Sometimes the solution is a vaccine, sometimes a cast, sometimes a mask, and sometimes quarantine. What is your principled distinction between these where some are pathetic reactions and some are not? — Hanover
Yes, I do believe that in 50, 100, 1000 years from now the second law of thermodynamics, evolution, the bacterial theory of disease, h2O, will be h20 - because that is the nature of the truths uncovered by science, and that's why they matter. They were true 50, 100, 1000 years ago whether we knew it or not because that is the nature of the reality we inhabit. It is real, causal - and we need to observe, and act responsibly with regard to, true knowledge of reality/Creation. Personally, I'm agnostic. — counterpunch
Total freedom is absolute chaos. — god must be atheist
The notion that human beings have no access to reality (primarily owing to the fact that all things intellectual are in constant flux) might just suggest that what you believe is real can easily be deconstructed (as can all things knowable) and vanish into thin air.
— synthesis
Okay, deconstruct my knowledge claim that water is two parts hydrogen to one part oxygen! Deconstruct the bacterial theory of disease - such that it is relative to the claim that evil spirits cause disease! Deconstruct the second law of thermodynamics; the simplest implication of which is that heat energy is transferred from the hotter body to the cooler body. Should be easy right? — counterpunch
You know what I think? You don't even know what you think!
— synthesis
Perhaps I am not as articulate as I think I am, because I don't know how you constantly miss my meaning. I try to speak plainly. I deliberately try not to use philosophical jargon - in part because such terms come loaded with baggage, but also because I try to express ideas in the simplest possible terms. — counterpunch
The poison is moral relativism, not intellectual relativism, in general.
— synthesis
In terms of wrong - that's brilliant. — counterpunch
All knowledge constantly changes due to the constantly changing factors which give rise to it. Since even the simplest of things is given birth by an infinite number of factors/events preceding, you are telling me that you understand not only simple things but highly complex ones, as well? This is the arrogance of man.
— synthesis
No. That's not what I'm saying at all. For example, I claim it is true that life evolved; but I recognize that doesn't explain how life came to exist in the first place. It's an intriguing question, but not one I claim to answer, because I don't claim to have access to absolute truth. Does that mean life did not evolve? The evidence that life evolved is overwhelming. I can reasonably claim to know that it is true; not least because any alternate explanation, like the skeptical doubt that we may all be brains in jars being fed sensory data we mistake for reality - poses far bigger questions than accepting evolution as an apparent fact. — counterpunch
The notion that human beings have no access to reality (primarily owing to the fact that all things intellectual are in constant flux) might just suggest that what you believe is real can easily be deconstructed (as can all things knowable) and vanish into thin air.That could be a rhetorical question; but it isn't. So yes, I do believe that what I put forth is grounded in the real. The absolute truth? No! I specifically reject approaches that imply absolutes. — counterpunch
That must be it.
— synthesis
Well, it isn't - and therein lies the problem. I know what you think...
"But how little it is now understood can be gauged from the procedure of the moral reformer who, after saying that “good” means “what we are conditioned to like” goes on cheerfully to consider whether it might be “better” that we should be conditioned to like something else. What in Heaven’s name does he mean by “better”?"
CS Lewis "Poison of Subjectivism" — counterpunch
THAT attitude.This is just a friendly conversation.
— synthesis
We'll see! — counterpunch
Freedom is all kinds of things to all kinds of people. Personally, it is something within, but that wasn't the point of this thread. The freedom I was referencing was generic. And suggesting that freedom doesn't really exist seems quite subjective to my eye. Of course absolute freedom does not exist but then again, absolute anything does not exist either, unless you wish to consider, The Absolute, where everything "exists" in the void.
— synthesis
Freedom is not all kinds of things in political theory; and it's in those terms I'm seeking to educate you. You need it. — counterpunch
Your subjectivist, relativist, politically correct approach to things - I can only assume is what seeps in to fill the void of ignorance, because it doesn't make sense in political theory terms. How do you not understand freedom as a political ideal? What did they teach you at school? We're you brought up in a cult or something? — counterpunch
I agree that it is very hard to define freedom, but it's really easy to tell when you've lost it.
— synthesis
Hmm - I'm not so sure. Obvious examples like restrictions on movement or religious freedom, sure. Hong Kong today versus 1999, certainly. However some of this is subtle stuff. People don't always make connections and some freedoms are lost via stealth and there's the fact that some people might not see a given issue presented as a question of freedom - COVID mask wearing, for instance. — Tom Storm
Freedom is a political ideal; a principle - and starting point for thought about how to build a successful and humane civilization. That supposed freedom is traded for social goods, like like law and order, the enforcement of contracts, and national defense - provided for by taxation. Hence, it's an ideal in that freedom is never fully realized, yet is still valued. — counterpunch
Few people I have spoken to can tell me what freedom actually is in any coherent form and I certainly don't have a robust conception of it. I know Americans seem to be very fond of the term, but I am sure it is understood differently (and not just across Liberal/Conservative lines). — Tom Storm
We are not free; so I don't think it a valid question. — counterpunch
What does that have to do with the question - does anyone in the West still want to be free? — counterpunch
We are not free; so I don't think it a valid question. Freedom is an ideal; a starting point for thought that is then traded for social goods like law and order, the enforcement of contracts, and national defense.
If you were to ask whether I think social impositions on individual freedom have gone too far, I'd say so - but it's not as if individual freedom were much more than hypothetical in the first place. — counterpunch
Uh actually.... I think you don't know Finnish history. The story during WW2 and later being non-aligned, not in NATO, never getting the Marshal aid. And no Liberation-Day / VE-Day for us in WW2, thankfully! — ssu
As Jack alluded, are you saying we can't use our minds to think about our own mental limitations? — 3017amen
Small? Lol. Nah, that's "the everybody" .. we just get to live on the illusion we're good people propped up by those who engaged in illegal acts of murder and robbery with no concern of repercussion (some with full knowledge of such) toward those who would come after. — Outlander
Perhaps the consistent theme is, we are trapped in this mystery of self-awareness, which resides in our consciousness. — 3017amen
Not everyone wants to succumb to the complacent degeneracy sipped from a poisoned chalice of ancient triumphs no one can even remember or even actually knows for sure happened. — Outlander
On the other hand, staunch individualism can result in the resentment of groups altogether and people believing that any form of collectivism or collective idea is bad. Yet it isn't so. Social cohesion is extremely important in a society and the feeling that one ought to do one's share. — ssu
On what I see. — god must be atheist
'Everything I say is a lie', which if true is false, and if false is true .i] — 3017amen
Think about religion and politics. It seems like most people need to look to others to give themselves purpose and meaning. — Harry Hindu
Where do you live?
— synthesis
Finland.
Corruption is THE problem everywhere ALL the time. Look at the history of our species!
— synthesis
Even if corruption does happen, it is in some countries a bigger problem than in others. It actually defines a lot how people behave. — ssu
In fact, the more you go back in time, the deeper and bitter the divide was. In the US it's a bit different, because you have only a right-wing and a centrist right party. When you would have real leftist parties in your Congress, you would notice the difference. — ssu
The swamp (although incredible deep by historical standards) has always been in place.
— synthesis
Some countries do have a problem with corruption, yes. — ssu
I am the type of philosopher who prefers to make his points the way the proverbial umpire did: "I calls them as I sees them". In other words, I give the status quo, I may even explain things, but I make no moral judgments. — god must be atheist
I somewhat disagree. I think those who change wildly the parties they vote are actually a minority (even if they are a very important minority).
Politicians lie so much that you simply cannot bargain on what they promise to do in favor of you. — ssu
And they see that authority protecting their niche in the system.
— synthesis
Actually, I think they simply want radical change.
When they are young, they want rapid change. When they are older, they have seen how difficult it is for change to happen and thus they are extremely happy and supportive when the next generation wants radical, rapid changes too. Consensus is a cancer for them. Down with the old!!! — ssu
Different people are currently experiencing different degrees of freedom and I think you do need to consider what dictatorship would mean for us and for future generations. — Jack Cummins
I am saying I can't respond to things that I am not totally sure what they mean. — god must be atheist
Make this a sentence that is syntactically sensible. This is nonsense. I am not saying you are speaking nonsense, I am saying the quote is grammatically so out-of-shape that it makes no sense. Please rewrite it in English if you wish me to answer it. — god must be atheist
All that matters is that moral authority comes from a source that cannot be corrupted by man's intellectualism.
— synthesis
Such as? I mean, you're playing coy here - there's an obvious answer, but, knowing this forum as you do, you don't want to give it. — Wayfarer
All that matters is that moral authority comes from a source that cannot be corrupted by man's intellectualism.
— synthesis
What are you thinking of here? — Tom Storm