There is a difference between informed consent and uninformed consent. If the best advice you can give them is not to believe the science then they are properly informing them. What an uninformed patient wants should not be the deciding factor. — Fooloso4
You certainly don't sound like it. You're far too critical of others to still allow for the thought that you'd be willing to die for them.I am. — James Riley
Depends on one's current health and financial status.No, but a probable personal catastrophe if one accepts the COVID vaccine.
— baker
Possible, yes. Probable, I don't know. — TheMadFool
I would have thought that working together to prevent the spread of a virus via masks and vaccination would mean that people will die in far fewer numbers.
The significant barriers to this are clearly the positions people hold on government and freedom and what counts as evidence. — Tom Storm
What's most striking about this thread is the parsing of an ethical decision as if it were a calculation of odds. — Banno
No, there are already consequences promised to those who have not been vaccinated. For example, in order to visit a restaurant or cinema, one has to provide proof of vaccination, proof of having been diagnosed with covid, or a negative test. In some companies, all employees had to accept the vaccine, or risk being fired. Discrimination is already taking place. Also, there is limited choice or none as to which vaccine to take. There is also shortage of vaccine. And scandals with using used needles (in order to get the most out of one vial).But you do have the freedom not to go along if not the freedom not to be expected to go along. And of course not everyone will expect you to go along. To my knowledge vaccination is not mandatory in any democratic nations at least. I haven't checked to see if it is mandatory anywhere else; although I think I heard somewhere that it is in one part of Spain. — Janus
All covid vaccines are experimental medications at this point, so from the perspective of health insurance, they are treated as other experimental medications.About the health insurance angle: if that's true it's a bad sign and would seem to indicate that the insurance industry, who generally do very rigorously analyze and assess risk, must think there is a degree of risk that is unacceptable, to them at least.
It seems more likely that they already believe such things, rather than having "bought into his lies". It seems unlikely that one person would have such power over others. Rather, this is about something that is already in the people. Similar as in Nazi Germany: Hitler didn't convert anyone, people weren't "buying into his lies". Rather, they already believed those things.a significant proportion of the populace has bought into Trump’s lies — Wayfarer
Don't be like the deva in the sala tree. That which you call "stupidity" is a seed, and it will grow, and destroy everything in its path.They’re too stupid to be genuinely dangerous. Trump is the definition of stupid. — Wayfarer
Assuming E = the buddha exists after death.
1. E. No!
2. Not E. No!
3. E and not E. No!
4. Neither E nor not E. No! — TheMadFool
This is a philosophy discussion forum. Read with precision.So you think that a conman "has" cognitive dissonance? — baker
This would apply only if religious people would typically be well familiar with the doctrine they profess to support.The average religious person has a cognitive dissonance though, I might even go so far as to say that belief in a religion is impossible without one. After all if you follow any one edict in the bible and not follow some other edict then you aren’t really making sense and since the contradictions of the bible make it impossible to follow them all you can’t really religious without making one or more breaches of logic and rationality.
I do wonder sometimes if mass shooters really believed they would go to hell for their actions, whether they would carry them out. The belief that ‘death is the end’ might be part of the rationale for such massacres, in that the perpetrators believe that when they die there won’t be further consequences. So that belief might be, ironically, consequential. — Wayfarer
Character assassination is a classical proselytizing method. It seems to work quite well on many people.But 'failure of imagination' is not itself an argument against even ludicrous, evidence-free ideas like "after lives" or "past lives". — 180 Proof
I know evidence that the conscious mind continues after bodily death is rare and iffy at best. But what type of evidence would be reasonable to convince skeptics that an afterlife probably is a real possibility? — TiredThinker
Either there's enough gas in my car to get me to town or there isn't enough gas in the car to get me to town.So, if you want to tell the truth about tomorrow and rain you could say, either it'll rain tomorrow OR it'll not rain tomorrow. The same logic applies to any other proposition.
Conclusion: It's possible to always tell truths. — TheMadFool
How about, solely for the purposes of an experiment, viewing that person as immature, naive; or as bossy and aggressive, rather than as a moral ideal?I have someone very close to me who has zero tolerance for lies - comes down hard on anyone caught lying - and the reason for that attitude is 100% ethical in flavor.
Either one is ethically duty-bound to always tell the truth, or one is not ethically duty-bound to always tell the truth.Taking into account that one is ethically duty-bound to always tell the truth, isn't it rather intriguing that one way of doing that is by resorting to a tautological disjunction (p v ~p)?
Only when one is in fact uncertain.Thus, in some sense, being honest/truthful is to admit one is uncertain.
Such is the view of virtue epistemologists: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/epistemology-virtue/Ethics seems to have a very deep connection with epistemology.
Plagues, historically, have been proportionally far worse than the present situation, often killing far greater percentages than Covid-19. That we have a vaccine that works is an extraordinary vindication of the understanding that science provides. That we have several... we should be singing the praises of science from the rooftops. Millions of lives have been saved by applying science here.
But that's not what happened. Instead we have an abject failure to recognise the benefits, a wilful emphasis on every negative.
Comment? — Banno
Also Cognitive dissonance is observable, primarily through the contrast between a persons thought expression and their behaviour. — DingoJones
What an extremely uncharitable position to take!It's supposed to get people to rethink their alleged thinking. Same with the lotteries, game tickets, etc. In other words, "risk" is not really the reason most of these people don't get the vaccine. They are either scared or petulant. — James Riley
We take much greater risks every time we walk out the door. — James Riley
First, I would need to feel a genuine need for it (which I don't).How, exactly, would you tailor your explanation? — charles ferraro
My assumption is that epistemology is done by persons, so no argument can somehow stand on its own two feet, regardless of the person making it.The question, as I see it, is simply whether, or not, the Cogito Sum argument has an inherent integrity, regardless of Descartes' motivations. Can the argument stand on its own two feet? If not, explain why. We're talking epistemology here, not religion.
*sigh*Care to elaborate on how you got this "passive-aggressive wimp" from my 'stoic warriors' post? — 180 Proof
No, there is no personal god to commune with in pantheism.Actually I might assume the Pantheist to have quietist tendencies, wanting to contemplate and commune with God at the expense of all worldly concerns. — praxis
It's not clear that in the case of the religious not living up to what they profess this is really due to cognitive dissonance. You'd need to rule out deliberate duplicity. Religion's bloody history warrants such scrutiny.It’s not lenience, it is just understanding what’s going on re cognitive dissonance. — DingoJones
You asked:Maybe binary isn’t the right term...I meant to describe how on your view your belief is either backed up by action or it isn’t really a belief. That seems like a binary metric to me.
To which I replied affirmatively. But see my above post: Some beliefs are inactionable, at least for some people. So one has to wonder why would anyone profess those beliefs? Because of their metavalue? (Ie. because professing such beliefs spares one from being prosecuted by other people?)That if you really believe something you obligate yourself to act in accordance with it? — DingoJones
I don’t see “belief” as binary like you do, I think as long as there are differences in how strongly people can believe things you have to accept that conviction and belief are distinct from each other. — DingoJones
The risks from being vaccinated are demonstrably far smaller than the risks associated with getting the disease.
I put anti-vax on the same footing as young-earth creationism and climate change denial. In that sense, I'm not the least 'anti-science'. — Wayfarer
Sure. But 5 in 200,000 is a very small personal risk. I've had my shot, and I think you have made a poor choice. I wonder how you took into account the risk, should everyone follow your example. — Banno
See, this is the hysteria I'm talking about. Making stuff up like that, black-and-white thinking.Baker would have us not vaccinate because of a relatively small risk. — Banno
But I still think it’s well-established that the risks from COVID are far higher than the risks from any of the vaccines. — Wayfarer
No, but a probable personal catastrophe if one accepts the COVID vaccine.The choice then, if choice is so important to us, is between a certain health catastrophe if one refuses the COVID vaccine and a probable political catastrophe if one accepts the COVID vaccine. — TheMadFool
They can take the Pfizer or Moderna. — frank
What are the arguments for and against the responsibility that individuals might be thought to bear to accept a Covid 19 vaccine? — Janus
Thanks for illustrating my point! The modern day stoic is a passive-aggressive wimp, while there is nothing in the original Stoicism that would stand in the way of being proactive.Can you imagine a military general, out on the battle field, who is a Stoic?
— baker
Well, let's see ... other than the old adage (I can't source it at the moment) 'Epicurean during peace, Stoic during war', what do you make of these reputed 'Stoic warriors' ... — 180 Proof
Of course, because pantheism gives one a definitive sense that one is part of divinity, and that as such, one's life is worth living, that life is a big and worthy project worth striving for, all taking place in a big and worthy universe.You believe that pantheism somehow preventsStoicism from being quietism? — praxis
No. They threaten with eternal damnation anyone who doesn't believe like they do. Because of this, they do not deserve the kind of lenience that you describe above and which would apply in other situations, for other beliefs (inlcuding flatearthing and antivaxxing).Cognitive dissonance, humans can hold two contradictory beliefs at the same time. It doesn’t mean they don’t believe in one or the other, it means they are holding an irrational contradiction. Most of the time it’s because the person doesn’t see the contradiction.
That makes more sense to me than saying they don’t really believe it considering the kinds of things they do in the name of their beliefs. — DingoJones
It's the religious who primarily see belief in such binary terms!I don’t see “belief” as binary like you do, — DingoJones
It goes the other way around too: For example, the way Catholic monotheism and the motivation to proselytize were conveniently omitted from Descartes' philosophy (probably in an effort to make Descartes look palatable to secularists?) which was then raised to a secular standard for philosophizing. What a Trojan horse!It interferes with the understanding. Much of what was best in ancient philosophy was absorbed into Christian theology, and then became rejected along with it. So there are philosophical ways of thinking and ideas that are rejected purely because of their association with religious dogma, even though that isn't an accurate depiction. — Wayfarer
But for whom is this really a problem? Perhaps for the professional philosophers. Other people who also have some interest in philosophy can and do skirt this bias.So there are philosophical ways of thinking and ideas that are rejected purely because of their association with religious dogma, even though that isn't an accurate depiction.
I do. In fact, many a southern bigot specifically defends their own stance as one of heritage. I get it from the following language: "Confederate flags . . . endemic voter suppression . . . Dixie . . ." — James Riley
Actually, I think that was the posters point - he was describing what he considers to be the heritage of white southerners. — T Clark
