Or perhaps now the young leftists who don't have any clue about the reality of the socialist experiment, — ssu
Accordingly, abandonment only occurs from within a lazy mind — 3017amen
You apparently can't see he is describing the status quo, and establishes the observance of a universal truth. — god must be atheist
The chain of power is presented in an uprising or revolution. And you fear that the restructuring won't be intelligent... that is a very rational and valid fear. Restructuring may very well be done unintelligently. Both these notions don't contradict Marx's text. — god must be atheist
Would you please be so kind as to point at the source where "barbarism" is defined, as quoated by you? — god must be atheist
I don't know man — Mutakalem
And this potentiality emergence is absurd, because being rationally possible to exist is a property of identity and no transformation of reality/identity can ever occur; meaning that it's either a 2 dimensional square circle is logically rationale or it's not, we cannot say that after day X it became logically rational, but before that it was irrational, or that the existence of an apple pie after day Y is irrational. This is violating the law of identity saying that y=y but starting from day X y=/=y if for example y is a 2D squared circle that by virtue has a logical irrational existence. — Mutakalem
Can you elaborate on that? — philosopher004
You are poor, or even miserable; empathy, humbleness, and other of these "virtues" would not help you out of this state at all. What would benefit you most would be the act of focusing on yourself, getting a job — Gus Lamarch
If everyone was concerned with resolving only their lives, their personal, individual interests, they would gradually change the whole of society. — Gus Lamarch
Not in my country, basically. This country has truly eradicated large scale rural povetry that there was in the 19th Century. It doesn't have shanty towns or people living on the streets in tents. — ssu
Have you read the old testament wisdom books? — 3017amen
What scientific, objective fact tells us that education or gender equality are measures of flourishing? The existence of identifiable measures does not constitute proof that those measures are measures of human flourishing, you've just labelled them as such. — Isaac
cite a Heidegger passage that is mystical please — Gregory
You can feel what I'm feeling. Irritation, maybe annoyance that you are dodging people's responses instead of confronting them. I can feel what you're feeling. Smug satisfaction, a little perverse joy that all these suckers have taken the bait and are responding to you at all. You are correct that your motivation is extremely selfish, but the reason the rest of us are responding is exactly because we are not solely motivated by selfishness. — Pro Hominem
the values that comes with the god and the religion makes peoples life better. — Ibtehal
Egoism is the nature of humanity. — Gus Lamarch
Attacking a person you don't even know is your way of presenting your arguments to me? — Gus Lamarch
No, there is no other experience for the individual than just his own. In that case, putting yourself at the center of all attention is not wrong, because how can it be? — Gus Lamarch
I don't think that the desire to lift the condition of humanity as a whole even requires a justification. It is self-explanatory. I don't think humans are special per se, but I think sapience is and we should do our best to use it to increase the general well-being of ourselves and our environment. — Pro Hominem
Morality arises out of human consciousness as means to try to organize our increasingly complex systems of interaction. — Pro Hominem
Every single argument here is for deism and has been swatted down long ago. — Thorongil
And the domain of its abstraction is nevertheless a domain. — tim wood
The question to you is do you know the difference between the idea of a thing and the thing itself? — tim wood
the idea is that you refer to ideas of things as if they were the things themselves. They're not. — tim wood
I think going over the heads of intellectuals in order to appeal to the masses is an important skill. For me, the problem of an ideology is not whether it is put forth in an emotional manner, but whether or not the ideology is correct. — NOS4A2
You will neither, then, mend nor finish what you started? — tim wood
You're talking about an idea-of that "proceeds" from an idea-of. — tim wood
what are some of them? — tim wood
please provide your definition of the word "God" — Pro Hominem
Which is debatable whether conformism and back-seat Christianity, as you put it, is a form of nihilism. — boethius
Apologists for Peteron, as apologists generally do, usually want to quickly move the conversation to the "big" questions (human nature vs. socialization, relativisim vs. universalism, redistribution vs. competition, collective interests vs. individual interests etc.) which serves the function of first credibilizing Peterson by making it appear he genuinely engages with these issues in a coherent way as well as fruitful ground to fabricate the fallacy that as long as there is one credible position in such a philosophical debate we could imagine, that can be somehow associated with Peterson, then Peterson therefore has a credible position, while also focusing the conversation on issues that have not been resolved for thousands of years and there are plenty rebuttals for everything on-hand. — boethius
However, by focusing on what Peterson actually says outside the attempt to make some theory Peterson is imagined to be representing or then a theory of what ulterior motives Peterson has, but rather just the simple self-expression of the man and whether it's coherent or incoherent, then the challenge to supporters is much more acute: they must actually deal with Peterson and not their own noble conceptualization of Peterson. — boethius
it is clear that Ideology is useful for capturing the imagination of those that are unwilling or unable to do the heavy lifting of actually thinking about a thing. — Pro Hominem
So, why must one exclude god to have any grounds for justice? — tim wood
they were not designed for the purpose of understanding the world. — ChatteringMonkey
I would argue that one MUST exclude god to have any grounds for justice. — Pro Hominem