It seems I was successful in that goal. — Jeremiah
You are probably aware that European culture was driving people insane in the 20th century -- WWI, WWII... Europe's craziness doesn't make anybody else's craziness better, but it can give you some perspective.
Does American culture drive people insane? Fromm thought so (The Sane Society, Erich Fromm). — Bitter Crank
However, I have no intention of spending time trying to determine which individuals fit where in those categories. — Jeremiah
I don't keep such lists and it is the lovers of opinion that are limiting themselves. The very nature of overindulgence in subjectivity is to limit everything to the self. — Jeremiah
He arose from global angst. His thought was global revolution. Others imagined attacking the problem one small piece at a time. The names of the moderates are not as well known, but they won in the end. Look at China's economy for proof of that. — frank
If it was merely a goodwill gesture — frank
China could have chosen a statue that wouldn't have resulted in protest marches in Germany. — frank
I'm sure the Chinese know Marx is a controversial figure. — frank
Was Marx a great intellectual in your view? — frank
Really? If it was meant as a symbol of a bond between Germany and China, why not a Beethoven statue? I sense something other than plain good will. — frank
No one is suggesting "one single model" for anything; however, if your statement is that there is bad philosophy then you must have reasons for thinking that. So then, what are the characteristics of "bad philosophy"? — Jeremiah
think a characteristics of bad philosophy is over generalizations and giving up before before even trying. — Jeremiah
HexHammer is right, there are a lot of lovers of opinion that masquerade as philosophers, — Jeremiah
You are conflating self-defense (something that is necessary for survival) and eating meat (something that is NOT necessary for survival). — chatterbears
As the story is written in first-person, I can only go by what the protagonist explains and I think that since she is consistently unsure about what he is thinking, that underlying intuitive response telling her that 'he could be a murderer' or that he has no cats etc, is telling of the authenticity of her actual motivations, that she really is afraid. — TimeLine
Hmm, interesting... So then the person must allow encroachment on his/her property if it was previously allowed, which then causes a loss of ownership. Seems like a good reason to not be tolerant. — Lone Wolf
Tolerance is not the same as respect, although respect can have aspects of tolerance. This must be the restraint of negativity in order to avoid conflict or harming another, not necessarily due to benevolence towards the other. For instance, one may tolerate another's annoying habits without respecting the person or the habit. — Lone Wolf
The immortality of the germ-line had to be physically separated from the mortality of the stem-line to achieve even basic multicellular complexity. — apokrisis
I was talking about the death of possibilities, the termination of development - the positive step of making the soma disposable so as to make the germ-line evolvable. — apokrisis
I was talking about the death of possibilities, the termination of development - the positive step of making the soma disposable so as to make the germ-line evolvable.
If you want to make some more simplistic reading of what I wrote, I guess I can't stop you. — apokrisis
Wasn't that my point? Structural complexity depends on controlled death. And hydra are already complex enough for that to be a factor. — apokrisis
Again, it is an evolutionary story. If complex structure depends on controlled death, then control over that death will become increasingly a feature. — apokrisis
But it is also true that hydra depend on apoptosis, or programmed cell death — apokrisis
So sex and death do go together. — apokrisis
Very cool. I wonder how it 'works'. — StreetlightX
I remain sceptical. After all, germ cells are not organisms, and the reason that they don't age is that they - exactly like cancer, actually - remain undifferentiated, retaining their pluripotential so they may turn into other cells. And organisms just are differentiated beings (among other things). — StreetlightX
I'm considering the cases of "feral children" and how they were able to assign meaning without having any human contact. — numberjohnny5
Gun controls will not work, for many reasons. The only way to stop gun violence is to remove the guns.
There are an estimated 270,000,000 guns in the country, if it takes a dollar for each one to be picked up how much is that. Would that money not be better spent on education? Most think it would. — Sir2u
It seems the position is a form of “Ontological Relativism” or possibly “Relational Realism”. I want to explore this view, but can find little if any references to how I envision it. — noAxioms
Things exist only in relation to something (anything) else. There is no objective existence of anything, thus solving the problem of why existence exists. — noAxioms
I think that that's the best criticism I've seen so far. It's one of those "harsh, but true" comments. — Sapientia
For me, ethics is not a motive. My motive is that I believe human beings identify as herbivores through our biology & physiology alone; regardless of how we identify through our behaviour. — XTG
Maybe Stover meant to put it in a rather provocative way. But if we bracket out the rather modern Marxist connotation of a class and rather hold to the more 'conservative' idea of a guild, tradition, art, craft, tradition of excellence, etc., — Pierre-Normand
Sometimes when I am asked about the value that I find in philosophy, the question takes the form 'A quoi ça sert?' (what is it useful for) and my provocative reply is that philosophy is utterly useless, which is why it's so valuable. — Pierre-Normand
Thanks for uncovering that. It's a real gem — Pierre-Normand
Hey, to the best of my knowledge, Akanthinos, you weren't singled out by the CIA as either a particularly tragic or unusually fine specimen of social capital. In fact, it isn't an individual issue. The kind of capital we are talking about here is social, not individual, and it isn't measured in dollars at all. — Bitter Crank
So, you, Unenlightened, and Erik don't like "social capital." What's the right word for what BC is talking about? Social values? Civic virtue? Community spirit? Quality of life? Or do you really have no idea what he is trying to get at? — T Clark
As I said once before, or maybe several times. It is people that kill, not guns. And if people do not have access to guns they will use something else. — Sir2u
There is no object though, it is an "unfocused anxiety". That is how these emotions, feelings of desire and intentionality present themselves to the conscious mind. So there is no object to be represented. — Metaphysician Undercover
If phenomenology stipulates that the conscious mind cannot apprehend anything other than objects, then perhaps you ought to consider that phenomenology doesn't accurately describe the capacities of the conscious mind. — Metaphysician Undercover
But my point is that these "feelings" do not inform conscious thought as objects. — Metaphysician Undercover
This volume leaves out "La structure du comportement", unfortunately, doesn't it? — Pierre-Normand
I've got the Routledge translation here. I'm guessing you've got a French edition? — Ying
So it is quite clear that the inner feelings begin in vague generalities, not objects of representation, and the conscious mind apprehends and manipulates these generalities to produce specific objects of intention. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't remember him talking about neurosis in that text — Ying
Just out of curiosity, where did you stumble across "Propaedeutics"? Nice obscure word. — Bitter Crank
Of course the primary source is the preferred source, go to the library and read. — Metaphysician Undercover