Why can't you post something more relevant and useful, like which type of baseball bat is best at breaking a political opponent's legs? — BitconnectCarlos
Lecturing users and giving them tips etc is largely pointless, because it's the publishing model which is the problem. — Hippyhead
This guy already joined this forum and posted his video a little while back. — SophistiCat
If so, the problem I see with a publishing model which is moderated is that it restricts the freedom of users. — zimti
The fundamental, and rather glaring, flaw in Hirstoff’s account is that everyone values truth and therefore it can provide common ground. I’m sure that everyone values truth to some degree, but the degrees vary, and some value other things above truth, and consequently motivations will also vary. — praxis
Sorry Hirnstoff but you lost me 2 minutes in this time.
I know your heart is in the right place, but when it comes to the flat earth it is probably not the case that Larry wants to "know the truth"; Larry wants to make the truth. — Srap Tasmaner
For example there was an article in the WSJ today about a school in Chicago which was pushing teachers to grant minority students artificially higher grades in the name of decreasing the achievement gap. Maybe this is racial justice, who knows, but it's not justice in the traditional sense. — BitconnectCarlos
The fundamental, and rather glaring, flaw in Hirstoff’s account is that everyone values truth and therefore it can provide common ground. I’m sure that everyone values truth to some degree, but the degrees vary, and some value other things above truth, and consequently motivations will also vary.
— praxis
Yes, some people cannot be argued with, but I think the majority of people actually do care quite a bit about what's true and what's not. They have to (at least on some level) because they wouldn't even survive otherwise. In the end reality always wins and will punish everyone for their incorrect description of it. Let's focus on all those people that do care about truth instead of giving up beforehand, because some people don't. — Hirnstoff
It's remarkable that you think this could be considered racial justice. Offhand, to me it sounds like the school is simply doctoring the numbers to look good or meet some standard. They're cheating (the minority kids most of all), in other words. — praxis
It's remarkable that you think this could be considered racial justice. Offhand, to me it sounds like the school is simply doctoring the numbers to look good or meet some standard. They're cheating (the minority kids most of all), in other words.
— praxis
I never committed myself to a position as to whether that policy would constitute racial justice. — BitconnectCarlos
I think the concept of racial justice is a suspect one in general... — BitconnectCarlos
... but if I were to accept it as a valid goal then blatant academic favoritism is not out of the question. — BitconnectCarlos
In any case my broader point was more just about how difficult discussion can be when the fundamental values of two individuals can be very much at odds. — BitconnectCarlos
That's what I found remarkable. But I didn't look into the case so I can't do anything but speculate. — praxis
Equal justice is generally suspect? How so? — praxis
This sounds like a strawman, but I may be misinterpreting you. — praxis
I don't think that our fundamental values differ much, actually. We just suppress or promote the values that are in accord with whatever tribe we belong to. A dedicated atheist can have a sense of the sacred, for instance, it's just that they revere something different than the theist. — praxis
I think what's happening here is that you're regarding "racial justice" as a sub-category of justice and I'm regarding the term more in its modern social usage. Racial justice in its modern usage generally refers to redressing historical wrongs through perks or advantages today that apply to only one group, e.g. reparations and affirmative action. Easier grading for minorities could easily fall into this category.
Of course I support justice, and that includes justice for everyone regardless of race, class, gender, etc. so in that sense I obviously support "racial justice" or "social justice." But the actual meanings of these terms today are quite different from just an extension of the conception of justice. — BitconnectCarlos
If someone is willing to prioritize their own ethnic group before justice/fairness then I just find it impossible [to carry on fruitful discussions]. — BitconnectCarlos
And I agree with you about how atheists can still have a sense of the sacred. I wouldn't be surprised if much of the environmentalism/conservation debates today are at its core clashing conception of the "sacred." — BitconnectCarlos
Does this mean that you're a science denier? — praxis
I don't think that you can win over a racist with reason. Their sense of fairness has to overcome the privileges of being part of the majority, if nothing else. — praxis
It sounds like you're more concerned with ideology than with extensions of the conception of justice or sub-categories of justice. If concerned with fair and equal justice, and a belief that that is a goal worth pursuing, it's easy to see how some approaches may be better than others, or that some approaches may even be corrupt. If an ideology doesn't value fair and equal justice then it may well consider the whole enterprise suspect. — praxis
Justice can apply to individuals, when it applies to entire groups it is more suspect. — BitconnectCarlos
So I suppose that we agree in a need for ever-vigilant suspicion and support for racial justice. — praxis
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