Republicans will be anti-labor, no matter the elegies written. Trump already proved this with his presidency. — Moliere
I suspect they will cheat or assassinate or jail their opponent in Stalinist fashion. — NOS4A2
Trump isn’t going to win. Biden campaigned from his bunker, drew crowds of max. 50 people at his rallies, was the first virtual candidate, and for some strange reason got the most votes in US history. Never underestimate the corrupt abilities of his party. — NOS4A2
They even had a mock gallows that could hang pence if only he was 2 feet tall — NOS4A2
So in America, criminality is more acceptable than aging? — L'éléphant
What's wrong with Biden? Why is he being criticized so much? — L'éléphant
Not sure that'd improve matters for those opposed to Trumpism oder the republican platform to be honest.
I think a sufficiently ruthless politician armed with the spirit of Trump might end up much more effective at getting their way than Trump will ever be. — Echarmion
I've seen several comments that our members wish death on Trump — AmadeusD
You could do the exact same thing with "do flowers exist." — Count Timothy von Icarus
Of course you could impose one on yourself, but that you could change at whim. — Tobias
l. They wanted Trump to be assassinated. — NOS4A2
Maybe I shouldn't have used "incorporeal," due to its past associations. I really just wanted to get at how these things exist in a way that is substrate independent and without any definite/discrete "body." A recession has existence within time, it begins and ends. I think cultures, along with their laws, do as well. "Minoan culture," doesn't exist anymore, although we can certainly point to it (same with material artefacts that no longer exist, e.g. the Twin Towers). — Count Timothy von Icarus
I feel like the right word for things like laws, recessions, culture, etc. would be "incorporeal" as in "lacking a specific body." — Count Timothy von Icarus
Likewise laws continue to exist regardless of whether anyone is thinking of them at any particular moment. It would seem weird to say they flit in and out of existence as they enter someone's mental awareness. "Japanese culture," would be the same way. It exists in mental awareness, in synapses, in artifacts of all sorts, etc. — Count Timothy von Icarus
But for the person committed to reductive materialism it seems that "personal preference," cannot be were explanation stops. Why is personal preference what it is? Well here we are going to need to call in biology, psychology, economics, sociology, history, etc. People don't have the preferences they have for no reason at all. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The driving assumption behind reductive explanations seems to generally be smallism, the idea that any facts about large scale things must be reducible to facts about smaller parts — Count Timothy von Icarus
For one thing, laws themselves end up affecting history, sociology, psychology, etc. The influence is bidirectional. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Even if they are reducible to something else, they certainly exist, and I think you'd be hard pressed to make a compelling argument that they reduce to "individual preferences," as some sort of unanalyzable primitive either. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I know, right? It so feels that way to me too. I can like remember every detail so clearly. — Hanover
I think obligation is something people feel sometimes. "He didn't want to go to the party, but he felt obligated.". Or it could be something that people in the area believe. "Most Americans believed he was obliged to resign.". It's just describing how people feel or attitudes they have.
— frank
There are of course multiple senses in which we use the word obliged. One indeed often feel obliged to do x. But consider the difference between these two sentences: "He felt obliged to go to the party" and "he was obliged to go to the party". They are not the same sentences, but in your account of obligation they are. That is because you think an obligation is subjective. The obligation though has an objective side to it. We are bound to certain acts and that bind we call an obligation. They arise out of certain procedures, being you signing a contract, or a legislator promulgating a law. — Tobias
The use of "I promise" over "I intend" is just to emphasise the strength of one's belief that it will happen. — Michael
You could think of a promise as an act prolonged through time, just like the turning on of a light. — Leontiskos
It's like when Margaret Thatcher said, "There's no such thing as Society." If you really don't understand what she was saying, that's your choice. Most of us understand it perfectly.
— frank
The question is, was she right? Of course I understand what she was saying. I also understand what it does when saying that. It was a way to get rid of social policy. I think that is always. Metaphysics, the question what is really real, is idle speculation. What we need to know is, what does ascribing 'reality' or 'existence' to a certain something do? The question is not 'does a promise exist'. — Tobias
The 'I' that does things is also shaped by the institutions in which it exists. — Tobias
it's an element of intellectual life. So yes, they exist. In another sense, they don't.
— frank
If that is the conclusion I would think it merits some investigation in what you consider meaningful for existence. What does it matter for the existence of something to be an aspect of intellectual life? My hunch is that it is 'dirt and dunamis' as you put it in an earlier post. What advantage does it have to hold on to a position that cannot make sense of the distinction between rules of evidence and existence? — Tobias
Too bad that the implementation of the whole process has proven fragile/vulnerable; — jorndoe
