but wouldn't suggesting it mixing it up with the topic on feminism. — RBS
Women are encouraged to talk, have therapists, "be in touch" with their feelings, and men are encouraged to be stoic. — I like sushi
1. What would a machine with an IQ of a million make of a human? — Devans99
2. Would it regard us in the way we regard bacteria? — Devans99
3. Could a machine be built so that it has respect for all forms of intelligence? (whether computer or biological) — Devans99
4. Or would we always be in danger of a HAL 9000 type incident? — Devans99
5. What should we do? AI could be our savour, yet it may also destroy us? — Devans99
Similarly there is no "direct transmission" of what the artwork embodies of those traces to the viewer, because he or she views works through a subjective lens. The point is, though, that what is actually embodied by the work is something real, that will be more or less apprehended by the viewer depnding on various factors, including of course education and subtlety of understanding, etc.. — Janus
And the harm of illegal drugs — tim wood
Used? Human beings have emotions; they don't use them. — tim wood
Seem to me you do not know what a category error is. Sugar is dangerous? Maybe sugar should be banned? Every thing is dangerous. Shall we ban everything? Or the reverse, everything isdangerous, so everything is ok? These are all implicated by your form of argument. — tim wood
Right. And as I commented on another thread, the dominant art of our time is on Netflix and Spotify. — old
There's a LOT actually. Depth of thought, values, artistic ability, complexity, etc. — NKBJ
if I had the requisite experience I could come to see what they see. — Janus
I maintain that there is simply more to be seen in some things than in others, and this is a function of what awareness, thought, association, emotion, liveliness, insight, and so on has been put in by the creator. — Janus
How can you find something inadequate or disagree with it prior to studying it? Of course it you disagreed with the whole idea of some discipline, say for a couple of examples, cosmology or theology, then of course it is not that you should not study; you would not study it. — Janus
Yes, I read it and I thought it was, most charitably, superficial, and, least charitably, vacuous. — Janus
At this point, I’d simply like for you to answer my initial two — javra
Premise: We humans value sapience; we, for example, want ourselves to be sapient, rather than non-sapient. As another example that is applicable to the philosophy forum: we almost by definition value those historical philosophers we deem to have been of greater wisdom, and do not value those whom we deem to have been utterly devoid of wisdom (given that philosophy is a love of wisdom). — javra
If this premise stands—and if wisdom is not concluded to be an irrational or fallacious concept in respect to what is real—then I offer that this conclusion then rationally follows: We, thereby, likewise value those artworks which to us expresses great sapience over those artworks that to us are either devoid of sapience or express minimal amounts of it. This regardless of whether it’s Shakespeare, the Transformers, or the Simpsons. To find aesthetic value in a blank canvas as a finished work of art, or in a musical piece that is devoid of sound, one will need to experience it as endowed with worthwhile wisdom; otherwise, one will not find aesthetic value to such pieces of art. — javra
We, thereby, likewise value those artworks which to us expresses great sapience — javra
so too is a human’s awareness of aesthetics better than that of a chimp’s. — javra
Really? Are you for real? Around here we call it the opioid crisis. Where are you from?
From a .gov, "National Drug Overdose Deaths—Number Among All Ages, by Gender, 1999-2017. More than 70,200 Americans died from drug overdoses in 2017, including illicit drugs and prescription opioids—a 2-fold increase in a decade. The figure above is a bar and line graph showing the total number of U.S. overdose deaths involving all drugs from 1999 to 2017." But gosh, that's just the ODs.
So, yes, I assert that taking illegal drug harms your community. Any argument with that? — tim wood
Are you arguing that "emotions" are somehow comparable with taking illegal drugs? — tim wood
"Taking illegal drugs is like having emotions because..." — tim wood
If aesthetics has the purpose of drawing us toward greater sapience — javra
Assuming your answer is yes, does your taking illegal drugs do your community any harm? Answer: of course it does. — tim wood
Well, firstly the point was to show that something can be more than something else even if we cannot measure it. — Janus
But there is also the point that if something is loved more than something else, then for those who love it the more beloved thing is better. — Janus
Of course you will now probably retort that for example more people love some silly pop song than they do Bach's music. — Janus
But the question is, do they really love it, or are they merely sentimentally attached to, or infatuated, with it? — Janus
So, the further point here is that taste for more original, inventive, subtle and profound things may be developed by education, and consciousness can be transformed in the process, such that we become able to see things we previously were not able to see. — Janus
Why would you expect aesthetic judgement to be deductively certain or empirically demonstrable? — Janus
What you really seem to be arguing is "I can't see it, so it must be wrong". — Janus
I can't give you a knockdown argument to support my contentions, as I already acknowledged; all I can do is to say what I know from experience, presuming that there is enough commonality to aesthetic experience and that it is something that may be cultivated that you may be open enough to come to see that I am talking about something which is a real possibility for your, or anyone's experience. — Janus
For me the human condition obviously consists in both what is debased and what is elevating, in what is trivial and what is profound, in what is original and interesting and what is banal. Of course the apparently trivial kinds of lives of many people can be treated in literature, for example with profundity and compassion or they may be treated with fatuous admiration, as if life is and should be nothing more than titillation, amusement, or alternatively drudgery and boredom alleviated only by novelty and endless acquisition and consumption. — Janus
I don't think you will disagree with me that very many people's lives are characterized by thoughtlessness and acceptation of the swill that is served up by popular culture. — Janus
I think it is ethically better to think for yourself while acknowledging that there are, not merely different understandings, but different levels of understanding at work in every human pursuit. — Janus
Call me an elitist: I probably deserve it! — Janus
What you are asking for is like asking for the explanation of a joke or a poem. — Janus
Some things cannot be directly said, but must be shown by allusion, and allusion is one thing that most crappy works of art do not embody. — Janus
And anyone who completes a Master's Degree to prove to them self that something is wrong with that field of study, is kind of a bad-ass. — ZhouBoTong
More of a sad-ass. — Janus
Can you guarantee to control your drug use and it's effects on you and others? — tim wood
plus a few seconds of the 5th (that scene in the Simpson's where the whole town gets up to leave the symphony after 5 seconds of Da Da da Daaaa nails it). — ZhouBoTong
Haha, that's brilliant. I didn't know of that scene. — S
And the fact is that most, if not all, evangelistic voters don't even want you to vote (i.e. choose for yourself), but only to demonstrate that you think like them by voting for their pick. That's not a prescription, just the way I approach evangelistic voters. — Merkwurdichliebe
Then you have the key systemic change: improving yourself. — Merkwurdichliebe
Most people would agree that Shakespeare was an infinitely better storyteller and writer than Michael Bay. — Olly
There's a fair consensus that shakespeare was an exceptional writer/artist, only a tiny percentage of people would say Michael Bay was as good, better, or even an artist at all. — Olly
Shakespeare explored the human condition with almost unmatched eloquence — Olly
Bay makes movies with explosions and hot models because Bay likes explosions and hot models, not because he has any interest in people or telling a compelling story. — Olly
Most "popular" or "low" art fades away after a few decades or less. — Olly
Their work has a timelessness to it, that resonates with people across all time, — Olly
It was not created with the talent or vision — Olly
the idea of the "western canon", a collection of artworks from our cultures that exists as a kind of lasting legacy of what we are at our best. — Olly
If the offered premise stands, how would the given conclusion be erroneous? — javra
Most people would agree that Shakespeare was an infinitely better storyteller and writer than Michael Bay. — Olly
Do we love some things more than others? Of course! How will you measure the difference? If you reduce life to what is measurable, what will be left? — Janus
So what if you show there are no such unequivocal arguments to support ethical or aesthetic judgements? — Janus
All you have shown is that such judgements are not analytic or empirical judgements, but that is trivially obvious to anyone who has given it any thought. — Janus
It doesn't follow that artworks and ethical judgements do not embody more or less understanding of the human condition, or that such understanding is not what is near universally valued above all else by those who value human intelligence and the compassion and sensitivity that come with it over mere entertainment or self-serving pleasure seeking. — Janus
People come to see these ethical and aesthetic truths because they develop and transform their ability to see them, not because they could be convinced by some deductive argument or undeniable empirical observation or theory. — Janus
This is off-topic but I think it is relevant. — Janus
I thought this thread was supposed to be about the morality of illegal drug use. — Noah Te Stroete
Yea, you know, if you're one to believe that an elephant's painting is as aesthetically valuable as is a human's, to each their own. — javra
beauty and emotional power are not "measurable" because they are not quantities. — Janus
some works embody them more powerfully, more subtly, more intelligently, more authentically and so on, than others. — Janus
To say this is not sophistry, but to express something I know from experience. — Janus
what makes you think it's about these issues to begin with? It's a big marketing campaign about who's popular. There were barely any policies debates in the last election. — Benkei
Democrats want a multicultural society. Democrats support more open borders. Democrats see benefits in socialism (general meaning, not arguing whether what they call socialism is actually socialism). Democrats generally do not see the U.S. as really great (it has done great things, but also terrible things). — ZhouBoTong
I feel sympathy towards those who have the genuine urge to take action (by voting) in order to make things better. It is unfortunate that we're left with the choice between a giant douche and a turd sandwich. In the end, I think voting is futile and can effect no real systemic change. — Merkwurdichliebe
Disagree, of course! But saying we had no arguments is a bit much! :brow: — NKBJ
Can you elaborate? I'm sorry brain is not working properly. — Anaxagoras
No, I'm not black. I'm very conventional: elderly white cis male, retired techie, from England. — Pattern-chaser
But they are experienceable, and some people are better equipped to experience and respond to them than others, — Janus
More like you interpreted the way it went predictably. — Janus
Really, zhou? And here I thought we'd been getting along.... :chin: — NKBJ
I haven't read that discussion, but it seems it went as I would've predicted. — S
No, I'm baffled. To undermine your base in the way they did, is about the most shady rat-bastard thing a political party could do. I don't see how they can be trusted with my vote. — Merkwurdichliebe
That's too bad. Race and gender are two of the worst criterion I can think of for supporting a candidate. Not that this hasn't been the case the whole time. I'm just saying. — Merkwurdichliebe
I want to now ask anyone interested in this topic to share the ethical implications you feel having this done to a someone undermines as a private citizen who has Human Rights. This excludes a cause for a terrorist investigation or justified concern by DHS -- whom are trained to properly handle bypassing a citizen's individual rights of privacy (for the most part, or at the very least are supposed to be) -- in order to determine a possible national threat. — THX1138
I'm more referring to "vigilante" private citizens. A formed group composed of those whom are technologically proficient and whom may have the resources necessary to hack someone. Their motivation may be to "karmically" punish someone for interests found to be reprehensible and suspect. Invading such an individual's privacy systematically (phone camera, audio, geo-location, online activities, accounts, etc.) being their method of obtaining intimate details.They may then weaponize the information they've gleaned against such an individual. — THX1138
I'm no Republican by any stretch of the imagination, but I don't know how anyone could support the democratic party after it sabotaged its popular candidate in the last presidential race. Can anyone explain that too me? — Merkwurdichliebe
Until they sabotage the next candidate. — Merkwurdichliebe
More intelligent appreciation of the arts is cultivated; the result of education, just as with philosophy itself. So thete are criteria that underpin aesthetic judgements despite the fact that not everyone will accept them, or understnd them.
If there are no analogous criteria for moral judgment, np criteria beyond personal preference then whether or not taking illegal drugs is moral will be merely a matter of opinion. — Janus