A lot of peoples jobs are part of their identities and a valued part of their life. — Andrew4Handel
I would be labelled agender by someone else — Andrew4Handel
Should we be able to identify however we like? Would that be problematic and is there an ethical dimension? Should identities be challenged? — Andrew4Handel
That is why some people convey a fake identity because it is an identity they wanted or it is an identity that is useful to them at some time. Such as evading capture or identity through elaborate disguise — Andrew4Handel
This is an example of how there are (at least) two identities at play in any social interaction. The self-concept of an individual (how he sees himself), and the other-concept of the person interacting with him.
— tomatohorse
The question probably is to what extent should one influence the other.
I think it is probably impossible to force someone to think something abut you. Such that we have limited control over other peoples minds without deception and coercion.
So the problem for me is any attempt to enforce someone else's opinion on someone else's identity.
. — Andrew4Handel
I think religious identities, special status and such are all socially imbued on a person. So there is a meaning to them beyond the silliness of being different due to a title. The public, the pnyotos, as the old Greeks called it, fears a person, or trusts a person or follows a person... these are not illusionary, but socially established. — god must be atheist
There are primal fears, and fundamental taboos in play in this discussion. The careful exposure of these to the insight of all participants is the prerequisite for anything approaching a rational or philosophical analysis. — unenlightened
Any comments before I word vomit more? — fdrake
We need others to point out areas in which we are deficient, and tell us how to do better. So in that sense, "DO listen to other people," is sometimes the way to go. — tomatohorse
Here you come, and shall I run from you, fight you, fuck you or eat you? — unenlightened
The first species of holes is between who I feel I am and who I am. It seems that feelings alone don't cut the mustard. The nature of those holes is brought into relief by inverting the account, which brings us to the second account. — fdrake
If the SS say you're a Jew, it really doesn't make much difference what you feel, say, or do. Just get in the cattle truck. Psychiatrists, social workers, doctors immigration officials and judges are all empowered to decide your identity for you. Or indeed against you. — unenlightened
My problem with felt account is: where would such a feeling and commitment originate, if not from previous positive experience? Why would anyone imagine himself a Star Wars fan without having seen and admired the films? — Vera Mont
Moore's paradox — fdrake
Eg: "I've been to all the Star Wars movies, have read all the books, but I've never been a Star Wars fan", it would be improbable behaviour, but doesn't strike as a contradiction in terms as the felt account's assertion did — fdrake
A being who cannot see his own ears has less of an ability to determine his own identity, I’m afraid, than someone else — NOS4A2
Identity is relational. I am exactly like you in my uniqueness. You are one of us, unless you are one of them. There is always a mutuality of connection or disconnection. Your behaviour and feeling are identified in relation to my behaviour and feeling. Identity is irrevocably social, except to the extent that it is ineffable. Even Crusoe only becomes significant in relation to firstly his origins, and secondly his relation to the deprivation of the social, and thirdly to his 'other' as Friday. The desert island trope is the exemplar of the social nature of identity - the limit of individuality. Crusoe is the absolute monarch of nowhere.
Personal identity is not relational; it’s actual. — NOS4A2
Should we be able to identify however we like? Would that be problematic and is there an ethical dimension? Should identities be challenged? — Andrew4Handel
do personal identities (which could include religious identities) have a special status and should they be challenged? — Andrew4Handel
Personal identity is not relational; it’s actual. — NOS4A2
For example I could identify as a Police Officer. Is that problematic? Does it entail I should have to do some police work? Am I undermining the police force? — Andrew4Handel
Someone might be deceiving one's self however in self presentation. We can deceive ourselves and hence portray a false image of ourselves not reflecting some facts about us. — Andrew4Handel
Relations are actual. — unenlightened
Who said a person doesn't relate to the world? But something actual has to exist as a discreet entity before it can relate to anything else that exists.Tell us about this actual personal identity that does not relate to the world. — unenlightened
But something actual has to exist as a discreet entity before it can relate to anything else that exists. — Vera Mont
Who said a person doesn't relate to the world? But something actual has to exist as a discreet entity before it can relate to anything else that exists. — Vera Mont
Relations are actual. I get my 3 ducks in a row; their relation is being "in a row". That's an actual row of existing ducks, but not 'three ducks and a row' 4 existing things. — unenlightened
I am saying that you cannot say anything about your personal identity as unique inner being, but only describe your relations to the world, and this is because language has to be public, not private. — unenlightened
Relations are actual. For example, my relation to my identity card is that I do not have one. Your relation to my identity card is blithe assumption that there is such a thing. Knowing is itself relational between knower and known.
Tell us about this actual personal identity that does not relate to the world. Of course it is impossible, because to speak at all is to relate to the public world. A private identity is nothing other than the way a fragmented consciousness relates to itself - a mere beetle in a box.
The actions one performs, his beliefs, his proximity to the rest of the world are secondary to, and indeed contingent upon, the thing that performs them. — NOS4A2
You’re Agender but don’t identify as Agender? :chin:
— praxis
I would be labelled agender by someone else. It is a bit like atheism relying on theism.
I can't make sense of the non grammatical form of gender.
I think there is a difference between desiring to be X and the ability to be X. If I desired to appear more of a typical man I probably couldn't and that would probably mean trying to project a (gender?) image through aping someone else. — Andrew4Handel
things are secondary and intuited from their relations. — unenlightened
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