the selective hysterics over Russia — StreetlightX
What exactly are you talking about? Are you saying a promise should be made, but with no intention to actually keep it?
— baker
For the sake of peace, a ceasefire deal affected and used as an opportunity to re-think and pursue strategic objectives further down the road when Russia is weakened by sanctions. — FreeEmotion
Why the insistence on making a tough stand now
I am learning new and disturbing things about 'our' world, things that do not inspire confidence in a peaceful future.
But ethics will always be based on securing, supporting and promoting survival. — Alkis Piskas
Hence, eventually: zombies.
But there's much more to "survival" than that. I might talk about it in some other post ... (I don't want to overload this one.)
It is apparent that it is not possible to set out what it is to be a religion, any more than for what it is to be a game. — Banno
All these events deny people the right to be an individual; perhaps we can say that these governments are “anti-person” or “anti-personalism.” — Dermot Griffin
If we really want to change the world then I think we need to start with a change in our own hearts first. — Dermot Griffin
To those who still insist the war is going 'disastrously' for Russia because they read that on CNN, ask yourself how Ukraine having the upper hand can be squared with a public admission they cannot take back their own territory and will likely have to give some of it away. — Baden
What I do not understand is why at least agree to a deal that can be simply rescinded at a later date — FreeEmotion
Promises can be broken so I do not see the point except to bring a ceasfire. — FreeEmotion
We want Russia to be free. — Olivier5
Without some minimum degree of freedom of expression, new ideas just don't get expressed because expressing them would be dangerous. And if one can't express new ideas, why have them? So only cultures that are reasonably open and tolerant can generate new ideas at a sustained rate. Of course these things come and go: cultures evolve all the time. — Olivier5
People were reasonably content but no one was happy. Nobody was ever smiling for instance, or joking or laughing their ass off, even when drunk. No public expression of joy. — Olivier5
It must be pretty schizophrenic. I travelled through Hungary in the 80's. It was rather sad how nobody would ever speak their mind in public but would unload in private. — Olivier5
I met an Albanian once, who had this story about the death of Enver Hoxha. She was at school when the news broke, a pupil in an average primary school in Albania. The teacher said that this was a terrible news and that they should all cry now. She found it hard to do, in fact she started to laugh irrepressibly. She quickly put her head down in her arms, crouched on her desk, and pretended to sob, all the while she was laughing and laughing. That's how she got through that.
It’s significant how many contributors here use this subject as a pretext for questioning democracy generally.
And scary.
Mind you, some of them seem not to know what to believe, or even what is real. Probably too much screen time. If a Russian artillery shell comes through the wall of your building, that would be a wake-up call. Although not if it’s only something you read about in ‘the media’. Then, it’s ‘propaganda’. — Wayfarer
Only in a democracy can you complain about your own government without fear of reprisal. — RogueAI
They won't be able to travel, buy foreign goods, import anything from the West. How is that a victory? — Wayfarer
So, do you believe that organisations like CNN, Al Jazeera, the BBC, etc., are doing something other than reporting the news? — Wayfarer
For instance the RSF Press Freedom Index. — Olivier5
Let's not loose sight of the fact that tens of millions of people are being displaced, thousands of people killed, entire cities laid to waste, and all for no good reason. — Wayfarer
Here in our little sheltered workshop everything is very comfy.
Is the dissolution of nation states something to be hoped for or admonished? — Banno
I think it's objectively true that in WW2, America was fighting for the good side and Germany was fighting for the bad side. — RogueAI
Yep. Ethics is hard.Much harder than just consequences and duty. It requires working on oneself so that one is better placed to make the right decision. — Banno
Zombies are alive, technically.
— baker
Yes, Frankenstein's monster too. — Alkis Piskas
The central element and purpose of ethics based on "major good for the greatest number" is survival — Alkis Piskas
Why are they standing in the queue, then? — Tom Storm
I agree, I think theism should have a more robust definition. — Shwah
Can we accept those who think murder is a good way to deal with having to line up for concert tickets. — Tom Storm
The central element and purpose of ethics based on "major good for the mojor number" is survival — Alkis Piskas
His famous example of a trade-off scenario:
You are distributing a lifesaving drug. — Camille
Despite that, the shunning of Russia may be the only weapon to actually bite home. — Banno
Is it possible that Russian involvement in global economic activities had become so vital that Russians find it impossible to get by without it
Might this century be the one in which the growth of global economic interdependence brings about a world in which the fear of being shunned means that nation states finally renounce their anacronistic boarder disputes?
And Sen. Lindsey Graham (R., S.C.) said that Putin should be assassinated:
Lindsey Graham calls for Putin to be assassinated by someone close to him: ‘Is there a Brutus in Russia?’ - Independent — Apollodorus
Imagine the international outcry if Putin had called for Biden to be toppled or killed .... — Apollodorus
Can the notion of god or some form of all encompassing entity be reconciled with the fundamental basis for religions and then natural sciences? — Benj96
Not only that, but Western dependence on the media’s mass-produced fake news has reached the point where people believe that facts don’t matter. — Apollodorus
To put the fire out. Do you really think there was some kind of moral equivalence between Nazi's using violence to round up and kill Jews and Americans using violence to stop the Nazi's? — RogueAI
I personally fear that the war will just continue for far longer even if a conclusion could be made earlier.
— ssu
I'm on board with this. There is a solution there imo, i.e. acquiesce to basic Russian demands with maybe a bit of face-saving negotiation around them. — Baden
The biggest danger though is that Zelensky hopes that the longer he draws out the war, the more there is a chance of some kind of accident or spark that gets NATO involved on his side.
If I were to have a vision for Russia, it might be a place where people wanted to go — jorndoe
Philosophy began with one objective in mind - to discover how to live the good life. — Agent Smith
To answer this seemingly simple query, philosophers needed to deal with other matters like truth & knowledge (epistemology), reason (logic), good and bad (ethics), gods, free will (metaphysics), beauty (aesthetics), so on and so forth. In short, as far as I can tell, all the various branches of philosophy are subgoals that we need to attain just so that we can finally answer the question "what is the good life?"
Philosophers soon realized the complexity and profundity of the problem. Each subdiscipline of philosophy turned out to be a tough nut to crack that required entire lifetimes of study.
As facts stand, philosophers have all but forgotten the original question (what is the good life?). They're now only interested in topics auxiliary to the main one viz., to reiterate, the good life.
Are philosophers missing the forest for the trees?
Oh no, protests are very useful for demonstrating that that Regime allows dissent and democracy. The power structures are safe from any influences from below, and things carry on as usual. They don't jail people for protests, worse, they ignore them.
These people are captives: they are being used to pacify, ironically, those who were against the war: see, we are protesting, we are fighting back, but in the end there is no effect. — FreeEmotion
The British have traditionally been racist towards the Irish too, e.g. the phrase 'That's a bit Irish' means 'That's stupid'. That doesn't amount to a Western Jihad against the Irish. — Baden
And a NATO jihad against NATO members, such as Poles, would be a bit self-defeating wouldn't it?
I would presume that people on a Philosophy Forum would back up those who are against authoritarianism and imperialism. — ssu
not to mention Russia forever losing its honor as a nation. — FreeEmotion
Yet the fact is the Russian reality is absolutely strange. It's a myriad of strange occurrences and crazy events in the eyes of Westerners. I don't know what would come close to it: a perpetual Trump administration? It's really different from the West.
In a way it's on purpose organized to various different elements, a multitude of intelligence services with their own military forces and to army and national guard, in order that there wouldn't be some strong counterweight to Putin himself. Quite similar to the Third Reich, actually. — ssu
You're confusing his anti-Western stance for being pro-Putin.
— baker
No, he's genuinely being pro-Putin. — ssu
If Ukrainians can resist Russia in Ukraine, Europeans can resist America in Europe. It's just a matter of Europeans uniting against foreign powers. — Apollodorus
Did you read through the his quotes that I gave? Likely not.
