I find it really unfortunate that we have to have children, like Greta Thunberg, promoting something that should be obviously clear about dangers that we all face collectively.
Not to isolate Greta as one case on the matter, the same thing is going on with the U.S. if anyone recalls the school protests after the Sandy Hook mass shooting.
The issue seems to be complex. Children are rejecting going to school and the curriculum over perceived dangers or injustices. In economics, this is strangely similar to the prisoner's dilemma, in terms of accepting a future where both are free to do what they want and are coerced by punishment not to fink on one another. Yet, the children are finking on the adults, who they (should) perceive as their more informed fiduciaries. How do you even begin to explain that, and perhaps more importantly in what terms? — Wallows
I count Greta Thunberg as fortunate because she's someone who seems to be sufficiently removed from the struggles of life and therefore has the time and energy to feel for one of the problems we are'll going to have to deal with in the future and then act on those feelings. — TheMadFool
Feelings... So, what do you make out of her feelings? Is it empathy or something else, like anger or outrage? — Wallows
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.