because it is not meant to be. — Olivier5
the people also understand this....
... "the government" isn't some different entity from the people making decisions to fight a war totally independently from the people. It's delusional to think any government or regime would contemplate war or to defend itself by military means if there is no support for this from it's people for this. If there's not the will to fight — ssu
as if the threat would not be extremely dangerous for everybody in the society. — ssu
Well, I've tried to give examples of that (to fight or to surrender) when it comes to war, but you respond that it's irrelevant. So that's why I'm a bit confused what your point is. — ssu
I'm still waiting on those examples your argument requires of government action which impose a risk of death for a non-unanimous gain. — Isaac
I question how much democracy is valued by someone who argues against participation in democracy — praxis
But you would be able to divide an extended thing forever. As the tiny pizza case shows. — Bartricks
Extended things are divisible. Your claim - your correct claim - that nothing can be infinitely divisible does not contradict that. It just entails what I said, namely that reality contains no extended things. — Bartricks
I have no idea what you are talking about here. — ssu
Why do you assume that not fighting a war the other option is "an ambiguous, uncertain harm on the other"? — ssu
Let's look at what that meant for example for Estonia: — ssu
Where do you get this idea that countries that invade others are somehow very benign and friendly to the people they conquer? — ssu
Like what decisions? — Olivier5
You are not appealing to reason, but to physics. — Bartricks
The idea that below a certain size it would become indivisible is utterly inconceivable. — Bartricks
In things that it considers dangerous for the collective, these regulations can be far more drastic than otherwise. — ssu
wars typically are the most dangerous things for the collective. — ssu
Stop saying you can't and not explaining why. — Bartricks
Our reason represents [X].
That's prima facie evidence that's precisely what they are.
That means it is defeasible evidence. That's fancy for 'it could be false'.
But it means the burden of proof is on the person who thinks [~X] to undercut those rational intuitions. — Bartricks
So why can't you divide it? — Bartricks
National defense is a collective good — Olivier5
Imagine a region of space isaac. Now imagine half of that. See?
Space. You can divide it. Any region of space. — Bartricks
If we all shrank down, and everything else with us, would there come a size where we couldn't divide our pizzas Isaac? Does your reason say yes? — Bartricks
Do explain to me, isaac, how it could be that an extended thing might not be divisible. — Bartricks
It is always more complicated than you cretins think. — Olivier5
A foil for the indirect realists. — Andrew M
So, shall we start with Parmenides and then Zeno of Elea. How many more do you want? What'll do the trick, Isaac?
Or do you want to know why they thought that any region of space can be infinitely divided? — Bartricks
Not really. People can volunteer to fight in Ukraine, and they do, so it's not like it's totally removed from personal choice. — Olivier5
you really think it would just have been "a change in existing power structures"? — ssu
How can someone who is not against democracy honestly argue against participation in democracy? — praxis
If you really are published on this, then tell us the title of your book or article — Janus
I have mentioned about the effect of voting for smaller (lesst strong) parties has, in my first example at https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/723152.
As for the confrontation between the two stronger parties, I gave another example in may recent post — Alkis Piskas
We have evidence that animals can recognise colours and no evidence that they share a common colour vocabulary. — Michael
in essence, by not voting, one supports the strongest party, whether this is known beforehand or not. — Alkis Piskas
A hermit with no language could look at two objects and see them to be the same colour (or different colours) — Michael
Hacker shouldn't be construed as defending either direct or indirect realism. — Andrew M
No offense, but this is bullshit. — L'éléphant
These kinds of actions are a detriment to robust discussion. Do you see why? — Tate
Elections are decided by votes and the structure of the election system, not be preferences. — Count Timothy von Icarus
If preferences = outcomes than the Republican party would be extinct at the national level because it fares worse with median preferences continually. It is viable in part because of election mechanics (e.g., the electoral college, partisan districting, capping the House of Reps early in the 20th century, the arbitrary representation of the Senate) — Count Timothy von Icarus
Having less support but supporters who are much more likely to vote is the thing that keeps the party competitive, none of the other stuff would save them without that edge. — Count Timothy von Icarus
It just happens rarely because radicals are, pretty much by definition, far from median preferences and so are unlikely to win in any electoral system. — Count Timothy von Icarus
even if you're a radical you probably have competitive candidates that are closer to your ideal than others. — Count Timothy von Icarus
No. I think their success was down to frightening the Tories into adopting their policy, which they did by "splitting the vote." Without those losing votes, there would have been no referendum. — unenlightened
Brexit got done despite the Brexit party never winning significantly, because the movement became a bandwagon and the bigots climbed aboard. So losing votes matter. — unenlightened
Even if your preferences are far from the median voters', your vote will still move the needle towards your preferences and away from the ones you most dislike. — Count Timothy von Icarus
voting for the candidate you least dislike is still an option. — Count Timothy von Icarus
what you have is a tipping point. If you are balancing weights on a fulcrum, and you have more weight on one side than the other, and so you get a tip to one side, it isn't that the mass on the other side is reduced to zero, it just isn't enough to stop the tipping. — Count Timothy von Icarus
as one sided as the US system can get, you still get surprises. Massachusetts has had two long term Republican governors recently who were quite popular. Kentucky currently has a Democratic governor. Parties with dominating leads in average voter preference can still manage to muck things up for themselves. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Winning on slim margins may also signal to election winners that they may need to moderate their views if they want to win re-election. This isn't always how it works, but it sometimes does. — Count Timothy von Icarus
One way they are seen to grow is by increasing their support in an election. Thus If I vote Green and the Green candidate does not win, still I have demonstrated some support for Green policies. — unenlightened
Voting is simply the bureaucratic exercise of officially informing the returning officer of that position.
If I vote, I give the returning officer a more accurate dataset. — Isaac
Showing support influences others. — unenlightened
Ask direct realists, not me. — Michael
