it is just factually the case you can never know the kind of life your child will have accurately. — schopenhauer1
Also, personal decision-making process of a single couple is presented here as a rebuttal to a broader philosophical position. — schopenhauer1
I have recently began my search for my soulmate; and started exploring dating apps. — Bob Ross
do you know of Rawls' Veil of Ignorance regarding justice and rights? — schopenhauer1
If this was applied to antinatalism, imagine a prospective parent/society is behind the veil of ignorance. — schopenhauer1
Some people are just interested in morality just because they are interested in morality, regardless of practical application. — Apustimelogist
Because morality is extremely complicated, and you can start with a very simple example that's easy for others to comprehend. — Philosophim
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
Because morality is extremely complicated, and you can start with a very simple example that's easy for others to comprehend. — Philosophim
Do you agree that the philosopher must uphold, almost, a fiduciary duty towards the public, in terms of living a certain life? — Shawn
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
one has to suspect that you have other reasons to hate it. — unenlightened
I think this problem is morally irrelevant. — Benkei
Yes, and not only Europe and China. — Jamal
I've been interested in the Mongol's since I was a boy. — Maw
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
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
Then the Biden administration actively worked with Bragg's office to revive and prosecute the case. — fishfry
haven't we come a far far far way from what got Nixon and Clinton ousted from the presidency. — Shawn
Ok, do you think ai art counts as art? — flannel jesus
I really don't trust it. — fdrake
"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
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
Self-awareness for you, and perhaps mental masturbation for others. — Tom Storm
Maybe there's use in those debates but... it's hard to see — flannel jesus
Some clarifications are useful and help us to manage our lives. — Tom Storm
There is nothing like coming back to Murakami after a while. — javi2541997
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
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
My sentiments exactly! — Vera Mont
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
...the "show" makes Idol not qualify as art, emotions wise. — ENOAH
...is Collingwood the convention in Aesthetics? — ENOAH
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
Except for the individual singers, the overall "show" does not seem to be "experiencing" emotions in the production, which it wishes to express. — ENOAH
If it is art, then it can be criticized as art. Is American Idol "good art"? — BC
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
