Ah, one styles themselves the arbiter of who needs what. Spoken like a true 'collectivist'. — Tzeentch
a successful capitalist has to produce something others want to buy — Tzeentch
In fact the entire advertising industry operates on the complete opposite goal: create desires for things not needed.
— Xtrix
Ah, one styles themselves the arbiter of who needs what. Spoken like a true 'collectivist'. — Tzeentch
A big mess of repression, surveillance, authoritarianism, genocide, etc. — Tzeentch
China — Tzeentch
Please don't use China as an example for successful collectivism. It's a powerful state. — Tzeentch
I understand collectivism to be a term to describe state policies — Tzeentch
Lol. Food, water, shelter, family, community. I view these as needs, or at least different than a new gadget every 2 years. — Xtrix
I guess I’m part of a communist conspiracy. — Xtrix
I don’t think China is an example of communism at all, as I understand it. — Xtrix
But I’m using your meaning, not mine. — Xtrix
Yes, the United States has its problems — Xtrix
Those darned advertisers convincing people they need pointless luxuries! — Tzeentch
Wouldn't it be nice if we could take all of that money and instead use it for useful things? — Tzeentch
your characterization of advertising as a means to sell people things they don't need suggests you both consider people too stupid to make such choices for themselves and yourself an expert on determining what is best for others. — Tzeentch
You may be a closet authoritarian, I'm afraid. — Tzeentch
If you're the hippie commune type I take all of that back, — Tzeentch
Collectivism isn't the same as communism, and China isn't communist (anymore). — Tzeentch
But if you want to compare the domestic policies of the US with China and suggest they're similar then that is laughable. — Tzeentch
A big mess of repression, surveillance, authoritarianism, genocide, etc. — Tzeentch
In terms of creating desires for useless stuff— “fashionable consumption,” etc. — this has a long history, has been studied, documented; not a controversial remark. — Xtrix
You’re free to ask me what I believe directly — Xtrix
And yes, China is communist. — Xtrix
Obviously they must find some use for it - entertainment or otherwise. Why else would people spend money on it? — Tzeentch
Communism explicitly aims to socialize the bourgeoisie, that is to say, repress and steal from the upper middle and rich classes and (supposedly) give to the poor working class. — Tzeentch
What do you believe? — Tzeentch
There is a lot to be said about it, but one thing is for certain in my mind: the existence of a “collective” can be seriously questioned. It’s abstract, amorphous, mind-dependant, something like a “natural kind”—a “political kind”. Utilizing it as a subject of evaluation focuses value inwards rather than in a direction that would benefit actual flesh-and-blood people. When it comes to the question “what is more natural”, valuing others above our own ideas seems to me more natural — NOS4A2
↪Pantagruel Collectivism may have some merit at the local level, where people cooperate voluntarily and the ties that group them together are tangible.
However, the larger the scope becomes, the more abstract these supposed ties become, the more imaginary (that is to say, non-existent) the group, the more it must rely on coercion and generally the more problematic the results become. — Tzeentch
its members fail to recognize their own solidarity. — Pantagruel
Apparently, Stalin saw only the forest, and not the trees. Which is why he could view individuals as expendable for the higher purposes of the collective. I suspect that Kings, Dictators, and Potentates-in-general share that view from on high. So, they have different "priorities" from those of us in the "huddled masses".I am terrible at collectivism, methodologically and in practice. Whether by nature or nurture I lack the necessary neural connections required to see the world as the activity of groups, nations, races, classes, or communities as Stalin did, so giving any priority to these over flesh-and-blood human beings is an impossible task for me. — NOS4A2
I am terrible at collectivism, methodologically and in practice. Whether by nature or nurture I lack the necessary neural connections required to see the world as the activity of groups, nations, races, classes, or communities as Stalin did, so giving any priority to these over flesh-and-blood human beings is an impossible task for me. — NOS4A2
Which helps to explain why mobilization of the working class is more difficult: its members fail to recognize their own solidarity. — Pantagruel
If plan to be more sporty, an advertiser suggests that buying a pair of their trainers will help, I am convinced and so I buy a pair - you're saying it's impossible that I'm wrong. If I think a pair of trainers will help me become more sporty then I've somehow changed reality such that this will be the case? — Isaac
I like working. Like you said, without it I die. I can use my myself to sustain myself. It’s amazing when I think of it. — NOS4A2
No one forces me to work, though, except the state. — NOS4A2
the situation of comply (work/survive in X way) or die was forced upon you — schopenhauer1
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.