as rare as incest — TheHedoMinimalist
it would seem very hard as a hard-necked atheist to refute the whole of the new testament — JACT
A taunting torturer can use empathy for bad. Empathy itself does not entail doing the right thing, but can just help understanding others. — jorndoe
But ultimately the burden is that of self-hood, and that is inextricably part of the human condition. — Wayfarer
Zapffe's view is that humans are born with an overdeveloped skill (understanding, self-knowledge) which does not fit into nature's design. The human craving for justification on matters such as life and death cannot be satisfied, hence humanity has a need that nature cannot satisfy. The tragedy, following this theory, is that humans spend all their time trying not to be human. The human being, therefore, is a paradox. — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Wessel_Zapffe#Philosophical_work
Which per se doesn't suffice for religious membership, and God belief without religious membership is worthless.But He exists in the same way that someone can account for hearing that tree fall in the forest, either by being present, scientific analysis, or common sense. — Jan Ardena
You're letting yourself be dragged onto their turf, exactly what I warned against.
— baker
How do you figure? — jorndoe
So, again, it's about socio-economic class. You could afford such an arrangment, Most people can't.
— baker
Afford what? A home computer and email? — Possibility
Psychologists and philosophers are equally subject to stupid stereotyping because people don't care enough to try to understand. This is also true of almost all academic disciplines and professions. — magritte
And what does that say about your mother, your father, your family, your community, and the lessons they taught you? And the lessons you teach others, God help us!
At the end of the day, it's all about confidence. It's not even about health.
— baker
Yep, tell that to the scared, suffering, incubated, and dying, and to the people who care for them and about them. And tell that to the people who end up paying for it all, namely all of us. (And give no thought at all to any science of the matter!)
Btw, are you vaccinated? Do you ever go to a doctor or take people you care about to the doctor? Or do you care about anyone, or anyone you? — tim wood
Nah. I doubt anyone in this whole thing really thinks of others. It's just politically correct to say one is doing it "for others". It makes for such good PR.
— baker
I can only speak for myself, but I did it for others, not myself. Specifically my wife and son. While I want to live, I'm not married to life. I'm married to my wife and I love my son. I also don't want to be the one that murders some other poor sap for no reason other than my own pseudo skepticism.
I suspect that a great many people who got the vaccine think along the same line. But I could be wrong. — James Riley
Eh?P.S. Put this in the back of your brain pan for future reference: Did Isis or AQ or some other group weaponize this?
Oh yes. That's why people vote for Trump.It's been about how people should be, and how they might become that way if they aren't so already.
— baker
And psychologists have certainly done a fine job on that project! — Bitter Crank
What are you, as a psychologist, willing to sacrifice in order to reduce the stigma of a psychiatric diagnosis?Let's not then. What would you replace that power with. Criminals all get treated the same regardless of their mental health? The judge just guesses? We put it to a vote? What is it you think we should be doing instead of making diagnoses based on educated guesswork? — Isaac
There is a stereotype about psychologists that says that psychologists have a poor grasp of human nature. Psychologists seem to be really eager to prove this, as often as humanly possible ...Psychology could cure cancer, find the Holy Grail, and win England the World Cup and it's reputation would remain unaltered amoung the ranks of the bizarre crusade this thread is on.
If literally nothing I say is contributing to the collective thought process anyway then I might as well swear like a sailor.
When posting Cambridge University School of Psychology's definition of what psychology covers hasn't budged people an inch from their lazy, puerile assumption that psychology is "Freud 'n that init", what more could I possibly do? Lobotomy? — Isaac
*aww*But to my knowledge, there's not one school out there which thinks it can 'see' psychological processes directly — Isaac
Not when you're on the other side -- when you're the one in position of less power.That's what I do with psychologists! I poke them and watch them squirm.
— unenlightened
That's what I do with everyone...is that not normal...
"These results suggest...". Plausibly. — tim wood
Oh Jesus.I think some people have seen movies like One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest too many times. — Tom Storm
Fuck you for this cynicism.As of this date, 18july2021, the news reports that 100% or arbitrarily close to 100% of people currently sick or dying of Covid are unvaccinated. Of course that's only tens of thousands of people and just empirical data, nothing that should influence those who "know." — tim wood
At the end of the day, it's all about confidence. It's not even about health.People are confident about all kinds of things, so what?
I'm not the one who needs to look it up.Riiiight. In my person I become a source of sickness and death, a mini-me Shiva. So fuck my family and my community, what are they to me? Their sickness and death are of no importance, significance, or relevance. Maybe you should look up "responsible" and "responsibility."
Nah. I doubt anyone in this whole thing really thinks of others. It's just politically correct to say one is doing it "for others". It makes for such good PR.To me, people who are confident that they won't get any negative side effects from the vaccine are the same as people who are confident that there is no covid or that they will beat it by sheer force of will.
— baker
I don't think they are the same. I think the former realize risk but think of others. The latter realize risk but think of themselves. — James Riley
I suppose it's like this for some people. It seems to me that for many more, it's "I'm already in bad shape, exhausted and stressed out to the max, I dread what will happen if I add more strain". For such a person, if they choose to get vaccinated and end up with serious side effects, they will have noone to blame but themselves. Hardly a prospect that one looks forward to.The instinct of "I'm fine, why introduce perceived risk" — Cheshire
One wonders when people will acknowledge that life is a group activity.Unfortunately, it makes for a lousy group decision and once people acknowledge that pandemics are group activities; then some of them come around.
Of course pretty much everyone wants such protection. That's not the issue. You're strawmanning.My metaphoric view/understanding of issues of vaccination is as that of a man shooting a gun and do I want best protection from those bullets, or do I want no protection from those bullets.
I lump people who don't want best protection - or any protection - with those who think they will breathe underwater. Of course an irony is that many of those will almost have to. — tim wood
Which is a strange thing to say, after decades of fierce indoctrination that everyone should be responsible only for themselves.And wrt epidemics, choice of protection isn't really just about oneself but also about family and community.
That's glib.As to potential side effects, everything has those. Rhubarb, I read, will kill me if I'm careless with it.
If they are supposed to have that same measure of legal power, then psychologists should get their act together and agree on one theory and enforce it, one objective system of measurement.
— baker
Well for a start they have the DSM, but aside from that, I really don't see how further unifying the criteria (even if it could be done) will help reduce either stigma or false diagnoses, you'll have to lay out for me a bit more clearly how you see that working. — Isaac
Science is the selfless observation of the world, and one cannot have a selfless observation of the self. — unenlightened
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
