The book takes place in the early 1950s while the movie takes place in the 1970s. Entirely different worlds. — T Clark
1. Good means, good ends
2. Bad means, good ends
3. Good means, bad ends
4. Bad means, bad ends — Agent Smith
What will work? I don't know. — BC
I'd propose a far more serious failure, if what you say is true, and that is that people are seeking meaning and virtue from the political theory or leader du jour. — Hanover
And any policies that exacerbate the wealth gap are culpable of that specifically. And poverty is a leading cause of many ills. But as I pointed out, these problems are also older than those policies. — Pantagruel
...members of labor unions, and un-organized unskilled workers, will sooner or later realize that their government is not even trying to prevent wages from sinking or to prevent jobs from being exported. Around the same time, they will realize that suburban white-collar workers - themselves desperately afraid of being downsized - are not going to let themselves be taxed to provide social benefits for anyone else.
At that point, something will crack. The non-suburban electorate will decide that the system has failed and start looking around for a strongman to vote for - someone willing to assure them that once he is elected, the smug bureaucrats, tricky lawyers, overpaid bond salesmen and post modernist professors will no longer be calling the shots...
One thing that is very likely to happen is that the gains made in the past forty years by black and brown Americans, and by homosexuals, will be wiped out. Jocular contempt for women will come back into fashion... All the resentment which badly educated Americans feel about having their manners dictated to them by college graduates will find an outlet
Neoliberalism is the set of policies mentioned, enacted over the last 40 years, with predictable results.
The people in government and business carrying out these policies are indeed to blame— whether they identify as neoliberal or not. — Mikie
The art critic Arthur Danto famously declared that after Warhol’s Brillo box exhibit philosophically interesting art was no longer possible. — Joshs
your experiences of life are likewise some bullshit off the television, I'm sure. — frank
You're the one spitting on other people's experiences. — frank
t's in keeping with what a Korean guy told me about life there. Maybe the same is true in Indonesia. — frank
What do you think? Can you relate to what I think/feel? — niki wonoto
Pardon my probing for meaning : How do you characterize your "indifference" to philosophical Ontological origins*1? Is it aggressive Atheism, or apathetic Agnosticism, or mundane Traditionalism*2, or some other pre-Philosophy understanding of the natural world*3? Or just Anti-Religion, as the parallel to politics for the cultural powers-that-be to dominate the common people? Or perhaps merely Anti-Ontology as a feckless waste of time in a heartless/mindless/pointless material world? :joke: — Gnomon
If atheism is a simple lack of belief what is the average goal of an atheist? Their hope for the future? Aspirations? Motivations? Motivations for continuing/propagating life? — Andrew4Handel
But I must ask. Do you then conclude that there is no point in doing science at all? — Mark S
That means the idea that important aspects of what is in our reality and how it works can be understood is a provisionally true, highly robust, scientific hypothesis - not a premise. — Mark S
If that room last night had, instead of eighty people, been eighty dogs, cats, monkeys or just about any other animal, the result would have been pandemonium.
To be sure, people do evil things. But this is the exception, and we pay it considerable attention. Overwhelmingly, people do cooperate. (those who don't are in the main disenfranchised males). — Banno
Along those lines, I wonder, is there a common root for all such endeavors? Did philosophy begin somewhere? If so, where and how and when and why and who and what? — Bret Bernhoft
I am not saying there is a solution but I prefer this way of thinking to current models. In the end it could all descend into meaninglessness. — Andrew4Handel
Nihilism can be a real problem. — Andrew4Handel
Women who are being exploited and are questioning the morality of that exploitation should be easily convinced. — Mark S
Science has empirically shown it is a powerful means for understanding what ‘is’ and how it works. — Mark S
However , rival views of the role of science (Kuhn, Feyerabend, Rouse, Rorty) reveal Popperian science (as Curry calls his approach) as stuffed with philosophical presuppositions that lead to a reductive treatment of human motives. — Joshs
science has not shown it is a suitable means for understanding what ought to be or what we imperatively ought to do. — Mark S
As an ethical naturalist and fallibilist, the truth value of moral claims about 'what harms persons, other animals and ecosystems' is discernible, ergo preventable or reducible. 'Supernaturalist criteria' for "justifying the moral norms" of natural persons was a brief, maladaptive interlude of the last several millennia out of an almost two hundred millennia span of eusocial h. sapiens existence. 'Divine command theory', as far as I can tell, is moral nihilism (e.g. Plato's Euthyphro, Nietzsche's The Antichrist), and the last century or so of substantive secularization has been and continues to be a struggle against vestigial priestcraft and normative superstitions. — 180 Proof
People don't seem to comprehend the lack of truth value in issue in morality.
Morality may as well be a religion if it is just making up a system of rules and ideas to keep people happy.
But it has no truth value. No one has discovered a truth value to moral claims or moral instructions.
So moral systems are a sham at heart but people don't believe that so keep on making moral claims relentlessly. — Andrew4Handel
Yes, understanding the function of past and present cultural moral norms as solving cooperation problems does require a worldview — Mark S
one that accepts, rather than rejects, science as a powerful way to understand what ‘is’ in our universe and how it works. But don’t we agree about that? — Mark S
I'm thinking Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, Lou Reed. — Jamal
How many of the multiple comments on youtube 1960’s songs saying they wish they were alive in that era, that the music was much better then, come from people younger than 30?
— Joshs
How would you or I know? Youtube has been around for over 14 years; it's used by people of all ages. — Noble Dust
I don't think atheists should be complacent in their atheism nor religious people complacent in their theism. It is an ongoing process of trying to understand reality and find meaning. — Andrew4Handel
That is what I am disagreeing with and the argument of this thread. I have been arguing it entails a worldview. — Andrew4Handel
I think that there are nihilist consequences to atheism in conjunction with scientific materialism that has been promoted and denied at the same time. — Andrew4Handel
What was the motivation for notable atheist Lawrence Krauss writing the book — Andrew4Handel
This goes against the idea of a simple disbelief in gods if you have to write thousands of words in response to arguments for God. — Andrew4Handel
The cosmological argument.
The moral argument for God.
Aquinas's Five ways
The ontological argument
The argument from beauty
The argument from consciousness
The teleological argument — Andrew4Handel
The role religion had in morality is in claiming there was a moral law giver and that that entity could generate moral truths. — Andrew4Handel
If they reached the current conclusion of evolution by natural selection thousands of years ago what influence would that have had on them? — Andrew4Handel
art of the current thinking is that there is no teleology or purpose or end goal plus the eventual heat death of the universe through entropy. — Andrew4Handel
It seems impossible now to be an atheist uninfluenced by religious cultures and to be able to claim these cultures could have been created by atheists. — Andrew4Handel
I have no idea what a purely atheist history of humans would have looked like. — Andrew4Handel
If people don't agree on a definition of morality then that is an unresolvable problem itself with no objective arbitrer to refer to — Andrew4Handel
Based on what I'm reading, it sounds like you are closer to ignosticism - which (in essence) says that the very notion of a deity or deities is incoherent. — EricH
I am pistically atheist and epistemically agnostic. — Fooloso4
Yes. Atheism is a response -- part rational, part emotional -- to traditional religious god-models of a "magic man" in the sky. But philosophers typically avoid anthro-morphic definitions for their ultimate/universal (non-particular) Ontological theories. And, since their logical models are hypothetical, they don't claim to have physical evidence to support their notions of Logos or First Cause. — Gnomon
Perhaps you "don't care" about the esoteric mysteries of Eastern Religions or Quantum theory — Gnomon
And the esoteric mystery of Ontological origins is a fundamental philosophical concern. :smile: — Gnomon
Which comedians would you choose for the best comedy team ever in history? — universeness
What did you think of the point made in the comedy show 'The big bang theory,' where one of the characters points out a fatal flaw in that movie — universeness
The abundance and beauty of the variety of tropes, metonomy, synechdoche, prosopoeia, metaphor, and the way they all blend and merge seamlessly and effortlessly into one another. If anything is more than real, for me, this is. — Pantagruel
YES, that's exactly what I'm trying to illustrate. Myself included, the only difference being that I'm (hopefully) aware of the phenomenon happening to me. — Noble Dust
24 (?) year old guy got hired and my other co-worker informed me that my musical choices "gave him anxiety". — Noble Dust
