I think you are referring to fundamentalist religion. I think it is arguable that most religious people are not fundamentalists. — Janus
For me the problem with what you seem to be proposing is that it would require everyone to be a highly critical thinker. — Janus
I just don't believe most people have the capacity for that; it is not merely a matter of lack of education. — Janus
No, I am referring to the fact that God-belief is a human psychological delusion, a projection. — JerseyFlight
What's this? Your argument is that people should be deluded? Have you even thought about this? This is pure resignation. It is also a form of elitism. You are indeed special, so special that you know other people cannot be like you, where you have awareness there they should be consigned to error? — JerseyFlight
In disbelief. ??? You know what? — JerseyFlight
Do you believe you are free from it? — Janus
No, it is elitist to suppose that you can pontificate as to what is and what is not delusion for others. — Janus
There are natural variations in degrees of intelligence..." — Janus
You seem naive and idealistic in these matters. — Janus
I don’t think it is possible for a a group as large as 7 billion people to agree that such proactive measures are necessary. — xraymike79
EVEN IF we 8 billion people, woke up and decided to start acting right now, it would be very hard work to prevent the cascade. I conclude that we are totally screwed. — Bitter Crank
Now I'm unexpectedly old, and humanity is if anything more fuck-witted than back in the 60's. Sorry kids, I tried to live green, I didn't go flying, or buy cars, I stopped eating meat. I preached and practiced as best I could. Nobody was listening and not many are still. — unenlightened
I reject your self-contradictory subjectivity which states we cannot tell the difference between truth and error. — JerseyFlight
I believe that all humans, including myself, are tragically prone to error, that is why we make use of intellectual standards. — JerseyFlight
You are changing the topic here. You said my position only applied to fundamentalism, this is not the case. The fact that you validate my premise means you agree with my position. — JerseyFlight
It is elitist to say that people should be fed on a diet of delusion because they do not have the resources for critical thinking. No doubt, there is some truth to this, but not for the fatalistic reasons you seem to portray here. If they lack the resources it is because their social experience was one of poverty. — JerseyFlight
The variation you speak of is not a genetic predetermination, it is created by environment and psychological care. — JerseyFlight
You are a material being, and ALL of your quality originates not from yourself but from your experience of collective community.
I don't play your abstract, idealistic privilege that seeks to separate its quality from every material fact that accounts for its being.
If you have intelligence it's not because you are special, it's because you are lucky. — JerseyFlight
No you are failing to make the crucial distinction between fundamentalist — Janus
It would be elitist if I had said that, but I haven't. — Janus
If you deny that there is any natural variation in intelligence..." — Janus
It is not a matter of "either/ or" but "both/ and". — Janus
Nature and human life are not as simplistic as you would seem to like to paint them. — Janus
think that there are no such things as material differences between people. — Janus
we are naturally variant in our gifts — Janus
I haven't said that anyone ought to be treated any differently on account of their natural gifts, though, and if I had that would be elitist. — Janus
talented individuals are special insofar as their natural gifts exceed the average, and this is the same in the visual arts, in music, in sports, in regard to physical strength and mental acuity. — Janus
Whether those gifts are cultivated and developed is an entirely different matter. — Janus
it must revise itself in the consciousness, of what appears to be, the most profound negation of being. — JerseyFlight
In that dimension of adaption we have no choice.
I think what fdrake had in mind with his comment is something like 'you have to work within the system to live a successful life' where "successful life" means something like contributing to the overall betterment of human life. — Janus
It's quite hard to fight off hedonism from this vantage. — JerseyFlight
In that dimension of adaption we have no choice.
I think what fdrake had in mind with his comment is something like 'you have to work within the system to live a successful life' where "successful life" means something like contributing to the overall betterment of human life — Janus
There is no such thing as a "natural gift," as you speak of it here. — JerseyFlight
It's not a question of how I'm speaking of it; it's very straightforward, it's just natural variation. Are you seriously claiming that some people are not more naturally talented than others in the various fields of human endeavor? — Janus
I think it's time for a reality-check, dude. — Janus
you are too deluded — Janus
you are apparently just another proselytizer, who would rather distort what your interlocutors — Janus
your tendency to distort the words — Janus
despite your apparent pretensions — Janus
you are actually a closed-minded ideologue, and thus also a self-deluding hypocrite. — Janus
However, you have forced the issue here, so you must explain what you mean by, "natural variation," that some people are "more naturally talented?" — JerseyFlight
Talent is not an attribute without a history, remove the concrete and it doesn't exist. (There is no Michael Jordan without the basketball court and hoop he had access to as a boy). — JerseyFlight
No, I will not play by your privileged rules. Like I said, it was people like you, specifically with this kind of self-righteous attitude of superiority, that crushed people like my grandfather and father. You need to be knocked off your perch, all the social benefits you received from society, that's what accounts for your quality, remove this and there is nothing left. — JerseyFlight
I have not been attacking you personally but drawing out brutal, material contradictions of your idealist position. — JerseyFlight
I am simply stating the obvious — Janus
Michael Jordan is a tall, powerfully constituted athletic type of person — Janus
You know nothing about me or my life. — Janus
Quote one example of anything I have said that would reasonably count as a "brutal, material contradiction" or show that my "position" is "idealist". — Janus
You tried to claim that talent is an attribute that pops into existence as a magical genetic structure. — JerseyFlight
And you do? Why? — JerseyFlight
not every horse can become a champion no matter how much training they receive. — Janus
I think what fdrake had in mind with his comment is something like 'you have to work within the system to live a successful life' where "successful life" means something like contributing to the overall betterment of human life. — Janus
As with any suggestive one liner, I meant a few things by it. In the context of the plausible threat of collapse of our civilisation in the next 100 years, and the by-and-large institutional indifference to that risk. — fdrake
Who knows what we'll be able to retain and what will be lost (beyond the obvious things which depend entirely on fossil fuel use)? Will medical science and technology be able to continue to develop for example? — Janus
One estimate I have come across is that organic framing (which must return and completely displace industrial framing if we, and many other species and habitats are to survive) can sustain only about 200,000,000 people. If this is right then there must be a drastic reduction of population over the next 50 years if we are to avoid total collapse of our ecosystems. — Janus
Personally I don't see how civilization, as it currently exists (or until recently has existed; global and prosperous for many with prosperity growing) is possible to sustain, given that it has been a one-off bonanza of growth enabled by fossil fuels. De-growth now seems inevitable as resources wane. — Janus
The extremely annoying thing is that greening production of electricity works - solar and wind are just as efficient now, electric trains and buses and cars are a thing (though large passenger aeroplanes still look a while off); stuff of that size being feasible makes it agriculture at scale feasible I think. Most petrochemicals are recyclable - though under 10% are recycled by our current production strategies. — fdrake
Sustainable agriculture looks workable at scale? Long term resources except electricity are finite, though. — fdrake
I find myself increasingly incline towards misanthropy. It's the form of Humanism that realises that all we have is each other, then looks around in despair. — Banno
Kenosha Kid, I'd like to add to that, that while the idea itself from the example you gave may be stupid, I can understand the general sentiment behind it. People have been lied to continuously in order to get them to sacrifice for the greater good, only to learn that the greater good usually meant some select group.
So rather than stupidity, it seem to me it's more a case of wilful defiance. There is no trust whatsoever in what authorities say, and a sense of living in a world that is only out to get you... which has led to a deep cynicism and instinctive reactions to try to repel manipulation. — ChatteringMonkey
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