My personal answer to that is role social media now plays as arbiter of truth. The battles are no longer fought between academics, they're fought on social media, so there's been a shift in what qualifies a person to be part of the debate, and it's not their academic qualification. — Isaac
How would a fact-checking institution be any less exposed to exactly the same economic and political incentives? — Isaac
One way forward I can see is to make it more difficult for conflicts of interest to be hidden. — Isaac
So, where does this "self-evident" dignity comes from? Where is it derived from? Is is just asserted, a mere self-attribution — Matias
Closure: A Story of Everything, Hilary Lawson — 180 Proof
Tom, no offence but you are part of the problem with the current state of psychology. — Deus
Peddle the psychobable and prejudice all day it won’t make it right. — Deus
The evidence is already linked to on the hearing voices network site, that when 'voices' are engaged with and responded to, they are less likely to be negative and violent. — unenlightened
they are less likely to be negative and violent. — unenlightened
The distancing is noted — unenlightened
the 'support' you speak of is that condescending kind — unenlightened
give not an inch of power but 'allows' what was previously forbidden — unenlightened
because it is conveniently cheap. — unenlightened
Shame you waited for me, a rank amateur, to point it out. — unenlightened
there is an alternative view that is at least semi-respectable. https://www.hearing-voices.org — unenlightened
1. We were gratuitously built-up in the womb with a particular capacity to perform certain actions. — Paul91
2. The need to protect/enhance yourself, with all your potential, only arises with a current perceived threat to the survival of your biological form or public image (rooted in egoism). — Paul91
To serve others in your own capacity fulfils a function that extends beyond yourself and would actualize your existence beyond simply name and form. — Paul91
This is because for many moral systems there is assumed to be only one meta-normative framework. As a result , we end up assuming that the other understands the facts just as we do , and it is their intent that is to blame. — Joshs
Although, I am riled as I had a brother who committed suicide in such an institute. — Deus
Serial killing is not "misuse of high IQ"; that's psychpathy (or antisocial sociopathy). — 180 Proof
Why should there be two distinctions ? — Deus
A host can make parasites, but a parasite can't make a host. — introbert
Would you agree, from your experience, that what shatters people’s lives is the loss of the sense of connection with others, of having worth, of being held in esteem, more than material deprivation or physical illness? — Joshs
Living with a terminal illness , and dying generally , isnt necessarily a monotonous unrelieved trajectory of suffering. It often has the same textured ups and downs of living. — Joshs
My severely alcoholic friend seemed less concerned with his homelessness than with escaping the anxiety of social responsibilities, which is why he self-medicated with pills and alcohol. — Joshs
The circumstances of people in this situation are complex and vary widely from person to person, depending on the reasons for their addictions, etc. — Joshs
The most hellish fate you could wish on someone is not homelessness, which people cope with in a wide variety of ways, but severe chronic depression, which can befall the wealthiest as easily as the most destitute. — Joshs
And the reason is not only because the present offers no sense of relevant meaning , but it becomes impossible to imagine a future different than the present. This is the purest example of stalled creativity. — Joshs
Suffering marks the end of this cycles. If we believe i. the endless renewal of creativity, then we can view suffering as an opportunity to discover fresh projects and directions, as well as deeper insights. — Joshs
I think such an approach to life is generally an unbalanced one. — Abdul
One should always spend time reflecting and evaluating their own judgment, sharpening the moral self if you will. I — Abdul
I wouldn't practically heavily rely on one of my virtues such an intuit as attractive as it may seem. — Abdul
not Randian-fantasy capitalism — 180 Proof
Not employer and employee, however. — Xtrix
I like Richard Wolff's tentative definition: capitalism is defined by the relationship between the employer and employee — Xtrix
How do we decide what matters? — TiredThinker
Is what matters and what we're willing to forgo have everything to do with our own mental state and less to do with the world we are trying to describe? — TiredThinker
I think the problem, to put it at an abstract level is this.
Person A: I think phenomenon A is real.
Person B: phenomenon A can't be real because it doesn't (seem to) fit with current scientific models. — Bylaw
It seems to me the greatest concern of neo-luddite’s isn't immediate physical harm cause by something like a weapon , but the psychological effects of tech. Here I reject the idea of any simplistic shaping effects of our machines on our behavior. — Joshs
Another way of saying that survivability is what matters is to say the truth is what works. That's the battle cry of the pragmatist. As far as we can tell, the theory of evolution by natural selection works. It helps us predict the future. Predicting the future makes it easier for us to survive. — T Clark
A question - if the argument is true, what is the alternative? God? — T Clark
