. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Is here anything language can express? What does it mean to say that language "expresses"?Is there anything that language can’t express? — kindred
Limiting ourselves for the sake of convenience to just Achilles and the tortoise, what exactly is there to debate about?We still debate this today — Gregory
You realize - yes? - that you're talking nonsense here. E.g., if a thing exists that is not an actual thing, and then it "manifests as an actual thing," then it is either the same thing or a different thing, and in-as-much as it goes from being a not-actual thing to an actual thing, then it's hard for me to see how it is the same thing. And as to the claim of the existence of not-existing things, it's incumbent on you to make clear just how that can be.No my claim is that something exists before it manifests as an actual thing in the world, in this case intelligence. — kindred
Perhaps you will read the Wikipedia article on abiogenesis. You will see that what life is, is not-so-easy to say, and that intelligence is a very long way down the evolutionary road. That is, that life and intelligence are not the same thing and should not be confused. Life seems to be a kind of ordinary process, which I think is inevitable given the right conditions. Maybe also intelligence, but maybe too with that some luck required.Inanimate matter could have continued to remain inanimate yet it didn’t because we have life (intelligence) so something happened to it which we can’t explain, we call this process abiogenesis. — kindred
Alrighty. Intelligence exists before it exists. Um, no.Not something but intelligence particularly. — kindred
No again. We know exactly that it does not/cannot. You're being too informal in your language and then reifying the errors into a fantasy that you're representing as (a) reality. It's not even language on a holiday; it's language in a playpen. And the topic is not well-served by such.We know one thing for sure, that matter went from being inanimate to animate in this universe at least. — kindred
I'm not 180 but I'll bite. The first granted because it appears to have happened, and more than once. The second granted same reason. Is your point something like something exists before it exists?Would you then agree that non-life has the potential to give rise to life and intelligence? Would you also then agree that at the very least intelligence is a potential in the universe? — kindred
What is a "logical" explanation? You seem to be making a categorical distinction: how does an explanation differ from a logical explanation? - Assuming that by "explanation" we mean something that makes sense as opposed to something that does not or cannot make sense.has no logical explanation — kindred
Ok. The surface of a table-top. Discrete or continuous? A sandy beach? Or the surface of a liquid? Certainly by your definition the number line continuous, but made up of discrete points - how can that be? It would seem that "discrete" and "continuous" are abstract convenient fictions their utility depending on usage in context. Thus when misused you might bet on the tortoise, but I'll bet on Achilles every time.Consider a set of points. — MoK
.Only one species developed our level of intelligence on earth, — Relativist
. The most charitable thing to say here is that it appears you're confusing knowledge, certain kinds of knowledge, with intelligence, and that's just plain a mistake.Hardly. None of them had a human level of intelligence. — Relativist
Yup. Astute of you, or did the "maybe" give it away. The biases I find is that you appear to think of life as that which comports with your ideas of life, rather than restraining yourself so that your ideas of life might comport both with what life is and may be; and, that in mentioning survival advantages there seems more than a hint of teleology. Individuals may want to survive; to say that life wants to survive requires some elaboration to make sense - and teleology is just a sometines useful convenient fiction."Maybe life developed in multiple environments and then interacted. "
Speculation. — Relativist
Sweet Jesus! They were all human - just not like you! Unique common ancestor? Life began "under exactly one environment"? I think you need to be a little more precise in what you write. I'll buy the proposition that so far, existing life appears to share a common ancestor, although deep sea thermal vent life may disprove that. But that is silent on life that may have existed before and disappeared. And it leaves open the question of what "exactly one environment" is. Maybe life developed in multiple environments and then interacted. The problem is that you have guesses and an apparent bias, all of which you think is knowledge. And it isn't. Maybe they're good and educated guesses, but not knowledge.Hardly. None of them had a human level of intelligence. — Relativist
Copied from our friend the 'net:Only one species developed our level of intelligence on earth, — Relativist
Keeping in mind the different kinds of life that have occurred on this planet, it appears that many "notions" of life should be qualified as life-like-us. Once free of that parish-pump idea, the possibilities for life increase by a lot. And where there's life there's the possibility of evolution. Life is thought of variously as divine, magical, mysterious. More likely it is simply a very possible mix of the right chemicals and some energy, and not even a lot of energy. Thus given enough chances, inevitable; and given a universe's number of chances, frequent.And that's just for life. — Relativist
Maybe this is the problem. It is called a sunk cost.And how to calculate the cost of previous generation is the biggest problem, — Sir2u
Some no doubt, but in terms of my argument, nonsense and non sequitur. Knowledge is a something. To claim to have it is a claim to have something. If it turns out you don't have and never did have it, then whence the claim? There's a piece of difficult forensic accounting to be done, the usual results of which not-so-honorable.The same observations you’re making concerning psychiatry could be made with respect to philosophy. — Joshs
If not for the generous and more than generous gifts of the universe, where do you suppose you would be?the universe is not a fair place. — Sir2u
Not so easy! The discussion - I don't consider it a debate; what would we be debating? - is about knowledge. Your representation that psychiatrists have knowledge. Mine that to be sure they have some but with respect to their subject matter, not much knowledge. Again not itself a criticism. And I think that the disrepute psychiatry has had - I'm not sure of its status today - is not so much because of the practices of some bad apples, but because of the general claims and practices of psychiatry itself, still among them, though perhaps muted, claims to knowledge that isn't.a psychiatrist is a medical doctor with further specialist knowledge - so has all the knowledge of a GP and additionally has expert knowledge of mental illness.... Anyway, I'm going to leave this one here since there is no end to a debate like this and it's not really my role to defend psychiatry,... The profession is generally demonized and poorly understood. Which was my original observation. — Tom Storm
Back to the question then, in different form: what exactly does psychiatry know, and what does it know about it? My own best guess for an answer is that they know about behaviors - they have observed them. And have made observations that are essentially statistical in nature - no doubt it's not quite that simple - thus being able to make "educated" guesses by looking at the data. Not to be confused with knowledge. And not a criticism but a critique; that is, a fact, or so I think.Then you seem to be arguing that psychiatry is not knowledge. — Tom Storm
Small point: how many decades? SIx? Sixty years? Assuming the search has been efficient and effective for that long, that's a search radius of about 60 light-years. The radius of the Milky way is 50,000+ light years. Further, contact by signal to be acknowledged will take at least an equal time back. Thus given the distances, it's like looking for a needle in a very, very large haystack, and even if it turns out there a many needles, still, we have barely even begun.the same way we had been trying for decades now. — L'éléphant
That's why clarity, in concrete terms, about everything matters. Briefly: a community can be injured as a whole - as a city subject to an artillery barrage - but the people of the city, if they're to be cured/rehabilitated at all, must be treated individually as individuals. And so with the effects of racism, slavery a species.To attempt to restore the victim to some status quo ante would in my opinion be even more complicated. — Sir2u
My understanding of the medical model is inherited from those who don't like it. And it amounts to this: if you go to the doctor you are by definition and understanding a patient and thereby something must be wrong, and it is the doctor's business to find something wrong - that he or she can treat.We agree thus far at least, so I might be able to convince you to consider that the medical model may be somewhat at fault.... One of the difficulties of the medical model — unenlightened
This is a pretty conventional view these days and was a thesis articulated rather well by a famous psychiatrist called E Fuller Tory in his 1980's best seller Witchdoctors and Psychiatrists: — Tom Storm
It seems to me - subject to correction - that you cannot even reasonably think about that without at least giving a somewhat rigorous definition of what you think a - your - number line is, in the sense of what comprises it, or what it's composed of or made of. If points, then you have to decide how many, and at the least you run into a labeling problem if you have too many.What I have in mind is that I simply divide the interval by 2^infinity in one step — MoK
Well, maybe it's a definition problem. Mental illness as reaction may possibly be treated by changing whatever the cause of the reaction is. But I think of mental illness as a condition, and as such in itself, not addressable through any social analysis. Not to dismiss it entirely; social analysis as consideration of the community, writ in whatever way is relevant, may influence for example treatment options. But if a fellow's brain chemistry is messed up, I do not see how a visit to the town zoning commission might help him.You don't seem willing to entertain a social analysis, and at the same time seem reluctant to actually say what you mean. — unenlightened