Okay. The period of the video and the video itself is about globalism. Globalism may have pulled some people out of poverty, which wouldn’t have been hard, but it then placed other people in trouble. I don’t think I need to explain all that. In that sense globalism is a big con, a global con job. We know who benefitted. But historically, going back as far as the industrial revolution, capitalism has slowly drawn people out of crippling poverty. There’s no doubt it created problems. But no other system has done this, until now, which is China. China is not Russia, they’re flexible with their Marxist ideology, they’re pragmatic. Which is interesting. — Brett
My friend, I had no such illusions going in. But please don't discount the possibility that someone other than you and I, reading this, might benefit from seeing a lefty twit get handed his arse over and over again. — counterpunch
A disposition towards some state of affairs: this disposition presents itself as a conditional "if...then.." which is a pragmatic construction. Dispositions are anticipatory and language and logic merely formalizes this. — Constance
I quote the passage above to illustrate where we came in on this question - just a day or so ago, and how already, the point has wandered quite a ways from its origins. If it weren't possible to click back a page or two, and look up where we came in - I would be quite lost. I really couldn't explain why we are seeking to establish the precise mildness of your approval for removing statues that remind us where we came from. — counterpunch
I do worry though.
"The world's two largest standing Buddhas - one of them 165ft high - were blown up by the Taliban in Afghanistan at the weekend. After failing to destroy the 1,700-year-old sandstone statues of Buddha with anti-aircraft and tank fire, the Taliban brought a lorryload of dynamite from Kabul."
How mild is your approval for this? Or do you disapprove of this - and maintain it's only your lefty cultural vandalism that's praiseworthy? — counterpunch
You don't? Ancient Egyptians, Greek, Romans all had slaves did they not? Ottomans, Muslims, Africans, Russians all had slaves. British people were slaves until 1584; only they called them serfs. Slavery is the default, and capitalism is the cure. Don't be sly - making sideways arguments, and referencing books I haven't read, and am obviously not about to run out and buy. Slavery was everywhere - all around the world and throughout all of history until the West ended it. — counterpunch
Another sly argument. In society and economics, it's necessary to discriminate - for example, between people who are qualified for a job, and those who are not qualified. So, for example, if numerous black people applied for a job without having the necessary qualifications, by your logic - they are being discriminated against, relative to the white person who is qualified. The discrimination isn't racial discrimination, but you switch effect with cause - like with Redlining, to suggest a racial disparity in effect proves racist intent as a cause. It's not so. That's politically correct logic. The same logic that denies slavery existed everywhere, since the dawn of time. You - lefties, are not capable of an honest argument. — counterpunch
Prelinguistic? Pragmatics is this, and most of our engagements in the world are like this. — Constance
I'd just add that each step of the process can be put into the form "Constance believes P" where P is some proposition. — Banno
Isn't your complaint just that I do not say enough about that of which we cannot speak? — Banno
Oh, yeah, all that. Except "The content of what is said is what it shows" - "content" is wrong, as shown in PI - use replaces content. — Banno
My argument: Read the Tractatus and associated material — Banno
You seem to be equivocating on different senses of what it means to say that events could potentially be stated. It could be said that, at a time when there were no language users, events could not potentially be stated (because there were no language users), but it could equally be said that those events could potentially be stated (because there could potentially have been language users). The first is an expression of actual or real potential, and the second is an expression of purely logical potential. — Janus
The world is all that is the case. — Banno
The kind of people who will only “keep in touch” by adding you on facebook are precisely the kind of people it’s not worth the effort of keeping in touch with. — Pfhorrest
Yes, an expectation of the reader filling in the gaps is common. It would be dreadful if that practice were abandoned! :cool: — jgill
You're indifferent to statues, but support tearing them down. Yeah, that makes sense. — counterpunch
I used the term "you" in a collective sense - meaning, you left wing types. It came across as personal to you, and was more aggressive in tone than I intended. For that I apologise — counterpunch
This obvious left wing hypocrisy can only be achieved by denying the ubiquity of slavery to the human condition, and that's not a lesson you want to forget. Those statues should make you aware, and happy you live in a society and era that allows for individual liberty. Yet you, lefties - protest against the very society, philosophies and economic system that afford you that freedom. You act as if freedom is some natural default setting. It's not. Slavery is the default - and freedom is hard won. So no, it's not quite: — counterpunch
t's that you falsify the history to forge a weapon against the very system that affords you the freedom to have an opinion, and to express it. You turn our own achievements against us - and it's just dishonest. We have multi-cultural societies, and have set racial equality in law, but it's still not good enough for you lefties - because, when it comes down to it, you're playing identity politics, and it's a power game. It's you lefties stirring up racial animosity for political advantage - not the right. Western society isn't institutionally racist, there isn't a racist genocide being committed by the police. It's all a lie. You politically correct lefties are the real racists, only you're racist against white people so that's okay then! . — counterpunch
How does something that isn't there, say anything? You look at that statue of Colston, for example - and are offended by it. It means something different to you now than it meant to those who erected it, and it will mean something different again to subsequent generations. Who the giddy fuck are you to insist your current opinion, not only trumps that of previous generations, but removes it from the consideration of all subsequent generations? — counterpunch
What do you see? You see an anti western target for your politically correct virtue signalling - a myopic, self righteous view based on the lie that slavery was a particular cruelty invented and practiced by white people, against black people - because they're black. You think slavery was racism. But white people didn't go out and capture black people and force them into slavery. They bought slaves from black people; trading Western manufactured goods - cloth and metal tools for slaves, then trading salves for sugar and spices in the Americas, and then back to Europe to sell the sugar and spices. — counterpunch
You despise the very civilisation that ended slavery — counterpunch
and if you have your anti western way
Formal mathematics is simply that employed by research math people these days. You know all this of course. I've now read a bit about the topic here and I suppose what I have used might be called naive heuristics, in light of all the various types of heuristics described in Wiki. — jgill
I agree that keeping in contact with people is still very much a useful thing. Now I simply prefer to use their Messenger application. The rest ("news" feed mainly, and the advertisements they bring, plus groups -- most of which are toxic) has become quite useless. I suggest this as a compromise to you if you're regretting not using it. It's basically text or, if people remember back, AIM (AOL Instant Messenger). — Xtrix
For sure, the bases of moderation and suspension/banning should be explicit in those T&C's. It is frustrating when platforms augment this with unofficial, ad hoc moderation (the Guardian being a prime example). But even if they don't, yes it's unfair, so what? That's a judgement on those platforms. As Pfhorrest said, simple solution is don't use them if you don't like them. — Kenosha Kid
Looking back from that high energy sustainable future, yes - I think people would regret destroying history for what it symbolises today. I think providing the world with limitless clean energy from magma, securing the future for humankind makes good on the civilisation we fought to build, and that sanitising history removes a warning label from what might come again if we don't keep building. — counterpunch
I completely agree. It seems quite ridiculous to me to compare the T&C's of services provided by private interests to state censorship, especially as these complaints come from users of sites who would ban criticism of far-right violence without a second thought. If Twitter doesn't want formentors of violent coups on its user list, their house, their rules. — Kenosha Kid
If the purported event is representable in language and it meets the public usage criteria for an event, then it is an event. — Andrew M
After all, our conditional logical form very likely is constructed on t he foundation that pragmatically "mirrors" the primitive, non symbolic cat knowing. — Constance
So, to save it from being Banno arguing that propositional content is a property of statements (or more generally speech acts) and since belief is a propositional attitude, the content of the belief is the proposition it's directed towards, and so concluding it must be propositional content.
And you arguing that belief content is a broader semantic category - I don't know what kind of things you throw in it, other than that it can be "pre-linguistic" - and so since not all of that content is even "linguistic" (presumably not all words or symbols, I don't know where you come from on this), not all of that content can be propositional; since propositions must be linguistic.
If you continued like that, Banno could assert his definition of belief, you could assert your definition of belief, and there's a strong chance you'll both address none of the other's points and retreat to hedges — fdrake
No. I don't propose drilling to the core of the earth. I was explaining how vast the energy of the earth is - 4000 miles deep, 26000 miles around. We could tap that energy forever and never put a dent in it. I suggest drilling close to magma chambers, and at subduction zones, where one continental plate meets another. There are about 500 volcanic islands in the Pacific Rim - far from anywhere and surrounded by water. There's also a huge magma chamber in the US - under Yellowstone national park, but I'd leave that one alone for now. It's too large, and too close to civilisation to make it a test subject. If something goes wrong - a super-volcano would take out most of North America. And we wouldn't want that, would we! — counterpunch
The fundamental nature of the problem is not capitalism. It's our mistaken relationship to science as truth; established when Galileo was tried for heresy, for proving the earth orbits the sun using scientific method. Consequently, we have used the tools, but have not observed the instructions. We continue to act on the basis of ideological conceptions of the world; applying or withholding technology as ideological priorities dictate - and not, as a scientific understanding of reality suggests we should, assuming only we wish to survive. — counterpunch
Any event can be characterized by a statement. Whether or not it ever is, is a separate matter. — Andrew M
If a purported event were not representable in language, then we would find ourselves up against the private language argument. We would have no grounds for calling it an event. — Andrew M
We just need enough energy - and it's there, beneath our feet, a big ball of molten rock 4000 miles deep and 26000 miles around — counterpunch
I have a solution, and I know it's right. I can prove it right down to the philosophical roots. I can explain where we've gone wrong and how to put it right in the same terms. I am a philosopher. My core subject is how to save the world. And I know how. — counterpunch
Event as in space-time region, or event as in abstract proposition about (or property of) such a region? Or something else? Or both? — bongo fury
I really want to thank you for your help, I can really see the bigger picture here now! — Twinkle221
By the time socialists achieve mass working class consciousness, Wall Street will have drowned. — Bitter Crank
Our old, handy, and familiar categories just don't work very well any more. — Bitter Crank
And yes, the word "metalanguage" felt odd so I'm glad to see we agree upon its use. — Twinkle221
But that works only when we switch between languages and get rid of the "ordinary language" right? — Twinkle221
So I assume, following your answer, that this is why by switching languages we can introduce "real" counterexamples that were not counterexamples before. — Twinkle221
I'm so sorry, I feel like everything gets mixed up in my head. — Twinkle221
Especially when you talk about intended interpretation, so this is why there is no contradiction between: (a) all polyhedral are Eulerian, (b) the picture-frame is not Eulerian — Twinkle221
So then, by changing language i.e., switching from L1 to L2, we're falling into this meta-language. "If we keep to the tacit semantical rules of our original language our counterexamples are not counterexamples — Twinkle221
And I guess we could add that concept formation cannot be separated from "definition formation" which relates to a more heuristic study of knowledge. — Twinkle221
No. An event does need to be representable in language, in principle (i.e., such that language users could potentially make a statement S(E)). But it need not actually be represented by someone in practice, now or ever. — Andrew M
When will you be able to get it? — frank
Do you believe that it's a property of the world that whatever happens in it can potentially be stated? — fdrake
Yes. — Andrew M