I note you carefully steered clear of my last question. How are you defining "just"?
So unless you are simply happy to keep chanting propaganda slogans, can you supply the argument that backs up this opinion.
Why is this something you merely say rather than something I ought to believe?
Altering one's beliefs is not sufficient for changing one's behaviour, as my examples demonstrate. There is the further matter of one's disposition and will power. If an individual does not already have the moral disposition which allows one to adhere firmly to one's beliefs, and not give in to temptation, then altering one's beliefs is an ineffective procedure. The person would just become more and more hypocritical, believing that resisting certain actions is the good and right thing to do, but still lacking the necessary will power to abstain.
Do you agree that things were happening, things were moving, prior in time to the existence of living beings capable of making decisions. If so, then you ought to see that it is not necessary for a "decision" to be made in order for something to move from one place to another.
You were arguing that a person moving an object in their room was actually time affecting matter and space (determinism). — Manbabyzeus
You used this to say that a person can’t be sure if they have the agency to proactively change their given situation. — Manbabyzeus
Then you said a person actually does have at least some control over certain things and can actually affect their situation. — Manbabyzeus
But If determinism is a reality, there is no free will. It’s not that it’s a grey area, it’s one or the other, determinism simply can’t exist with free actors. — Manbabyzeus
Do you mean things like weathering, chemical reactions, momentum? Or do you mean the framework of the human mind, as being the factor that’s determined? I fell like all animals already intuitively do this. — Manbabyzeus
Sure, one must change his conduct to align with his morality. If one has difficulty doing so he has to try harder. If he doesn’t, then yes he becomes a hypocrite. Will power is often difficult to muster, especially for people who do not believe in it. — NOS4A2
I was just saying that you or I can decide to move something from one place to another, altering our situation, changing the world. — NOS4A2
They all think they are moral ubermensch capable of lifting themselves up by their bootstrap regardless of whatever circumstances they find themselves in. At the same time foreigners are to blame because "dey touk our jabs!", liberals are to blame for every social ill and meanwhile they're totally blind to the fact its society and its welfare components that create the choices and freedom to choose among them instead of having to spend all our time just surviving. — Benkei
Trying harder is not necessarily the answer. Often this just leads to frustration and the person might become of a worse moral disposition than before. There are many factors involved with trying to change one's morality, and learning to have realistic goals might be one of the first. However, inspiration (and this is directly related to will power), might be the most important of all. As you say, some do not even believe in will power. If a person doesn't believe in will power, how could one even be inspired to try to change one's morality? So the question here might be what provides the prerequisite inspiration for a person to actually change one's morality. It's easy for a person to look at oneself and say I have some bad habits, I should get rid of these, but what inspires a person to actually carry out the work required to drop those habits. It's not like the person gets paid for that work, so the motivation must come from something else.
Yes, and I was pointing out, that just because a person decides to move something from one place to another, this does not mean that the person can actually do it. That's the problem with your view of morality. You seem to think that a person can just pick and choose one's morality, as if one's current moral disposition has no bearing on what type of moral principles the person has the capacity to uphold.
But If you’re trying to separate these uncontrollable constants from controllable entropy in order to find true existence, it’s a noble goal but in truth we live separate conceptually but not actually from these things. — Manbabyzeus
If you set the separation from the universal constants aside your essentially describing stoicism. I also think pondering time excessively is not only bad for your mental health but also an exercise in futility. — Manbabyzeus
I really like your thinking here. Nicely said. I will just say, though, that inspiration is followed by a choice, some sort of follow-through, which begins and ends in the individual. Man becomes inspired. He is the genesis of his inspiration, and all subsequent follow-through. He is not the passive object and I cannot speak about him as such. — NOS4A2
I don’t believe a person just picks and chooses a morality, as if from a menu, just that he can come to believe in certain moral principles by his own volition, by weighing the pros, the cons, the value and justice of certain moral principles, and that the sum of his moral principles can be called a “morality”. I would say this is a choice, a matter of choosing. — NOS4A2
The Democrats appear to have adopted much of Sander's rhetoric; I doubt it will translate into actual policy. But ever hopeful. — Banno
In China, folk wear face masks to protect others.
In 'merica, folk wear face masks to protect themselves. — Banno
The United States is no longer a leader among nations. — Banno
China has achieved very long ago great power status as we give great power status to Russia, France and the UK too.What's unclear is whether China has now achieved great power status. A sign of that would be the onset of cold war, which is actually a source of global stability. — frank
China has achieved very long ago great power status as we give great power status to Russia, France and the UK too. — ssu
Don't think that some power will replace the US. After the US there is only a void in it's place.
And that void can surely happen. — ssu
Only Superpowers were truly global in their reach as many great powers haven't been even in their hey day truly global (think about Japan, Austro-Hungarian empire or the Ottoman Empire etc.). A regional power would be a country like India, South Africa or Germany as you won't find them operating by their own in other continents. What especially is lacking is the will to do that, which is crucial: A great power nation thinks it's a great power... at least some people in their governments do.. France and the UK are regional powers, neither is global at present. — frank
After decolonisation, France established formal defence agreements with many francophone countries in sub-Saharan Africa. These arrangements allowed France to establish itself as a guarantor of stability and hegemony in the region. France adopted an interventionist policy in Africa, resulting in 122 military interventions that averaged once a year from 1960 to the mid-1990s.
What especially is lacking is the will to do that, which is crucial: A great power nation thinks it's a great power... at least some people in their governments do. — ssu
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