No, it’s a fact. He’s actually filed bankruptcy for his casinos several times. — NOS4A2
BBC is a state-run news agency. That alone warrants skepticism. — NOS4A2
Just like a cisgender role claiming the absurdity that a woman with short hair and pants is not a woman or less of a woman, the trans version ignores the fact that women come in all shapes and sizes. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Intuitively I would think that a transgender woman would want very much to fit in with societal gender roles. That would sort of be the whole point. Again, I'm talking about something where I don't have much experience.
— T Clark
This still seems right to me. If a man is going through all the difficulties it requires to become and be accepted as a women, it just seems to me she would want to be considered a woman as typically defined in society at large. That's my intuition. More than that, it's what I feel when I try to place myself in their shoes. Yes, of course, it is a bit presumptuous for me to think I can do that, but it's disrespectful for me not to try. — T Clark
Do you treat the news with the same skepticism? Because I did not inform you about the casino. — NOS4A2
Of course you do not know. That’s not my fault. — NOS4A2
But I do apologize for accusing you for suppression. — NOS4A2
And there is nothing wrong with dismissing counterfactuals. — NOS4A2
In my first post I explained clearly the difference between "the correct" and "a correct" and stated that I disagreed with your use of "the correct". — ChrisH
I do, however, think that he's nitpicking and missing the point. — Magnus Anderson
"This is the meaning you should go by if you want us to have a meaningful conversation about chairs without you being a pain in the arse by making up your own meaning"
— S
Which of course is already putting social pressure on them. If they don't use the meaning you're calling "correct," they're being a pain in the ass. — Terrapin Station
Or are you going to claim that "pain in the ass" is only descriptive, too? — Terrapin Station
Let's say I expressed myself in a way that wasn't the best. — Magnus Anderson
The correct answer to the question "Is 2 + 2 = 4?" is "Yes". What's prescriptive about that? — Magnus Anderson
That's true. Maybe I can correct myself by saying that's one of several correct meanings of the word? — Magnus Anderson
I'd take issue with your claim that you've given "the correct meaning". It's 'a' meaning but not the only one in current use. — ChrisH
It's rhetorical, because (in my opinion) obviously you should realize that other people have no obligation to cater to you when they don't have a problem with something but you do. Why shouldn't you just as well cater to them? — Terrapin Station
Because you have a problem with it? That's your problem.
I'm not about to change something I'm fine with just because other people have a problem with it. — Terrapin Station
Okay... what am I supposed to do about it? — Terrapin Station
Which I of course do not see as a problem. — Terrapin Station
I see the norms more as an ancillary ending place. — Terrapin Station
Wait, you're saying that ethics is also determined by norms? — Terrapin Station
What do you think - should organisations promoting deceitfulness (think for example Ashley Madison which aims to be a dating website for people already in commited relationships, guaranteeing to keep the identity of their members secret) be outlawed, and people engaged in such activities punished by law? — Agustino
How, in your view, can someone be mistaken about whether something is unethical? — Terrapin Station
I can't be wrong about whether something is unethical. (Of course, I can't be right, either. Right and wrong don't apply here.) — Terrapin Station
Re the other part, in other words, it didn't seem to me like you were asking me to explain my view with the goal of better understanding it for the sake of understanding it. — Terrapin Station
I don't agree that there's any context within which concepts are correct. — Terrapin Station
I don't see anything unethical about any utterances. — Terrapin Station
You were asking me to explain my view, to aid your understanding of it, and I didn't explain it to you? — Terrapin Station
Arthur Schopenhauer claimed that the human brain (the understanding) spontaneously constructed perceptual objects by applying (a) the pure “a priori” intuitions of space and time and (b) the transcendental principle of cause and effect to the body’s subjective “under the skin” sensations.
I consider this claim to be valid and to have been a significant advance over Kant’s epistemology.
However, neither Schopenhauer, nor Kant, ever attempted to explain where the body’s subjective sensations came from in the first place; i.e., what the nature of their originating source might have been prior to the brain’s construction of the perceptual objects out of them.
Schopenhauer did provide an explanation for the originating source of perceptual objects; viz., the brain’s activity, but he did not provide an explanation for the originating source of the bodily sensations that comprised those perceptual objects. Nor did he try to determine if the originating source which preceded the body’s sensations bore any resemblance to the constructed perceptual objects which succeeded the body’s sensations.
In other words, I submit that the perceptual objects (which are after-the-fact constructions of the causes of the given sensations by the brain) are merely “purported” causes of the sensations because we can never be certain that the brain’s spontaneously constructed perceptual objects actually coincide with the “real” cause(s) of the subjective sensations, which cause(s) would necessarily have “predated” the brain’s act of spontaneous construction.
What's your opinion? — charles ferraro
Fast forward to present day neuroscience and find your answer. — I like sushi
That's actually probably all the refutation needed on Terrapin. Unless he can pull something else out, we should probably move on. — Baden
Why would God bother with you or me? — Pattern-chaser
Conceptualization is not a relationship between concept and subject, but it is the act of forming a mental model, the concept itself. The mental model or picture is not correct or incorrect in itself, but is correct or incorrect in its relation to the objects of perception or cognition. :lol: — Noah Te Stroete