If judges decree which laws are to be enforced based upon the justice, wisdom, efficiency, or prudence of the law and those pronouncements are recognized by law as authoritative, then are we within a positivist or natural law system? — Hanover
If the local sheriff wouldn't enforce the law, the prosecutor wouldn't prosecute the law, the juries wouldn't convict under the law, the judge wouldn't sentence under the law, and the warden wouldn't incarcerate under the law, then it was not the law, correct? — Hanover
On the other hand, with natural law, some natural or divine force is posited to justify the existence of the law, but with positivism, it seems (and explain if I have this wrong) the law is a rule laid down that gains acceptance and the nuance of what the law actually is will vary depending upon how the people at the time accept it to be. — Hanover
Law, by which I do not mean a law, or the law, but law in itself, does conform to a standard, it isn’t law if it doesn’t, and it explains what law is, hence is not the ignoring of it even while ignoring its instances. — Mww
What does "the Law" here refer to, other than an assumed standard? — Metaphysician Undercover
The law can change, and then there is the old law and the new law. — unenlightened
To speak of law without mention of the power of enforcement seems to me to miss something essential. — unenlightened
No, we can neither expect nor demand respect for the law just because it has been promulgated, regardless of its content. What matters is not respect for this or that (often accidental) decision of the majority in a parliament or of a judge. Rather, what matters is respect for the moral law, which may or may not coincide with the positive law and which involves the legally irrelevant distinction between good and evil. — javi2541997
Men do not make laws. They do but discover them. — javi2541997
isn't that obvious? — Banno
What about something like environmental law? It is always a reflection of an "assumed standard" or set of models that gets hashed out by scientific peer review. Beyond the particular acts of regulation and remediation, the "assumed standard" is a social contract to be a steward of the environment rather than merely living as a rapacious generation with no thought of any life afterwards. — Valentinus
One can examine their life without being pensive over its necessity, but refraining from any contemplation in that regard is antithetical to all philosophy - isn't it? Why assess the structural or metaphysical underpinnings of your life, if you aren't trying to decipher or extract a meaning from it? — Aryamoy Mitra
If not, you're no longer examining your life. — Aryamoy Mitra
Ignorance? It's the illusion of knowledge that's getting L O U D E R thanks to social media and 24/7 non-stop cable / satellite / streaming "bread & circuses" infotainment. People are still just people – (ten) millennia of syphillisation notwithstanding. — 180 Proof
You guys are saying we should throw out the entire philosophy of a great writer because of possible poor judgments of his in terms of politics. — Gregory
Of course it makes a difference if he supported geonocide. My number one problem with the three major religions on the West are their endorsement of mass murder at "God-Allah-Yawweh's" commands — Gregory
He did not openly support Nazism after they started murdering people. — Gregory
Who cares? — Constance
But Heidegger wasn't nearly as bad as you suggest. — Constance
Hannah Arendt — Joshs
I could care less what he said and thought — Gregory
Heidegger was a very sheltered man, but since he never ordered the murder of any person whatsoever, I don't consider him a Nazi. He was simply swept up in a cultural revolution — Gregory
Might as well have said ‘only a miracle’. — Wayfarer
But in particular, the argument from character is a very weak one. The guy was fat, ignore everything he says. — unenlightened
Masculine identity is probably the key to the rise in assault weapon ownership and mass shootings.
I think researchers are sleeping on the plunge in young males' sexual activity in recent years, and the effects of the dynamics of internet dating. Inability to find mates is identified as a major factor in the radicalization of Islamist terrorists. Far-Right sites are awash in references to their poor prospects and the fear of "cuckolding," whilst "incel" is a common insult. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Yet he agrees with Hume, a philosopher so unapologetic he is still seemingly ahead of the times. — unenlightened
And this is no off-hand remark of Chesterton's, but the direction of much of his writing. — unenlightened
