No, we're not. — Ying
You could not be more wrong.
It's all about Point of View. — charleton
I think you will find that this is a pattern which is far older than the United States. There is no way for any organism to exist without using resources from ecosystems. — Bitter Crank
Well, the solipsist argues that others do not exist. And then the Buddhists and other like-minded folk say the self does not exist. Descartes can be criticized on the grounds that he assumed there was an I to the experience of having a doubt, given that he was supposed to be entertaining 100% radical doubt. — Marchesk
Or it exists platonically independent of any actual quantity. — Marchesk
Alternatively meaning does not exist in the head (semantic externalism), and language does not reference private states (Wittgenstein). You also have the behaviorists and the eliminative materialists. — Marchesk
Sydasis — Sydasis
I essentially disagree with this. — Marchesk
I like using self-organizing systems metaphors. If the universe(or multiverse) is an auto-peiotic development, then it moves progressively from a state of lesser dynamic differentiation-integration-stability to a state of greater integrity. What this means at the level of cultural evolution is that our origins are necessarily violent and chaotic , but our future holds the promise of the sort of interpersonal agreement you state as a fact, but most would hold onto as a dream. — Joshs
Of course, whether we judge the other to be agreeable or not is a function, among other things, of the breadth of our perspective. The fact that Western Europe, for instance, is in the midst of its longest period without war, is considered by some a sign that we know how to agree with each other at the most general political level in a way we didn't used to. — Joshs
At a more up-close level, however, real intellectual disagreement can be measured by the negative affects(hostility, disgust, bewilderment, ridicule,etc) that run rampant in discussion forums and many other places, as reflected in the vast machinery of the litigation industry.
On this forum there are almost as many philosophical worldviews represented as there are contributors. These world views are not reconcilable in the sense that you can't reduce Hegel to Kant or Kant to Plato. — Joshs
If agreeing to disagree can be considered "being all in agreement", then we are all one big happy family here. But I suggest what is missing from this near-utopia is the resources to understand each participant's view as pragmatically true relative to their own perspective, and the ability to link each participant's perspective to those of all the others via some superordinate undestanding.
That is the means by which I can, if not move the other towards my position, at least see their viewpoint as valid and necessary for them given the world as they see it. — Joshs
The best way to fool yourself into thinking that everyone agrees on the fundamental
philosophical issues is to use a naturalistic vocabulary borrowed from mathematics and physics. These descriptive languages are designed to be so conceptually abstract as to mask important differences in worldview. — Joshs
Of course women's sport teams are not going to perform the way men's teams perform. Men's athletics, standards of performance, levels of fan enthusiasm, money spent on men's athletics, etc. has a long history.
Major women's athletics is a fairly new thing. Large numbers of women athletes have not been celebrated, fussed over, had money lavished on their needs and so forth, over the last century. Given equivalent funding, institutional support, fan-base development, and all that, women's sport will eventually be more like men's sport -- not the same sized bodies, or testosterone driven athletes--but well funded athletes who have been working on their skills since they were in kindergarten.
I don't think professional sports is worth the amount of money expended on it, but if people like it, money will get spent. But be careful what you pray for.
Professional men's athletics do absolutely nothing for the health of 99.9% of fans. Professional women's athletics are going to do absolutely nothing for the health of 99.9% of fans, either. What is more important -- much more important -- is that athletic activity be democratized in grade school, high school, college, and in adult life so that more people participate in active life styles.
Focusing a lot of money and attention on 1/10th of 1 percent of the population to play professional sports and neglecting the other 99.9% just isn't a good idea. Better that millions of girls and boys have programs to help them find ways to be active and physically fit than always grooming the cream of the crop from little league on up to the major leagues. — Bitter Crank
By the way, the folderol going on in Minneapolis for the 52nd Super Bowl is a COLOSSAL pain in the ass. Massive traffic and transit disruptions not just on Sunday, but for the 10 days preceding the #$*&@#(@Q)$( thing. Security checks (backpacks, purses, open your coat please...) as one walks down the street. — Bitter Crank
Yes, cause exists. It explains how a piece of matter affects another piece. — bahman
(This is what came out of the ‘observer problem’; read this.) — Wayfarer
How seriously do people take the inability to cope with life?
If someone is dying of cancer people have to accept that as inevitable but if someone isn't coping with life there are thousands of self help books available and criticism to be had.
It is as if the inability to cope with life is a character flaw or choice. The same goes for mental illness. Mental illness is not strictly terminal so if you die due to mental health it is usually self inflicted. People can cast aspersions on the character of mentally unwell person. — Andrew4Handel
Materialism is a system of belief which emphasizes that physical process can explain all phenomena in the world. Consciousness therefore is an epiphenomenon within materialism since it is not a physical process but outcome of a physical process. We however know that consciousness is necessary for learning (please read the following article). This means that consciousness is causally efficacious. Therefore materialism is not correct. — bahman
I'd say that the most watched and appreciated women's sports are those where the line between the genders is the least obvious. — Buxtebuddha
Well, there's Women's Sports and then there's women's sports. Or maybe girls sports. The important thing about girl's sports is the same as for boy's sports - children and young adults learning how to handle their bodies, work with others, get knocked around, compete, and win and lose. For whatever social, physical, and temperamental reasons, I think that comes more easily for boys. — T Clark
At the very least it would remove some cases where people's careers will be stymied for the sin of wanting to start and take care of a family. — fdrake
The "consumer" is an economic stereotype made possible and created by industrial society. "Consumer" started to become popular around 1900.
Prior to the deployment of various labor-reducing devices using electric motors, automobiles, and so forth, men and women devoted most of their time to producing. Men worked in production jobs (farm or factory, mostly) and women produced food, clothing, and some domestic goods at home. A woman often prepared food from a kitchen garden and used eggs from a backyard henhouse. Food was prepared from simple raw ingredients.
The industrialization of the home converted women from producers to consumers. One drove to a store and bought bread (didn't make it), canned fruit (didn't preserve it), meat (didn't kill it), and ready-made clothing (didn't sew it). The woman shopped for and "consumed" household goods, as well. Families consumed housing and transportation.
"Consumer" is now applied to everybody, even mentally retarded individuals who "consume" custodial care services, so the term has approached meaninglessness. But if you set aside these nonsensical uses, the term is still meaningful.
The economic role of consumption (by consumers) is a critically important element in the modern economy. Something close to 3/4 of the GDP is derived from the acts of buying stuff that define the role of consumer.
In many ways, being a "consumer" is a degraded role, a shrink wrapped stereotype. — Bitter Crank
The distinctions identified in race, whilst having no bearing at all on personality, did once indicate very strongly the cultural heritage of that person and so what adopted values they may have. — Pseudonym
Nowadays, thankfully, this is becoming so much less the case that to read anything into race would be unfair stereotyping, but our history of oppression and its legacy still means that someone's skin colour gives a statistically more significant indication of the sorts of challenges they've had to face in life than their ear lobes. — Pseudonym
It's not just arbitrary. It meant something significant about cultural heritage a hundred years ago, and shameful though it is, it still means something about one's history today. — Pseudonym
Rationality is light, supposedly. It is associated with enlightement, wisdom, philosophy, science, blah blah blah. To find fault in rationality is simply impossible. You would have to be either mad or a fool or both to even think of painting rationality in a negative light. — TheMadFool
What is socially constructed is not the skin and hair colour and nose shape but the importance of these things in influencing our judgements and categorisations unjustly. This in turn focusses our attention on skin and hair colour etc. When someone says 'race is determined by culture not genetics' I think the charitable way of reading this is that the racial basis of prejudice, hatred and discrimination and thence of the study of and focus on racial differences is entirely arbitrary. If we have any charity left and I hope we do. — Cuthbert
Hot topic lately, which I find rather scary. To be clear, such a 'right' does not currently exist. But there seems to be a movement that seeks to establish it. Anyone care to defend the position that this would be good for society? — Roke
What is your stake in the view that "race is culturally constructed" and that "gender is culturally constructed"? — Bitter Crank
Race is real and isn't determined by culture; it's inherent in the genetic makeup of a person. — Bitter Crank
Culture is also real, and is learned. There isn't a genetic link between race and culture. There are links of learning and environment, however, between race and culture. People tend to behave like those around them--that's cultural.
Maleness and femaleness are real and are biologically determined. Men are males, women are females. Both males or men, females or women, have certain sex-linked characteristics and traits, and both males or men and females or women learn an array of culturally specific roles in connection with their sex and gender.
All humans inherit tendencies to behave in various ways, and also learn behaviors in early life. Some of the behaviors are "stereotypes", a term applied to specific types of individuals or certain ways of behaving intended to represent the entire group of those individuals or behaviors as a whole. So, girls playing with dolls and boys with trucks are "stereotypes".
A "role" is culturally defined manner of behaving. "The stereotypical male role in a family is to provide financial support and leadership." A "role" may also be biological. The male "role" in reproduction is inseminating females. The female "role" in reproduction is bearing off-spring. The male may play the role of "family defender" because biologically he is bigger and stronger than the female (usually). The male may also play the role of care-giver, which is a role usually assigned in stereotypical fashion to females.
It's just an inconvenient fact of life that roles, stereotypes, biology, and culture are braided together. With some effort the specifics can be teased apart. We struggle to do this all the time. "Was so-and-so born with high intelligence (genes, biology, prenatal environment, etc.) or is so-and-so very successful as a result of obsessively hard work? Or in joke form, "If you're so smart, how come you are not rich?" — Bitter Crank
Racial classification is...based on biological clustering of physiological traits within geographic populations. — JustSomeGuy
The fact that you won't acknowledge that the "acts" you listed are stereotypes does not mean I created a straw man. — JustSomeGuy
You have provided zero evidence for your claim other than "because I say so". — JustSomeGuy
I'd also like to make clear that my claim was that gender roles are based on stereotypes--no different than racial roles/stereotypes — JustSomeGuy
and you have yet to show why gender stereotypes are different from racial stereotypes in any significant way, which was your original claim. — JustSomeGuy
If race is not biological, why are children born the same race as their parents? How can we find our racial ancestry by looking at our DNA? How can forensic scientists tell what race a person is based on their blood? — JustSomeGuy
I never said it was, you did--that's been my point this whole time. — JustSomeGuy
You listed some stereotypes, claiming that doing them would mean you are "acting in the role of man". — JustSomeGuy
These "roles" you speak of are just stereotypes. — JustSomeGuy
According to you, I am not a man because I don't do these stereotypical "male" things. — JustSomeGuy
And yet despite not doing any of them, I am a man. It's almost as if being a man means nothing more than having a Y chromosome, just as being white means nothing more than having a certain skin tone....anything beyond that is a stereotype. — JustSomeGuy
I think maybe what WfPOMO might be saying is that there is arguably a male role that is derived from some set of rationally justifiable beliefs about being male, — Pseudonym
I think maybe what WfPOMO might be saying is that there is arguably a male role that is derived from some set of rationally justifiable beliefs about being male, whereas the 'white' role is only stereotypes, nothing more than the pursuit of power evident in all humanity which, means that, by virtue of historical power plays alone, whites have largely adopted expressions of power where they can. Nothing about being 'white' directly caused them to do this. — Pseudonym
A 'male' role is arguably, not a role a woman would adopt even if they could. According to the logic behind it, its largely to do with greater average physical strength and the inability to suckle children. So, the theory goes, women would not adopt the typical male roles because they are not, on average, stronger, and they can suckle children. I'm not saying I necessarily agree with this argument (although I have a great deal of sympathy for it), I'm just saying there is one.
With race, however, whilst a few extreme racists exist who have ideas about racial differences leading to behavioural differences, most people who exhibit 'white' stereotypes do so by virtue of the historical context alone, meaning that had history taken a different route, blacks would have adopted this role instead.
So the argument is, nothing about their 'whiteness' causes them directly to adopt this role, whereas something about a man's 'male-ness' causes him to adopt the roles he does. — Pseudonym
Of course the social role of "white" exists; and "black" and "gay" and all others. Stereotypes and social roles exist because we are not all one big cultural frappe, the same everywhere. Cultural groups are just unique enough to be noticeable. So, what is the "white" social role? Among other things, it's a distinctive kind of language (depending on geography); it's certain kinds of food and clothing preferences; it's a way of relating to institutions (like the police or government officials) that is a bit different than other people's; it's a generally practiced style of self-presentation. Han Chinese, Nigerians, Argentinians, Ugandans, Indonesians, Zimbabweans, Russians, Peruvians, French, Italians, Swedish, Canadians... pick a group, any group, and there will be a certain style of "XYZ" culture which will be unique to a particular time and place. — Bitter Crank
So you want me to tell you what white stereotypes are? — JustSomeGuy
But these things are also stereotypes, so you're sort of shooting yourself in the foot.
The truth is that these "roles" you're talking about are all based on stereotypes, whether they're gender roles or race roles or whatever the case may be. So, you can either say that these roles are legitimate or that they're not, but you can't cherry pick. — JustSomeGuy
Do you think stereotypes or expectations about the way people of different races should act would fall under the category of "roles"? — czahar
Sometimes one hears about a "post-racial society" and then something happens which pretty much obliterates the idea that we are anywhere close to being a post-racial society.
If we were a post-racial society, then we would think about race as much as people today think about phrenology - measuring the bumps and indentations in your skull to learn about one's personality. We don't think about phrenology. We are a post-phrenology society. Post racial? Not even close. — Bitter Crank
A difference in taste, that is all. — Rich
It claims everything is already determined. — Rich