• Antinatalism Arguments
    it is just factually the case you can never know the kind of life your child will have accurately.schopenhauer1

    That's very different from a "Veil of Ignorance." If it only means that the we can't predict the future perfectly accurately, then it's kind of a useless concept.

    Also, personal decision-making process of a single couple is presented here as a rebuttal to a broader philosophical position.schopenhauer1

    No, it's not just a single couple. It's reasonable to say that any prospective parent can know their future child's ethnicity, social status, and their idea of how to lead a good life with reasonable accuracy.

    To be clear, I'm not arguing against anti-natalism here, although you know I find the idea repugnant. I'm only arguing that your logic is flawed.
  • Finding a Suitable Partner
    I have recently began my search for my soulmate; and started exploring dating apps.Bob Ross

    My son met his girlfriend on Tinder. They've been together for 3 years and seem like a very good match in personal values and life plans. She's a wonderful person and we've forgiven her for the fact her father voted for Trump. I just provide this to let you know it can be done.
  • Antinatalism Arguments
    do you know of Rawls' Veil of Ignorance regarding justice and rights?schopenhauer1

    I've heard of it only in the quote and link you provided. As described there, as I noted, it does not apply to antinatalism, since when I choose to have a child I do know the kind of life it is likely to live. My wife and I wouldn't have had children if we didn't think we could give them a good life.
  • Antinatalism Arguments
    If this was applied to antinatalism, imagine a prospective parent/society is behind the veil of ignorance.schopenhauer1

    This doesn't make sense. How could I have a child without knowing the social conditions into which it would be born? If I were the King of Philosophy, I would outlaw thought experiments.
  • How would you respond to the trolley problem?


    We're changing your name from BC to SP for smarty pants.
  • How would you respond to the trolley problem?
    Some people are just interested in morality just because they are interested in morality, regardless of practical application.Apustimelogist

    Ok, but I don't understand. Moral philosophy describes how we should treat other people. How can you talk about that without talking about how it works in the real world?
  • How would you respond to the trolley problem?
    Because morality is extremely complicated, and you can start with a very simple example that's easy for others to comprehend.Philosophim

    I don't agree. Most philosophical thought experiments are silly. To have any value, a thought experiment should take into account the issues we see in the real world. It can still be simple, but it has to be real.
  • The philosopher and the person?
    Whether Heidegger was a Nazi or not (for me) may well taint our experience of his work, but it says little or nothing about whether the work is any good.Tom Storm

    Yes.
  • How would you respond to the trolley problem?
    Because morality is extremely complicated, and you can start with a very simple example that's easy for others to comprehend.Philosophim

    Sorry, I feel like I've waylaid your discussion. I know this wasn't the direction you wanted to take it.
  • The philosopher and the person?
    Do you agree that the philosopher must uphold, almost, a fiduciary duty towards the public, in terms of living a certain life?Shawn

    Anyone who accepts anything any philosopher ever says without reflection is a fool. We're not supposed to use philosophy to tell us how to think. We're supposed to use it as a guide to insight. We have to discover the world ourselves. Philosophy is just a road map. We are responsible for what we believe and how it leads us to act, not any philosopher.

    So - the philosophy stands on its own feet, although a philosopher's life might lead me to choose whether or not to read their works.
  • How would you respond to the trolley problem?
    In the light of the video above, where folks were placed in a situation that they really believed that was almost exactly the trolley problem, it is clearly a possible scenario,unenlightened

    How often would that type of scenario actually happen in the real world. Answer - almost never. Given that, why has this become such a centerpiece of moral philosophy?

    one has to suspect that you have other reasons to hate it.unenlightened

    Naughty, naughty. You know that questioning motive is not a valid philosophical argument. Perhaps you have another reason to make that kind of argument.
  • How would you respond to the trolley problem?
    I think this problem is morally irrelevant.Benkei

    Yes, I hate the trolley problem. It's one of those things that gives philosophy a bad name. It's nothing like any person will ever have to face in the real world. I wasn't going to say anything and sidetrack the discussion, but you gave me an opening.
  • Currently Reading
    Yes, and not only Europe and China.Jamal

    You just sent me on a 30 minute Wikipedia walk through Mongol and Turkic history in central and western Asia.
  • Currently Reading
    [reply
    I've been interested in the Mongol's since I was a boy.Maw

    The thing that fascinates me is how big an impact they had on the history of Europe and China and how little we hear about them.
  • What Are You Watching Right Now?


    I'll check to see if it is available. Thanks.
  • If existence is good, what is the morality of life?
    I'm not going to participate in your thread because I don't agree with some of your previous points, but I really like the way you set it up. You've made it easier to get at the points you want to examine by making the boundaries of the discussion clear. I wish more people would do that in their OPs.
  • American Idol: Art?
    I would suggest that those images naturally trigger "pleasant" feelings. And while you referenced them to illustrate that pleasant feeling do not necessarily make something art, I think what you have referenced has a direct relationship with art.ENOAH

    That wasn't exactly my point. @flannel jesus wrote

    AI imagery shouldn't be <enjoyed? purchased? appreciated? created?> because it doesn't take any effort and isn't a venue for human communication".flannel jesus

    My response was to point out that even if [whatever we call it] created by artificial intelligence isn't art, it still may be worth enjoying, purchasing, appreciating, creating.

    This has been an interesting conversation, but I think we have taken it as far as I want to for now.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    Then the Biden administration actively worked with Bragg's office to revive and prosecute the case.fishfry

    This is a lie.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    haven't we come a far far far way from what got Nixon and Clinton ousted from the presidency.Shawn

    Clinton (I assume you mean Bill) was not ousted. He completed two full terms.
  • American Idol: Art?
    Ok, do you think ai art counts as art?flannel jesus

    I'm not sure. I'll think about it.
  • Currently Reading
    I really don't trust it.fdrake

    Yes. Never trust Cormac McCarthy. He is ruthless with both his characters and his readers.
  • American Idol: Art?
    "AI imagery shouldn't be <enjoyed? purchased? appreciated? created?> because it doesn't take any effort and isn't a venue for human communication"flannel jesus

    If you start a thread with a game like that, I'll play. On the other hand, there are many things I wouldn't consider art that are worthy of being enjoyed, purchased, and appreciated even though they don't take any effort or involvement communication - sunsets, landscapes, people's faces... No, let's not have a discussion as to whether or not those should be considered art.
  • American Idol: Art?
    For clarity, I'm not saying "it's pointless to talk about what art means to various people", I'm more saying, "it's pointless to make it your mission to convince other people with different definitions that your definition is the right one", which is apparently the goal of the guy I was talking to. You see the difference?flannel jesus

    Sure. I've tried to be clear in my post that my definitions are what works for me, what helps me think about the subject clearly. On the other hand, if we want to talk about art, which I do, we have to all be talking about the same thing. Beyond that, I love words and I love definitions. I play a game where I'll come across a word I'm familiar with and try to come up with a definition. I'm surprised how often I have trouble.
  • American Idol: Art?
    Self-awareness for you, and perhaps mental masturbation for others.Tom Storm

    That's true of just about all the discussions on the forum for someone. I think many philosophical questions are silly - mind/brain, free will/determinism, hard problem of consciousness, anti-natalism... I participated in those arguments, sometimes vigorously, till I figured out how pointless and intellectually unfruitful they are. Lots of frustration with little or no satisfaction beyond the opportunity to vent my spleen. Now I generally avoid participating in those types of discussions unless I have something constructive to contribute. When I don't I usually regret it and often behave badly. Who needs it.
  • American Idol: Art?
    Maybe there's use in those debates but... it's hard to seeflannel jesus

    Some clarifications are useful and help us to manage our lives.Tom Storm

    I find this kind of discussion interesting and helpful because it lets me sort out how different kinds of creations affect me in different ways, how I experience them. It's about self-awareness. If you're not interested in that kind of discussion, you don't have to participate.
  • Currently Reading
    There is nothing like coming back to Murakami after a while.javi2541997

    As we have discussed previously, I also like Murakami, but it always takes an act of will to get me to start a new one. The way he writes and the things he evokes are just so different from what I'm used to. Those Japanese. Don't get me started on their movies.
  • American Idol: Art?

    What in God's name does this have to do with Velveeta?

    As for your post - I've looked up the definition of "abstract expressionism" numerous times and I still don't know what it means. I know it's more than "My kid could do that." I too like the Nevelson more than the de Kooning. It brings to mind movable type set up for printing or hieroglyphics. The de Kooning doesn't really evoke anything. As you note, the Nevelson clearly required more skill, effort, thought, and time. How do I use that to decide which is better.

    I started a thread a while ago, "Skill, craft, technique in art," that attempted to deal with this issue. Competence and skill matter to me, but Collingwood says that could just as well be craft rather than art. In my previous response to Vera Mont, just above this one, I included an excerpt from his discussion of the issue.
  • American Idol: Art?


    In my recent reply, I mentioned Collingwood's discussion of the question of craft vs. art. I just tripped over this quote while looking for something else.

    In order to clear up the ambiguities attaching to the word ‘art’, we must look to its history. The aesthetic sense of the word, the sense which here concerns us, is very recent in origin. Ars in ancient Latin, like τέχνη [technē] in Greek, means something quite different. It means a craft or specialized form of skill, like carpentry or smithying or surgery. The Greeks and Romans had no conception of what we call art as something different from craft; what we call art they regarded merely as a group of crafts, such as the craft of poetry (ποιητικη τέχνη, ars poetica), which they conceived, sometimes no doubt with misgivings, as in principle just like carpentry and the rest, and differing from any one of these only in the sort of way in which any one of them differs from any other. — R.G. Collingwood
  • American Idol: Art?
    Well, the mice go for the cheese in the trap whether it's fine cheese from France or it's Velveeta. Now there is a difference between Great Performances on PBS (high quality cheese) and schlock on the networks and cable (Velveeta).BC

    I am deeply moved by your acknowledgement of my attachment to America's greatest cheese (product).
  • American Idol: Art?
    My sentiments exactly!Vera Mont

    Personally, I have a hard time separating art, including mediocre art, from good entertainment. Collingwood arrogantly seemed very certain of his judgments. In "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance" Robert Pirsig proposed defining art as "high quality endeavor." I found that compelling 45 or so years ago, but now I don't find it convincing. Pirsig discussed it in the context of a welder who fixed a broken part on his motorcycle. Collingwood would call that craft, not art. He has an interesting section on the difference between craft and art in "The Principles of Art."
  • American Idol: Art?
    I suspect that Idol could be seen as a type of art in its own right - in the genre of realty TV (whatever one may think of this). The music/performances are incidental. The show is about telling stories of people struggling against the odds to follow their dream. It's carefully crafted and built to follow certain emotional arcs. Perhaps it is kitsch, which certain purists might argue precludes it from being art. I would argue there is good and bad kitsch. And the line between kitsch and art may be irrelevant.Tom Storm

    I think you're probably right - it's possible this type of production might be considered art. I'm sure Collingwood wouldn't think so and I doubt you could convince me it is.
  • American Idol: Art?
    ...the "show" makes Idol not qualify as art, emotions wise.ENOAH

    I don't think that is necessarily so - writers, producers, directors, actors, and technical staff for a show might rise to the level of artists. I would judge that isn't true for American Idol.
  • American Idol: Art?
    ...is Collingwood the convention in Aesthetics?ENOAH

    Collingwood died in the early 1940s and is still respected and discussed. As far as I know, he is just one among many philosophers who write about art. He happens to be a favorite of mine and I find his theory of art matches my intuition well. I strongly recommend his "An Essay on Metaphysics." Both books gave me words to describe what my intuition was trying to tell me.
  • American Idol: Art?
    Or perhaps people think pop music period is not art. But I would say I have drawn more aesthetic value (and certainly more "feelings") from blues, jazz, rock, r & b, rap, than I have from sculptures and paintings in my life time.ENOAH

    Collingwood includes music among the arts, but I doubt he would include the genre's you identify or those included on American Idol. He doesn't really like recorded or broadcast music at all because of the distance it puts between the artist and their audience. He was certainly something of a killjoy. On the other hand, I think those types of music can be artistic by his standard.
  • American Idol: Art?
    Except for the individual singers, the overall "show" does not seem to be "experiencing" emotions in the production, which it wishes to express.ENOAH

    It's not the show that would experience emotions but the artist, perhaps the producers or writers, but as I noted before, I don't think the show is art by Collingwood's criterion.
  • American Idol: Art?
    If it is art, then it can be criticized as art. Is American Idol "good art"?BC

    I remember your "Can this art work even be defaced?" discussion from a couple of years ago fondly. That was one of the first times I tried to figure out my understanding of art systematically.
  • American Idol: Art?
    But is it really important that everyone agrees on what art is? I mean we disagree on what things qualify under what categories all the time, why should art be an exception?flannel jesus

    It doesn't really matter if it's important or not, it will never happen, which I guess is your point.
  • American Idol: Art?
    It seems like I have made the same mistake some others have - mistaking AI for artificial intelligence instead of American Idol. That brings me back to my original judgment - Americal Idol probably is not art but the individual performances may be.