suppose.. in that random crazy scenario there's some point. — Outlander
Can I steal your house or wife just because I can do something better with either than perhaps you can at present? Just curious.
I mean, who knows. Maybe he sacrificed time and energy that could have been used to build the strength and endurance needed to throw said item as far just so he could be able to purchase said item legitimately. What then? — Outlander
The resentment in the story itself is palpable to me. — Srap Tasmaner
On the other hand, the story itself could be the kind of fairy tale you might tell to get Real Patriots to take back their country from the effete elite. — Srap Tasmaner
What would you say if I told you that the Javelin represents philosophy? — MSC
Now, you're thinking about the psychology behind the philosophy! — MSC
Well I'm a person you know. I have a family and a job and everything. I can psycho-analyze total strangers all day long. I just don't see any reason to call doing that "philosophy". — Srap Tasmaner
I hope you know that my feelings that lead to writing this, are not directed at you? — MSC
I am genuinely glad to hear that. I seriously hesitated about talking about the story itself as resentful -- other people's lives, especially here, are none of my business. But you made it clear you wanted feedback. I seriously worried that it would be hurtful for me to say that. — Srap Tasmaner
The way I interpret this is that the first guy has a loser's mindset. He'd rather protect his own ego and simply follow what the instructions (i.e. learn the "right" way) say than actually learn how to do his craft better. Then when someone upstages him he just gets resentful and bitter instead of either trying to learn from the guy or look inward and critically examining his own approach to the javelin instead of just regarding it as flawless because he knows the instructions. He thinks he knows the craft because he seems to be possess a limited amount of knowledge that he gained from the instruction manual, it's classic amateur thinking he is expert.
I see this in poker a lot. Nobody cares how you think the game "should" be played - everyone thinks they're decent or an expert. Learn when people get the better of you and leave your ego at the door. At least that's the way I read it. — BitconnectCarlos
... collapsible Javelin. — MSC
The reason I included it in the story was to illustrate that appearances and novelty matter to the buyer. — MSC
Made me laugh. — MSC
I'm a refugee from the old 'Philosophy Forums' and, where my philosophical skills lacked quite a bit, I often tried to lighten the mood with a bit of 'non-sequitur' humor. I kind of always sided with Ludi Wittgenstein who said, “A serious and good philosophical work could be written consisting entirely of jokes." — Mayor of Simpleton
Does humour ever shed light on philosophical problems? — MSC
Humour does quite often sheds unwanted light upon the 'agents' of philosophical problems who prefer to live in the shadow lands (or behind the curtain) and exposes supposed philosophical problems for being poorly asked questions or just statements being stated with a inquisitive tonality (conclusions wearing a questions clothing).
I do hope I failed... success is so boring.
I prefer fail again, try again, try to fail better over any participation trophies...
... or collapsible Javelins (most likely an impulse purchase one late night from the ACME Corporation as recommended by Wile E Coyote - 'Super Genius': https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QHDO78QfLbE ) in a glass case (something only a helicopter mother can be proud of). — Mayor of Simpleton
So your answer, if I am understanding it correctly is that there are no philosophical problems? — MSC
Indeed there are philosophical problems... in fact, quite a large number of them.
What it is I find all too often are 'impostors'; extremely poorly asked questions or statements/conclusions that are designed to act as if they were indeed philosophical questions. These 'impostors' demand the attention rather than command attention. Still they tend to attract a good number of folks due to some sort of popular affinity one might share with the notions implied, yet have the implications pimped as 'harmlessly asked' or even worse 'the given without proof', veiled with a variety of confirmation biases. Indeed they are popular as most are usually soft targets and require less critical thinking or critical self-evaluation.
Well... that didn't make much sense at all, so you see why I stick to the jokes. Believe me, no matter how far I toss this statement around (15 meter or more) I certainly won't be 'pleased with myself' or place it in a glass case. — Mayor of Simpleton
Only problems of language, mathematics, ethics and logistics, to name a few. — MSC
might suggest that all of those are all subsets of philosophy; thus in the end... philosophical problems, but I suppose that's another 'philosophical problem' for another thread? — Mayor of Simpleton
I'd say it's a linguistic problem. If the problems of objective sciences are grouped together, then aren't we just using the term 'sub-set' when really we are just creating a blanket term for those problems? — MSC
I'll watch the video very soon. — MSC
Is purchasing more legitimate than making? Doesn't someone have to first make, in order for the made to be bought? — MSC
Here is a question for you. In the story, which was the more legitimate throw? Should either of the throws made by either people be seen as illegitimate? If so, who's throw was more legitimate? — MSC
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