What I am after is getting intellectuals to engage culture precisely to make human existence better. — JerseyFlight
I don't attack intellectuals because I have been psychologically burned by them, but because I see the loss of so much valuable energy wasted, unfocused, misplaced. — JerseyFlight
This is apparently judged to be a low quality proposal, so they moved the thread to the lounge. — Hippyhead
And status is a rare and limited resource. As such, there are barriers to it. Those who have obtained it have worked much harder and had greater skill than those around them. — Philosophim
If this was the reason your thread was moved, that is disappointing — JerseyFlight
As much as we would like other people to behave better for ours and other's benefit, it cannot be done by appeal, but by example. — Philosophim
When we speak of direct activity we are not talking about street protests, we are talking about polemics: direct intellectual engagement with the intelligentsia.
Analytical thinkers are scared to death of dialectical thinkers, if they can censor them they will. The irony is quite hilarious, analytical thinkers consider themselves to be the elites of the philosophical world, but theirs is just a more abstract form of idealism. When the dialectical thinker shatters their false presumptions of value, they sense the total loss of their authority and cultural relevance, and so they either run away or try to attack or suppress the dialectical thinker. — JerseyFlight
If intellectuals are irresponsible as you claim, and/or inept as I claim, what is the argument for engaging them? Before we consider such engagement to be productive action, don't we need some evidence that it will be successful in reaching some of the goals you have outlined? — Hippyhead
This was exactly Adorno's position, that we need to be able to calculate, in one form or another, that our revolutionary action will have some relevant level of effectiveness. — JerseyFlight
So how did he calculate the opportunity for effectiveness? — Hippyhead
Status and authority are most often accumulated by those with a talent for accumulating status and authority. This talent may have little to nothing to do with the performance of their duties. Case in point, Donald Trump. — Hippyhead
For my part, when I look at thought, I do not think about the cultural status of the person who is thus speaking, I pay attention to the content of what is being said! In my life as a thinker I have found that most thinkers do the opposite — JerseyFlight
Some, through wisdom, do actually give heed to substance as opposed to form, — JerseyFlight
I don't think Adorno ever did, keep in mind I have criticized critical theory for getting lost in itself. Nevertheless, the question is exceedingly important. I think one thing that stands out is that thought must know how to select the right emphasis. The way I have calculated is by reverse engineering culture through an analysis of effective historical action. However, we have much more than this. We have cultural psychology and social psychology, which help to guide the process. The answer is through a multi-disciplinary comprehension of the social sciences. — JerseyFlight
This suggestion, advice, actually an injunction, is to be found in every basic course in logic — TheMadFool
Indeed it does friend, but it's tragic that our psychological structure is so emotionally set against it, that even those who teach it still fall prey to it. I have seen it happen repeatedly. Even though this may be taught throughout the world my experience tells me that it's exceedingly rare. The problem is that it takes a different form in our own psyche, one we cannot detect. We don't even realize we're doing it. — JerseyFlight
Do you think engaging intellectuals can be useful? If yes, why? — Hippyhead
The specialization isn't a bad thing but without proper knowledge of what that may bring can be devastating. We need people who study the intellectuals and convene on what they have observed about them being in their specialization and how their attitude is to other disciplines. Also intellectuals should not continue themselves to limit themselves to a singular discipline in order to diversify thinking and problem solving. — River Lantzantz
It's strange that this assumption repeatedly surfaces as I have discussed this topic throughout the years. — JerseyFlight
Negative Dialectics. Get the lectures not the book, though the book is superior, it will be rough going — JerseyFlight
At this point in my life, I think I'll skip negative dialectics. The time remaining is short and there are other avenues I wish to pursue. — Bitter Crank
Ok, but it can be said that the need is greater now. You know, modern civilization can now be destroyed, perhaps by mistake, in just a few minutes. — Hippyhead
Translation: where reality is negative there I bury my head in the sand. — JerseyFlight
This is not to say that every intellectual or every academic is Elitist. — JerseyFlight
I see this as a serious problem because the intellectuals have begun to function as a new ruling class. — JerseyFlight
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