That's interesting because in theology relation is the only difference between persons of the Trinity. They are completely one, but a one that relates 3 ways — Gregory
The crucial point is agential separability. It matters whether or not we are ‘looking’ inside the phenomenon (in which case the ‘instrument’ itself is excluded from the description, and it is only the marks on the ‘instrument’, indicating and correlated with the values intra-actively attributable to the ‘object’-in-the-phenomenon as described by a mixture, that are being taken account of), or viewing that particular phenomenon from the ‘outside’ (via its entanglement with a further apparatus, producing a new phenomenon, in which case the ‘inside’ phenomenon as ‘object’, including the previously defined ‘instrument’, is treated quantum mechanically). — Karen Barad, ‘Meeting the Universe Halfway’
So my question on this thread is how we can know whether we are finite or infinite and what this means. Hegel seems to develop an argument about the infinity of the mind from the simple fact that we can think of infinity itself as an object of the mind. The cause has to be proportionate to the effect. Hegel draws a distinction between the form and the content of thought. Form is abstract and logical. Content has will, emotion, and imagery involved in it. But for him, God himself can be the content of thought: "It is only in thinking, and as thinking, that this content, God himself, is in its truth." Spirituality, as for as Hegelians are concerned, is closer to us than we are to ourselves. For him when we rationalize about infinity, whether in mathematics or logic, we indicate that there is a part of ourselves which is infinite through it containing the abstract content of infinity. This seems to be an elaboration of Descartes's ontological argument (from his Meditations). — Gregory
So maybe the question is, if there is and can be something infinite, what would that be? — Gregory
There are also no hard and fast distinctions between scientific, political, economic and literary domains.
— Joshs
I’m not sure what “domain” means here, but what matters in each field leads to different criteria without any similar endgame. My point is that requiring certainty is a theoretical desire that strips away ordinary criteria which are different for each type of thing.
ascertaining the real is simultaneously an empirical, ethical and political endeavor.
— Joshs
Well if we’re saying that there are political dimensions to philosophy, or ethical considerations in science, I agree, but the process and criteria, for the identity and correctness or appropriateness or ways in which they fail for each, are different and create the category and structure of a thing or practice. — Antony Nickles
The point is that more is at stake than ‘the results’; intra-actions reconfigure both what will be and what will be possible - they change the very possibilities for change and the nature of change.
Differentiating is not about othering or separating but on the contrary about making connections and commitments. The very nature of materiality is an entanglement.
. But it is just Barad’s position, or wish, that criteria should be held to one standard of “objectivity”….there is no singular standard for our criteria like “objectivity” to make them all certain.
— Antony Nickles
What would be Barad’s standard of objectivity other than the measurements determined via the criteria offered by contingent configurations of phenomena? These configurations, what Barad calls apparatuses, are entanglements between non-human matter and human conceptions, purposes and goals, which are themselves produced through cultural-linguistic-material entanglements. Thus, there is no separation between the material and the discursive. There are also no hard and fast distinctions between scientific, political, economic and literary domains. Because the engagement between the human and the non-human revolves around what matters to us in our discursive material practices, ascertaining the real is simultaneously an empirical, ethical and political endeavor. — Joshs
Determinately bounded and propertied human subjects do not exist prior to their ‘involvement’ in natural-cultural practices…Human bodies, like all other bodies, are not entities with inherent boundaries and properties but phenomena that acquire specific boundaries and properties through the open-ended dynamics of intra-activity.
Apparatuses are the practices of mattering through which intelligibility and materiality are constituted (along with an excluded realm of what doesn’t matter).
The apparatus enacts an agential cut - a resolution of the ontological indeterminacy - within the phenomenon, and agential separability - the agentially enacted material condition of exteriority-within-phenomena - provides the condition for the possibility of objectivity.
There are certain characteristics I have that I am confident about - that are part of how I think about myself, my identity. These include that I am my three children's father, I am intelligent, I write well, I am a Clark, I think like an engineer, I see the world in ways that not many other people do, I am loyal, and I am a man. My maleness manifests as intellectual aggressiveness; an ability to deal with conflict in an honorable way; competitiveness; a strong drive to make and take responsibility for decisions that affect my life sometimes without waiting for other's agreement; a desire to protect my family, friends, and people who are more vulnerable than I am; and a desire for emotional and sexual intimacy with women. That's what being a man means to me. — T Clark
Wonderful reflection. Thank you for sharing. Responsibility, action, loyalty, aggression, providing protection to the vulnerable, and sexual attraction to women are perfect explications of a masculinity. — Moliere
Physical space is an emergent property of matter. It is a physical object just like a table or a chair. Physical spacetime has an extra dimension, time. If the physical matter in the universe evaporates back to pure energy, physical spacetime disappears and we are left with the spacetime of energy. We would no longer have a 4D space. We would have something more exotic. Scientists speculate that quantum spacetime has 11 dimensions. — EnPassant
So the space of the self, and general space are superimposed but are not equal. And that shows how truly complex the dimensions, definitions and meanings of space are. And how they relate to the things that occupy them, or don't. — Benj96
No, this does not involve gender. Gender is a societal expectation of how a sex should behave in terms of body language, dress, and cultural expression. The ability for a man to penetrate a woman is a function of sex. It is not an expectation of how a man should act, it is the recognition of the physical potential action that a man can act on. — Philosophim
You cannot necessarily judge the intent of someone by their behavior. Also gender does not apply to sexual assault or lewdness. Gender is very simply a subjective expected set of behaviors and cultural expressions that society and groups of individuals expect a sex to express. Men not crying is an example of a gendered expectation. This does not mean a man cannot cry. This does not mean that a man crying is a gendered expression. The gendered expression would be if a man decides not to cry purely because of the gendered expectations of himself or the group he is around. — Philosophim
Its about the comfort of those feeling like they have a safe space for their sex. When you're in a vulnerable position with your pants down in a bathroom or needing to adjust clothing you don't want to worry about a man in the area. If a man wants to invade a bathroom and commit assault they can of course. But when there is a social pattern that's ingrained in a person its less likely to occur. — Philosophim
I don't know if you're familiar with Margaret Atwood's fiction, but one of her most famous works, The Handmaid's Tale is about the rise of a branch of the religious right which reduces the role of women to the bottom of society. Atwood claimed that all of the things depicted in her fiction reflect real world attitudes and events. I would say that's how the incel culture goes beyond being a vent for sexual frustration among some white men to connecting to social movements. The base notes are hatred and at least contemplating violence. The higher frequencies mesh with the reactionary right. — frank
However social constructionism is a theory and a contested theory at that, you are simply claiming without evidence that certain traits are social constructed but if you apply that to everything consistently nothing is real (It is an anti realist stance). — Andrew4Handel
Intersex conditions I know tend to occur in either males or females. For example Klinefelter syndrome only occurs in males. Turner Syndrome only occurs in Females. Androgen insensitivity syndrome occurs in males. — Andrew4Handel
But we are here because a male impregnated a female and that is essential for the survival of our species and a fundamental. We need to know whether someone is the opposite sex to reproduce. — Andrew4Handel
I understand your preference for ‘good grounds’, but what constitutes ‘good’ is socially constructed,
— Possibility
I disagree.
Having been brought up watching the Simpsons, I conclude that my skin is not yellow enough, and I have too many fingers. Can I get some medical help?
I claim the Simpsons as a society, and three fingered yellowness as its norm, and how can anyone dispute? One has to say that some social constructions are repugnant, invalid, reprehensible, ridiculous, dysfunctional. But if one says it only relative to the current fashion, it has no moral force at all. Next year it may be absolutely the thing to have a finger removed and yellow stained skin, and unpatriotic to remain encumbered with four fingers and that disgusting pasty white or brown skin. — unenlightened
I just want to illustrate what is at stake in these discussions.
My argument in summary is men and women are different, women have praiseworthy characteristics
but mens characteristics are the most celebrated.
These are all biologically based and not social constructed and cannot be opted in and out of.
The denial of this harmful.
I want people to have all the evidence and this evidence to me is to compelling to be dismissed and should shape further discussion.
I think that there needs to be good grounds in life and philosophy for denying reality or in believing in hidden identities. — Andrew4Handel
I thought philosophy was The Love of Knowledge and was really concerned about the nature of truth and reality.
To me censoring or vilifying people for misgendering people and making me or others call a Male "She" or a Female "He" is undermining the quest for truth and transparency and authenticity.
It is Undermining people personal beliefs it is engaging in a reality denying exercise and trying to suck society in to it. Getting people to deny their senses when they see a male looking person enter a women toilets. Gaslighting people.
I have called people who are clearly male "she" to be kind and this was before people started chanting "Trans men are men" and demanded we view trans and biological sex as interchangeable and equivalent.
It is a major assault on the truth. It is not a trivial or solely personal issue it effects relationships between people and peoples children are being told they can be born in the wrong body and set on the course for sterilisation and becoming a life long medical patient.
My being gay does not hinge on the approval of others it is not propped up by making people have particular thoughts about me.
Telling people they are hateful for not believing a man can become a woman, opposing child transition and destructive genital surgeries
that is a major psychological exercise at undermining peoples sense of reason and strongly held reality beliefs to follow what amounts to a personal and group religious ideology of invisible gender souls. — Andrew4Handel
Has someone posted an explanation yet of why most violence, sex offences and crime per se is committed by men throughout history.
It clearly isn't socialisation. There is no evidence it is socialisation and there is no evidence of a change in trends. I have never been in a formal situation where men have been encouraged to be antisocial outside of male banter (all male social situations) and the school playground. Men are spontaneously aggressive. Men and women want to do different jobs. Women aren't desperate to be car mechanics and plumbers.
I think there is some reality denial going on and a lack of evidence being presented over quite trite theories and wishful thinking.
Reality doesn't care about feelings and hypothesises.
Someone trying to behave like the opposite sex is futile. I am a male all my behaviour is male by dint of it being mine. I live as a male not a non binary multigendered invented woo entity. — Andrew4Handel
It is generally more simplistic. If you invest in ‘training’/‘educating’ then the pay off comes literally decade/s down the line. It is understandable why - in an economy based on profit - many people prefer to invest in what pays off next year/month/week rather than what pays off in 20 years or so … people have to eat and sustain themselves so the majority of what they have will be invested in tomorrow, next month/year rather than further down the line. — I like sushi
In society womens’ ‘traits’ (if we can call them that?) are generally not rewarded because they are good for roles/jobs that tend to see long term benefits rather than short term benefits - hence the pay of teaching and nursing. — I like sushi
By saying females I am including women and girls and even females of other species animal mothers and so on.
These thoughts came to me watching Wonder Woman and contrasting the treatment of Male and female super heroes.
It seems to me that male traits are seen in a more positive light than female ones still and that traits like nurturing, caring and kindness and forgiveness are seen as weaknesses.
There is evidence such as in the fact that the majority of people in the caring professions are female that these traits are not just stereotypes and even if they were they would be positive stereotypes.
Male traits also can be viewed as negative however I think they still lead to more success and influence in certain areas of life.
So where should we go from here in regards to responding to and analysing these kind of traits. I feel we need to celebrate the female traits and encourage them to be aspirations whilst not degrading useful male assets. Maybe not rankling traits at all unless they are anti social ones. — Andrew4Handel
Well, this seems to be a critique to basically every ontological system, and one that's easily fixable by including "absence" in whatever ontological system is missing it, so I don't believe it's exactly a problem with mine specifically or that it's a hard problem to fix.
I think this needs a separate op talking about whether "absence exists". — khaled
Well I wouldn't say "absence of matter" is a "thing that exists" so I didn't include it in the system, but that's not to say I don't believe there are no places where there is no matter.
Maybe it's hypocritical of me to believe that a pattern is a "thing that exists" but an absence isn't. Hmm... — khaled
You probably noticed by now that I don’t subscribe to pragmatism or utilitarianism in ethics. I do get the attraction, however. It does seem easier. But I don’t think it can achieve anything more than assessing or justifying the rationality of behaviour AFTER the fact.
— Possibility
Actually, pragmatism and utilitarianism are very consequentialist, so I don't see how else to asses the moral worth of an action rather than after the fact with those two rationale's. — Shawn
You probably noticed by now that I don’t subscribe to pragmatism or utilitarianism in ethics. I do get the attraction, however. It does seem easier. But I don’t think it can achieve anything more than assessing or justifying the rationality of behaviour AFTER the fact.
— Possibility
In other words, "anything more than" learning (developing more adaptive habits) – a feature in my book, not a bug. — 180 Proof
It rare for me to do this but I hope in faith that Hanover would like to address this. What I would say from my side would be something like, we work with an imperfect model and we do the best we can with it. It sounds pragmatic, to say so, but we aren't all behind a veil of ignorance to asses these issues, only judges are. — Shawn
Well, are you talking about society or the application of law itself? Please clarify. — Shawn
It seems that pragmatically we address the issue in terms of the benefit conferred to the total, that is society. We can only be as intelligent as the conduct that is expected of us. — Shawn
The ‘most efficient outcome’ from what perspective?
— Possibility
I think efficiency in decision making is called utility or intelligence.
It's hard to classify someone as intelligent nowadays without metrics swarming around you with advertisements and pixel tracking on a phone. Does that make sense? — Shawn
180 Proof kinda explained it. But, yes, we're all taxed on what's the most efficient outcome and seem to believe that rational self interest is possibly representative of our true selves. — Shawn
homo sapiens has done well even without conceptual frameworks allowing a person to make decisions based off of the ethical framework. Yet, modern day man finds it easier to function with a set determinate way of behaving according to law and order. Just my two cents. — Shawn
Here are some of the many issues I think are relevant in decision making.
1. Upbringing influences the kind of choices we can or do make.
2. Religious belief or atheism guides decision making
3. Physical disability effects decision making
4. Cognitive issues like Autism and ADHD, OCD, brain damage etc impact decisions
5. Decision often effect others from mild to major effects
6. Ignorance of the law is not an excuse. Consequences of actions don't care about motive.
7. there is a vast amount of information for sentient humans to process and that our brains do process.
8. Decisions are made at the level of consciousness and also with unconscious influences
9. Defence mechanism will influence choice justification.
10. At least one or more persons will disagree with your choices
11. We may or may not have free will and may never know.
123. Inaction and stoicism has consequences. — Andrew4Handel
There are studies that show babies as young as three months old, long before they have language, are already judging other people's behavior and making value judgements. Karen Wynn, who conducted the studies, suggests this does show there are innate rules for behavior. — T Clark
There are no innate rules for behaviour and any value judgements and ought's are completely fabricated.
Every decision we make we don't know if we are doing the right thing and what the consequences are going to be. — Andrew4Handel
Now consider the difference between kinetic energy and potential energy. The former would be actually having the capacity to do work, and the latter would be having the potential to have the capacity to do work. The concept of "potential enrgy" really doesn't make any sense logically, but the use of it is what gives rise to the issue↪kudos points us toward, where energy is seen as an entity in itself, rather than the property of an active object. When a thing has potential energy, that energy can only be understood as the property of something else. But it's easier just to ignore the requirement of something else, allowing the energy to exist as an abstract entity. — Metaphysician Undercover
You said the potential energy is in the spring (or at least you seemed to.). Strictly speaking, potential energy doesn't have a location. You could think of it as a sophisticated prediction.
— frank
I don't understand this. If it exists nowhere, it doesn't exist.
A battery has stored energy and you can move it from one thing to the next. I get that the total energy equals the potential energy plus the kinetic energy and the amount of energy that is demanded will increase based upon the resistance, but I don't see how we can suggest the energy is being expressed or being held in a potential state at some location away from the event.
That is, when I drop a penny, the energy event isn't occurring down the street. — Hanover
It's sort of important that they are real since it affects how we treat and regard them. A lot of bad has been done by those who have a habit of making others appear to be less than.
Real does determine existence and I don't know where you got this notion that it is outdated. Never heard anyone suggest that. I'm not even sure how you're dragging energy into this. What is real is what can be determined to exist, that's how we know dreams are not real and can safely dismiss a nightmare (well usually). — Darkneos
By no definition of the word fiction is your interpretation supported. It's tacking on too many things that aren't supported by it. — Darkneos
You're making it more complex than it needs to be. To refer to something as fiction is by definition to say it's not real. So when he's saying that the notion of other people is a useful fiction is implying that they aren't real. Read what he said. — Darkneos
I don't know if you think of what you've written as metaphysics. Whether or not you do, I think you have described the fundamental relationship between we humans and whatever constitutes reality. — T Clark
As for the "useful fiction" designation, this is nothing new. 2,500 years ago they might have called it the illusion of the self. It's true it's a bit cold, but a lot of eastern religions and philosophies observe humanity from a distance. — T Clark
Most empiricism stuff and deductive knowledge through logic can be certain. 2+2 = 4 — Deus
↪Janus No not at all. It's just regarding other people as not real rubs me the wrong way. — Darkneos
.Well no. Color doesn't exist even though it is an "experience" in our heads. Phantom limb isn't a real experience and neither are hallucinations either. Which is why the terror from such things can be dismissed. What looks like an apple isn't an experience of an apple, especially if it's wax. — Darkneos
But it's not a matter of what you accept, these things can be tested. That's how dreams can be known to not be real. Just because it's an experience doesn't make it real and if there is nothing behind the experience creating it then solipsism would have to be true.
You keep trying to get around it but Kant's logic flows there every time. — Darkneos
I think I started a thread in regards to whether Quantum mechanics has any affect on this, maybe that might have some insight. — Darkneos