Whenever you rely on somebody else that person has authority over you — HardWorker
This is false, for the simple fact that authorities rely on those without authority. Short of physical force, no one actually has power over others. A president is only a president because enough people agree that they are a president. It is an illusion, or rather a social construct. Societies are constructed on a series of ideas and agreements, nothing more. — praxis
Maybe you meant to word your concept differently? "Authority" means they have command over you. But if a person you rely on does not live up to your expectations, they don't have command over you. You're forced at that point to rely on someone else, or yourself. Someone with authority can punish in a way separate from your reliance, like putting you in prison or harming you in other ways. — Philosophim
Only if that's how you construct your worldview - in terms of power relations. Personally I see reliance as an issue of mutual trust and positive regard. But it may depend upon the context. The notion of 'rely' and 'others' needs further clarification. — Tom Storm
Whenever you rely on somebody else that person has authority over you. — HardWorker
That's probably true. But I tend to work to minimize the inclination by not reinforcing hierarchies unless I can't avoid it. :wink: — Tom Storm
Whenever you rely on somebody else that person has authority over you. An advantage of being independent is that you're not giving people power of you, you're not giving people authority over you. This is something to realize if you do plan to rely on others and if you do plan to not be a recluse. — HardWorker
The postal worker, bank teller, grocery store worker, and everybody else I rely on for bits and pieces of everyday life, have no authority over me, even though I rely on them. — Bitter Crank
Philosophy is a radical extension of what it means to question an authority. Foucault: Am I being ventriloquized by history? Ever word I speak, after all, is learned, but have I assimilated language, or has language assimilated me? Assimilation here means in authority. — Constance
But I do think that individualism is harmful, indeed, emphasis on individualism is one of the nasty things lurking in the background of much of the demise of what we might loosely call western culture. Failing to acknowledge our mutual interdependence has led to the peneary of our common wealth. — Banno
But I do think that individualism is harmful, indeed, emphasis on individualism is one of the nasty things lurking in the background of much of the demise of what we might loosely call western culture. Failing to acknowledge our mutual interdependence has led to the peneary of our common wealth.
We are in this collectively. That involves giving up some part of your autonomy. Get with it, or go live in your grass hut. — Banno
Given that culture is literally built out of dissent. — Constance
Most of politics since Thatcher and Reagan. Trumpism. Neoliberal economics. The failure to invest in social capital, such as education and health, let alone roads and pipelines. Shit, celebrity itself, the worship of individuals to the detriment of quality. Rap music. Need I go on? — Banno
Not speaking for Banno, but for me culture (for all its problems) is built out of cooperation and the overarching goal is to include as many stakeholders as possible. You can see that the significant problems of human existence - resource allocation, climate change, war, can only be successfully dealt with and remedied through cooperative ventures. If not, we are lost. — Tom Storm
Not speaking for Banno, but for me culture (for all its problems) is built out of cooperation and the overarching goal is to include as many stakeholders as possible. You can see that the significant problems of human existence - resource allocation, climate change, war, can only be successfully dealt with and remedied through cooperative ventures. If not, we are lost. — Tom Storm
Whenever you rely on somebody else that person has authority over you. — HardWorker
No, I am talking about individualism, the social theory "favouring freedom of action for individuals over collective or state control". — Banno
Say some more. — Tom Storm
I speak of the dogmatic approach to living and thinking. Unquestioned rules and ideas. — Constance
to me the question, that is, the resistance that is posed by the possibility of an opposition, this needs to be free. — Constance
but living in this "tension" of irony in which all things stand challenged and nothing sits too firmly, this is the essence of a free society. — Constance
My interest is in ethics, as prior to politics. Or better, as what politics ought be. — Banno
No ethics, no politics. — Constance
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