“We've arranged a global civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology. We have also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology. This is a prescription for disaster. We might get away with it for a while, but sooner or later this combustible mixture of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces.” — Xtrix
Thales (first philosopher/first scientist/first physicist) has met an unkind fate in his old age. He went out from the court of his house at night, as was his custom, with his maidservant to view the stars, and forgetting where he was, as he gazed, he got to the edge of a steep slope and fell over. In such wise have the Milesians lost their astronomer. Let us who were his pupils cherish his memory, and let it be cherished by our children and pupils. — An ancient writer relating how Thales' absent-mindedness did the great philosopher in
Have you read the rest? Typical male.You provided an example already. Women who think Covid vax will make them infertile (there is no evidence for this). — Tom Storm
What's the use of saving your body when it costs you your soul?But others include; people with mental illness who think that covid medication will allow the police to control their behaviour. Because of negative experiences with involuntary psychiatric medication in their past.
Aboriginal Australians thinking the medication with kill them or make them sick because of negative experiences with 'white medicine' in the past. Incidentally I am working with Aboriginal staff and elders to encourage Aboriginal people to have their vaccinations.
People with alcohol misuse who believe that alcohol helps them to survive life (they can drink away traumatic memories). Here's the tip - it doesn't work.
All of these appear to be reasonable positions to hold but are ultimately unhelpful.
It's still not clear why you call it a matter of "stupidity". Perhaps it's the most convenient to do so.And there is the problem of resources. Every outfit has managers competing for the best people in an organization to work for them. What is that like? These culture models are weak beer in addressing the problem. — Valentinus
Agreed, they can shift very quickly, as if such shifting would be the whole point. I brought up the distinction because I hoped it would help me to clarify something else, namely, how to distinguish between stupidity and confidence. To me, even freezing/panicking can be acts of confidence.The text you quoted from me was a response to the work culture views you had linked to. My disagreement with the utility of the division is not based upon my theory of the stupid. My disagreement was a rejection of the idea that people operate strictly on one basis or another. The world of actual work shows that these elements are all mushed together in real and very short time. That, in any case, has been my experience. — Valentinus
?You seem to be suggesting it is something we pin the tail upon like the donkey in the parlor game.
Not sure how else to respond to the claim that Theravada Buddhists don't believe in emptiness. — praxis
Normally, when Buddhists talk of emptiness, they mean it in the Mahayana sense ("nothing has any inherent existence or nature"). But that's not what it means in Theravada
I fight the good fight because all the tyranny of stupidity needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent. — praxis
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