I wouldn’t overdramatise the principle, though. Chance is a factor, that is all. — Wayfarer
When a guy tells a woman she's beautiful and she either says that she knows or gives an unmoved expression that indicates that the sentiment isn't worth much is this just straight up hubris? — TiredThinker
?No, that's just a heuristic approach that you confuse with making a rational decision. — Benkei
Perhaps just to get a sense for it, yes.That's why it is highly desirable for people to -- at least occasionally -- attend live performances. The live performance does not have to be up to Carnegie Hall standards, but it should be reasonably competent. I've attended amateur / semi-professional performances that were very satisfactory concerts -- and yes, sometimes noticeably imperfect. That's fine. The thing is, hear music that is performed live, before a live audience. — Bitter Crank
With Pfizer's technology they can make a new vaccine in a couple of weeks.
Unfortunately it has to be super frozen, so it's not ideal for protecting war torn regions, for instance. — frank
I think government action in respect of Covid has been pretty shit in general. — Benkei
There's no particular reasons to distrust vaccines other than general distrust of governments and big pharma and that simply isn't evidence. — Benkei
Why do people live? What do they hope to accomplish by living? Should they be helped to live, made to live, solely for the sake of living?
It would be easier to design an emergency response strategy to a health crisis if people's lives would be considered in terms of "living as a means to an end", rather than just "living for the sake of living".
It is, of course, unacceptable to bring this up in polite society. But it is precisely because we haven't cleared this up and instead made it into a taboo topic that our response to a crisis (any crisis) is bound to be ineffective
— baker
I'm not sure what you're getting at here. — frank
I said: As long as the discussion is limited to philosophy forums, there should be no problem.As long as the discussion is limited to philosophy forums, there should be no problem.
— baker
There's no 'problem' per se in voicing opposition to whatever policy but I believe that in times of crisis, 1) one should give some slack to political leaders, their job is hard nowadays and you and I wouldn't be able to do any better; and 2) consider the need for a little social cohesion, for a bit more attention to the public good, i.e. more civic sense and responsibility to the collective is required in times of crisis than otherwise I think. — Olivier5
It was a she. I think she made a good point. So much of what people do, or don't do, depends on whether they trust the government. She pointed out that typically, countries with high vaccination rates are those where people trust the government.Some Croatian social scientists say that the reason why many people don't get vaccinated is because they don't trust the government.
— baker
So a guy spoke on TV, huh?
Here's the thing: Why don't the vocal pro-vaccers (who claim to be taken hostage by the unvaccinated) put their money where their mouth is and limit health care (and other things) for the unvaccinated?
If the vocal pro-vaccers believe they are so right, so superior to the unvaccinated, then what on earth is stopping them from passing laws in accordance with that?
— baker
"Doctor do no harm", "doctor help the sick", all that? Empathy/decency towards the ignorant/fearful/ungrateful? Ethics? I'm thinking there are a few reasons anyway. — jorndoe
Then it should be easy for you to provide at least two canonical references that support the above. TY.Good that you brought that issue -epistemic autonomy - up; it (epistemic autonomy) is, to me, basically the idea that one must reserve one's belief only for those claims/theories that has oneself studied and thought through. Buddha was a staunch advocate. — TheMadFool
So you're using a teaching by the Buddha to defend a teaching for which you can provide no evidence that the Buddha taught it, and for which there is some evidence that he didn't? You should do better than that.It's an unwinnable and interminable argument; a poison arrow argument. — Wayfarer
Agreed, they can shift very quickly, as if such shifting would be the whole point. I brought up the distinction because I hoped it would help me to clarify something else, namely, how to distinguish between stupidity and confidence. To me, even freezing/panicking can be acts of confidence.The text you quoted from me was a response to the work culture views you had linked to. My disagreement with the utility of the division is not based upon my theory of the stupid. My disagreement was a rejection of the idea that people operate strictly on one basis or another. The world of actual work shows that these elements are all mushed together in real and very short time. That, in any case, has been my experience. — Valentinus
?You seem to be suggesting it is something we pin the tail upon like the donkey in the parlor game.
But to them that's like burning a pile of trash. Ie., not a bad thing, not at all, but something useful.Not at all. What is apparent is that they deny what is before us all; the fact of the destruction of classical literature by Christian zealots. — Banno
The more efficient method is to let them die in their front yards gasping for breath? Or what? — frank
Will it?Although, the investment in this vaccine technology will ultimately save lives in the future because it will speed up response to the next asshole virus. — frank
but it's the Jessie Norman 1983 Kurt Masur version that really transports me. — Tom Storm
It's still not clear why you call it a matter of "stupidity". Perhaps it's the most convenient to do so.And there is the problem of resources. Every outfit has managers competing for the best people in an organization to work for them. What is that like? These culture models are weak beer in addressing the problem. — Valentinus
Because our core nature, the equivalent of Freud's "Id", our emotionally driven instinctive selves, is not the sum total of our nature. There is also the "Superego", the rational and idealistic aspect of our minds, with which the Id does constant battle, to varying degrees of success among differing people, to form the Ego, the objective personality. This Superego is the result of the continued evolution of our brains. Lions do not possess a Superego, and so they cannot view as immoral that a new pride Alpha will immediately engage in an orgy of infanticide to eliminate the previous Alpha's Gene's from the group, and more quickly bring the lionesses to estrus. Humans, though, do have the car to see immorality in this.
Whatever else can be said of the man, and he had his theoretical faults and inconsistencies, Freud's model of the mind, along with Jung's concept of psychological archetypes, appears to myself absolutely key in understanding why we humans behave as we do. We must encourage people to allow their rational and idealistic selves to hold sway over the primal, emotional aspect of their minds. — Michael Zwingli
Read the whole sentence.No, it requires more than that. Belief in the historicity of Jesus is essential to Christianity. One has to believe that Jesus literally rose from the dead, or else the whole project of salvation becomes moot.
— baker
Are you citing to some particular Protestant dogma that prescribes the particularities of the faith required for salvation, or are you just telling me your basic understanding or what you think ought be the case? — Hanover
And you're on board with that, epistemically and ethically?The point in religion is that particular moral tenets have to be believed for the right reasons. Ie., e.g. you have to believe that stealing is bad not because your mommy told you so or because you don't like being stolen from, but because God said that stealing was wrong.
— baker
Now you're just making things up. It is not a universal tenant of religion that intent matters regardless of impact, and it is not universally considered sinful to do the right thing for the wrong reason.
FYI, I didn't go to Sunday school.It sounds like I'm just hearing a recitation of your recollections from Sunday school at this point and you're presenting it as if they are universal axioms.
We read it as didactic literature, not as art.The story was originally in Greek I suppose, but do enlighten me how they read the fox and grapes story in continental Europe?
Except that religion bolsters those conflicts with metaphysical underpinnings, thus giving the conflicts a dimension that is hard to master.Religions don't compete. People do, so it's hard to blame the idea over the person. But in any event, ideological differences lead to conflict, whether that be religious, political, or just general worldviews.
By religious people.Why close our eyes to the obvious? Why not consider the possibility that religion is the way it is precisely because it is intended to be that way?
— baker
Intended by whom? — Hanover
I am sure that I wrote a meaningful English sentence.I also don't know what you mean by "religion is the way it is." How is religion?
Why should we think that this isn't what religion is supposed to be like? Why assume some kumbaya?I suppose you mean the caricature religion where they yell at you about going to hell and then take all your money?
Huh?If you don't like the church you're going to, go to a different one. If you don't want to go to church at all, that's fine too, but I don't see where you have this great insight and knowledge into where I go and can make comments on it. All this talk about facts, yet here you're just factually incorrect.
Have you read the rest? Typical male.You provided an example already. Women who think Covid vax will make them infertile (there is no evidence for this). — Tom Storm
What's the use of saving your body when it costs you your soul?But others include; people with mental illness who think that covid medication will allow the police to control their behaviour. Because of negative experiences with involuntary psychiatric medication in their past.
Aboriginal Australians thinking the medication with kill them or make them sick because of negative experiences with 'white medicine' in the past. Incidentally I am working with Aboriginal staff and elders to encourage Aboriginal people to have their vaccinations.
People with alcohol misuse who believe that alcohol helps them to survive life (they can drink away traumatic memories). Here's the tip - it doesn't work.
All of these appear to be reasonable positions to hold but are ultimately unhelpful.
Where is there chance in the present moment?
— baker
There’s no saying what will happen. — Wayfarer
What's wrong with materialism? Matter's true nature is unknown. It stays mystique, even if it's matter "only". — Khalif
You know, I will repay you and your ilk for this contempt.Try to keep up. — Xtrix
It's the level on which trust in the medical system is build, or destroyed.We weren't talking about what happens on the ground between doctors and patients, so this is irrelevant. — Xtrix
I am trying NOT TO UNDERMINE trust. — Olivier5
No one is arguing perfection. — Xtrix
As long as the discussion is limited to philosophy forums, there should be no problem.Nothing to do with the government. It's the whole health sector we are talking about. And not during a pandemic. Sowing doubt for no good reason in situations of crisis is antisocial. — Olivier5
But look at Israel. Sky high vaccination rates achieved early on, yet the vast majority of covid patients requring hospital care are fully vaccinated. This trend is observable in other countries too: the percentage of the fully vaccinated hospitalized is growing.Vaccination gives us a tool to work to that end. Collectively.
Pressure? It's flat out hatred, contempt.So we speak to one another about the pros and cons. It's not entirely entirely certain and all proven, it's a new technology after all, but it seems to reduce both incidence and gravity. But we GET it. It's a necessary leap of faith. Yes there's some social pressure to get vaccinated, as there should be. It's a mater of survival.
Croatia has one of the lowest vaccination rates in the EU, around 50%. There is a public debate as to why this is so and what can be done.The fact of the mater is that trust of the average citizens in one another, in one's neighbours, is close to zero in the DRC. This sentiment may be well-founded in their case but it still creates a lot of problems.
That such a sentiment be justified in Congo doesn't make it justified where I live, where reasonable levels of trust in one's neighbours, as well as in public institutions still exist, and for good reason, and where this trust is an asset. — Olivier5