No. That's not what I meant anyhow. You can clearly see how, say, a pistol is very very different from the AR-15 with a bump stock. One can be used to EASILY kill many people at once, while the other cannot be used that way.I think a gun qua gun qualifies as a weapon of war. — Thorongil
No, I clearly said, for example, many handguns don't qualify as weapons of war.If there are no non-war-like weapons, and it doesn't seem that there are, then you're just against weapons per se, which would seem to indicate your opposition to the possession of any means of self-defense. — Thorongil
It's negative depending on context. It's not negative in a war setting.You clearly regard "war-like" as a negative quality in itself. — Thorongil
I don't really have favorites. For any basic level online skills (I work in development & marketing atm), udemy.com - for advanced level stuff, learning by yourself, thinking, and asking around on forums. Also books.Do you have any favorite sources of information that would be of interest? — T Clark
No, that's not what I asked you for. You are just running from the questions. Of course there are defensive gun uses - but those cases do not demand the use of war-like weaponry.It is estimated that there are between 60k to several million defensive gun uses each year. — Thorongil
I'm also an engineer by degree, though I'm not a practising one.As an engineer — T Clark
I thought that all an engineer has to know is how to create things and achieve things when one does NOT know. An engineer is a master of not knowing.In order to do my job, I have to know things about the world and I have to know how I know them. — T Clark
You never come to know things. You just come to know what is not the case - that the retaining wall cannot fail through this and those particular mechanisms. But there may be a mechanism that you have not considered through which it can fail. There are always assumptions that can be wrong, etc. That's why engineers use things like factors of safety, and so on so forth.In the process of coming to know things — T Clark
Simple. I demonstrate it by asking you to give me examples of realistic situations when you would need such a weapon for self-defence.How do you know? This sort of assumption is at the heart of the anti-gun rhetoric, it seems to me, and it's never demonstrated. — Thorongil
You're equivocating on "powerful". Guns can be "more powerful" in a lot of different ways. Deeper penetration from one single bullet but very slow firing rate for example. Or you can have very fast firing rate, with less damage per bullet. There are many ways to assess what is "more powerful". So you're just equivocating.As I've already pointed out, and this is for Baden too, there are guns more powerful and deadly than the AR-15. — Thorongil
Oh yeaaaaah, the hamster mafia is after me, I certainly need a bazooka to defend myself, I'm sure they'll be coming with tanks too :snicker: I'm prepared:non-violent people will not have a means of defense. — Lone Wolf
Yes, I am against the freedom of an individual to own atomic weapons, regardless of whether he is Bill Gates and could afford to buy a few.All in all, if one is for a generalized gun- control, s/he is against freedom for an individual to make his/her own choices. — Lone Wolf
The police and the military are structures through which the government acts. The government cannot get "out of the military and police work", since the military and the police are created by the government to ensure that laws get followed.What needs to happen is to get the nose of the government out of the civilians personal lives, and get the politicians out of military and police work. — Lone Wolf
They are not falsehoods. If you're going to play with how weapons are classified, and what counts as assault rifles, etc. I'm not interested in that game. The fact is that there are guns that the public owns that the public has no business in owning.Are you sure you haven't, in light of the two falsehoods you peddled above? — Thorongil
That's because it is funny.I certainly expected someone like you to find Borat funny. :vomit: — Akanthinos
Yes, that! :rofl: I'm sorry for being an uneducated foreigner! :lol:"Come on", not "common". — Michael
I have trouble following what you mean here.I'd guess that the Romans were unable to get far enough away from their own influence to have that overwhelming advantage that enables a total subjugation — unenlightened
So... you are an authentic opportunist? :lol:There's a time for honesty, and a time for moderation; I believe in whichever suits me at the moment. :grimace: — unenlightened
What were the slaves used for? What kind of work did they do? And why didn't earlier peoples, which were arguably a lot better organised than the European countries at that time (thinking now about the Roman Empire) make use of slaves and achieve a scientific revolution?This handy timeline makes it clear that the slave trade predates the Enlightenment, and anything one can seriously call industry as we think of it. — unenlightened
:rofl: But I thought you're the guy who was all about honest talk...Well some of us might have other reasons for treating you badly, but let's try not to go there. :fire: — unenlightened
Yeah, that is true - China also happened to be the world's largest economy for much of world history. But at the same time, they did not learn how to make use of natural resources on an industrial scale and in a scientific way in the manner, Western Europeans did during and before the Enlightenment. Why didn't they? What made this "scientific revolution" possible in Europe?Who knows, it's certainly possible, but China invented gunpowder, paper, and all kinds of stuff without feeling the need. It's obviously not a racial thing, but it is a cultural thing, and who knows where any culture might have gone if...? — unenlightened
There might be remnants, but I don't particularly see the kinds of systemic racism where people are frequently fired from their jobs based on racism, and similar issues.I do assure you those years have not gone, but continue. Even dinosaurs remain as fossils, and in the imagination, and in the way they influenced the development of the Earth, and that was a very long time ago, before even my time. — unenlightened
Right, well I agree that they don't suffer a widespread disadvantage because of skin color, at least not in the Western countries. But then, I don't think that other races suffer such a disadvantage based on skin color (there are some exceptions in certain areas, etc. - I'm talking just by and large) in the West.if white people suffer a widespread disadvantage in the culture because of their skin colour, then the answer is that they do not and never have done. — unenlightened
That one. Clearly, Obama as he was quoted by Trump thought that it is laughable that someone could rig America's elections.And regarding Obama's inaction, he tried to speak about it but was blocked by McConnell. — Michael
Hmmm okay, but wasn't it the technological superiority of the Western Europeans at that time that allowed them to subjugate the rest of the world? They may have justified it as white supremacy in some cases (though that depends, because with regards to Eastern Europeans & Russia, it couldn't be justified as White Supremacy). But it was technological superiority that really permitted it to happen.What you would hear me say is that there is a legacy from the past, from the colonisation of the Americas, Africa, India, Australia, New Zealand, by (white) Europeans, which was justified by an explicit doctrine of white supremacy. — unenlightened
I agree that the attitudes persisted - they were there in the 60s, 70s, 80s - but those years are long gone now! I really think we have moved beyond that, especially with the internet and the ease of access people now have to others of different nationalities, skin colors, and to knowledge as well.But can only think that by covering your eyes and ears to the vast amount of evidence from the media from social scientists, that the attitudes persist, as one would expect them to if one understood the evolution of social attitudes at all. — unenlightened
So a professor getting fired based on skin color isn't a serious case of racism?And a really good example of this persistence is the way, in this very thread, one incident in what the article calls 'a historically black college', of alleged discrimination against whites is taken as of comparable weight to the discrimination against blacks. It is particularly ironic that the black colleges were explicitly set up to educate newly freed slaves who had previously been forbidden by law from being educated. — unenlightened
:rofl: Thing is, people who are mentally impaired by an actual illness (like Alzheimer's, etc.) cannot do those regular tasks. That's precisely the point. People often confuse actual medical disorders with behaviour that is within normal bounds.Or is that all it takes? Being able to name some animals and draw a cube? ;) — Michael
That Trump got 30/30 on the cognitive test :razz:At work so can't watch. What's it say? — Michael
Sorry, I didn't mean to put that in an insulting way (as in, saying that you don't know Kant), I simply didn't understand what you meant by your question. Maybe not being a native speaker doesn't help here.OK, I don't want to get into arguing over who has studied what more; perhaps I was mistaken in my impression that you were familiar with Kant mainly through the lens of Schopenhauer (if that can be counted as being familiar with Kant). In any case I thought you were aware that I have studied Kant's critical philosophy sporadically yet consistently for more than twenty years, a fact which would make it surprising if I were not aware of something so fundamental to Kant's thought. — Janus
Yes.Kant denied that there is intellectual intuition in the very sense that Spinoza (probably following Descartes) claimed is the highest form of intellectual knowledge. "Intuition' for Kant denotes something like 'sense perception'. — Janus
Hm? I never claimed not to have studied Kant/Schopenhauer (especially in-so-far as metaphysics is concerned). It's Hegel and the other German Idealists that you have certainly studied more than me.And this is puzzling beacuse you should know from previous conversations that, from your own admission, I have studied Kant, and German Idealism in general (with the exception of Schopenhauer who I have little regard for) far more than you have. — Janus
Hmm no, I believe I misunderstood what you meant at first. I thought you did not understand that there was a form which was given through the pure intuition of space & time and also through the understanding.OK, but when you previously answered 'no' to this it seemed as though you wanted to deny that sensation, for Kant, is formless. — Janus
Yes, the matter is "from the noumenon" so to speak.If the human mind gives form then it follows that the matter which Kant wants to equate with sensation is prior to form, no? — Janus
There is a problem with the traditional sense of "intuition". Philosophers have used it as a coverup, when they didn't know how to explain how something came about. Why is it that so and so is true? Oh, it's an intuition. If I remember correctly, Descartes for example used "intuition" and "clear and distinct ideas" in this manner.The point is that in the traditional sense of "intuition" an intuition is the direct apprehension of an intelligible object with the mind. — Metaphysician Undercover
Why are intelligible objects noumena? And what does it even mean "intelligible objects"? When you are critiquing a system of philosophy, you should first try to get into it, and critique it from inside. That is what Socrates was doing - he would get into what his interlocutors were saying, and show inconsistencies from the inside.So Kant denies the possibility of apprehending intelligible objects (noumena) direct with the mind. — Metaphysician Undercover
I quoted it already before. Did you read it?What do you mean by "pure intuition"? — Metaphysician Undercover
And accordingly we find existing in the mind a priori, the pure form of sensuous intuitions in general, in which all the manifold content of the phenomenal world is arranged and viewed under certain relations. This pure form of sensibility I shall call pure intuition. — Kant
A pure intuition is what is left when you abstract sensation and the categories that are imposed by the understanding.What could a pure intuition be? — Metaphysician Undercover
So you start out with an empirical (or impure intuition) you abstract sensation and the categories of the understanding from it (like causality), and then you're left with pure intuition, which are space and time.Thus, if I take away from our representation of a body all that the understanding thinks as belonging to it, as substance, force, divisibility, etc., and also whatever belongs to sensation, as impenetrability, hardness, colour, etc.; yet there is still something left us from this empirical intuition, namely, extension and shape. — Kant
No, I read those words guiding myself by the larger context and the way Kant has defined them.So, is it the case, that if you don't like certain words in the text, you simply leave them out of your interpretation? — Metaphysician Undercover
Why? You miss losing so much? :rofl:I miss debates. What about a facility for debates? — Banno
But not all groups are capable to determine what is best for themselves.You didn't, and I didn't say you did. I'm pointing out how useless it is to claim that they'll "do what's best". What's best for one group isn't what's best for another group. — Michael
Where did I say they should all be tied to big business?Better for who? If the legislators are all tied to big business then they're going to do what's best for big business and not what's best for the lower class. — Michael
No. It should be what is best for everyone - if one part of the population can take better decisions because, for whatever reasons, they are the most capable, then they should be the representatives.I think in the case of a parliament it should be representative of the populace. — Michael
Right... that is not discrimination, because they are white and heterosexual on top, so they deserve being fired :confused:That white professors were fired for being white isn't that "discrimination against white heterosexual males" is being encouraged. — Michael