Now, from a female perspective, given that males are around and about on the internet professing their inadequacies in the form of bullying or projection or ****** or trolling, how does a female find any desire to engage in online discourse? — Wallows
How does that make you feel if I am so bold in asking? — Wallows
Usually the way I respond to annoying ones is by talking to myself what i feel like saying. Then just type “lol” or something pacifying. — 0 thru 9
But darn... the obnoxious things always grab the attention. Like loud radio ads. If it bleeds, it leads, as the saying goes. — 0 thru 9
Perhaps some people (myself on past occasions) get a type of high or adrenaline rush from confrontational posts. — 0 thru 9
I would say that intent is actually irrelevant entirely. — VagabondSpectre
Have you made any “wallowing” t-shirts? It might spread the word. I’ve seen worse ideas on GoFundMe and such. The world could use some mindful wallowing. Maybe other names were used for it. Lao Tsu did it. Henry David Thoreau. Emily Dickenson. John Lennon and Yoko bedding for peace. Moses wallowed in the desert for years. Probably all the well known philosophers.How about some healthy wallowing? Yes, I am becoming evangelical. — Wallows
The world could use some mindful wallowing. Maybe other names were used for it. Lao Tsu did it. Henry David Thoreau. Emily Dickenson. John Lennon and Yoko bedding for peace. Moses wallowed in the desert for years. Probably all the well known philosophers. — 0 thru 9
People are saying things in an attempt to persuade the other to change their positions (moral suasion), right? (the intent of persuasion itself matters to us as individuals). — VagabondSpectre
While this is true to us as individuals with the subjective opinion that we are more correct than others, philosophy has demanding standards about the method of persuasion it prefers to use. — VagabondSpectre
There's a whole world of sophistry out there whose only utility is that it is highly persuasive, and people appeal to them every day (more and more in the quick-rhetoric-slinging world of online media). — VagabondSpectre
But as philosophers, we're supposed to recognize them as fallacious appeals and seek more reliable arguments and conclusions. — VagabondSpectre
In theory it is more important that we are correct than it is important we are persuasive, but neither is useful without the other. — VagabondSpectre
Winnie the Pooh, Piglet, and Eeyore all are habitual wallowers. Eeyore made $40 million last year. Owns an island in the Caribbean. :nerd: — 0 thru 9
About the topic... I think one can kind of “read between the lines” to suss out some kind of intention. It’s my feeling that people really want to be understood, even when they are being sneaky or something. Especially in our current culture, where it seems one has to scream or be on fire to even be noticed for a moment. Subtlety is not in the top 40 list of prized virtues at the moment. — 0 thru 9
Some people use other people as a means to an end, and good people don't. Good people treat other people as important in of themselves. — Daniel Cox
My professor friend just installed a new thermostat for me, I helped a little bit. He always makes me feel better about myself. It's the easiest thing in the world imo to know another's intent, the problem I have is letting go of negative people. — Daniel Cox
It's like a train wreck, i just have to keep attending. The fault of negative people in my life is all mine. — Daniel Cox
Wishing you the very best! What a great post! — Daniel Cox
Meaning, that some appeal to authority is required, which in my opinion goes against the very ethos of philosophy. And they call economics the dismal science. — Wallows
How do you present either of those traits in a post-modern, hyper-normalized world? — Wallows
In ordinary conversations with a person in real life we are able to see for ourselves what a person intends by their behavior, facial expressions, and other non-verbal cues; but, on the internet, we don't have access to this prominent feature of human interaction. — Wallows
I think one can kind of “read between the lines” to suss out some kind of intention. — 0 thru 9
The people I speak of are trolls, shills, internet bullies, and in the more abstract "sophists". These people exploit their anonymity and lack of discernable intent to promote ideas that can either be dangerous or downright stupid.
How does one resolve this issue of lack of discernable intent from discourse? — Wallows
Square one is logic, reason, and evidence in pursuit of truth above persuasiveness. That's the authority it appeals to by definition (or at least under most philosophical roofs). — VagabondSpectre
I wish to figuratively dump a couple bucketloads of warm slop on you, in the event that your wallowing hole is cooling off. I don't want you to get a chill. — Bitter Crank
How does one resolve this issue of lack of discernable intent from discourse? — Wallows
Sexual innuendos? Where! Where! — Bitter Crank
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