But now we have to define "god." — tim wood
Science is about the how, not the why. For so long as people ask an unanswerable why, god is as good an answer as any. — tim wood
If you have created a God, perhaps in your own image, that you can object to, then that's your own straw man and your own problem. — tim wood
You understand that in the last paragraph of mine you quoted I was speaking for the position I intended to refute in the paragraphs right after that, yes? — Srap Tasmaner
Also "blanket" is kind of a weasel word. Statistics don't show, don't expect to show, that every white household has more money than every black household.
Also this post is not about what I would call "white privilege" but about systemic racism. — Srap Tasmaner
the Egyptians and the Romans,...were,... engaged in observational science.
— Pro Hominem
Small point: almost everyone but the Romans? And preceding the Romans by in some cases thousands of years — tim wood
religion is part of history and science is part of history, they must be connected to one another. That is not logically valid.
— Pro Hominem
Maybe not valid, but a fact. But only in this sense, and expressed here briefly, because expressed elsewhere multiple times. To do science requires consistency. If it falls down here, it's a problem if it falls up there. At a time when god(s) were understood to have arbitrary control over the world, that consistency could be guaranteed only by having one God in authority, and that one a mainly beneficial - and consistent - God. Otherwise there could only be provisional and contingent "house" sciences that could neither communicate with nor cooperate with each other. Most scientists, then, are essentially monotheistic, though the object of their respective beliefs vary from a God, to logos, to law. — tim wood
I'm going to try this again. You both claim:
1. White Americans do not benefit from systemic racism in the United States.
Perhaps my usage of "systemic racism" is nonstandard, but I take it to refer to things like the Black-white wealth gap:
In 2016, white families had the highest level of both median and mean family wealth: $171,000 and $933,700, respectively (figure 1). Black and Hispanic families have considerably less wealth than white families. Black families' median and mean net worth is less than 15 percent that of white families, at $17,600 and $138,200, respectively. Hispanic families' median and mean net worth was $20,700 and $191,200, respectively.
— The Federal Reserve
In American society, as currently constituted, whites have one hell of a lot more money than Blacks!
You can support (1) by also claiming:
2. A white household with a net worth of $171,000 derives no benefit from a Black household having a net worth of only $17,600.
The total wealth of Americans is not a fixed number to be carved up like a pie; white households don't have higher net worth because non-white households have lower net worth. If it counts as evidence that our system is racist, it's not because there is white benefit here, but because there is non-white deprivation. — Srap Tasmaner
So let's address this first. You must remember that science was first studied on religious motivations. — TrespassingAcademia
Furthermore, the development of the modern scientific method by Descartes was claimed to be 'inspired by the divine'. — TrespassingAcademia
The reasons for pursuing science remains based on a dogmatic argument even today. One does not do science for any utilitarian/economic purpose, but instead for the pursuit and understanding of reality. Most of our scientific facts do not have any application beyond satisfying the curiosity and developing the understanding of those who study it. The idea that this is a valid way for humans to spend their time has no argument beyond 'the pursuit of truth' which is an argument deeply rooted in religion. — TrespassingAcademia
Now beyond science, would you say the conclusion that slavery is bad is a shortcoming? Would you say that assumptions like 'murder is bad' and 'don't sleep with your neighbor's wife' do not make life better for mankind? Would you say the ideas of charity and peace do not make life better for humankind? All of these core assumptions, so fundamental to how our society functions today that we forgot we assumed them in the first place, are derived mostly from religion. Even much of our big laws today is derived verbatim from the Jewish laws of 4000 years ago — TrespassingAcademia
You are wrong. About almost everything. Your ideas are dangerous and if they ever become the norm, that society will be hell on Earth. I really wish there were something I could say that would help you and make a difference. Talk to a counselor or something. Unless you really are a sociopath there has to be some way for you to see value in something other than your own selfish interests. Just try.
— Pro Hominem
That's what you keep telling yourself.
The truth is I hit the nail on the head in my original posts, and you know it. You have difficulty swallowing that pill, so your reaction is to get angry, misrepresent my point and demonize me so you can tell yourself you don't have to listen to my ideas.
Here, I'll repeat them for you:
Socialists want to spend other people's money because they think they know best.
— Tzeentch
[Government is] a form of coercion: a means to force individuals to do things by threat of violence.
— Tzeentch
Governments assert power over individuals based on what are essentially territorial claims, [governments are], at their basis, [...] no more legitimate than a despot
— Tzeentch
Finally, and most importantly:
And beware those who see government as a legitimate means to an end.
— Tzeentch
Now, that last sentence obviously didn't make it into a discussion about socialism by accident. That sentence is exactly about you.
Everything you've provided so far shows you have a great deal of trouble accepting the fact that people have different views than you, and that you would happily use coercion to force them to act in accordance to your beliefs. You're little tyrants, masquerading as philanthropists.
I like to think philosophy and psychology go hand in hand, and the gaggle of angry socialists on this forum being shown a mirror never fails to provide some interesting cases.
Now go on and reflect, as will I. I'm done conversing with you three. — Tzeentch
I am saying that using aggressive language will not lead to any conclusion other than some injured egos and - eventually - banishment. You may disagree with ech other, there's nothing wrong there, we are not yet living in times of totalitarianism. — Gus Lamarch
What I said is that coercion is something inherently problematic. When we apply that to politics, it results in the position that government is, at best, a necessary evil (↪JerseyFlight, ↪Pro Hominem, pay attention next time). — Tzeentch
Thus I believe government interference in individual's goings-on should be minimalized at every opportunity. — Tzeentch
A classically liberal (read: not the "modern" use of the word), perhaps libertarian, view. — Tzeentch
I love to read discussions where people respect each other. :smile: — Gus Lamarch
I can tell you all I was really trying to do was give a very broad description of systemic racism, specifically because of Pro Hominem's position: he accepts systemic racism but rejects white privilege. I thought maybe we could stop trying to convince him to accept something he already accepts — Srap Tasmaner
If we look at point #1: first, the assertion is not categorical (at least intends to divide),differently from what is asserted in #2, 3, and 4. Next, # 1 does not state that "the system" divides all people into two groups. Therefore, we probably would not classify the system as racist. Yet, the next assertion is
I do not believe there is any disagreement here on (1)-(4).
— Srap Tasmaner
Actually, the mentioned consensus functions as an indicator of the conventional understanding of the system. Conventionally, it is understood as racist. It looks like Srap Tasmaner wanted to avoid the explicit labelling, but cautiously enacted the 'racist' understanding. Maybe, I misenterpreted him/her. Anyway, probably, the general framing of contemporary public debates
fails similar attempts to avoid the direct stereotypic labelling. — Number2018
But I'm thinking now that what you're really after is detaching the use of racial categories from the conferring of advantage and disadvantage based on those categories. — Srap Tasmaner
The difference being; there's no state that gets to take one's things, to provide one with services one didn't ask for nor wishes to receive. — Tzeentch
For many, me included, it is the fact that a government may force individuals to part with their wealth. — Tzeentch
How exactly are we to read (3)? Are we talking about mandating and enforcing separation? — Srap Tasmaner
In general, are you wondering whether it's possible for a system to be racist against everyone? — Srap Tasmaner
to be privileged in some way is to be a member of the category that receives advantages and avoids disadvantages associated with that membership. — fdrake
@Srap Tasmaner↪Srap Tasmaner
1. There exists a system that at least intends to divide people according to a criterion it calls "race".
2. That system marks some members of our society as "black" and some as "white".
3. This system legitimizes violating the human rights of those marked as "black" but not of those marked as "white".
4. The system also legitimizes various sorts of unfair or inequitable treatment of those marked as "black" but not of those marked as "white".
I do not believe there is any disagreement here on (1)-(4).
— Srap Tasmaner
Should it be concluded from (1) - (4) that the society of the US is segregational and racist? — Number2018
Thats not what it seems to me, reading eg the FB posts from my friends in the academic left. Its more like just that "collective empaty". There is seldom a solution to a complex question. Refugees -"just let them come, no limitations, we have to open our hearts". CO2 emissions - "We have to find a new lifestyle". And this is from otherwise highly intelligent persons that for most other questions can acknowledge a problem as difficult and take part in a solution — Ansiktsburk
Socialists want to spend other people's money because they think they know best. That's a statement of fact. If you don't understand why that is arrogant, you're ignorant. — Tzeentch
Then there's the quintessential bid for moral superiority, which I interpret as terribly selfrighteous. — Tzeentch
My statement: 'the facts considered in these fields are considered to be true' was put there to say we do not need a consistent formal language to describe things that we describe to be true. — TrespassingAcademia
You are correct, there is a long history of mathematicians trying to make general language consistent. And this is somewhat analogous to what I proposed. I propose a formal language to describe theological theory in a consistent way, thus granting it the same level of 'reality' as mathematical objects like groups/rings/topological spaces or the real numbers. — TrespassingAcademia
Love is an abstract concept. Like numbers was an abstract concept 1000 years ago. We saw a bunch of examples of each, enough for us to talk relatively unambiguously about both and thus we started calling it 'real'. Other examples of abstract concepts are money, economy, countries, etc. which all of us come to call real. If someone were to develop a specialized language, as was done for mathematics, to pin down our abstract concept of God, then God would share the same amount of reality as all of the abstract concepts I mentioned. However note that I believe religions commonly attribute a stronger type of reality than mere an abstract human thought. — TrespassingAcademia
You might believe that God was created by the 'elite' as a ploy to power, but I doubt this is the case. — TrespassingAcademia
Do you believe superheroes were created by the American shadow government to control your minds and influence the opinions of the masses? Because this is the same type of argument you are making. — TrespassingAcademia
At the very least one needs to treat religion as an abstract concept developed to try pin down some observations on what actions make life better and what actions make life worse. — TrespassingAcademia
Well ironically enough, in Christianity, Jesus was once a boy. :chin: — 3017amen
Banno gave a worked example using "stairs" for able-bodied privilege at the start of the thread, then linked an essay later in this (↪Banno) post. ↪creativesoul gave a long explanation. If this question is rooted in a failure of understanding, one of the essays Banno linked has a checklist of ways white privilege works on a day to day individual level (as a manifestation of systemic racism) — fdrake
Well let's parse one thing at a time carefully. Are you saying that mathematical formulas cannot explain the nature of your conscious existence? Or can it only explain things like laws of gravity... (?) — 3017amen
I'm a little confused, what does loneliness have to do with mathematical truths? — 3017amen
Are you sure? Surviving in the jungle doesn't require knowledge of the laws of gravity do they? Survival depends on appreciation of how the world is; not any hidden underlying order. Surely that couldn't be the case, could it? — 3017amen
So using that example, it seems like you're implying that in order to evade falling objects, I must first run calculations (or at least have knowledge of mathematics) in order to avoid the object. But if I did that, how would I have enough time to avoid the object itself? Wouldn't sensory perception in itself be sufficient? — 3017amen
It is not about letting our perceived superiority belittle others theories we dislike. — Philosophim
Are you sure? You're implying that mathematical truth correlates to the reality of consciousness. Is there a mathematical formula that explains consciousness? — 3017amen
Are you sure? Surviving in the jungle doesn't require knowledge of the laws of gravity do they? Survival depends on appreciation of how the world is; not any hidden underlying order. Surely that couldn't be the case, could it?
So using that example, it seems like you're implying that in order to evade falling objects, I must first run calculations (or at least have knowledge of mathematics) in order to avoid the object. But if I did that, how would I have enough time to avoid the object itself? Wouldn't sensory perception in itself be sufficient? — 3017amen
True, but by this argument this is also a proof against evolutionary theory/ modern medicine/ any other modern science not formalized in this way. The facts generated in these fields are nonetheless considered to be true. — TrespassingAcademia
Would you reject the concepts of mathematics as irrational and not correlated to the real world? What I tried to do was explain that one may consider mathematical reality to be based solely on the fact that the language used to describe it is logically consistent. So my proposition is that if we can do the same for our language used to describe God, then this gives our concept of God as much 'reality' as mathematics. — TrespassingAcademia
This however does not yet prove the existence of a somewhat more 'platonic' God, but it does give us a sort of 'half' existence like mathematics/numbers/love etc — TrespassingAcademia
No so my friend. I was not advancing an apologetic, I was citing a simplification of reasons to establish government. I don't have a problem with those principles, of course a conversation as to what they mean is necessary, but that is for another thread. My point was about the necessity of government — JerseyFlight
If we are not free to say what we want about this thing, then it exists. — TrespassingAcademia
Every society in the world contradicts this principle. Would you then try to enforce this principle on the societies of the world? Why do humans form governments in the first place? This is what the American constitution says: "...in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity." — JerseyFlight
I suspect that these were more likely middle-class than working class. My recollection is that even in the good old days, you needed to be pretty damn literate to negotiate the benefits system with any degree of success. I've known a few climbers too in N. Wales, and they climbed the slate quarries for fun, precisely because they were not the children of the quarrymen who climbed them with drills and explosives for a living. — unenlightened
Let's say that having "compassion" for those who have less than you is much easier when you are in a better situation than said miserable. — Gus Lamarch
Oh, well, that clinched it.
— Pro Hominem
Are you acquiescing already? — 3017amen
Oh, I am concerned with the welfare of people around me. I just don't believe such concern should be forced upon me or anyone else through government.
You speak with the self-righteous ignorance of a true socialist. — Tzeentch
It is a challenging question. I am sorry, but I cannot give you some advice. Probably, it is a false choice between “being white” and “being fully conscious of systemic racism.” We need to avoid a trap of the imposed choices between fixed, rigid, and normative identifications. One of the functions of power is to reduce the complexity of our social reality to the easily recognizable obviousnesses — Number2018
What makes people from wealthy, academical background lean left? — Ansiktsburk
The same arrogance that makes any socialist think they know best how to spend other people's money. — Tzeentch
I am always curious as to what people mean by "socialist"?
Is providing basic health care to the population of your country "socialist" or is it responsible government? In either case sign me up.
Is free education for the most talented, motivated and capable regardless of race, sex, religion or socio-economic status "socialist" or an investment in the nations future? Again I am all for it.
It seems to me most cannot distinguish between "socialism" and "communism".
In terms of economies, central planning and state ownership of entire economies seem to have failed multiple times but there are other state interventions that would seem to be in the interest of both the state and the general welfare. — prothero
Oh, forgot to add:
Philosophy of Religion: God
Ethics & Political Philosophy (separation of church and state/In God we Trust). — 3017amen