I like nature guy, I'm nature guy to some extent, but we can't return to some previous more innocent state of being without facing the consequences that entails. Back-to-nature should own up to the consequences, and in a world of 7, 8 billion people those aren't pretty I'd say. — ChatteringMonkey
If ssu couldn't brown nose US power, he wouldn't know how to breathe. — Streetlight
Again, not sufficient for what, to whom, why? — neomac
If we are in a forum debating things we can link sources, provide arguments , offer definitions. — neomac
whenever I found your arguments fallacious as straw man, misquotations, contradictions, question begging claims, lack of evidence, blatant lies, etc.) or questionable on factual or explanatory bases, I argued for it. — neomac
I didn't offer an argument in the form of a logic deduction — neomac
I try to identify the logic structure of the argument, — neomac
I’m mainly interested in reasoning over pertinent arguments on their own merits, more than in resulting opinion polls and intelligence contests — neomac
things can be perceived, represented, or valued differently, yet that doesn’t prevent us from explicating and navigating these differences in more or less rational ways, and define accordingly margins of convergence where cooperation is possible and beneficial. — neomac
you started talking about possibilities (“possible interpretations”, “could perfectly rationally”), yet you concluded your argument with a fact (“And indeed, many have” concluded that perfectly rationally look at those facts and conclude etc.) giving the impression that the possibilities you were talking about were actually the case — neomac
that the same facts (e.g. the ones mentioned by ssu) have been looked at and assessed with perfect rationality to conclude something incompatible with ssu's conclusions hasn’t been shown yet. — neomac
Not sure about that either. First, I have no idea how one would or could calculate such a probability — neomac
Why, the Russian have only made reasonable proposals — ssu
some diplomatic approaches to end the war. — ssu
That Biden has said he's not looking for regime change in Russia — ssu
The romantic "nature guy" opposition is even more ideological or should I say religious. — ssu
a way for Russia to signal that it's open for some diplomatic approaches to end the war. — ssu
We will be ready to return as soon as Ukraine shows a constructive position and provides at least a reaction to the proposals submitted to it — deputy foreign minister Andrei Rudenko
any concession to Russia is not a path to peace, but a war postponed for several years. — Mykhailo Podolyak
Note the ought not? This is supposedly a moral position, as can be seen in the OP. Hence such discussions are fraught with over-reaction. — Banno
I can't think of any situation where a declaration of belief is required. — praxis
The EU just sanctioned 2/3 of his crude oil. So at best he would be able to sell a small part of it at a huge discount. — M777
Why don't you call a specialist in the scientific study of human behavior? — Olivier5
I've edited my answer. — Olivier5
My claim is that some are more guilty than others — Olivier5
It is sufficient for people posting in good will. — Olivier5
extensive — ssu
well reported — ssu
assume — ssu
as a show-of-force — ssu
very often — ssu
I guess the response I'll get to this is a list what the US has done to Third World countries. Because that I guess makes all above totally OK behavior. — ssu
when poster X goes through the trouble of rephrasing what another poster Y has already phrased, there is a risk for a straw man. — Olivier5
If poster X does so very often, and his victims very often do not agree to the rephrasing, and berate him publicly for it, that is an indication that X might be addicted to straw men. — Olivier5
We can differentiate between some statement being true, and our believing that it is true. This is a commonplace; it's a distinction worth making because it allows us to on occasions to be wrong - ...What this shows is that we need the notion of "belief" in order to make a basic distinction between what we think is true and what is actually true. — Banno
A good willed poster does not misrepresent systematically what he is responding to. — Olivier5
It is sufficient for people posting in good will. — Olivier5
If we are in a forum debating things we can link sources, provide arguments , offer definitions — neomac
I try to identify the logic structure of the argument, so e.g. in case of a deduction premise and conclusion , to check if it's logically valid. — neomac
I don't even know what opinions you are talking about how can I possibly believe they all are indefensible and irrational?! — neomac
the point is not to assess people or opinions, but to assess actual arguments, so e.g. what are the actual arguments — neomac
I'm not sure how you understand it or intend to apply it. In what sense do the fact that I listed underdetermine the theory (?) that Russia is a security concern for the West? — neomac
in such uncertainty, can they bet on the Russians playing nice? — Olivier5
There is no method that aggregates all the methods. — neomac
Whenever peers and experts disagree with me, I should examine how rational their arguments are — neomac
And this trust can be again more or less rational. — neomac
If there are two claims that I find both defensible after rational examination, I would find more rational to suspend my judgement. — neomac
either they are smarter than I am, or I’m smarter than they are, or we are equally smart but we fail to understand each other for non-pertinent reasons or we are all stupid but everyone in their own way . — neomac
There are all the murders already committed against civilians. That is evidence. — Olivier5
My answer is: the actual, documented behavior of said occupying troops in Bucha and hundreds other places is indicative of what will happen in such a scenario. — Olivier5
Since you cannot counter them — Olivier5
With reason and arguments rather, which you failed to address — Olivier5
the EU will most probably be extremely generous with Ukraine — Olivier5
the Russians could be persuaded to call it a day sooner than you think. — Olivier5
Point 4 is to wooly for discussion. — Olivier5
I contend point 3. Ukrainians have shown a certain resolve and interest is staying independent. I guess they don't want to go the way of the Uighurs. — Olivier5
I should have known that you can't possibly put forth any positive argument. — Olivier5
You made an argument — Olivier5
Are you taken into consideration the behavior of Russian troops in occupied Ukraine? — Olivier5
I am making the argument that the Russians have no particular reason to stop killing Ukrainians, even after they sign a potential peace deal, and that in actual fact, they do kill, torture, rape and rob a lot of civilians wherever they occupy Ukraine. The only way to stop these killings is to push the Russians back into Russia. — Olivier5
As if chopping your way out to some dumb remark you can smirk about, wasn’t even more weird. — neomac
The points I made for example are sufficient to rationally justify my perception of the Russian threat against the West — neomac
Prior to any consideration of political regime, and the varied levels of freedom and security they afford to their citizens, to me the first and most important point here is that of aggression vs defence. — Olivier5
What I said, originally, is that it is neither naïve nor immoral nor unphilosophical to support a democracy that is being attacked by a dictatorship. On the contrary, it is the natural, logical, and moral thing to do. — Olivier5
to now pour them into the largest concentration of Nazis in Europe? My God its horrifying. — Streetlight
