It's a pity society doesn't believe in hell any more. As it is, these people believe, among other things, that as they will take themselves out with their final, despicable act, they will never have to suffer the consequences. So I can't see any way to prevent these acts from regularly occuring from now on. I think it is an extreme manifestation of the attitude that nothing matters, and that everything is simply a spectacle - a complete disassociation from reality. — Wayfarer
Could you speak more about this? I'm still having trouble connecting awareness to identity, even with the example of dementia. Perhaps this is because I think of awareness as withing the context of Searle's discussions on consciousness -- where the term refers to our ability to focus or unfocus our mind upon various things within our environment or mind. I gather that awareness and memory are actually linked in this way of referring to awareness, though. — Moliere
Labour has never been stronger. — charleton
what you mean by identity is awareness of it? — Mongrel
Socrates pushes Theaetetus to accept that knowledge must be something more than just true belief - it must be justified true belief. And so this concept reigned for a while until other epistemologies started to crop up, culminating in the Gettier cases. — darthbarracuda
Furthermore, as Heidegger noted, anxiety is a fundamental aspect of being a human. This anxiety is from not-knowing — darthbarracuda
Anxiety brings Dasein face-to-face with its Being-free-for the authenticity of its Being... — Being and Time 188
My brother had that song on a 78, back in the 1950's, that also included songs from High Society. One of my favourite politically dodgy things to do is to perform a passable imitation of the Satchmo contribution to the climax to the song 'High Society'...Bap-bip-pee-oh-mo-yeh-----uuuuuuu-teeeee...I bet my bottom dollar I'll lose the blues there — Ciceronianus the White
I'm as tired as you are of gender fluidity bullshit and special snowflake syndromes. Both of them are luxury goods that wealthy, reasonably peaceful societies can afford and enjoy. People living close to the edge of survival can't screw around with this sort of stuff. — Bitter Crank
Also, how do You quote people? I get the feeling I'm doing it wrong... — David
Any thoughts on this series? — SystemsActivated
Instead, the scrap heaped ex-workers in coal, steel, shipbuilding, etc, who have lost their cultural and economic base have seen the migrants who are necessarily more adaptable, and often better educated and more ambitious, overtake them.It is because people have lost their place in society that they are in crisis, not because other people have found a place.
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-britain-eu-oldham-idUSKCN0ZB0LU
It's all there, ironically expressed by the son of Pakistani immigrants. He is not the problem, it must be those others. It is frankly ridiculous to blame immigrants for the neglect of the infrastructure, the lack of schools, jobs economic activity. The mills have closed and nothing has replaced them. Local government is starved of funds and central government has done nothing. — unenlightened
What is the implicit message that society is trying to convey about life? — schopenhauer1
Alas, those who are young at heart will become confused when the calendar marches on and glory is in the rear-view mirror. But that's ok because by this time, Nature has already produced a bumper crop of baby Kierkegaards to preside over the disintegration. — Mongrel
But what I want to ask you is 'Are goodness and decency a form of incompetence?' — unenlightened
Must one assume that The Elites are of one mind and so are the "Ignorant Masses"? That it's either the elite's way or the highway? Is the choice between the corporate and institutional elite and fascism? James Straub, author of the linked article, seems to think so. — Bitter Crank
Talking of agendas:
In Foreign Policy: It's Time for the Elites to Rise Up Against the Ignorant Masses
The headline is in earnest. — jamalrob
Well, the point I am trying to make is that there are liars for sure, but there are also very gullible buyers who believe outlandish claims on the basis of rhetoric rather than evidence. — Bitter Crank
I wonder, given the lies and misinformation from the Leave campaign, e.g. over NHS funding and a reduction of immigration – things which were no doubt influential – do you think that there's reasons to reject the legitimacy of the result? — Michael
In the case of the EU, it is assumed that Britain has the absolute right to decide to leave, presumably forever at any time. But Scotland does not, let alone Yorkshire, or the unenlightened household. — unenlightened
Germany, France, Holland, Spain, Italy, and so forth all have ancient histories as States — Bitter Crank
So much selves, so little consciousness. This is getting a bit off topic perhaps, but I would say that most of the time I am performing, conforming to an image that I hold onto and from that nothing new can come. But to be 'authentic' (is that the right word?) is not to make that division for a moment but to respond from the whole of what one is, and in doing so one learns - recognises -something of the truth of what one is. Unfortunately, what tends to happen is that the same process of thought immediately makes a new image of this, and one starts performing it. — unenlightened
I've toyed with this idea before. That life, or perhaps consciousness, is a good thing regardless of what is experienced.
I don't think it's a very defensible position. Nobody wants to suffer, and if they do, well, they aren't suffering. I don't think a romanticism of suffering accurately portrays what suffering is like. Or at least suffering without any meaning. — darthbarracuda
How did your your own character convince you of something? — shmik