individuals can be forceful in non-physical ways.
Think for example of applying social pressure, using misleading rhetorical devices, non-horizontal dialogue, etc. — Tzeentch
Then there is morality that's implicit in law, which is applied through the threat of violence ('at gunpoint'). — Tzeentch
if the intention isn't genuine — Tzeentch
since you are here, interacting and reading my messages voluntarily, there's no meddling taking place. — Tzeentch
I'm not trying to stop anyone from doing anything, nor am I attempting to persuade. — Tzeentch
it avoids the common pitfall of using notions of morality as a means to meddle in the affairs of others — Tzeentch
In general, I think that, if you agree with the logic being employed, accept the inference rules, etc., if the argument is valid, and if the premises are all true, the argument should generally be persuasive. — Count Timothy von Icarus
However in these areas it's more about assigning probabilities to explanations than establishing certainty. — Count Timothy von Icarus
We use mentalistic vocabulary about others as readily as we do about ourselves, attribute knowledge and beliefs and awareness and forgetfulness and consciousness to other people all day long, and we mean the same thing as when we describe ourselves as being in these mental states. What matters is the book, not its being on the shelf. — Srap Tasmaner
So minds and brains are different? What are the differences? — RogueAI
I’m not seeing a mind’s eye in the brain images provided. — javra
No one can in any way see that aspect of themselves which visually perceives imagined phenomena via what is commonly termed “the mind’s eye”. — javra
What I am seeing are individual slides empirically depicting a certain set of a brain's functions which are inferred to correlate with empirically evident self-reports concerning something that might or might not in fact be. — javra
were philosophical zombies to be real,... — javra
In other words, these illustrations of a brain’s functioning so far do not falsify the proposition which was provided. — javra
No one can in any way... — javra
This thread is still very much on my mind, so I'll probably come roaring back in another day or two. — Srap Tasmaner
D. H. Lawrence's first book of poems was called "Look! We Have Come Through."
Robert Graves reviewed it, saying, "Perhaps you have, and a good thing too, but why should we look?"
That was roughly the mood in which I wrote the OP. — Srap Tasmaner
If minds are brains — RogueAI
So still on topic. — Srap Tasmaner
My eyes glaze over when there's a lot of "That's not what I said," and "That's not what I meant." — Srap Tasmaner
If I say, "we can be justified about some historical facts and narratives," you respond with "so, you don't get that people can disagree over historical facts and narratives?"
If I say, "we must sometimes rely on the authority of institutions and base our beliefs on trust because it is impossible for one person to conduct more than a minute fraction of all experiments in the sciences," you respond with "so you always blindly trust authority?" — Count Timothy von Icarus
I don't think the problems you point out are at all specific to history. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Trust in both individuals/institutions and in the process of scholarship is just as essential for science. — Count Timothy von Icarus
My argument is simply this: "if the history of an idea is sometimes relevant, and if we can sometimes have justified beliefs about the history of ideas, then sometimes arguments made from the history of an idea are relevant. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Whether we accept or reject the argument should be based on the data supporting the premises and if the conclusion actually follows from the premises — Count Timothy von Icarus
this doesn't seem like a difference in kind. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Nor is it clear that all scientific empirical claims are easier to verify than many historical fact claims. — Count Timothy von Icarus
What I found weird was the claim that "[if] I'm persuaded by the argument that I must accept the entailment, regardless of whether I accept the premises," which seemed to imply that the logic alone was persuasive. But a valid argument with false premises isn't persuasive. I didn't, and still don't really know how to take the claim that: "For a logical argument to have persuasive force it is only necessary that I agree with the rules of logic." — Count Timothy von Icarus
No one can in any way see that aspect of themselves which visually perceives imagined phenomena via what is commonly termed “the mind’s eye”. — javra
The substantiated position is that consciousness is not empirically observable — javra
the stranger claim that if an argument is in a valid form we should be persuaded by the argument — Count Timothy von Icarus
I only skimmed the exchange you were having with Isaac, and don't want to take sides. — Srap Tasmaner
We're not talking about disagreements about scientific theories. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I've yet to come across any radically different versions of how thermodynamics, etc. were developed. — Count Timothy von Icarus
But per your view, how can we actually know why a scientific theory was advanced or why others were rejected? — Count Timothy von Icarus
when Einstein says he added the Cosmological Constant to have his theory jive with the then widely held view that the universe was static I think that is a good reason to believe that is why Einstein added the Cosmological Constant. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The pioneers of quantum mechanics published papers throughout their lifetimes, conducted interviews, were taped during lectures, and wrote memoirs, all describing how the theory evolved. In many cases, their personal correspondences were made available after their death. Most of this is even free.
Now tell me where I can get access to a free particle accelerator and a Youtube on how to properly use it so I can observe particle physics findings first hand? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Einstein added the Cosmological Constant to fit current models is an empirical fact. In 1492, Columbus sailed the ocean blue is an empirical fact. The Catholic Church harassing advocates of heliocentrism is an empirical fact. People have had sensory experiences of those things and reported them. — Count Timothy von Icarus
When was the last time you wanted to learn something and held a double-blind clinical study? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Do you replicate the experiments after you read a scientific paper? No. Then you're trusting the institution publishing it and its authors, right? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Plenty of people don't trust the scientific establishment. This cannot be a good criterion for justification. — Count Timothy von Icarus
A measurement isn't always a good measurement, and it's particularly difficult to tease out what a good measurement is with respect to oppression because history is not repeatable in the same way that other experiments are. "Oppression" has no units, after all. It's a story. Further I'd say your measurements are good at assessing an individual's circumstances, but that the individual isn't always an appropriate place for understanding group dynamics -- so the metrics of oppression you list won't capture all of what a group faces. It's a part of the story, and important to check up on because hey maybe one day the world really will be different and our metrics will display that, but not the whole — Moliere
What these political philosophies are doing are not enforcements of a law or a principle for individuals, nor laying out some universal truth, but rather binding people together in spite of differences that seem important. Intersectionality isn't a scientific law as much as it is an organizer's tool which has already been proven. — Moliere
to be effective you have to understand what people really care about. The international poor just isn't that big of a rallying cry, I'd hazard that's because in our particular social system we've erected a public/private property distinction. While it's certainly true that if Helen Mirren cared about the plight of the poor she'd act differently, the fact is that not only does she not care -- most human beings don't either, but not because we're callous, but because this is how we're trained to be with our private money, and people really believe they "earned" it. — Moliere
Patriarchy -- the rule of men -- is still quite common. And healthier gender identities -- ones not obsessed with maintaining power at home or at work -- will undermine that. — Moliere
denying that we can trust the standard fare of physics textbooks re: the origins of relativity or thermodynamics also comes with a lot of commitments. You'd have to assume a lot of people were "in" on a misrepresentation and that they had all coordinated to keep to the same narrative across a wide array of texts, including falsifying and circulating the papers of the original people involved. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Your average person is in a much better position to vet if a science textbook is telling them the truth about the history of quantum mechanics than they are to go out and observe entanglement and test Bell's inequalities. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I don't buy that this is any reason to assume total nescience is at all rational though. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The fact of our contributions would be lost to the shifting sands of history, unable to be verified. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I was fortunate to have been raised with creativity and curiosity as well as understanding consequences of actions. — Christoffer
what would constitute a pretty normal kind of upbringing in which a person gets the necessary tools to function around facts, knowledge, judgement and how to behave against other people. — Christoffer
Almost like whenever a person shows attributes generally considered to be in line with being a "good person" (in this context), then they should in some ways feel bad for being like that in contrast to people who don't care about this extremely topic the world is facing right now. — Christoffer
Isn't it better to ask why people don't care rather than ask why some do? — Christoffer
You fail to see that it's the antagonists of actions to make the world sustainable who are the ones dividing the world, not the ones who propose actions to fight climate change. — Christoffer
I don't get how you are somehow blaming the polarization on the ones who's trying to globally get everyone on board to solve this? — Christoffer
My response to you was what it was because you have repeatedly made the claim that the reason arguments involving history aren't valid is because "you can select just the history that proves your point." My point was that this can be claimed against all inductive arguments — Count Timothy von Icarus
I'm going to assume you meant something else by it, like "an argument can be valid without being sound. — Count Timothy von Icarus
My choices have nothing to do with me pointing out the fact that bio-dynamic farming leads to better results. — Benkei
I'd wish I could get all my foodstuffs locally but alas I'm stuck with cheese and eggs. — Benkei
Adoption of the necessary policies has to do a lot with framing as well I think. You shouldn't do XY and Z or the world will burn! Or maybe: "If we do XY and Z we will have more nature, more free time and more security". It's governments now going down the road of the techocratic control of society, which is, if we're not careful, a prelude to fascism but in any case just raises a shit ton of resistance and distrust at a time where trust and solidarity need to be peak. — Benkei
who in their right mind would be passionate about the shitfest that's modern politics nowadays? — Benkei
The major problem—one of the major problems, for there are several—one of the many major problems with governing people is that of whom you get to do it; or rather of who manages to get people to let them do it to them.
To summarize: it is a well-known fact that those people who must want to rule people are, ipso facto, those least suited to do it.
To summarize the summary: anyone who is capable of getting themselves made President should on no account be allowed to do the job.
— Douglas Adams
Through every nook and every cranny
The wind blew in on poor old Granny
Around her knees, into each ear
(And up her nose as well, I fear)
All through the night the wind grew worse
It nearly made the vicar curse
The top had fallen off the steeple
Just missing him (and other people)
It blew on man, it blew on beast
It blew on nun, it blew on priest
It blew the wig off Auntie Fanny-
But most of all, it blew on Granny!
can you really not see a problem with creating a system whereby a government and/or a private corporation can inject the entire population of their country with a chemical which is only intermittently batch tested? — Isaac
I fail to see your point? — Christoffer
Laziness, carelessness, ignorance, egotism and stupidity. There's little reason today for the privileged to make excuses and justifications for their ignorance of these environmental problems. — Christoffer
The rebuttal: — Hanover
If you tried to imply some hypocrisy I'm sorry to disappoint — Christoffer
in the EU, the regulations surrounding it make it hard for companies to circumvent laws and regulations; therefore, it's a bit easier to trust the official markings on products, at least in Sweden. — Christoffer
It seems that the hammer is the required tool to get people into serious action. A carrot doesn't work, they will just buy the least expensive mass produced chemically sprayed carrot possible and then get surprised when they die too soon. — Christoffer
The general view is that there's good persuasion, which follows the rules of logic, and bad persuasion, which doesn't.
I'd rather switch that around and say logic is partially descriptive of at least some the types of persuasion we find good, or think usually work, etc. — Srap Tasmaner
A: We should take the car.
B: Train.
A: Why should we take the train?
B: Trains have been carrying passengers traveling for both work and for pleasure since the mid-19th century. They were once the primary form of transportation, but with the advent of gas-powered automobiles in the early 20th century and the modern highway system, particularly in the wake of the Second World War, they were largely displaced by cars, buses, and trucks. — Srap Tasmaner
No, this is profoundly misunderstanding what logic alone can do for us. Logic just tells you that, if the premises of an argument are true, then the conclusion follows. — Count Timothy von Icarus
there isn't one set of "the rules of logic," — Count Timothy von Icarus
If I say "cutting taxes won't result in higher government revenues per the Laffer Curve, because we have seen 3 major tax cuts since 1980 and each time revenues have fallen instead of increasing," that is of course an argument relying on historical fact. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I've always thought that these reviews were done so that the student could follow the development of an position. Knowing which alternatives to a theory have been considered and rejected are key to understanding a theory because, especially for a novice, the dominant theory of the day is always going to look undetermined by the evidence they are aware of. It's also true that knowing why a given element was added to a theory gives you much better insight into how to think about that part of the theory. If some constant was added simply because the mathematics for some project wasn't working out, it's good to know it. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I don't see how poo pooing the struggle of some women somewhere is helping that or anything else really. — frank
looking at interlocking systems of oppression effecting people marginalised in more than one way. — fdrake
If you're willing to accept that some kind of feminist analysis is helpful, especially along intersectional/postcolonial lines, and that broadly speaking anti-patriarchy politics is doing Good Things (tm), then there's room to talk about what's to be done. If you're on the "we should be concerned about nothing but international class based geo-politics" boat, that is fair enough. It is a respectable boat. There's another boat, which is the "international class based geo politics would be swell, and so would emancipatory politics in political north countries"... I assume you are also in that boat. — fdrake
there's a type of social concept which is required to understand and work on these things. Like a demographic. Trying to understand why people act the way they do. As men and women. Around relationships, cohabitation, sex and all that. There're problems. And they're not all addressed by throwing money at them.
If those problems are simultaneously interpersonal and systemic - which they seem to be - then you end up looking at norms and what enables people to act in accordance with them. That's the space this discussion operates in. — fdrake
How would you flip the table and play the old one? — fdrake
Not sure I buy the point about the elite trying to distract us from the real issues. I mean, of course that's a real thing, in many cases well organized and funded -- but shouldn't you apply the same statistical approach to whether Helen Mirren's mouthing off is necessarily part of such a scheme? — Srap Tasmaner
Heard a fascinating theory along these lines of the origin of organized religion: there have to be burdens, like dietary restrictions and so on, as bona fides of your seriousness about being a member of the group; and these are only necessary because human communities had grown large enough that you might not know right off whether someone is one of us or one of them. Religion then steps in as a kind of passport, offering proof of group membership by having these up-front costs. A shared religion indicates a level of trustworthiness, so then religion can even cross borders and enable the maintenance of trading ties and so on. But again, it has to cost you something more than professing membership or no one will think it a reliable indicator of your trustworthiness. Another way of handling the cheapness of talk there. — Srap Tasmaner
One other thing that occurs me, that comes off the idea of the sentiment of rationality being the feeling of release under tension, is that a lot of what we actually do is more rhetoric than logic, in this sense: if you think of storytelling as the art of withholding information -- so that the audience feels anticipation and is eagerly engaged, anxious for the next reveal -- then we make our little step-by-step points so that the audience will keep getting a little hit of the sentiment of rationality. — Srap Tasmaner
Did you use Yahoo! or did you get someone to help you ask Siri? — Srap Tasmaner