I know quite a few of those: the universe was created just so that I can have a relationship with some supreme celestial creator/father figure, and all of his edicts in my special book are truth. — ToothyMaw
The examined life is both an examination of life and a life of examination. It is both theoretical and practical. It is a critical examination of what I think, and say, and do. It is an examination of desires, and goals, choices, and values. But since we do not live in isolation, it is also about what others think, say, do, and so on. — Fooloso4
Do we create morality and then it takes on it's own existence? Or perhaps the whole of existence is aware and no event is truly unobserved. — Cheshire
It's not relativism if the person is a narcissist, or, specifically, an epistemic narcissist or egotist. Such a person is firmly convinced that "the way things really are" is precisely as they view them. Such a person has no sense of their perspective, instead, they believe they can directly perceive the truth. Such a person is, for all practical intents and purposes, a solipsist.So how is following what 'seems best to me' not precisely relativism? — Isaac
But I think moral absolutism might be possible, along with objectivity. — ToothyMaw
That's what is called 'cynicism'. — Wayfarer

Sometimes, you can be really narrow and petty.Did you even read what I wrote? I don't have anything whatsoever to do with the diagnosis of mental disorders. Nothing. — Isaac
*sigh*Or maybe it's because you're forming your judgment about an entire international field of research, teaching and practice based on the six people you happen to have met...?
This sounds like something out of an American self-help book, and certainly not universal.The most universal criteria for examining whether or not you are living your life is the question of whether or not you have the courage to own your fears and failings, and do your best to overcome them. — Janus
Its the thought that counts. — DingoJones
An objective morality would still examine an action within the context it takes place. It seems like it sterilizes the matter for the sake of maintaining the position. Plenty of artist have destroyed works for materials or even burned them for heat. Ignoring the context just doesn't seem reasonable. — Cheshire
Possibly many/most people have this belief.I firmly believe things are right or wrong apart from who does them. — Cheshire
This is where you differ from the people above. A consequent moral objectivist would either not ask about the origins of morality, or would be certain of a particular source of it. Either way, he would not struggle how to account for objective morality.But, I can't account for how this could be; because every case seems to be about an observer.
If so, one only has to read the book of Genesis to realize that if humamity started off with one man (Adam) and one woman (Eve), incest was/is inevitable. — TheMadFool
As usual you've grabbed a barely connected sentence out of context just to use a a springboard for some general whinging. Not even worth a reply really, I'll just quote the rest of the post you decided to ignore — Isaac
How do I see what working? Kicking plebeians out of academia?The emergence and spread of postmodernism is an indicator of how the world of academia exists primarily for its own sake, catering to its own needs, interests, and concerns. It's also a cautionary tale of what happens when academia is opened to plebeians, ie. people who don't belong there.
— baker
I don't disagree but this latter part involving the plebeians - how do you see this working? — Tom Storm
No, your just giving your view. A view of a non-committed theist.I don’t “bitch” about atheists
I just tell it like it is — Jan Ardena
Permissible by whom?
— baker
Permissible as one's own ethical guideline. — schopenhauer1
The solution is to not start the suffering. — schopenhauer1
I don’t understand why we hate incest if we acknowledge that homosexuality is ok — TheHedoMinimalist
It's about reasonable expectation. Having a child at all does not lead to a reasonable expectation that the child will have genetic defects. Having a child with your own sibling or parent or offspring does. — Kenosha Kid
Last I checked, nepotism is still going strong.A socio-economic argument against incest is that if everything "stays within the family", the family will have less influence over other people in the community, thus weakening socio-economic cohesion.
— baker
I don’t think it’s common for any family to have any involvement or influence in the community in this modern age to begin with. — TheHedoMinimalist
Then this here is a clue to some underlying assumptions for why people marry: I think strategic alliances to improve one's socio-economic standing have been the main motivator for marriage throughout history, and still are nowadays, once people mature a bit.I think most people interact with the community to put food on their table more so than anything involving romantic relationships.
It would have a considerable effect for those involved. Historically, this is one of the reasons why some for of incest was practiced by royal families. For those families, it was important to stay in power and to increase their power, and marriage was a strategic tool for this. As needed: sometimes, to keep the power all in the family, a marriage between close relatives; other times, marrying outside the family for political and economic gains.I guess I should also point out that seems highly unlikely that incest would ever be so widespread in any society that it would have this sort of big macro effect.
No, but those rates being higher would be something to consider when trying to estimate the frequency of incest. If no children are born from a relationship, then it can be harder to prove a relationship exists at all; assuming that incestuous couples are more likely to try to hide their relationship.Again, we'd need to consider the miscarriage rate and the abortion rate, as compared to those rates in the normal population. I imagine they are both higher in the incestuous population.
— baker
I don’t think those are overly high either. I think older couples that try to have children also have really high miscarriage rates but I don’t think you would use that as an argument against them having children. — TheHedoMinimalist
So, I do think it’s a pretty weak argument against incest myself. — TheHedoMinimalist
Again, we'd need to consider the miscarriage rate and the abortion rate, as compared to those rates in the normal population. I imagine they are both higher in the incestuous population.I also have heard that incest only creates a modest increase of risk having genetic disorders, high infant mortality, children with broken immune systems, and weak hearts. — TheHedoMinimalist
What do you think it is talking about?/.../but I don't think this is what the article or the OP is talking about. — Luke
I think its pretty straight forward, “unexamined” means thoughtless, unreflective…life isnt worth living unless it is given thought, contemplated, otherwise you might as well be an inanimate object. — DingoJones
That's easy. Try to talk to someone who thinks differently than oneself. This quickly brings to the surface one's hinge propositions. The moment in the interaction when you want to call the other person crazy, evil, deranged, and such, is the moment where the hinge proposition surfaces and can be recognized.And 2) do you happen to know of any relatively simple or brief way to identify your own APs or anyone else's? — tim wood
That depends on how much goodwil and time one is willing to invest in the interaction, and whether one is willing to make the first step.anyone else's? — tim wood
Oh. So you're the one developing the negative side effects of hormonal contraceptives and having abortions? Good to hear.You really proceed with maximal unjustifiable assumptions, don't you. — Kenosha Kid
*lol*If you mean using contraception, then no. There's no contraception that leads to no procreation, only less procreation. — Kenosha Kid
By all means, it's the woman who should risk her health and life with hormonal contraceptives and abortions. Because you're so wonderful, so worth dying for.I had a vasectomy*.
* Absolutely not true, DO NOT QUOTE THIS! :rofl:
Then we're at a much more fundamental question: Do we have the right to prohibit anything?A better question imo is: do we have the right to prohibit incest to avoid infant suffering and genome degradation? If so, do we have a right to take babies off smokers and ban gingers from reproducing?
Besides, that film is a cautionary tale about what one should expect if one tries to play the system.I think some people have seen movies like One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest too many times. — Tom Storm
*sigh*It's all you. You probably say the same of all healthcare workers. You're perfect and everyone else is uncaring of perfect you. — magritte
Professionals are part of a system. If they don't do their jobs according to their system then it's up to the system to correct that. If you disagree then go complain, but don't just throw shee at everyone in site.
Mental health workers don't have the means or time to treat more than the symptoms with medications. Sad, but true.
There you go.What are you, as a psychologist, willing to sacrifice in order to reduce the stigma of a psychiatric diagnosis?
Answer this, and you'll have a context for the above.
— baker
I'm really not sure what you think I could do. I was a researcher for most of my career. Now I mainly help organisations include human factors in their long-term risk analysis. What would you have me do differently to effect a change in the stigma associated with psychiatric diagnosis? I really would be glad to help, but I haven't a clue how. — Isaac
Yes. From what I've seen, psychologists tend to try really hard to live up to that stereotype. Maybe it's a professional deformation. Maybe it's something deeper than that.There is a stereotype about psychologists that says that psychologists have a poor grasp of human nature.
— baker
Is there? And..?
We can see it with anyone who is in some important way more powerful than we are.The negative reactions you often see to psychologists is when people resent the legal power that psychologists have.
— baker
Really? Do we see the same with judges, barristers, solicitors, policemen, doctors, forensic lab technicians, and graphologists?
How? If they are homosexual and having sex, they are making a point of not procreating. If they are heterosexual and having sex, and are taking steps to prevent a pregnancy and plan for an abortion should a pregnancy occur, then they are making a point of not procreating.How? If they're having sex, they're not making a point of not procreating. — Kenosha Kid
If they are homosexual close blood relatives having sex, is it incest?If they're not having sex, it isn't incest.
The key to happiness is to lead an unexamined life. — emancipate
In reference to this:Why are babies not an issue? — Kenosha Kid
But suppose a person may decide to marry or enter into sexual relations with a close relative that is unlikely to result in children being born, for example, if both partners are of the same sex, beyond a certain age, or otherwise unable or indeed unwilling to conceive or procreate. — Apollodorus
catharsis through dialogue. — schopenhauer1
