https://www.open.edu/openlearn/history-the-arts/culture/philosophy/kant-on-trustMistrust and suspicion are on the increase in our society; and confidence in our institutions is in decline. To understand why a “crisis of trust” is so serious, we must take account of the philosophy of Immanuel Kant, who placed honesty and trustworthiness at the heart of his theory of how we should live.
When men choose not to believe in God, they do not thereafter believe in nothing, they then become capable of believing in anything. — G K Chesterton
It used to be that politicians had to resign when their decisions or their claims were shown to be wrong, but not now. — unenlightened
Please talk about TRUST, and the importance of telling the truth, and how these things can be sustained in a merely human and imperfect world — unenlightened
Here's a question, is enforced honesty - pure honesty?Rather, I wonder if there is any agreement that honesty in public life should be enforceable in principle in somewhat the same way that it is in business? — unenlightened
Not really. If you get scammed, you don't deserve a reprisal; but it's common practice - partly due to goodwill, partly due to sales tactics.If my new gizmo doesn't do what it says on the tin, I am entitled to my money back; — unenlightened
In his enforcement of Putin’s will — or his own interpretation of it — Surkov carefully constructed and presided over a system in which Russians could play-act an intricate imitation of democracy. Every persuasion on the political spectrum was given a Kremlin-backed voice within the system as Surkov ensured that the Kremlin organized and funded a wide range of political groups and movements, from liberal to Communist to conservative, sowing confusion and cynicism in the public while at the same time co-opting any genuine opposition. The messengers differed, but the message was the same — the Kremlin was always in control. Under Surkov’s simulation of politics, dissent wasn’t crushed: it was managed.
I wonder if there is any agreement that honesty in public life should be enforceable in principle in somewhat the same way that it is in business? — unenlightened
His war stance with Iran, anti immigration policies, his control and enhancement of budget. — Schzophr
Rather, I wonder if there is any agreement that honesty in public life should be enforceable in principle in somewhat the same way that it is in business? — unenlightened
That's how a representational democracy govt. works. You choose someone to handle the budget. If you don't like how they handled the budget, vote for someone else next election.There are particular threads to discuss particular cases, so I don't want to get lost in trying to decide them here. Rather, I wonder if there is any agreement that honesty in public life should be enforceable in principle in somewhat the same way that it is in business? If my new gizmo doesn't do what it says on the tin, I am entitled to my money back; perhaps I could sue if my taxes are misspent? — unenlightened
I don't think we can talk about the decline of trust in public without talking about the political use of fear and the political strategy of anti-politics. — fdrake
That's how a representational democracy govt. works. You choose someone to handle the budget. If you don't like how they handled the budget, vote for someone else next election. — Harry Hindu
One man's "failed" politician is another man's "successful" politician. That is politics. So maybe we should eliminate politicians and representation and just let all citizens use the internet to vote for any bill or budget that is proposed. What a hoot that would be!To expect that failed politicians resign or be sacked is no odder than to expect surgeons that fail to resign or be sacked. — unenlightened
When that goes, well, anything goes. Which was a hit song in the 1930’s. — Wayfarer
Rather, I wonder if there is any agreement that honesty in public life should be enforceable in principle in somewhat the same way that it is in business? If my new gizmo doesn't do what it says on the tin, I am entitled to my money back; perhaps I could sue if my taxes are misspent? — unenlightened
The question then is why can't we sue every politician who secures votes saying he will not vote for X the minute he votes for X if he is just another gizmo producer? — Hanover
except to the extent the acts of politicians amount to actual violations of law. — Hanover
And how do you subject politicians to legal restrictions when it is the politicians that define the legal restrictions?Well all I am suggesting is that politicians be subject to the same kind of legal restrictions as every other citizen in every other kind of job. — unenlightened
Which is what I said earlier:Well first you try voting for the ones that agree with you — unenlightened
If you don't like how they handled the budget, vote for someone else next election. — Harry Hindu
Good luck. One man's revolutionary is another man's terrorist.and if that doesn't work, you start a revolution. — unenlightened
I'd like to try, anyway. I gave a link in the op to the Open Learning site. It is a source I trust, both academically and politically. I trust them, not to be perfect, but to be careful; to be concerned to be accurate and unbiased in their material. Likewise, I generally trust the ingredients list on food packaging to be accurate. And as Wallows points out, money is entirely made of trust - well trust and rather thin paper. It's not a matter of left or right particularly - social life, economic life, law and order, governance, academia, science, every good thing depends on trust. — unenlightened
The difference is that there is no enforcement of any standard. In the UK it used to be managed by peer pressure — unenlightened
Socially necessary trust can perhaps be called an operative belief seen in our actions, even if the emotional valences of trust are not there. — fdrake
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