The absolute most weak person is a bit hard to imagine having much of a role of any kind in society.
I'm a bit lost as to what you are aiming for. — Bitter Crank
But sometimes it does? That's news to me.The world doesn't always work on Buddhist principles. — Apollodorus
Absolutely.I think China knows exactly what it is doing. — Apollodorus
Are you sure about the former, given the rise of rightwing politics?If the West controlled Hitler and Stalin, why not Xi?
Gotcha, but wouldn't this be a distraction from the point that injustice can happen whether people view it as a blessing and like it or not? — schopenhauer1
My stance is that people can't imagine smells/tastes/touch/sounds as they can visual images or if they can only to a lesser extent. — TheMadFool
You could perhaps specify your point and instead of making a wholesale indictment against humanity for procreating at all, focus on pointing at the fault of producing children while failing to instill in them the belief that life is a blessing and worth living.
I think this is the point that people fail at the most: Showing and teaching others that life is a blessing and worth living. — baker
By that standard, eating is unjust. — Derrick Huestis
Our minds can, via imaginative ability, create simulations - virtual realities if you like - BUT the simulations are always partial/incomplete. In the example above, I can see the golden sand, I can see the rock I told you about, I can also see myself touch it BUT I can't feel the rock.
What gives? — TheMadFool
Of course.This is to say that emotions aren't merely feelings like sad or happy (those are simply the downstream by-products of awareness of our emotional processing), but rather that emotional processing in the mind is an actual system of information composition, deconstruction and restructuring that can cohere with and use imagination — intrapersona
I think this is what people do anyway, they just don't talk about it that way, given that "emotionality" has such a bad reputation in our culture.I want to try and prove inductively that if we were hypothetically trained to use emotions as a way of making sense of the world, new kinds of epistemological truths could be uncovered and perhaps even a new systems of logic or in the very least, new postulates or non-logical axioms
I never got round to reading Dorian Gray — TheMadFool
Oh, and the West is heaven on earth, right.I see your point. However, China has been an evil dictatorship from the day the Maoists seized power in 1949.
So, I would say that China (i.e. the political system, not the Chinese people) is evil quite independently of the West. — Apollodorus
So why not just, you know, stop importing low quality products from China?And precisely because the West bears a large share of culpability, it also has the responsibility to do something about it. Economic sanctions, for example, would definitely be a step in the right direction.
To avoid being fired for failure to get vaccinated, people claim religious exemptions. Lawyers will have to go through the exemptions and rule on them. — frank
An atheist can also be more effective at helping humanity by adopting secular ethics and values rather than bronze age myths. — Wheatley
"The human body is the best picture of the human soul." ~Witty — 180 Proof
The soul is what gets incarnated, not resurrected.↪baker Interesting fact, it isn't the soul that is resurrected (should there be such a thing) but the physical body. As it says in the Creed: "I believe in the resurrection of the body". — Bitter Crank
Sure. Also, even people who don't believe in a "soul", but who are big advocates of identity, individuality, place considerable value on what is, in effect, the "afterlife". Many self-help theories try to orient its audiences with questions like "How do you want to be remembered after you die?", "What do you want to be written on your tombstone?"↪baker I think your observation is correct, more or less. The term "spirit" and "spiritual" are sufficiently vague that they could just as well be replaced by identity, individuality, or personhood. Still, a residual belief in an afterlife is pretty common, and "something" is thought by many to continue on indefinitely. At least that's how I read the 21st century.
They do??? This has not been my experience.I'm not exactly sure, but from a value perspective it's like this frustrating feeling of like on the whole we are being given the option of this beautifully crafted piece of solid oak furniture that will last for generations versus a crappy piece of particleboard furniture and taking the particleboard... a despair at feeling a lost innocence.
Maybe this is why most states condone those who beat down religion and it's values. — kudos
‘There would no fool's gold if there were no gold’ ~ Rumi — Wayfarer
*sigh*Yeah, not interested. You can find plenty on the internet. — Benkei
We've got /.../ people believing the worst things without any ability to even listen to opposing views.
— Benkei
Do you know of any time in human history when this was not the case?
I don't. Sure, the superficial methods change over time, as technology changes, but the underlying principles are the same. Pick any actual time in human history, any actual year and place, and research whether people in that year and place had free access to all information.
Was there ever a time when the distribution of information was not in one way or another targeted? — baker
He just is allowed such.Still don't understand how he can be allowed to participate when he won't observe the house rules. — Wayfarer
It's not only that. Some administrations really, genuinely don't care about the people, and they make that clear. Some administrations expect that the citizens need to earn the favor the government.This is actually what is happening and has happened in many countries. The pandemic has put the ruling administrations in a tough spot and if the emergency laws aren't up to it (as usual), it causes this kind of friction where governments have to back down because of legal reasons. — ssu
Apparently there's something worth talking about and promoting, that is your version of the truth. What makes your version greater than that of another? Something of value to you, that doesn't warrant life, whereas something of value to another does warrant life. You see the dilemma an observer faces when trying to process your argument. — Outlander
I asked before, but nobody wants to reply:You sound downtrodden. What makes you so certain life isn't like a sandbox or a community pool, just because you showed up when it happens to be full of piss, doesn't mean it wasn't once before and never can be again, despite those who preach the same.
Anyways, no this isn't about me not cleaning the dishes or wanting to do "my fair share.." The whole point is that it is unjust to be put in a situation where you cannot opt out unless you die of /degradation/ or suicide..
— schopenhauer1
As noted above, some people do believe, by default, that life is a blessing and worth living. Such people cannot relate to your concern.
You could perhaps specify your point and instead of making a wholesale indictment against humanity for procreating at all, focus on pointing at the fault of producing children while failing to instill in them the belief that life is a blessing and worth living.
I think this is the point that people fail at the most: Showing and teaching others that life is a blessing and worth living.
While many people will eagerly criticize anyone who is in any way pessimistic about life as such, they are quite unable (or just unwilling?) to persuade them otherwise. They'll even go so far as to claim that something is genetically or otherwise physiologically wrong with the pessmist and dismiss them. — baker
Are you slothful by nature, but have managed to overcome your sloth philosophically? — baker
No.In a universe where everything is ineffectual does this make moments precious and worthy of reverence — Benj96
No, but at least a more precise one.or do we require a more apathetic approach?
Jung held that there was both a philosophical and scientific basis for synchronicity. He identified the complementary nature of causality and acausality with Eastern sciences and protoscientific disciplines, stating "the East bases much of its science on this irregularity and considers coincidences as the reliable basis of the world rather than causality. Synchronism is the prejudice of the East; causality is the modern prejudice of the West". — Wikipedia
Bringing this back to the original topic, if when we consider all men and women to be equal in terms of civil liberty and simultaneously assent to an implicit notion of an extended spiritual equality on which this is based, I just can't help but find this situation so utterly absurd and dysfunctional. — kudos
Why is it you think that people often look away from these ideas? How is the injustice of putting someone else in the de facto nature of working-to-survive, not realized? — schopenhauer1
Have you never experienced a moment or period in your life you enjoyed and wish to repeat? — Outlander
This is actually what is happening and has happened in many countries. The pandemic has put the ruling administrations in a tough spot and if the emergency laws aren't up to it (as usual), it causes this kind of friction where governments have to back down because of legal reasons. Has happened here too. But I guess it still far from a threat of there happening a self coup or the polarization of politics in the US. — ssu
How seriously do you think we should take the 'rat race' of the natural world? — kudos
An equality of caring I guess it would resemble, though it may sound corny, is a missing link with the modern equality of wealth and employment and so forth. — kudos
Like Michael said:You're going to have to explain the relevance of this response, because I'm not seeing it. — Janus
Your very hypothetical scenario presupposes realism. Your wife is having an affair (unbeknownst to you), and then you find out. Obviously if you presuppose realism then you're going to find it absurd when you then consider anti-realism. — Michael
/.../ the relation between belief and observation is a two-way one, rather than the one-directional inductive process suggested by such phrases as ‘the most rational belief given the available evidence’. — baker
Yes, but that it had been going on for some time entails that it was true that it had been going on, and yet unverified — Janus