In a larger sense, is a meritocracy unfair? — jgill
it was almost laughable. This is common sense. If I were to start somewhere it might be wondering about that. — kudos
You have a large section of the population who have invested heavily in something: something that grants them certain powers and privileges. I'm not saying they're blocking anyone from happiness, or there's anything wrong with universities teaching kids to succeed in their field. But there is a system in place that poses a potential for a class divide and an ideological crisis. That's all, no blame or anything on anyone, just plain old crass cynicism. — kudos
Is there a definition for playing darts? — Varde
or what I call 'special arts', are also skills. — Varde
Therefore art has no definition — Varde
Martial arts is a skill. Painting, Drawing, Sculpting, Creating Audio, or what I call 'special arts', are also skills. — Varde
IE, within modernism are many different approaches, as with postmodernism, but for me the primary dividing line within art is the presence or absence of the aesthetic. — RussellA
Also, I'm not saying this to advertise theism. But if we are going to dismiss the one epistemic method that has been the primary epistemic method for what is probably the vast majority of the human population, then we're going to need some really good reasons for doing so. — baker
(we ultimately do not know)
— Tom Storm
How can you say that?? Based on what?? — baker
The inference is not involved in the experience, which, sans inference is just affect, but in what we call the experience, and what we take its significance to be.. — Janus
Just speculating here: in a few centuries, science fiction will cease to be a genre; all of the possibilities explored in these books will either have been accomplished, or found to be impossible. — darthbarracuda
“Art is an expression of human consciousness. Art work is information about the artist’s consciousness.” In order to define something you need to specify it’s unique attributes. Your definition only identifies information and human consciousness, nothing specific to art. It is not a definition of art and has no explanatory power in regards to art. — praxis
I can appreciate the difference between subjectivity and objectivity, but it should be an aesthetic value, not an epistemic value. — Enrique
A happy Sisyphus who sings the blues. :death: :flower: — 180 Proof
. I suspect even atheist-types have some deep-rooted superstitions.. — schopenhauer1
Who here thinks that if they question the "game of life" that god setup and call god immoral, that they will be cursed by that very same god for calling him immoral? — schopenhauer1
The belief of the existence of evil, at all, is what allows for the infinite manifestations of evil that we experience daily. — PseudoB
If we consider that in the beginning all was perfect, then this negates the existence of evil.... That is of course until we are presented with the knowledge thereof. — PseudoB
Illusions can only be experienced by a subject, which points back to cogito ergo sum. — Wayfarer
If any problem qualifies as the problem of consciousness, it is this one. In this central sense of "consciousness", an organism is conscious if there is something it is like to be that organism, and a mental state is conscious if there is something it is like to be in that state.
— David Chalmers, Facing up to the Hard Problem
As it happens, and even though I agree with the thrust of this, I think it could be explained better. Where Chalmers uses the term 'experience', I think the correct word to use is 'being'. What he's saying is that no purely objective account of the mind is the same as 'the nature of experience'; describing an experience is not the same as having an experience. And the capacity for experience is unique to beings, who are the subjects of experience (even very simple beings, but not inorganic nature - this is not panpsychism). — Wayfarer
So then, are academics bound to impotence except in their own - now highly monetized - spheres of thought? — kudos
‘[tokens] of the most commonsense, and scientific, physical types objectively exist independently of the mental. Realism about ordinary objects is confirmed day by day in our experience . . . Given this strong case for Realism, we should give it up only in the face of powerful arguments against it and for an alternative. There are no such arguments.’ — Joshs
I don't think this to be something that always existed chronologically either, but something we sometimes take for granted in modern times. — kudos
More recently, the idea came to mind about individualism in general, and how one individual can be superior to another in intellect or performance. — kudos
