The burden of disproving my argument falls on the neurological reductionism — Wayfarer
I’m saying that in order to even begin to explore the neuroscience, you already need to use reason, you need to reason by inference from cause to effect and so on. So in doing that, you’re deploying the very faculty that you are claiming neuroscience can provide an account of. That’s where the circular reasoning or question-begging comes in. — Wayfarer
Whenever we deploy a reasoned argument, we’re using a faculty that is internal to the nature of reason. And that is not something given in any data, it is deployed to interpret data and to say what it means. — Wayfarer
When you're looking at neurological data and interpreting the meaning, then you're using the very faculty you're trying to explain. And that faculty operates on the symbolic and logical level, the level of logical necessity. — Wayfarer
:100:
Not a football game, but worthy of cheerful support nonetheless! — creativesoul
Because it is goddam hard and the choices are quite arbitrary! A Dutch company tries to your eco-friendly phones called Fairphones. It says it can reach 40% of the materials used would be ethically sourced or recycled (of dozens of materials used). Again, arbitrary choices about what is complicit and what isn't. — ssu
if a fifth of the population of Congo gets income from mining and the vast amount of this is from artisanal and small scale mining (ASM), why would you then be against one of the most poorest people in the World? — ssu
The reality is complex, but your answers are simple and arbitrary. — ssu
I know a lot of groups from history like that. They are called dictatorships or authoritarian regimes. Keeping people in fear was/is a control tool for them. They differ from ordinary mobsters in that they surely have great plans for the improvement of the World, at least in their own thinking. The World is going to be a better place, if only you eradicate the capitalists / the jews / the communists whoever from society. That's how they think. Bold dramatic moves have to be taken! And they don't believe in democracy. — ssu
people generally ask then: "OK, if I'm not going to use this bad company (because they use cobalt from Congo), what will I do then?" — ssu
Are you less complicit than the young student working on the counter at the fast food restaurant trying to get some income? — ssu
So you might be against attacking families that have bought a Happy-meal, but Ok with the young employee losing his or her job and perhaps happy about the entrepreneur losing his business. And all because it gets into the local news! — ssu
Would you publicly use a smart phone if someone can takes a photo of you, tracks down where you live and puts your house on fire? — ssu
Who decides that? You? — ssu
Because if a small cabal protest the use of something as complicity to bad behavior, then the question rises that what then is "good behavior"? — ssu
And if you protest the situation of child labor in Congo, is then the answer to put an embargo on it and make things worse the 12,5 million people or one fifth of the population that is employed by Artisanal and Small-Scale Mining, because the country is such a mess that only a few mining companies dare to operate there? — ssu
Why the employees and the entrepreneur have to lose their jobs for a media photo op is disgusting and their "complicity" in the problems global markets is rather dubious. — ssu
Do they at McDonalds think it's OK? — ssu
Do you think that they are irrelevant of an media article like that appearing? — ssu
So there's no other way than to burn down franchising to get the message? — ssu
the article is 20 years old, but it doesn't matter, nothing has changed in twenty years in China, right? — ssu
Because let's remember that you had that smartphone which uses cobalt dug up by that poor Congolese kid, then perhaps your house should be burned down. — ssu
If you don't use anti-child labor eco-friendly 'happy cobalt', your house might be burnt down. Wouldn't that just change peoples behavior!??? Remember I'm using the 'happy cobalt' mined by those happy miners adhering to environmental regulations at the Murrin Murrin mine. So, have I really made things better with my anti-child labor choices? — ssu
at least with burning down that McDonalds in Wyoming you have likely put one franchising entrepreneur in severe economic difficulty and few low paid workers (who might be poc) out of a job because you burned their workplace down at a time when the economy is very bad and a pandemic is going around. Guess all that makes the World a better place then. — ssu
And if in Ethiopia a Chine factory uses child labor in miserable working conditions, that is the reason to burn down a McDonalds in Wyoming? That will really help the Ethiopian children or what? — ssu
if we have a smartphone that has lithium battery using cobalt mined from the Republic of Congo? That's the willful blindness? — ssu
Surely something has to be done, but how do we get the change we want? — ssu
Here in the UK, it's the rightwing media which drives racism, to boost their readership and make a bit of profit. Not to mention, as a driver for Brexit. — Punshhh
Those complicit regarding matters of institutional racism and it's residual effects/affects will remain so as long as doing so poses no threat to their own lives and/or livelihoods.
Is that a good summary?
I mean, do I understand you correctly? — creativesoul
If we glorify violence, if we think it's the only option and aren't careful, we really can get violence and lawlessness on a far larger scale that we ever did imagine in our now seemingly peaceful society. — ssu
So is your argument here that you cannot make a change without braking the law? That those constitutional rights that I and you have isn't enough or what? That the existing laws are so bad, so outdated and wrong, that there is ABSOLUTELY NO OTHER WAY than to resort to breaking the law? — ssu
The question is how to bring about that change. — Isaac
And that change usually happens through political movements that even can organize themselves into political parties. That's how the system ought to work. — ssu
You have to say what is needed to change. Or you just oppose 'systemic racism' just like a Republican opposes socialism, or better yet, cultural-marxism, which is created as this catch-all term for everything. Which naturally doesn't even imply any real suggestions what to do etc. — ssu
You can organize into associations, you can form political parties, you can join political parties and be active through them. You can run in elections in your community or so. — ssu
You can write opinions etc. to the media. You can write to the Parliamentary Ombudsman here and engage with authorities directly. You can speak to members of Parliament or elected officials in the community. — ssu
you can hold political demonstrations. — ssu
The majority of Americans DO support change. — ssu
So basically what you are saying is that nothing changes in elections. — ssu
How have you established that the electorate is not against systemic racism? You have only said that elections don't work, people aren't interested, politicians won't do anything. It might be good to explain this. — ssu
And what would be your options in a fully functioning democracy? You are not above others, you know. If you want to change peoples thinking and influence the community, yes, you have a hell lot of work to do! — ssu
I don't believe that. — Marchesk
So Wittgenstein was wrong? — Marchesk
Which is something odd between the world and our conceptualizing. — Marchesk
if a state does not tend to change its behaviour based on expressions of the public will, then that's a defeater for it being a representative democracy. — fdrake
It seems to me that when a state's populace isn't in uprising, the default state tends towards serving the interests of wealthy private interests; which is problematic for calling that state a representative democracy. It's more of a "We'll fuck you as hard and as long as we can get away with-ocracy" — fdrake
What task is over and when? — ssu
Hence if the democratic system works, at least some party will respond to it. Or then the people can form their own political movement. — ssu
That's not what you said earlier, if I've read your posts well. — ssu
So if candidates promise police reform that is utterly trivial? — ssu
Wrong.
On an earlier comment before my last one:... And even before that: — ssu
it's YOU who is forgetting that democracy isn't just elections and campaigns and basic political activity of the populace is an adamant requirement for there to be true democracy. — ssu
I understand the critique of positivism or empiricism, or verificationism. Condensed: The empiricist's methods cannot be empirically verified, and so they have to ground what they're doing in something nonempirical. You can't verify verificationism, no. — csalisbury
I point out, that, despite your rejection of verification, you compulsively reference verified sources qua verified. Though you reject pure experience as authoritative, and refer to the non-empirical essence of a priori methodology, you always approach that methodology via empirically-derived understandings of which texts are authoritative. — csalisbury
what's more interesting is what we're doing when we do this, and why. — csalisbury
I've noticed I tend to talk compulsively about the things I most need, that I'm most scared of evaporating if I don't talk about them, which means I never really had them to begin with, and could only convince myself of their reality by arguing for them against an enemy. — csalisbury
So you're saying it's self-evident that universals refer to nothing, and yet people have debated whether they refer to something. — Marchesk
If one can understand the terms of the debate and participate in the debate, then yes, it's meaningful. — Marchesk
Is the argument over universals a topic in sociology? — Marchesk
the questions around why and how we do it. — Marchesk
A representative democracy is much more than just elections. I think this is basically clear to everyone. — ssu
As if elections don't matter. — ssu
Elections are utterly trivial in political terms because they are just a snapshot of what the electorate think at that time. — Isaac
Elections are a safety valve by which we can change ruinous administrations — ssu
Yet I personally don't believe that anytime the majority is "simply wrong". That view is extremely arrogant and shows the utter hubris of the person saying it. If people are conservative, old-fashioned or even superstitious and reject something that will only later become accepted, I wouldn't judge them to be "wrong" and thus voting "wrongly" — ssu
Campaigns usually ought to be more thought not only showing that something is wrong, but a specific answer what to do about it. — ssu
Right on! If there's NOBODY ELSE than conservatives, what fhe f* is your problem? — ssu
just give somebody dictatorial powers and he will solve it. It never happens like that, it never has. — ssu
I'm unsure whether representative democracy as a social model is itself to blame. I think that our current forms of it in the political north are prone to co-option by wealthy private interests. It also looks to me that states are on a much more level playing field with corporations in terms of political power, and we often forget this. Corps are beholden to their shareholders, corps are at least as influential between states as states, and more influential within states than their populace. — fdrake
There should be vents for public opinion that are more easily leveraged into policy than the current blockade between public opinion and policy execution most of us live in.
Our political classes only consult public opinion to the extent it allows them to manage it. And let's be under no illusions here; the corpus of political influence that drives our states' policy advocacy does not come from anything to do with the majority of its people, — fdrake
Whenever those small concessions can be scapegoats, so much the easier; "clap for the NHS" - fund them better, etc. — fdrake
I don't believe a representative democracy will represent any populace adequately when the interests of wealthy international actors are given much more weight by a state than their populace's own interest, or of the interests of humanity as a collective. — fdrake
To that extent, elections do not implement public opinion, for which a more interactive mode of democracy, well within our technical capability, would be neccesary. — Kenosha Kid
Better that reflection than no reflection. If power only changes by violence, in that society everything surely isn't well. — ssu
democracy needs an active populace: not only voters that don't tolerate corruption or dismal performance or those in power breaking the law, but genuinely voice their concerns and their agenda — ssu
What on Earth do you think election Campaigns are about? — ssu
without there having been any significant change in governance or methodology or philosophy, you conclude that this time, it's all perfectly legitimate. — unenlightened
I propose that — unenlightened
we do so with more attention to the nature of the discipline, which is only possibly scientific at the margin where it merges with human biology, and that for the rest we adopt a much more humble and far less dogmatic let alone coercive stance in relation to education and psychiatry in particular — unenlightened
I propose that we acknowledge the inevitably cultural nature of psychology and the reflexive way that theories of psychology change the human behaviour they describe. — unenlightened
there is a great deal wrong with representing this reflection as science. — unenlightened
If it was self-evident, there wouldn't be long-standing philosophical debates over universals. — Marchesk
Not if it's motivated by a philosophical puzzle. — Marchesk
The argument I'm having with ssu (on my end at least) is regarding the historical failure of representative politics - the changing whims of the state - to make US POCs equal, except when their hands are forced or leveraged by popular movement. — fdrake
Elections are a safety valve by which we can change ruinous administrations to others and a way to show that those in power do enjoy support of the majority. If the elections are just an theatrical show, naturally democracy doesn't work. But it can work. Quite surprising to have to say such basics. Just saying. — ssu
I think you're missing the point of representative democracy. — ssu
You realize that by this account all of the other supposedly meaningless philosophical questions discussed in this thread also become meaningful empirical questions in light of the confusion or clarity they produce in people? E.g. the difference between a world where "universals exist" and a world where "universals don't exist" is that in one world (whichever of them represents the correct answer to that question), people are not needlessly confused by intractable philosophical problems, while in the other world, people are thus confused. — Pfhorrest
there isn't a disagreement about the observed phenomena (the facts of speciation), but a disagreement about the observers (the humans doing the thinking about speciation). — Pfhorrest
Elections and representative politics has a terrible track record on addressing systemic racism. — fdrake
Neither side could demonstrate the difference between a world where "species exist" and "species don't exist" through Snakes' "novel test", for example. — Pfhorrest
it is a concept that gives rise to unnecessary confusion and unanswerable questions, so that concept and the framework that surrounds it are best abandoned and replaced with alternative ways of thinking about things that serve the same purpose without leading into those same problems. — Pfhorrest
