But also because pronouns are just easier right? — Srap Tasmaner
Is that the difference between authoritarian and anti-authoritarian politics? No superheroes but plenty of supervillains? — Srap Tasmaner
I suppose we could say that's a good thing, it's just that the other thing going on is that the crazy left seems to have agreed that everyone not a hero-activist is not a bystander, not an opponent, not a villain, but in fact a supervillain. The right still seems to distinguish between the evil masterminds of the new world order and the gullible cucks and libtards that they've taken in. — Srap Tasmaner
But your notion of superheroes would make sense of righteous fury. — Moliere
Any sense that some of these folks have taken such a view of themselves? — Srap Tasmaner
What's worse is that the direction of modern discourse is to make the truth even more pedestrian. In just a few years it's gone from the golden light at the end of the long tunnel of scientific enquiry to being easily accessed from the pages of the New York Times, or the lips of the government spokesman. Now we have 'disinformation experts' who's only truth-o-meter is to check what the government website says... — Isaac
Any sense that some of these folks have taken such a view of themselves? — Srap Tasmaner
(we won't go into why I believe that, here, as that really would totally derail the thread, and I suspect we're on thin ice in that regard already!) — Isaac
I've enjoyed the reflections you've shared. — Moliere
still looking for the loop back -- but I can see the relation due to the timing of trans issues becoming more prominent in popular discourse aligning with changes in norms of discourse. This not really talking about trans issues but rather the media form which all of these political views get disseminated through. — Moliere
I'm still looking for the loop back — Moliere
There's some stuff here. One is that the behavior we all deplore -- because Street's gone, so there's no one to take the other side -- among certain groups of young progressives has a name: bullying — Srap Tasmaner
we're dealing with the personal psychology of J.K. Rowling and whether or not that is a good psychology or if she is a bad person, and this is why she's good/bad, and if you do/not like her then you're also good/bad. There is no demand hooked to the decision which can be debated. It's her, and reflectively our own, moral character that's at stake. — Moliere
and I don't understand how this happened or why people do it. — Srap Tasmaner
my guess is that masculinity probably isn't related to where we landed — Moliere
Resentment is the emotion of toxic masculinity moreso than the pleasure of bullying. — Moliere
Everyone can resent. What flavours of resentment are uniquely masculine or essential characteristics of toxic masculinity? Can you give a list of contributors to toxic masculinity? Something like correctness conditions for the predicate "is an instance of toxic masculinity"? — fdrake
So I thought asking about masculinity was fairly on target for the original topic. If we are spurred on to defend this or that view because of our masculinity, it makes sense to start asking what is the value of this masculinity? What else other than our masculine identities is contributing to this confusion? — Moliere
Something like correctness conditions for the predicate "is an instance of toxic masculinity"? — fdrake
resentment of women as a type of person seems to get closer to the psychological type, but functionally it wouldn't matter what the psychological type is if it results in misogyny either way. — Moliere
my guess is that masculinity probably isn't related to where we landed — Moliere
Simply put, who or what is the object of the misogynist's hatred? — Isaac
"Woman", to the misogynist, probably has a collection of traits associated with it but I wouldn't be too keen on accepting the Type as the misogynist sees it either...
...it's the misogynist that's doing the identifying...
...So from my perspective the object of the misogynist's hatred is partly a fantasy. — Moliere
a toxic masculinity is an identity which results in misogyny. — Moliere
People don't identify as misogynists, so that'd be problematic! — Moliere
If we were talking structural problems, like patriarchy, then it'd make sense to talk about a social determination -- but at the level of identity I don't think it makes sense to say that's a social determination. Or, at least, it's not the same — Moliere
Also I'm not sure that an identity is a trait as much as it's a manner of expressing traits. "Tall" is a trait that's relative to the group, being between such and such heights on average is a range of traits associated with some group, and expected behaviors are one step away from traits. But the manner of expression is what differs. — Moliere
I've been saying resentment too, which isn't the exact same as hatred. — Moliere
So it's a way of displaying one's manliness, or expressing one's manhood, or being a man that results in the hatred — Moliere
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.