It can feel rewarding in many ways to feel that one has the "best" preferences, that what I enjoy, I enjoy because of my great taste. Others just don't "get" why what I like is so good, they're the ones missing out. This kind of validation produces feelings of superiority, confidence, pride and success. — Judaka
1) Assuming narratives that condemn, demean, mock or hold in contempt people for their actions, characteristics, skills, beliefs, preferences, views etc — Judaka
But that leaves one confronting the case of a weak person who refuses to be carried, or the stupid person who refuses to be questioned. — James Riley
‘weak’ and ‘stupid’. It sounds like hostility is embedded in your articulation of the issue. If we could just get people to stopacting so stupid, weak and condemnable we could solve the issue of aggression. — Joshs
press on with what every one knows is intended, regardless of the incorrectness of the terms used. — James Riley
Its not the correctness or incorrectness of the terms Im
focusing on, it’s that they are terms of hostility masquerading as neutral descriptions. — Joshs
You’re describing what you believe are objective character flaws, but I see our judgements of other people’s ‘character flaws’ as typically forms of hostility. — Joshs
but I see our judgements of other people’s ‘character flaws’ as typically forms of hostility. — Joshs
See my terms for anger in my previous post on this thread. — Joshs
I see our judgements of other people’s ‘character flaws’ as typically forms of hostility.
— Joshs
I don't. — James Riley
, does this mean that thisunderstandable, relatable and human. — James Riley
they only describe limits of capability in a non-moral sense? — Joshs
How to love an enemy? — James Riley
How to think the meaning of the word ‘enemy’ that is not already fraught with affects of alienation and threat. — Joshs
To
the extent that we find it necessary to use a word like ‘ enemy’ to deceive another, we are still in the midst of a kind of crisis of empathy. — Joshs
Only when we no longer have to label
the other as ‘ enemy’ do we truly find ourselves free of our puzzlement and failure to understand
the other. — Joshs
“If, rather than getting angry or condemning another who wrongs me, I respond with loving forgiveness, my absolution of the other presupposes my hostility toward them. I can only forgive the other's trespass to the extent that I recognize a sign of contrition or confession on their part. Ideals of so-called unconditional forgiveness, of turning the other cheek, loving one's oppressor, could also be understood as conditional in various ways. In the absence of the other's willingness to atone, I may forgive evil when I believe that there are special or extenuating circumstances which will allow me to view the perpetrator as less culpable (the sinner knows not what he does). I can say the other was blinded or deluded, led astray. My offer of grace is then subtly hostile, both an embrace and a slap. I hold forth the carrot of my love as a lure, hoping thereby to uncloud the other's conscience so as to enable them to discover their culpability. In opening my arms, I hope the prodigal son will return chastised, suddenly aware of a need to be forgiven. Even when there is held little chance that the sinner will openly acknowledge his sin, I may hope that my outrage connects with a seed of regret and contrition buried deep within the other, as if my `unconditional' forgiveness is an acknowledgment of God's or the subliminal conscience of the other's apologizing in the name of the sinner.” — Joshs
you are making all these inferences based on your understanding of the meaning of terms which are not being used in the sense you apply to them. — James Riley
it seems to me that it all springs from insecurity; a concern with how you want to be perceived by yourself or by others. — James Riley
That will not help you with those "others" because we are not all one (at least from a temporal, sense of interhuman relations). — James Riley
To
the extent that we find it necessary to use a word like ‘ enemy’ to deceive another, we are still in the midst of a kind of crisis of empathy.
— Joshs
Again, you infer deceit. — James Riley
Before you get bent out of shape , you’re right. — Joshs
What does insecurity spring from? Is it irreducible, or it it the manifestation of difficulties in making sense of social situations, in relating to the perspectives of others? There is no hostility, aggression, anger, condemnation without insecurity , but there is no insecurity without the experience of failure to relate to the thinking of others, and this includes our understanding of how they regard us and why. This failure to relate isn’t a personality trait or character issue , but an existential, situational issue. — Joshs
What Im getting at is that I believe there are
more satisfying philosophical approaches out there than the ones which support a ‘love your enemy’ narrative. They begin from a better grounding in how to understand human drives, motives, intentions and values and thus what causes individual human values to differ from each other. — Joshs
Where I believe strong cannot complain about weak, and wise cannot complain about stupid, it raises the question of how the strong and wise are to related to others without violating these principles and therefor exhibiting their own weakness and stupidity (humanity) in doing so. — James Riley
aggression — Judaka
condemn, demean, mock or hold in contempt people for their actions, characteristics, skills, beliefs, preferences, views etc — Judaka
As you mentioned, there can be a variety of motivations for alienating other persons or groups, but I think the central motive for harm, violence and rejection of others is feeling the emotion of anger. — Joshs
But in a second step, we generate the possibility of forcing them back to the way we believe they should have acted in the first place. — Joshs
The hierarchy exists in the mind of the aggressor, whether it exists in any other form or not. — Judaka
You can call a man weak and a "bitch" or say a professor was being toxic without trying to emphasise how you're different - and better. — Judaka
However, isn't this inference basically necessary for your comments to make sense, how can you condemn people if you're no better? — Judaka
Doesn't it only make sense if you're above their behaviour? — Judaka
And isn't it necessary for you to put these "fakes" in their place? — Judaka
Isn't that kind of what you've been doing here in this thread? — Judaka
On this view, to "condemn, demean, mock or hold in contempt" for their attributes is legitimate; after all if the attributes are flawed in any way and if attributes define identity, the aggressor is justified in criticizing the person. — TheMadFool
We still agree X = weak/stupid, right? Z = my theoretical aggressor, Y = strong/wise. — Judaka
Z could be arguing on the superiority — Judaka
what's important are the feelings he evokes in himself — Judaka
Do you have any advice on how we could identify Z? — Judaka
Z is weak and stupid because he is aggressive? — Judaka
Or because he is motivated by the inferences he can make when being aggressive? — Judaka
Can someone really become weak and stupid just because you don't like what they're doing? — Judaka
what you're doing is no different than Z, making assertions based on how convenient it'd be if it were true. — Judaka
Is your weak/stupid, strong/wise dynamic, just a way for you to assert control over your environment? — Judaka
The prerequisites of these terms are defined by your ideals but you retain their conventional meaning? — Judaka
When you call someone weak, what you really mean is some specific, non-standard prerequisites have been met but when you call someone weak, that comes with the cultural power associated with the word. — Judaka
Nobody wants to be called weak, but probably nobody cares about meeting your specific prerequisites, based on ideals they don't follow. Best of both worlds, right? — Judaka
According to my definition. — Judaka
how do you determine whether someone is / is being weak or stupid? — Judaka
I don't see how you can assert Z must be X, I don't understand why you're X if you can't convince a buffoon like Trump, as if Trump hasn't ignored very competent, intelligent and accomplished people at every turn? — Judaka
If only!Not an extensive list but I think it is important to remember that people may be acting in a certain way because it feels good and is emotionally rewarding rather than assuming it is deeper than that. I think this kind of thing is worst in high school and then most people gradually grow out of it as they get older. I see a lot of younger people getting drunk on these feelings but others' treatment of them is not necessarily reflective of this. Instead, they're seen as passionate or immature, which they might be but it may not be the ultimate cause. — Judaka
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