"All"? Are you sure? — Beverley
I would say that as much truth is told about a country's past as is told about a person's past. — Beverley
...but I love the debate and hearing other people's views on things. :) — Beverley
Civilizations and cultures also exist for a lot longer than governments. — Beverley
But I am talking about what is most likely, and that is that the history of China, as it has been recorded, is as true as any history (I suppose, including what exactly we all did yesterday!) — Beverley
To my mind, governments have no power over civilization and culture, since governments are controlled by the people, and the people make civilizations and culture. — Beverley
I think people are poor because they didn't use their potential enough.
It's a potential issue. — YiRu Li
Does the above make sense to you?
Can I still use 'inequality' to say it? — YiRu Li
How can we educate people, so they can be happy with their position? — YiRu Li
Yes'born into a rich family or poor family' is 'inequality' to you? — YiRu Li
If a person is so sad because she can't have kids.
Is this 'have' & 'not have', 'inequality' to you or 'difference' to you — YiRu Li
I ended up as a metaphysical idealist – somebody who thinks that the whole of reality is mental in essence. It is not in your mind alone, not in my mind alone, but in an extended transpersonal form of mind which appears to us in the form that we call matter. Matter is a representation or appearance of what is, in and of itself, mental processes.
— Bernardo Kastrup, magazine interview
Now I think that is different from saying that 'the external world is made of mental substance'. I think that use of the term 'substance' arises from the translation of the original Greek 'ouisia', which was found in both Plato and Aristotle, into the Latin 'substantia', and thence into the English 'substance'. — Wayfarer
I thought I already identified 'inequality' as
e.g. good <-> evil, rich <-> poor, beautiful <-> ugly, young <-> old, high <-> low, correct <-> wrong, have <-> not have, strong <-> weak, left <-> right, subjective <-> objective, absolute <-> relative, Life <-> Death — YiRu Li
Anyway, I wonder if the term "inequality" is throwing people off. This term is very suggestive of social and especially economic inequality in English, whereas I think the concept she is going for is "difference". — hypericin
For example, if we feel getting birth in a rich family is not equal getting birth in a poor family. It is inequality. And this feeling of inequality, is the issue of the world. — YiRu Li
He is hypericin.
We posted this question together. He is the cohost. — YiRu Li
This is a very broad view of "inequality".
What you call "inequality", I call "perception", and "thought". — hypericin
I know when talking about inequality, in western philosophy, political philosophy is more famous.
Glad you'd like to identify it.
I'll let my friend reply to you.
He knows better about philosophy. — YiRu Li
Chinese has 5,000 of years history.
We still can easily read any documents from 5,000 years ago.
It's not legends, it's history. — YiRu Li
For Chinese medicine to be true or not, this probably needs using your own body to try it. No one can tell you. :sweat: — YiRu Li
Democratic socialism would be one answer. — Wayfarer
and eating Cheetos to moving to the recliner watching cartoons and eating potato chips. — Fooloso4
Chinese medicine says about 5,000 years ago, everyone lived one hundred years without showing the usual signs of aging. — YiRu Li
One main difference I guess is that Rand attaches her notions in a more traditional milieu. Basically these people are just idealizations of the "Great Men" of history.. Where Nietzsche might entertain a Napoleon, she emphasizes industrialists and the like. To me it's just a different mode of the same idea. Nietzsche's can be applied more universally perhaps.. — schopenhauer1
Nietzsche was right. I won't take the time to tell you who Nietzsche was, but he was right. The world belongs to the strong - to the strong who are noble as well and who do not wallow in the swine-trough of trade and exchange. The world belongs to the true nobleman, to the great blond beasts, to the noncompromisers, to the 'yes-sayers.”
― Jack London, Martin Eden
He (Nietzsche) believed that there was need in the world for a class freed from the handicap of law and morality, a class acutely adaptable and immoral; a class bent on achieving, not the equality of all men, but the production, at the top, of the superman.”
― H.L. Mencken, The Philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche
Otherwise, Plato was right, and nobody wants that. — Banno
the evidence points strongly to non-physical mental content driving these unfortunate conditions — Mark Nyquist
So the only choice is between the irrationalism of physicalism and the irrationalism of mysticism and fundamentalists? — Banno
Albino ravens are apparently a thing. — Janus
I'm just giving a concrete example of Hemple's dilemma. But further, physicalism is itself not a physicalist doctrine, and hence denies itself. — Banno
I am agnostic, but interested in reading about either positive or negative arguments for the proof of existence. — Corvus
Please help check if this classic allegory is inspiring for your question? — YiRu Li
Take religion. Feuerbach, Marx, and Freud also developed explanations for religion around the same time as Nietzsche, explanations that also nicely happened to support their particular overarching message. How do we judge between these, in some ways mutually exclusive, versions of history and why wouldn't they be subject to the same charge of "working towards a pre-existing conclusion?" — Count Timothy von Icarus
Inequality is a thinking issue. It's about how people see the world.
Will the focus on social policy block out the time for people to practice thinking about it? — YiRu Li
Policy is made by complicated processes and not all the people are qualified to get benefits.
But the inequality issue is serious for everyone's life, in all kinds of areas, and we often are not aware of it. — YiRu Li
The feeling of tedium... — Joshs
But if we are taught that the way of moral, spiritual and empirical truth involves chaining ourselves to fixed, foundations, we will consider overcoming to be a mark of immorality, irrationality, madness, nihilism, infidelity. — Joshs
You overcome the tedium. :smile: — Count Timothy von Icarus
The second, more popular explanation is that "strong" have allowed their hands to be tied by a "false morality." It's here that a relation to Nietzsche's ideas is more obvious. Generally, the claim is that economic elites, the "neoliberals," or simply "the Jews," have tricked the strong into a false morality. Once the strong "wake up," and form their own morality, this age of evil will be resolved. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I think it means not constantly wanking in public — bert1
By ‘strength’ Nietzsche meant a will to continual self-overcoming ( not personal ‘growth’ as in progress toward self-actualization, but continually becoming something different). — Joshs
...the supremacy of proportional logic. — Joshs
