Religion has been on earth for thousands and thousands of years and it never figured out, and does not know how to produce healthy humans. — JerseyFlight
Knowing that knowledge is a privileged enterprise empowers us to create a more intelligent species. — JerseyFlight
This is all very idealistic. — apokrisis
It is indeed a significant fact of history that humans have shifted up a level from being "emotional" animals to being "rational" beings due to the semiotic power of developing language. — apokrisis
I think we at least have to start closer to the pragmatic truth of knowledge. It must be serving a purpose. The question becomes whose? — apokrisis
But have we overshot the mark in trying to construct a purely rational society? Or even a purely mechanistic one, now that we have added the semiotics of numerical syntax to that of linguistic syntax? — apokrisis
It could also be that this is just Hegelian inevitability. We are following Nature's course somewhere "good". It is a live question. And the deeper one to be addressed. — apokrisis
Right now you are manifesting, not that you have superior will power, but that you have been a beneficiary of society to a higher degree than others. — JerseyFlight
Last time I checked food and water were the basic building blocks of intellectual life. Do you deny this? — JerseyFlight
It is not an abstract problem when we talk about poverty and lack of education throughout the world. — JerseyFlight
Seriously, imagine putting these questions to a million war torn refugees. — JerseyFlight
If we know we are determined by social process and resources, isn't it intelligent to try to intelligently determine this process? — JerseyFlight
I said you are being idealist because you are not understanding that Nature is also about the imperative of entropy production - the dissipation of material gradients. — apokrisis
This is all very idealistic. Knowledge is not something disembodied and abstract. At least not in the form that modern society is privileging it. — apokrisis
That is where pragmatism is a corrective. It makes us go looking for the reasons why we would even hold rationality, science and a good education in such high regard. Society is training us for something! — apokrisis
No this is not all "very idealistic" but very materialistic — JerseyFlight
I'm not exactly sure what you mean by this? — JerseyFlight
We don't need millions of people asking the privileged question of why we would hold rationality, science or good education in such high regard, you are ignoring the concrete fact that the positive fruit of these categories already exists, — JerseyFlight
I comprehend what you are asking, it was asked, far more profoundly than you are asking it here, by the Frankfurt School. — JerseyFlight
I referenced an exceedingly important text by Allan Schore, in this text he has traced the biological and psychological development of human beings from the early stages of life. This is a major game changer — JerseyFlight
We must overcome the psychological desire to prove something about ourselves, we must reach the point of maturity where we are trying to change something in society, not merely prove ourselves in society. — JerseyFlight
Religion has been on earth for thousands and thousands of years and it never figured out, and does not know how to produce healthy humans. — JerseyFlight
Knowing that knowledge is a privileged enterprise empowers us to create a more intelligent species.
You call the fruits positive. That is the presumption I have challenged you to justify. — apokrisis
...not driven by defense mechanism or insecure rigidity. — JerseyFlight
You are smart enough to know that when you answer my questions you will end up validating the very category you tried to deny, which then provides the premise from which to deduce my position. — JerseyFlight
For example, it is unlikely that a child growing up in the tragedy and violence of Syria, is going to have advanced knowledge in philosophy or science, let alone even much awareness of itself or the world. — JerseyFlight
You are now engaged in Ad Hominems. Please answer my questions. — JerseyFlight
Your position, in order to qualify as a refutation of my position, — JerseyFlight
We’ve established that you have no particular position. — apokrisis
I have no interest in evading my burden of proof. I am not trying to play a posture game. I just want to seek out truth, my motivation is not to be right. You raised many points and some of them may indeed stand to correct my position. I would only be grateful for it. — JerseyFlight
Suppose I was talking about freedom in a time of slave plantations, and you went off on an abstract rant about "whose interests [would this freedom serve] would you be wanting to impose some universal system of freedom?" — JerseyFlight
Just like you would be telling me I was wrong to speak of freedom back then, you are telling me that I am wrong to speak of education now. — JerseyFlight
I hold my tongue, but you are seriously a despicable intellectual. — JerseyFlight
The question would be what interest was being served? That purpose would explain why some interest group might take one view rather than another. And my general position would be to ask whether some universal system of freedom could even be the case. What would it look like if it was to meet all possible purposes of a variety of interest groups? — apokrisis
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