If by apt you mean the most irreparably destructive and philosophically regressive force of the last 2000 years, then sure. Hiding a noxious resentment of reality - generally coupled with a healthy hatred for the body, manual labour, temporality, and women (whatever doesn't reek with the stench of socio-economic privilege really) - behind a slogan doesn't make it any less venomous. — StreetlightX
I would add pornography to the list of the Internet's ills. Its effects, especially on young people, I think are being greatly understudied and underestimated. — Thorongil
As you like it. — Hanover
A hole needs ground around it to be a hole. — Moliere
So you expect people to be different just because the topic is philosophy? — Marchesk
Doing philosophy is exactly an exchange of of information and viewpoints.
— bert1
Is it? — Marchesk
Is that what professional philosophers do? — Marchesk
Or do they also advance their own positions? — Marchesk
Also, I'd like to point out that your question was an attempt at defending your position by pressing mine. — Marchesk
Maybe people engaged in philosophical discussion deliberately choose to not answer questions as a debate tactic. — Marchesk
Or they don't like your questions and would rather ask you a question back.
Or perhaps they see your questions as an attempt to frame the debate in a way favoring your position.
These are all common strategies in any discussion forum across the net. Often times questions are asked in an attempt to force a poster to answer a certain way. But most posters are smart enough to see through that.
For you it is.
Here's what this sounds like to me bert. Imagine a community of people called the lefters who have only one arm, the left one, and they walk around wearing capes so that nobody can see their disability. One of them says...
On so many occasions I have met a BT (brachiotypical) person, and most of the time they offer their right hand. This seems like a straightforward social disability, and it is the norm. You just can't shake hands properly like that. On the other hand, my handshakes with other lefters are always perfect. I meet one and they always offer their left hand. This is first class interpersonal etiquette.
— A. Lefter — jamalrob
It is not always good communication to answer every question that is asked, and a response that ignores the questions completely may still be a good way of taking the conversation forward, allowing the questioner to see that the questions were misplaced, or trying to tackle things from a different angle.
And from the questioner's standpoint, a response that doesn't directly answer their questions but nevertheless shows a deep insight into what they have said can be more satisfying; I often find point-by-point responses pedantic and facile. Granted, this way of responding may not work for everyone, may be difficult for some people to understand, and is sometimes open to abuse, but that doesn't make it "second class".
I'm sorry if this would get me boo'd off the stage at Autscape.
By having "armed citizens" we have gun massacre after gun massacre. And to think that other armed citizens will prevent it is not absurd. — Landru Guide Us
that honoured spouse thinks the whole thing is a waste of time — Wayfarer
Only aspects of it are. Forums and other forms of dialogue are naturally social, but introspection and unshared thoughts are not. Both can count as doing philosophy. — Sapientia
A distinctly modern notion. The ancient philosophers would have argued that philosophy simply cannot be done in isolation and without cross-examination. It was the image of Descartes shut up in his room that started the trend towards believing that philosophy could be done alone. But even then there were letters containing objections and encouragements traded back and forth before any of his works were completed. — Postmodern Beatnik
It's provocative to reflect that while autistics suffer from a degraded form of interpersonal communication, that may be just what allows them to experience an enhanced form of extrapersonal communication. — Baden