I think so. You do get taught about religions for the purposes of normalising them and the people who practice other ones. You get taught about other cultures for that reason too. Same with sexuality. Reducing prejudice in the populace is a noble goal for education, right? So making similar space for transgender people in education makes sense for the same reasons. — fdrake
Speaking as someone who has moved from roughly the position of Mikie and @Pantagruel to a much less trans-sceptical position, I can attest to this. — Jamal
The means do not need to "reflect" the goal, they need to accomplish the goal. — Judaka
The "direction" society is evolving in is recognising that tolerance and treating people equally isn't sufficient. — Judaka
That’s right. Trans identity is interesting because though it demands the recognition and protection and rights of its own identity, it begets the blurring and obfuscation of others, to the point where men are now celebrated in spaces dedicated entirely to women. It’s the natural progression of identity politics. — NOS4A2
Its demand for conformity and special treatment makes transgenderism an authoritarian and anti-social ideology, which is a shame because it reflects also upon the innocent and those struggling with dysphoria. — NOS4A2
Yes, when the goal is to reduce/prevent/remove the development of misinformed, irrational hatred of a minority group, particularly a mostly non-violent, non-threatening minority group, such as trans folks. — universeness
What’s the problem? Maybe my legal name is Michael but I prefer to go by a different name. Asking you to call me by this other name isn’t asking for special treatment, and is hardly a burden on you. — Michael
Nothing needs to be redesigned. — Michael
In what way? Children have been “exposed” to the difference between cis men and cis women for all of human history, what does it matter if trans men and trans women are also recognised? — Michael
Nah, a strawman is overly simplifying an opponents argument, and/or making it ridiculous in order to counter-argue it more easily. — Christoffer
What do you think? Is it helpful and does it do anything that other informal fallacy concepts don't already do? — Jamal
AI language models have an inbuilt understanding — Benj96
Besides, in the long run oblivion renders "in/justice" moot. — 180 Proof
Nice. Can't help but find this a fascinating and useful insight. Do you think the day will come when we can produce an AI creation that is closer to being an ecological system? — Tom Storm
What is merely an egalitarian ideal?But that is merely an egalitarian ideal whose actualisation is an ongoing process where social mobility is still a factor holding it back due to hidden nepotisms still pervading a meritocratic society. — invicta
Really? I think AI puts out derivative crap so far. — Benkei
I had forgotten that you already had made this great suggestion here when I replied to Marchesk over there. It seems like we are in broad agreement. — Pierre-Normand
I don't have an internal dialogue — Pierre-Normand
This is something that has been under discussion for some days now in the threads on Heidegger. I started this topic based on just this problem. — Fooloso4
The first step is to acknowledge the problem. I can offer no solutions at the institutional level. On a personal level I attempt to speak and write simply and clearly. — Fooloso4
Must it be balanced? What does this mean? Wherein lies the balance? The good with the bad? The positive with the negative? What is the balance that turns my claim that:
Philosophy has become in large part insular and self-referential.
— Fooloso4
from something that is not valid into something that is? — Fooloso4
Let’s name names. Who in particular do you have in mind? Here’s a starter list of philosophers, half of whom are actively writing, who I don’t associate with your characterization: — Joshs
↪Fooloso4 :clap: Yes, it seems the sophists have won, taking over the academy (pace Plato et al). Old story though, at least since the scholastics. — 180 Proof
I also think looking at experience from the inside is interesting. — T Clark
That is painfully true, as evidenced by just about every related discussion here on the forum. Be that as it may, with current issues about AI, it looks like it's going from an interesting philosophical problem to a practical political and social one. — T Clark
I am not suggesting that any level of 'telepathy' between humans is impossible, but it is true, that from a 'naturalist' position, and from a quantum physics position, science would be tasked to find the 'carrier particle' that causes telepathy and consciousness. Just like the search for the graviton, currently continues.
This is probably why I still love string theory.
Consciousness could then be just another vibrating string state! Easy peasy! :halo:
String theory at is base is a great KISS theory. Keep It Simple Stupid :grin: — universeness
Other people and other measuring devices can then confirm or conflict with MY interpretation of the event. — universeness