Ok - i admit i am missing it, but in the thought that is in my head there is absolutely nothing different between your use of right and my use of correct. They are semantically equal to me.
That being as it is. Your view is there no truth statement we can make about the rightness or wrongness of slavery without the appropriate reference.
In that case I just disagree, which is fine. My view is slavery was always wrong, and the culture that allowed it was incorrect. — Rank Amateur
If you mean there's no non-subjective standard by which to assess disparate moral judgements, then yes, you're right. But it does not follow from this that disparate moral judgements are all seen, in any sense, as 'equally valid' by any single individual. — ChrisH
I just want you to answer a question.
I will try again see if this is better.
Can you tell me how your view of cultural relativism applies to slavery? — Rank Amateur
I am getting very tired of near every response on this board is becoming near pure semantics. — Rank Amateur
Did cultural relativism as you understand it allow certain cultures to judge slavery as morally acceptable? — Rank Amateur
Thanks, more interested in which view you support. — Rank Amateur
"Valid" in what sense, and from whose perspective? — ChrisH
Yeah, I've asked him that a few times, but we haven't managed to explore it at all yet. — Terrapin Station
So here are the available moral options as I see them for this actual situation.
1. Both truth and morality are culturally relative:
The slave holders have the majority cultural belief and therefore their moral view that slavery is not immoral is the correct moral view, and then the same people held the incorrect immoral view when the majority of the culture changed
The abolitionists while not the cultural majority at this time, had the incorrect moral view that slavery was immoral, until the cultural majority view changed, and then they had the correct moral view. — Rank Amateur
4. The morality or immorality of slavery is an individual judgement.
All of us just make our own judgement -each as valid as the otherand it's right or wrong in a relative sense, and some judgements are better or worse than others in a relative sense also. — Rank Amateur
If the term is used according to its intended meaning and affect then it is not being misused. — Fooloso4
The term has no meaning independent of its use. This is how the term is being used tactically by some conservatives. I do not approve of the tactic but have no compunction to assure that the term be saved to be used in a specific way. — Fooloso4
What you said is that there is a distinction between being politically correct and wanting to do what is right. The problem is that the distinction leaves the relationship between PC and doing what is right ambiguous. — Fooloso4
The point is that you are doing the very same thing that would be called PC by someone who does not like that you are frowning on what they are doing. They too think they are doing good rather than harm and they do not like your interference, which they see as the real source of harm. — Fooloso4
Once again, it is not about you. You are so eager to protect your image that you're not really thinking things through. I am not talking about you. I am talking about political philosophy. — Fooloso4
There is a tension here between the individual and society that is as old as political philosophy itself. It has not been reconciled. In terms of freedom of thought, you are as derivative and unoriginal as the rest of us, and more so than some. Your independence is an illusion (and even this is not strictly about you either). — Fooloso4
Once again, it is not about you or the people in this discussion. It is about the political power struggle and the tactics being used. — Fooloso4
No, this one is about you and your imagined unbiased view and superior knowledge that leads you to think that you should be trusted rather than questioned or criticized.
This has become all too personal. I am not interested in going down that road. — Fooloso4
Trump was using the term exactly as conservatives intend to use it, to summarily dismiss anything said by the opposition. — Fooloso4
Are you suggesting that the politically correct do not want to do what is right? Do they think that what is correct is wrong? — Fooloso4
So, those who think they are doing good but are actually causing harm should be frowned upon. That sounds very PC. — Fooloso4
We are herd animals. You are not breaking with the herd when you repeat what every other herd animal who fancies himself an individual says. We are social beings. If we are going to live together we need to have some form of agreement as to what is and is not acceptable behavior and speech. — Fooloso4
Of course context matters! Labeling something PC is the opposite of examining context. All you need to be told is that it is PC. Game over.
Long before PC there was censorship. It is not a PC invention. For most of my life it has been conservatives who have pushed for censorship. The underlying dispute is not over censorship but who gets to be the censor and what are they censoring. — Fooloso4
When Trump objects to PC he is not objecting to authoritarian hive-mind conformity. — Fooloso4
Trust you? That sounds authoritarian. Since you are "inside" you think that you are unbiased? — Fooloso4
Be extremely cautious with people that market themselves as centrists or anything new. They are absolutely the worst. Everybody will finish hating them. Just remember Tony Blair and his implementation of "Third way". How cool was that for Britannia?
Far better are those who indeed are centrist, yet openly acknowledge that they are either conservative/right-wing or left-wing/progressive and specifically in what issues. Sincerity is important in a politician. — ssu
"No, PC means that you're polite" - "No it doesn't". — ssu
Still smiling about that Macron comment... Yes, let's have out-of-the-box thinking in Europe: so let's vote for a federalist investment banker. He definitely will have "new ideas" as we have already seen. :grin: — ssu
This is genuinely hilarious, unlike most ancient jokes. It's like the opposite of Nietzsche going crazy with sorrow after seeing a horse getting beat. It's a much better story. — csalisbury
Can anyone give me any advice to better my situation? — Perchperkins
You might be being a bit hard on yourself. — Baden
We set up a computer system, including a camera/microphone and a robot arm, in a small room, so that there's also a tree, a totem poll and a bookcase in it.
We type or say or show a picture we drew of a tree. The computer responds by pointing the robot arm at the tree.
We type or say or show a picture we drew of a totem poll. The computer responds by pointing the robot arm at the totem poll.
Is the computer "doing meaning"? In other words, does "tree" mean something to the computer? — Terrapin Station
It may not even be cynical to point to the absurdity of some contemporary philosophy, especially since its being absurd doesn't mean that it's not true. — Joshs
"But then it wouldn't surprise me, in a sense, because there is nothing so absurd that some philosopher hasn't said it."
Maybe absurd, or maybe crucial to any truly fundamental understanding of the basis of mathematics and its relation to both science and ethics. Given your professed ignorance of philosophy, at this point open minded curiosity might be a more adaptive approach than cynicism. — Joshs
You miss the point. There is no misuse of political correctness. — Fooloso4
It is a label, a code that says bullshit here. That is precisely its use. — Fooloso4
There are people who want to do what is right, who have an interest in social justice, morality. Sometimes some of them go to extremes. Grouping them all together as politically correct ignores the particulars. — Fooloso4
I have emphasized the importance of the abnormal age we live in. Demographics are changing and the bounds of acceptable behavior is changing too. Calling out the language and behavior of others is something we are going to see more of, not because PC is contagious but because the old boundaries no longer hold. — Fooloso4
The anti-PCers are objecting to the very thing the PC are trying to accommodate, integration. They are not simply resisting the conversation they are resisting the very need to do this. — Fooloso4
"Politeness or violence is the choice we're faced with. I choose politeness. Violence achieves nothing worthwhile."
Rudeness and violence are not the same thing, nor are politeness and violence each other's opposites. There are many people who are polite who are complete sharks. I think that what you are looking for is action that is genuinely good. Genuine goodness is something that I can respect and that I believe I practice. It has nothing to do with being polite and everything to do with righteousness of action. — Ilya B Shambat
Try reading the OP, S. Someone not you denies that 2+2=4 is demonstrably true. Nothing to do with morality. That's why this is the math forum. — tim wood
He also says - it's just above:
"
there's no reason to say that any mathematical statement is universal.
— xxxx
Do you endorse that? — tim wood
Perhaps like abandoning for a while the left/right juxtaposition of agendas or the current political cilmate? Now that would be out-of-the-box thinking. — ssu
Basically a better definition for politically correct would be something like "minority friendly" than politically correct. — ssu
And then there ought to be really a universal definition of "politically correct" meaning "language, policies or measures" that emphasize and/or enforce the current and dominating political views or political system in any country. — ssu
I request the opposite feature, the ignore a particular member feature offered in pretty much every forum software. Such a feature can help reduce the typical ego shoot outs which so plague the forum realm. — Jake
Is this going to be another endless thread where loose terms like "absolute" are introduced but never explained, and then people proceed to talk past each other ad nauseum? — SophistiCat
You're just a metaphorical bear trap, which is ok, since we only want to metaphorically snuggle with you. — T Clark
Come on S, everyone who's been here for more than a year remembers the old S. You're just a little teddy bear now. We just want to snuggle with you. — T Clark
This should be on the home page. Or better still, the site strap line -
"The Philosophy Forum - there is nothing so absurd that some philosopher hasn't said it" — Isaac
History would suggest that instrumentalism would be the more reasonable approach. Or are you saying that we have good reasons to believe that we've finally figured things out for real? But then which theory has it correct? Are particles excitations of a quantum field, as quantum field theory says, or are they one-dimensional strings, as string theory says? Is gravity the curvature of space-time, as general relativity says, or is it a force mediated by gravitons, as quantum gravity says? — Michael
I don't think it's right to say that there's empirical evidence for scientific realism. Realism and instrumentalism are two different ways to interpret scientific evidence. — Michael
Ah I just thought of one possibility. The Kathy Griffin thing, although I don't know how we could make that fit the concept of political correctness really. — Terrapin Station
"Ethics and maths are two fundamentally different things."
I assume it wouldn't surprise you if I suggested that for a number of contemporary approaches in philosophy maths and ethics do indeed fundamentally interpenetrate. It has something to do with the dependence of math on propositional logic and the dependence of propositional logic on conditions of possibility and the ground of conditions of possibility in perspective and the dependent relation between perspective and will.
Indeed. — Joshs
That's certainly the materialist's position. But the idealist disagrees with this. They are probably going to be instrumentalists rather than scientific realists when it comes to talk of particles. — Michael
I wanna play!!!!
Yes, I hold 2 + 2 = 4 is absolutely true. As a matter of reason. No, not as a matter of opinion, psychology, and whether others hold with it is up to them.
Now what? — Mww
