How many more times must I say that my semiotic approach is founded not on determinism but indeterminism. Constraints and freedoms co-arise in mutually synergistic fashion. — apokrisis
There are a lot of things you don't want to talk about in creating your "unified front" against Scientism. — apokrisis
Whether it is telling me that your big daddy in the sky is going to come and get me, or yours is the exclusive back-slapping club to which I can't belong, it always comes back to the pragmatics of social power. — apokrisis
If a balance is desirable, then why shouldn't a balance be attempted? Why would you let the perfect become the enemy of the good? (Or is this one of those non-commonsense examples of religious/artistic wisdom that I was asking for.) — apokrisis
You mean like ... politics? — apokrisis
So how, in your solipsistic ethics, do you handle paedophiles and crack addicts? They are just doing what makes them feel good, right? Should you be able to curtail their pleasures by introducing some kind of constraint on their lives?
And is virtue not a good even if virtue means some degree of personal sacrifice?
Where do your ethical simplicities stop and some real moral theory start? — apokrisis
Where in this schema does 'contemplation of the One' fit in? That is the 'acme of reason' for Aristotle, as for all Platonists. It is at once aesthetic, intellectual, and spiritual. — Wayfarer
I don't recognize Aristotle in this. The contemplation of the one comes later, surely, with Plotinus. Aristotle is careful not to say he's a Platonist. — mcdoodle
What are you talking about? Are you denying that my phenomenological experience is in fact a balance of the positive and the negative? — apokrisis
Does personal, first-person experience with complex variety not occur for you? — apokrisis
Anyway, you were addressing my question about paedophiles and crack addicts. Do you think their "is" should be our "ought"? No matter how good they think something is, would you not wish to draw a moral line on behalf of society? — apokrisis
The key word here is BALANCE. — schopenhauer1
I also do not consider the pain involved in exercise or learning something new a "harm" so you don't have to include that red herring, which you are prone to do. — schopenhauer1
Are you suggesting that I take some ethical stance that whatever someone believes is the right action must be the right action? — schopenhauer1
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