Just as it is the case that we cannot doubt that that is(called) "a tree", likewise we have no ground to doubt that those people mean to do us harm and are to be avoided at all costs. We have no ability to question whether or not the teachings are true, because questioning that requires a baseline, and our initially adopted worldview is that baseline. — creativesoul
I said I don't know how the geography-illiterate think about where things are located. Geography is a science, so if a person has not thought geographically then maybe he/she thinks that the locations of things are random. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Sociology, economics, geology, biology, etc. can all be done without any reference to or account of latitude and longitude--without any reference to or account of location on the Earth. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
You prove the point of this thread with much of what you say. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
But eventually it comes down to a coin toss?But before people can understand and appreciate the location of their settlement, they have to be aware of things like that network. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
So etc. could be referring to any geographical element? Okay.But you started out talking about the relationship between cities and ports (water). — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Yup, them there country folk are real morons.The geography-illiterate might be so provincial that they do not see the small range of latitude and longitude that they work and live in being affected by or affecting any other place. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Thereby allowing a significant portion of the population to engage in finding solutions to current dilemmas in all domains from science to spiritual to politics to psychological and social issues etc. — intrapersona
I don't even know what the geography-illiterate think. They think that the locations of cities, soils, water, etc. were randomly determined by the flip of a coin, maybe? Places are in vacuums and do not affect each other, maybe? — WISDOMfromPO-MO
There's no hope because the way general beliefs about the mind are socially constructed are socially useful. You can't fight what culture wants you to believe as part of its own self-preserving mythology. — apokrisis
If we think of ourselves as freely choosing souls or rational beings, separate from our gross animal physicality (or Freudian unconscious), then that is exactly the myth by which we will learn - get into the habit of - acting. If you think about the nature of consciousness in the conventional fashion, then society is assured you will behave within the scope of that conventional construct. — apokrisis
So the folk psychology term of consciousness has huge problems once you try to apply it in science. It confounds biology and sociology in believing things like introspection to be a biological function rather than a linguistically structured skill. It makes the big mistake of thinking awareness to be a running realtime representation of reality rather than having this complex internal temporal structure. It makes a big mistake in creating this homuncular self that is then witnessing the representation.
So consciousness - and all its crew: unconscious, non-conscious, subconscious, preconscious, semi-conscious - is a very familiar social construct that just ought to be junked so we can start over again on a better metaphysical and scientific basis.
But no hope of that of course. — apokrisis
If ideals are to be found anywhere it would be in the desired ends, such as good financial health. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
To me governing would be about identifying problems that can be solved and then using my authority to marshal and mobilize resources to find and implement solutions to those problems. I would be a facilitator living on the same level as the people I am serving and working with them on practical matters, not someone with privilege overseeing his subjects from above and producing top-down policy in conformity with theoretical language embedded in some ideology. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
I believe the U.S. is currently far too polarized but that's no reason to ignore our own values, even if that were possible.I try to not even think in terms of the binaries that things like that [Political Typology] test do. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
You mean eliminating from budgets unnecessary expense like useless printer paper is my original idea? — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Doing good financial housekeeping and eliminating unnecessary expenses... — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Since when is maintaining a lean budget an ideological position? — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Conservatives want things like reduced spending for ideological reasons. I would want them for practical reasons. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
And conservatives' biggest hero, private business, would probably love it because it would treat businesses as equal partners in solving problems, not vilify them and treat them like enemies to be regulated and taxed. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Some specific items in your proposed approach:I would be looking for ways to cut costs, cut waste, cut spending, reduce debt, etc., so I doubt that any conservative would play the "unregulated free market" card against me. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
I don't know what my approach to leading and governing would make me--a political pragmatist, perhaps. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
I don't know what my approach to leading and governing would make me--a political pragmatist, perhaps. But I sense that the people who now identify as "liberal" and "progressive" probably would not like it. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
I have noticed in my interactions on forums, that diehard materialists invariably reject the notion of the unconscious. However, I don't think they're really cognisant of their own reasons for so doing. — Wayfarer
There are things that are true of me but are not true of my brain and body. — nixu
In respect of the philosophical point, though - yes, we have to 'alter our minds', but that is because they're mis-configured. They're not running properly. Getting that straight is 'praxis', — Wayfarer
I do love me some myths, and fables. They're my favorite thing. — Wosret

If you seek your personal legend the entire universe will conspire to assist you. — the alchemist
Basically because in Buddhism there's two possibilities: nirvana or samsara. Any God, including a supreme God, can be in either. If God is samsaric then we're with God in samsara. If God is nirvanic then we'll be with God in nirvana. Alternatively I suppose you could interpret nirvana as God, in which case God would not be samsaric.He(?) [Jesus] even downgraded the Hindu gods into the realm of Samsara. Surprisingly, he never did the reverse of floating the idea of a supreme God a la Abrahamic religions. Why? — TheMadFool
There seems to be a subtlety, or fundamental understanding, that I'm missing. Maybe if you could give a practical example.Indeed we do - but what I'm talking about is looking to science to provide a normative basis for values, which is often beyond it's legitimate scope. — Wayfarer
I'm sure. Because my profession demands that I be in front of a computer screen all day I try to avoid additional eye strain and consume books in audio format when possible. Unfortunately Audible only has two Weber offerings, both short form.Weber is worth reading in long form, to appreciate the rigour and erudition of his writing. — Wayfarer
Clearly we don't want to give power back to magicians, and we don't want to remain in the iron cage. So what can we do?Rationalization destroyed the authority of magical powers, but it also brought into being the machine-like regulation of bureaucracy, which ultimately challenges all systems of belief. — Max Weber
