I think people in general are far saner and more resilient than psychology has been giving them credit for. I appreciate George Bonanno's work on this.Despite all that, there are many (not sure its more than a billion) people who seem to be healthy, well grounded, clear headed, honest, open, and cooperative. They, of course, do not end up on the psychotherapeutic couch. Psychology would probably learn more if it spent more time analyzing all the happy people who are alike, and less on the unhappy people who are all different and totally screwed up. — Bitter Crank
And what would that help? It seems that most well-adjusted people have as their foundation a functional and relatively happy childhood; so it's not something that can be replicated for adults with problems.Psychology would probably learn more if it spent more time analyzing all the happy people who are alike
Society instructs us that if we peer deep inside our hearts that we will eventually find what makes us happy. — Ladybug
That's exactly the point! Psychology isn't/can't be a science. For it to come anywhere close to being a science, it needs people to be honest when reporting their thoughts, feelings, intuitions, whathaveyou and as we all know, honesty is (not) the best policy. — TheMadFool
It's not fucking yellow either is it? Moron. — Isaac
That's the idea.If that’s the case, then it makes sense to share the load. But this ‘cultural assumption’ - that women are consistently unavailable for work - certainly works in a man’s favour, doesn’t it? — Possibility
Most people don't work at a computer, and working from home isn't an option for them, because of the nature of their work.Afford what? A home computer and email? Childcare would have cost half my pay check - it was never an efficient option. My employer simply valued my work, and made allowances for me to continue working.
The Desire Conundrum: — TheMadFool
Stop confusing yourself and go study some actual Buddhist doctrine instead of relying on popular pseudobuddhist soundbites.
In Early Buddhism, there are two types of desire: the bad one (tanha) and the good one (chanda). A person is actually suposed to cultivate the desire to make an end to suffering!
There is no catch-22 like some pop-Buddhists would have us believe. — baker
Why must it be broken? Justify.
— baker
Because people shouldn't replace morals with Leviticus 20:13 (for example)? — jorndoe
People who think psychology should be a hard science like physics or chemistry need their heads examined, as well as their lives. — Bitter Crank
What are you talking about?And this is what the issue is: the unwritten cultural assumption. It’s actually a load of crap that men are paid more for their ‘prospective availability’ - that’s a flimsy excuse. If you write this clearly into the contract without discrimination, then you would see this. — Possibility
Sure, this is a possibility sometimes, but not something to count on.This is what ‘parental leave’ and ‘family leave’ is all about - then either parent can take time off to care for babies and sick children. And they do. As Tiff said, the younger generation males are recognising these opportunities to genuinely share in the parenting responsibility, and both women and men are equally prepared to say “I’ll take this one” or “You stay home this time - I have a deadline to meet.”
So, again, it's about socio-economic class. You could afford such an arrangment, Most people can't.Agreed. I set up with my office to work remotely from home a few weeks before our first child was born, and I continued to work in this fashion as required until our youngest started school. We never needed external child care. — Possibility
That depends on the type of work one does, the position one has.If you are good at what you do and are loyal, you would be surprised how accommodating people can be. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
The reality of work is that one needs to be prepared for "old school" attitudes from one's employer.Up until now I didn't like the "cancel culture" to the point I would debate it's impact to the nth degree, much to the dismay of my offspring but I will be dipped if you didn't just score a BIG old point for them. Well done
/.../
Let me put it more clearly: my adult children are just as interested in "paternity" leave as they are maternity leave. In fact one of my boys fully intends on being a stay at home parent. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
So, at least in the short term, the side that is vigilant about its believes would win, not the one that is factually correct. — stoicHoneyBadger
as well as the antivaccination side.
— baker
And just what exactly is that side? Might it be the same people who believe in breathing underwater? — tim wood
SO do you folk agree that opposing the vaccine is a bad thing?
I mean, do oyu honestly think that folk ought not get vaccinated?
Why? — Banno
But often, they're not doing equal work. They're probably doing equal work in, say, a factory setting working at a conveyor belt. But in many other places, they aren't. Some types of work are such that only one gender is better suited for it, and also where (good) looks and age matter. Gender/appearance is often a part of the job description and job performance, even if it is not directly stated as such. This is a cultural given. Imagine an elderly fat man working as a kindergarten nurse, or a young poor looking woman selling luxury items for men. It just doesn't compute. In many lines of work, a person's qualifications matter not if they don't look the part.Women want equal pay for equal work — Possibility
Eh?1. Nobody wants to work — TheMadFool
No, the scheme is supposed to mean that a word in one language has a group of meanings and a word in another language has a different group of meanings, and that the two groups partly overlap (see discussion with ).We would expect L1 and L2 to contain different words (to express M1, M2, etc.), because they are different languages. Your parenthesis appears to indicate M4 is a "different word" used to express the same meaning as M3, yet you distinguish them as "M3" and "M4" which denotes different meanings. — Luke
I speak several languages, so I can think of many practical examples. But I can't quite pinpoint yet what the phenomenon at hand is. I need to think abou tthis some more.Thank you for a better explication here: that "how it means" is related to what "is lost or added in translation". Unfortunately, you don't explain what is lost or added in translation. Are you able to answer the question you posed: what is it that is Shakespearely? Is it anything other than the original (untranslated) style or form of expression?
How do you keep yourself up to date about last philosophy tendencies, research, important topics, new ideas? — Angelo
What a strange thing to say. Science is science. If something is indeed a science, then it should be science all the way down.The problems with applied psychology have nothing to do with whether or not psychology is a science. — T Clark
Yes, definitely a very difficult and contentious issue in clinical psychology. What do you propose as an alternative? — Isaac
And which leaves me wondering just what exactly psychology is. Maybe just a family name for differing methods and subjects they're applied to? — tim wood
The issue is applied psychology, as it is applied by people in positions of power, whether they have a degree in psychology or not, and the legal power that these people have.Even if your theory had a shred of evidence from nearer than a hundred years ago, you've not shown at all how it would actually prevent the application of the scientific method, only that it would present the field with some unique challenges. — Isaac
There are also countless theories in physics, until we settle on the best one. Then we continuously revise. — khaled
And, of course, there was once the Democratic-Republican Party.That parties have dramatically changed in time is in my view a noteworthy fact, not something totally unimportant. — ssu
Following what said earlier:If people and governments boycott say, Germany or South Africa for their state policies, I can see no reason why this shouldn't apply to China. It may well be the case that it isn't going to work, but from an ethical point of view, at least we try to do something to redress an unacceptable situation. — Apollodorus
This part:You're not agreeing. I had a bad relationship with my parents. — Tom Storm
suggests that that particular conversation took place in an atmosphere of trust, even if it was just temporary.What did cut through was when my mum said as an adult she understood some risks I didn't understand and that she wanted me to follow direction until I was older enough to understand the issues. Made sense to me. — Tom Storm
Yet the antisocials and the freeriders can do extremely well in life. How do you explain that?Antisocial, free-riders are outnumbered over 8-to-1 by eusocial, cooperators; otherwise, h sapiens would not have achieved any viable social arrangements larger than hunter-gather familial clans. — 180 Proof
I agree. I've seen this phenomenon in, for example, meat eating Buddhists. Now, these peple vow not to take life, so they wouldn't kill or order the animals to be killed. Some of them wouldn't even kill a mosquito, but they have no problem with eating cows, pigs, chicken, etc. They believe they can buy meat at the supermarket, and that this way, they are in no way participating in the industry of killing animals and meat production. That since they themselves did not kill the animals, did not intend to kill the animals (or didn't intend to order them being killed), they can eat them guilt free and without fearing any kammic consequences.It's not necessarily about avoiding the harm caused by the actions themselves. It's about avoiding the harm caused by developing a psychological means of allowing oneself to be complicit in causing harm. Once you have those defenses so firmly in place that you can see the suffering you're complicit in yet feel no compulsion to act, you have a means by which any complicity can be accepted without dissonance, and I think that's a dangerous tool to encourage a population to develop. — Isaac
With no further introduction to give, I ask the reader whether they think psychology is an important field or whether any of the above makes sense to assert about the importance that philosophers purported was the examination of one's life?
Can or ought this be done through psychology, why or why not? — Shawn
Simply saying 'because i said so' does not foster good relationships between people, and is fallacious. — Bradaction
Sometimes we are too young to understand. I had this argument used on me by my parents a few times when young. It did not bother me. I understood that I lacked capacity to understand at the time, which was completely true.
Example: I asked why I couldn't accept a lift from a stranger. I didn't understand what my parents meant by potential danger or comprehend why someone might present risks to my safety. What did cut through was when my mum said as an adult she understood some risks I didn't understand and that she wanted me to follow direction until I was older enough to understand the issues. Made sense to me. Experience is a significant factor in understanding and even in having capacity to understand and reasoned argument sometimes falls flat or introduces other problems. — Tom Storm
