Puts the lie to those who sneer at people who voted for Donald Trump. — T Clark
Is EQ emotional intelligence? I talking men and women, not general social difficulties. I don't think women are more "developed" than men or vise versa. — T Clark
People in general care what other people think of them. They want to be regarded with respect and affection. More specifically, more strongly, I think men care very much what women think of them. It's tied in with longing. Men want women to love them and take care of them. That gives women a lot of power over them. They have the power to hurt them with their scorn and that is frightening. — T Clark
I think the same is true for women, maybe less strongly. I'm not sure about that.
Hard to describe. It definitely feels very vulnerable, childish. It's not a willful, adult feeling. You give yourself, surrender your will and desires to the other person in the hopes, expectations they will be close and intimate with you. That they will love you, hold you, protect you. I sure hope someone else will come along who can be more articulate about this than I am. — T Clark
Even if you're right, that this only applies to people like me, it's social consequence is probably a lot broader. — T Clark
men are emotionally afraid of women — T Clark
Our desire for sex and mature human intimacy is all mixed up with a childish yearning for surrender. For someone to find us and give us back what we’ve lost. Take care of us. The fact that the people we relate to can’t, shouldn’t, don’t want to, don’t know they should, don’t know how to give us what we want leads to incredible resentment, again, most strongly in our intimate relationships, but also more generally. — T Clark
They may be valid for others that are like you.These observations are based on my own experiences, although I think they have more general validity. — T Clark
It's great that you're working things out for yourself.I’m bringing this out here because I want to examine it. — T Clark
Assuming you're not joking, do you think this is an adult position to take?I’ve shown I have insults and bitter vituperation ready and I’m willing to use them if I feel that I’m being mistreated. — T Clark
"Gastro-psychologists" (just invented new specialty) think that bacteria may have quite a bit of effect on our emotions. Hasn't been proven, but... again, I wouldn't be surprised. — Bitter Crank
Of course! Good diet, reasonable exercise, and practical stress reduction are good things and help people. So does getting 8 hours of quality sleep. So does having supportive friends. It isn't reasonable to expect good habits to cure everything (and you weren't saying it would). — Bitter Crank
I'm just saying I have confidence that, if I express what's in my heart, others will understand me. — T Clark
I have to trust that the connections I see will be understandable to others whether they are rational or intuitive. — T Clark
An artwork may or may not say anything of importance. A Thomas Kinkade painting may appeal to norms of beauty and generally be perceived as pretty but it may not really show much. The subject matter of a Kinkade painting, the little cottage in the woods or whatever, may have special meaning for the artist, and he may therefore feel that the subject matter says volumes about him. He is privy to a narrative that the audience lacks.
— praxis
I don't buy that, but thanks for giving me a chance to bring out one of my favorite quotes from Emerson. I seem to use it in some post every week or so
— T Clark
"To believe your own thought, to believe that what is true for you in your private heart is true for all men, — that is genius. Speak your latent conviction, and it shall be the universal sense; for the inmost in due time becomes the outmost,—— and our first thought is rendered back to us by the trumpets of the Last Judgment."
— Emerson — T Clark
It has struck me that what Sloterdijk is talking about in the text that's been quoted is not too different from what I'm saying, is it?
— T Clark
Right. You and I and he all seem to understand the value of a kind of 'nobodiness.' — syntax
The mania for "identity" seems to be the deepest of the unconscious programmings,
so deeply buried that it evades even attentive reflection for a long time. A formal somebody, as bearer of our social identifications, is, so to speak, programmed into us.
secular culture by definition has no aim beyond - well, what exactly? — Wayfarer
An artwork may or may not say anything of importance. A Thomas Kinkade painting may appeal to norms of beauty and generally be perceived as pretty but it may not really show much. The subject matter of a Kinkade painting, the little cottage in the woods or whatever, may have special meaning to the artist, and he may therefore feel that the subject matter says volumes about him. He is privy to a narrative that the audience lacks.
— praxis
I don't buy that, — T Clark
I have to believe that what I write means something. — T Clark
It comes back to differences between your and my understanding. I wouldn't exactly call my list poetry, but it said what it said in a kind of impressionistic, poetic way. At least it was intended to. To me, that's the only way to understand someone - paint a picture. Show, don't tell. — T Clark
What I mean by seeing is to perceive them without interpretation or concepts, just as they are. That certainly takes imagination. To me, empathy is 80% imagination. — T Clark
I acknowledged my initial response to praxis was unnecessarily snotty. That's why I followed up with the other one. I wonder, what would constitute necessary snottiness? On the other hand, I think the primary tools in understanding people and their ideas are empathy and compassion. Intellectual empathy is indispensable for philosophy. — T Clark
I think that just shows a lack of imagination, vision, on your part. Seeing people as they are is a skill not everyone has. — T Clark
I would describe positive emotions as being divine, holy, magnificent, and transcending states. — TranscendedRealms
I used ''heart'' as a matter of convention. For my purposes ''heart'' means anything non-brain and capable of thought. — TheMadFool
Why can't the heart (the actual biological organ) think?
I know most think that the heart organ lacks the neural network to be capable of thought but the mind-heart connection is hard to ignore. Thoughts give rise to emotions and vice versa. Most think this connection is unidirectional brain-->heart but what if it goes both ways like brain<-->heart?
That would be interesting right? — TheMadFool
if indoctrinated into the materialist paradigm, it then becomes a meta-narrative of cultural materialism, and thus the ‘addictive’ need to attain more and more materiality, and carnal satisfaction, in order to feed and fulfill that corporeal identity and its cravings. — snowleopard
Do you agree or disagree that identity is tangled with worldview? — syntax
Do you reflect on this in your own case? — syntax
Or does life beat us into a certain shape? — syntax
A lot of women relate to each other based solely on gender, this is less of a thing for men. The reason is because of how we're designed biologically and mentally. Women are caregivers and nurturers. They form the core of the 'home and hearth' sphere of our lives and this will often draw women together and promote cooperation.
Men on the other hand have historically been competitive with one another, be it for food, land, resources, and even women. It's not to say that men can't come together because they can. However, for them this tends to be the result of sharing a common goal or objective, rather than being based on gender. — Antaus
So which examples of identity politics do you think of as irredeemable rubbish and why, then?
— fdrake
Anything modeled on the Marxist type of societal analysis (of oppressor/oppressed groups, with the groups marked by their closeness to, or distance from, "power", arbitrarily defined). — gurugeorge
If, on the other hand, you are saying that our survival is dependent on this blind conformism... — TimeLine
These considerations seem to indicate that both tendencies are present in human beings; the one, to have - to possess - that owes its strength in the last analysis to the biological factor of the desire for survival; the other, to be - to share, to give, to sacrifice - that owes its strength to the specific conditions of human existence and the inherent need to overcome one's isolation by oneness with others. —
He was able to unify the Republican vote into a victory. — Hanover
Why is Trump's brand of other party exclusion worse than Obama's? — Hanover
