The logos has been hijacked by Christianity in which it's equated with Jesus; this proves how important the idea is, but unfortunately, not how true it is. — Agent Smith
How can it be said the meaning is a property of the expression—its use, its context, its syntax, its content, its whatever—if Y could not derive from it its meaning, and if Z has not expressed anything? — NOS4A2
It seems the more general and vague something is the more applicable it is to larger sets but also less informative to individual cases. And the more specific and defined something is obviously imparts more info about limited things. — Benj96
You're welcome. Fractalness is basically a property of a strange attractor within the phase space of a system - viz. "strange attractors, which are described by a fractal structure in phase space"I wasn't familiar with "fractal attractors", and found only this paper using that terminology. I suspect what you mean is "strange attractors", which have been studied extensively. But thanks for piquing my curiosity. :cool: — jgill
There are a lot of illusory phenomenon that arise from just the sheer complexity of variables that are at work within them. I suspect they can be broken down and fully predicted with enough/fast enough computing power. — Benj96
Except that the universe is a collision between law-governed and non-law-governed events. So if a fractal structure evolves as a result of its fractal nature, then the changes will permeate. If it alters as a result of some locally contingent force, then not. It seems like your post assumes that everything must unfold according to a set of underlying laws, all or nothing. In fact, reality as we experience it is simultaneously law-governed and exceptional.By that I mean that any change at any level in the fractal will impact the entire fractal. — Benj96
You don’t necessarily recognize them as being in justified need before understanding their perspective. — Joshs
Is empathy possible without first being able to understand what appears to one initially as a dangerously alien worldview? — Joshs
I would say there is a war between people with no empathy and everyone else — Bylaw
Do you have suggestions for how these differences can be reconciled or overcome? — Tom Storm
I'd like to think this is true, but isn't the substantive problem that with different worldviews and values, people tend to have extremely different ways of understanding what productive and healthy looks like and how it should be achieved. — Tom Storm
In a country like the US, it could be a lot more rare. Wouldn't you agree? — frank
Economic hardship has been identified as a major stressor — frank
Since economic hardship is not a rare thing, there is undoubtedly a wide set of correlations with economic hardship. I believe the saying is, correlation is not causation.If you look at the latest one, you'll see the correlation between mass shootings and recent economic hardship in the lives of perpetrators. — frank
And which is why I’ll reference, again and again, why that’s completely irrelevant. I’ll do so as long as it takes. I’m not interested in hand-waving, I’m interested in REAL POLICIES. — Mikie
The ills of any society will be seen to have something to do with government policies or the lack of whatever is needed to make the world perfect, so it's not a particularly meaty topic. — frank
What was the Balbec passage that you were thinking about? — SophistiCat
I think it's just a matter of a shift in consciousness. The "merely real" is the sublime, when "the trivialities of the moment" do not intrude upon it, or in other words, are not seen as trivial. — Janus
This thread is specifically about deaths of despair and their roots in the aforementioned (neoliberal) policies. — Mikie
Oh? And what’s the larger problem? Remember: I’m keeping to real policies and their well-documented (and easily seen) results. — Mikie
This is not philosophy, this is propaganda politics. No one knows what you mean by this. Avoid such ill defined terms and write out some points. What specific aspects of neoliberalism ties the West to destruction? Why is it only neoliberalism, and not other political aspects of culture that drive us to this? — Philosophim
it’s recognizing a set of very real policies that have been implemented over several decades, and the very real affects they’ve had on society. — Mikie
Yep. An important thing to remember about neoliberalism is that it wasn't created by an elite group. The opposite is true. The present global elite was created by the success of a neoliberal policies. It's easy to condemn as if that's solving some problem. It's harder to understand why former leftist strategies failed so utterly. A real leftist would be interested in that question. — frank
Neoliberalism is the set of policies mentioned, enacted over the last 40 years, with predictable results.
The people in government and business carrying out these policies are indeed to blame— whether they identify as neoliberal or not. — Mikie
No, it's not only an ideology. It's a set of real policies enacted by real people — Mikie
Both issues are a direct result of neoliberalism. — Mikie
↪RogueAI Bartricks was, in practice, a 'solipsist' and I'm getting 'solipsist' vibes from Zettel. — 180 Proof
We cannot know everything, so at some point in our quest for knowledge we will reach a point in which we will have to use that which we know to talk about that which we don't, and to talk about ways to explore that which we don't know. In my opinion, that's metaphysics; a tool formed from verified knowledge to probe the unknown. — Daniel
It's one thing to state an unsupported sentiment as "I believe...", but quite another thing to state an unsupported sentiment as "we know...". The former may be a truth, the latter is a falsity. — Metaphysician Undercover
