Well, the individual was there before society, so who was the first to impose? — Tzeentch
It's not matter of cardinal order. Unless you want to argue that limiting one's ability to trespass is an imposition. At which point we are using "impose" in an unnatural way in order to support some ideal or dogmatic sense of personal permanent right of way.Well, the individual was there before society, so who was the first to impose? — Tzeentch
It's not matter of cardinal order. Unless you want to argue that limiting one's ability to trespass is an imposition. At which point we are using "impose" in an unnatural way in order to support some ideal or dogmatic sense of personal permanent right of way. — Cheshire
Unless you want to argue that limiting one's ability to trespass is an imposition. — Cheshire
It's not matter of cardinal order. — Cheshire
What's the source of such a right? — Tzeentch
What's the source of such a right? — Tzeentch
I think we'd have to settle this before making further progress. Where's the limit? At the extremes any perceived opposition to one's will becomes another's "imposition". Suppose I refuse to stand aside while you walk down the sidewalk. Has my mere persisting as a physical being managed to become an "imposition" by unnatural definition?Depending on the situation it sure can be. — Tzeentch
Suppose I refuse to stand aside while you walk down the sidewalk. — Cheshire
Has my mere persisting as a physical being managed to become an "imposition" .... — Cheshire
At the extremes any perceived opposition to one's will becomes another's "imposition". — Cheshire
Whenever one's desires are cast on other individuals, impositions almost always follow. — Tzeentch
If one lets it turn into one. Sure. — Tzeentch
Is it illegal to farm without advanced farming equipment? No. Something being inefficient doesn't make it illegal. — khaled
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/625528I'm not convinced about this anger angle.
— baker
I would think those all fall within the domain of what we're talking about.
Did you take note of my first post in this thread?
The main topic isn't so much anger explicitly but simply intense emotion, and whether it has a place.
I doubt disgust/revulsion (same thing), strategizing, or plain disagreement could get someone to shoot someone else however. Have you ever shot someone for not showering?
I can't imagine someone who freely volunteers in a war without being angry at the enemy.
If enough people get angry with their bosses you get the French revolution.
I believe in order to go to a war you need to be angry. And that in order to try to change another's mind you need to be at least mildly annoyed. There is a difference between standing up for yourself and actively trying to change others' behavior. The latter requires some hostility.
Is standing your ground and refusing to move out of the way of someone walking down the sidewalk an imposition? — James Riley
Is the refusal to go around someone who is standing there minding his own business the imposition? — James Riley
Is it the individual, or society that says sidewalks are made for walking, not standing? And if it is society that says it, is that society imposing upon my right to stand my ground? — James Riley
Yes.
Is the refusal to go around someone who is standing there minding his own business the imposition?
— James Riley
Yes.
Is it the individual, or society that says sidewalks are made for walking, not standing? And if it is society that says it, is that society imposing upon my right to stand my ground?
— James Riley
Societies don't impose. Individuals in that society do. In many instances, it is the societal structure that gives those individuals the power to do so. — Tzeentch
I am putting forward that 'anger'/'annoyance' is the point from which we build, or directly express, our 'opinions' (items that we care about).
If not 'anger'/'annoyance' what are the other progressive mechanisms at work (progressive as helping us move onward and expand our understanding). — I like sushi
I am saying 'anger'/annoyance' is certainly a way to combat fear, and I am also putting a bold foot forward and saying it is the only real way. — I like sushi
I view the use of force as categorically undesirable and immoral, and if I were ever to feel that the use of force is the only option, I would have to tread extremely carefully. — Tzeentch
No, I have no desire to impose anything on anyone. — Tzeentch
It is my suspicion that whatever "sometimes" entails is dictated by governments and by majority opinion of whatever society one happens to live in. — Tzeentch
What makes one opinion better than the other? — Tzeentch
In the short term, probably. — baker
Would you let a psychotic killer kill you or a member of your family? — khaled
What "sometimes" practically entails is different from what it should entail. Might makes what happens. Might doesn't make right.
Yes governments or even majorities can determine that Jews don't deserve to live. That doesn't have anything to do with ethics. — khaled
The data, for one. — khaled
Of all the people that think they can drive fine while drunk, a majority are wrong. — khaled
Also the simple fact that measurable deterioration in your performance exists when you're drunk. — khaled
Do you think no opinion is better than another? — khaled
Okay, I'm seeing "life = conflict." — James Riley
I'm resolved that the operative question is the one I raised about reasonableness of the perception of imposition. It's not that there there is no imposition. There is. Rather, is the perception of that imposition reasonable? — James Riley
No. Like I said, there are situations where force is the only option, but even then I'd regard the use of it as immoral and as a personal failure. — Tzeentch
if we have established that might cannot make right, then what determines what is right? What is the source? — Tzeentch
Data is often open to multiple interpretations. What determines which interpretation is the right one? — Tzeentch
Is that true? How many people drive while intoxicated and how many of those cause accidents? — Tzeentch
And apart from that, what justifies the use of force to impose on all drunk drivers, when only a part of them would go on to cause accidents? — Tzeentch
Sure, but where one draws the line is a subjective matter, and not every drunk driver is the same (and we're not testing all of them). — Tzeentch
Opinions are all equally silly (including mine) and should never be a basis for the use of force. — Tzeentch
Before we start, are you just the kind of ridiculous skeptic that thinks no objective truth is possible in anything? — khaled
It cannot be immoral if it is the only option. — khaled
Our moral intuitions. — khaled
Statistical analysis, methods of sampling, etc. There are classes on that if you’re interested. — khaled
Yes though the experiment wasn’t done as I described (not that I know of). Because that’s not needed. — khaled
False. There is a medical definition:“ Intoxication is the term used to describe any change in perception, mood, thinking processes and motor skills that results from the effect of a drug(s) on our central nervous system.” — khaled
Because a formal system to distinguish people that are ok to drink and drive and people who aren’t will inevitably be abused leading to more people drunk driving and more accidents. It’s a practical limitation. — khaled
That’s a silly opinion, and so I have no reason to listen to it. — khaled
Considering everything you observe has to go through the subjective filter of your mind, it is a given that objective truth ("ultimate reality") is, and I'll put it cautiously, extremely difficult to access for humans. — Tzeentch
Well, it's not really the only option, is it? — Tzeentch
What happens when those intuitions conflict? — Tzeentch
Results from these methods would not be open to different interpretations? — Tzeentch
It's one of the first thing I was taught in academics. — Tzeentch
According to the subjective opinion of whom? — Tzeentch
It's arbitrary, based on convenience. That's not a justification, which is what I asked for. — Tzeentch
That’s a silly opinion, and so I have no reason to listen to it.
— khaled
And yet, here you are. — Tzeentch
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