That said, a terrorist nuke may be our best hope. We're in a race between a limited event like that and The Big One. — Jake
It means that if you own part of the earth you are depriving someone else of it. — Andrew4Handel
Given that we're not capable of addressing this threat through reason alone, some event is going to be required to engage our emotional energy. As example, imagine how the group consensus might dramatically shift if a terrorist sets off a nuke in some major city. — Jake
Imagine that hackers added a button to this forum which would allow every reader to erase the entire forum and the backups too. This issue would immediately go straight to the top of focus for the mods, right? Obviously, that's because if they don't get rid of that button it's only a matter of time until somebody clicks it and then all the other threads vanish. Thus, it's not rational to focus on the other threads until the button is gone. — Jake
I do agree that human psychology is the root of the problem. I'm just making the point that we don't have time to fix that first, if it even can be fixed. Such a process would take centuries at least, and we just don't have that kind of time. Imperfect flawed human beings are going to have solve this one, if it is to be solved. — Jake
Gender is just another faucet of the interior — Moliere
In a case of bodily dysphoria it is open to others to say that the feeling that the limb does not belong to the patient is pathological; that it is the feeling that needs to be treated, not the limb.
If our conception of transgender is also based solely on a feeling, then it also remains open to others to say that the feeling that the genitals do not belong to the patient is pathological; that it is the feeling that needs to be treated, not the body.
The idea that gender is determined by feeling leaves itself open to this criticism. What's the answer?
And this is where Rebecca Reilly-Cooper's discourse becomes a great strength: at it's heart, the concept of gender is no longer defensible.
So the answer to my question, "how best to think about the challenge of transgender?", is to admit that gender is a social construct that we are better off without. — Banno
How long do you expect this process to take? — Jake
Would you try to teach them how to be enlightened, argue for a radical transformation of human psychology etc? — Jake
Everybody is interested in everything, except the gun. That's fundamentally irrational, and demonstrates the weakness of philosophy. — Jake
Now please observe how posters will continue to ignore that specific challenge, or look for some clever way around it. Observe how philosophy is not helping us to be clear minded enough to simply admit that we are all quite literally nuts, almost psychopathic in our lack of concern. — Jake
There's a difference, of course, between "What it is like to be a man" and "What it feels like to be a man". — Banno
What is the point of philosophy if it can't even guide us to focus on the "gun in our mouth" which could destroy everything in just a few minutes? — Jake
Well, a higher order volition stems, most often, from a feeling (most often love, or most appropriately). — Posty McPostface
In order to carry out a rational evaluation of some way of living, a person must first know what evaluative criteria to employ and how to employ them. — Harry Frankfurt
Higher-order volitions (or higher-order desire), as opposed to action-determining volitions, are volitions about volitions. — Wikipedia
a higher-order want/desire/passion to do what is good or moral or ethical? — Posty McPostface
So, if we add in the passions to the discussion, then isn't this talk about 'volitions' and not reason and passions operating in seemingly isolation as per this discussion? — Posty McPostface
So, you have said it yourself, that reason can inform the passions through none other than reason alone, that some goal is undesirable rather than another. — Posty McPostface
This is pure Antisemitism = Fascism. — Number2018
Are you serious about this statement? — Number2018
it's incredibly difficult to stave off that influence by sheer will-power, unless it's boosted or still at high level. I think we are constrained by passions but not necessarily slaves to them which implies no autonomy no ability to fight their influence. — aporiap
Do you suggest that those with body integrity disorder ought be permitted to amputate whatever body part they fell is not their own? IS that feeling enough?
All that I am sugesting is that there is more involved here than it might at first seem. Hence the thread is a puzzle.
SO now, if you can see the issue, can we work towards some sort of coherence? — Banno
The tail that's wagging the dog of those things is the vampirism of the elites that I've mentioned (being paid more and more bloated incomes to strangle the system more and more), just as the cause of the French revolution was an absentee aristocracy putting an ever-heavier tax burden on the peasants. — gurugeorge
Essentially we have the (university-indoctrinated, NGO/HR-Department-employed) equivalent of a decadent, periwigged, pompadoured rentier "elite" (or rather, in modern terms, rent-seeking crowd) that's leeching off the body politic, whose way of life, whose ideology, language and manner, and whose dominance of the cybernetic industries, are absolutely hated by the average working person. — gurugeorge
desire will become completely fascistic. — Number2018
