Generally, agreement is counterproductive to philosophy. — Metaphysician Undercover
Existentialism imitates "substantive content", to the point where the untrained eye might not even see the difference, but it isn't substantive content. Then the trained eye would grasp the existential proposal as a pure invariant form, even though the intent of the proposition is that it be apprehended as pure content. — Metaphysician Undercover
The schools which take derivatives of the Latin existere [Latin:
to exist] as their device, would like to summon up the reality of
corporeal experience against the alienated particular science. Out of
fear of reification they shrink back from what has substantive content.
It turns unwittingly into an example.
We ought not conflate the two things. I personally embrace AI for research and have had conversations amounting to hundreds of thousands of words with it, which have been very helpful. That's different from letting it write my posts for me. — Baden
I don't know. It's kind of like saying that you can steal 40% of the bank's money, but no more. — Baden
This anecdote might help my case: At another department of the university where I work, the department heads in their efforts to "keep up with the times" are now allowing Master's students to use AI to directly write up to 40% of their theses. — Baden
Content is logically prior, — Metaphysician Undercover
"The pre-eminence of content reveals itself as the necessary insufficiency of the method." — Metaphysician Undercover
But that's the mistake of dialectical identity thinking which Adorno is exposing with negative dialectics. The two are not properly dialectically opposed, in reality, so we cannot say that each one implies the other. If one (content) extends beyond the other (form), then in the way explained by Aristotle, the former (content) is logically prior to the latter (form). Then, mention of the latter (form) necessarily implies the former (content), but not vise versa. Mention of content does not necessarily imply form. This is the reason for "the remainder", "the pre-eminence of content". — Metaphysician Undercover
Maybe. If someone uses AI to create a fascinating post, could you engage with it?
— frank
Sure, why not? I would be more impressed if someone created a fascinating post by themselves, though. — Janus
Marx called religion the "opium of the people," though ironically his philosophy is entirely ressentiment-based, and it is ressentiment that functions as "opium" for the weak and disenfranchsed to this day; — Tzeentch
Very simply gender is an expectation of one or more individuals in how a sex should act culturally in relation to the reality of its own sex. It is culturally sanctioned prejudice. "A man must be aggressive. Oh, you think a man can be timid? 'We' do not sanction such behavior." When gender is taken too far, it becomes culturally sanctioned sexism. So gender is very real. But its real in its culturally accepted prejudice about one's sex, not real as in a dictate that one's biology must follow because of the laws of physics. — Philosophim
"But lo", some of the members of society say, "We know that God is a construct of the mind, not reality." — Philosophim
Yes, very clear insight there. — AmadeusD
I think you're just misreading my comment and not keeping it contextualized. My comment was responsive to yours, which started off with the word "really" as if to imply you were offering a moment of true objectivity. — Hanover
Then you suggested we've banned people for such commentary, resulting in whatever just followed, which really is not helpful, considering it incorrectly asserts inconsistency on the mod team and sends the message to others, to the extent they listen to you, that we will not tolerate any opinion that even subtly questions mainstream liberal progressive views on trassexual speech or categories. — Hanover
He most certainly did.But Hanover didn't deny that transwomen are women, not did his statement imply it. — Jamal
It's not outrageous to ask someone on a philosophy forum to back up an eccentric and implausible statement. — Jamal
So I actually have to ask you to point me to where it was said, or to explain what was said? Because I'm pretty sure you're wrong. — Jamal
To be fully objective, it's a biological man who identifies and presents as a biologucal woman. Your definition suggests a third gender. Mine is silent to that because that is disputed. — Hanover
I see this from time to time. One I'm thinking of tries to baffle with bullshit. Best to walk away, right?
— frank
Sure, but walking away does not solve, or even ameliorate, the problem. — Janus
1) A man is a male person because they had an xy chromosome, testicles, a penis, and a prostate gland at birth. His mature reproductive sex role is to eject sperm during sexual intercourse.
2) A woman is a female person born with an xx chromosome, ovaries, a uterus, a vagina, fallopian tubes, a cervix, etc. Her reproductive role is to produce an egg for fertilization by sperm after sexual intercourse, and harbor the developing fetus for 9 months. — BC
and the ways in which prominent members of this site have used it to make themselves look smarter than they really are — Janus
. I believe not entirely, — Patterner
"We can by inductive reasoning" just is "the future will resemble the past". It's re-stating, not explaining. — Banno