How so? I haven't felt any strong emotion about religion or philosophy in quite some time, and I don't see anything unreasonable in asking how valid and invalid atheisms manifest in your opinion, since you mentioned them. — whollyrolling
"It is doubtless true that interests predispose us to a given libidinal investment, but they are not identical with this investment. Moreover, the unconscious libidinal investment is what causes us to look for our interest in one place rather than another, to fix our aims on a given path, convinced that this is where our chances lie." AO345 — Streetlight
What would a valid form of atheism look like? — whollyrolling
The left changes its guiding principles and the movements it promotes as if it's changing underwear. BLM had as its central tenet the destruction of Western culture and its institutions before the group seemed to dissolve due to fraud and abandonment, and "cancel culture" is self-explanatory — whollyrolling
Please feel free to explain the morality behind a movement which desires the destruction of all institutions and a state of resulting lawlessness. — whollyrolling
I'm not sure what you're trying to say here: "Apparently you dont need a God for a culture of blame." — whollyrolling
. Atheism is not exclusive to the left, it's just an easy default for them because it is amoral and imposes no accountability — whollyrolling
What is positive side of killing someone for fun? Nothing to do with moral or immoral. Why would any society want people to do it? — Jackson
postmodernists argue that all morality is culture -relative.
— Joshs
Would not agree with that assertion. Does any culture believe stabbing and murdering people is acceptable (outside of war!)? — Jackson
No. Just what I said. Stabbing people for fun. What culture thinks that is good? — Jackson
You're saying Marx is ground zero for everything in philosophy since Hegel?
Probably not. — frank
Does any culture believe stabbing and murdering people is acceptable (outside of war!)? — Jackson
One only leaves a thinker behind by incorporating the valuable features of his work into a new whole, such as to think him better than he thought himself. I’m not convinced you or Hayek understand very much about the history of philosophy since Hegel, that is to say , all of the philosophies and social sciences which have benefited from his influence. A central feature of post-Hegelian thought is the appreciation that individual knowing is the product of interactive dynamics within a cultural community, that knowledge and values are in large part socially constructed through language. Post-Hegelians are thus moral relativists rather than moral realists.I'm not insulting Marx by the observation that history has left him behind. It's just a fact. — frank
This interests me. Can you say more about the Hegelian influence on AI? — Jackson
Hayek may have lived in the 20th century , but his political theory is derived from philosophical ideas that are considerably older than Marx. Essentially Hayek is an 18th century philosopher in the cloak of a 20th century political thinker.
— Joshs
I don't think so, but it's a moot point. His view is still the the blueprint for the world you live in. — frank
What also emerged from
Hegelianism was Darwin’s theory of evolution
— Joshs
How so? — frank
Hayek is 20th Century. Marx was from a world that's gone now. — frank
I would suggest that it is not possible to understand contemporary thinking on the left and far left without making your way through Marx
— Joshs
That may be, but what relevance does the left or far left have in the world today? — frank
Since Hayek is relevant now and Marx is really completely irrelevant, I'd want to judge leftism by how it relates to Hayek. — frank
What is the left now, and what is the far left? Who is the far left? — frank
Here is an article that is disturbing, at least for me, an old retired prof. What do you think? — jgill
You may well be right. But he is a legitimate, well published academic, based at UCL a fairly good university. — unenlightened
You are by no means alone. Here is club you can join.
https://www.ucl.ac.uk/friends-of-wisdom/what-went-wrong#blu — unenlightened
The only way left for me is to reject this civilization in its totality and embrace the life of a shepherd in a countryside, away from all the trouble and in peace with myself. — Eskander
Btw, science and mathematics (esp) is a shared heritage of mankind. Every civilization has a played a decisive role in its advancement and STEM will take care of itself. I'm more concerned with the ethical- social-political-economic side of the equation. — Eskander
What we are witnessing is social and moral degradation. — SpaceDweller
Prosperous modern people have often moved to the country or joined communes, or decided to live off the grid as a 'remedy' for the present era. I understand the power of this idea and acknowledge that it might provide some peace, if not boredom. I suspect that the recent and enduring cult of authenticity and hipster artisanal products is another expression of this impulse. As was Transcendentalism in the 19th century. — Tom Storm
The only way left for me is to reject this civilization in its totality and embrace the life of a shepherd in a countryside, away from all the trouble and in peace with myself. — Eskander
So art, tragedies, copy an action and is imitative that way. Not ideals, but actions or plots. You're not imitating something that happened, you're constructing purposes for why they happened that way. — Jackson
In the modern world, with a lot more science at our disposal than Kant ever had in small-town Köningsberg, it's hard to remain Kantian. — Hillary
Going back to ancient world. For Aristotle, sense perception (aesthesis) cannot take place without the imagination (phantasia).(De Anima). So we can imagine things without sensing them, but cannot perceive things without the imagination. — Jackson
Art has always been about how things are perceived. No one invented that. — Jackson
Starting from impressionism the progression was basically > post-impressionism > cubism. If you're saying there's a "new theory" behind each of these stages, what are they? — praxis
Because the geometry of a picture plane was new. Using the abstract math of architecture was a new thing — Jackson
Art is about the sensual. — Jackson
Thanks Joshs. Not sure I recognise the significance of these two ideas. Are you able to briefly describe how this Kantian stage actually plays out in art with an example? — Tom Storm
Vision is a function of the technical. Nothing to do with "reshuffling." — Jackson
Cubist paintings took the idea of frontal, optical perception and created a geometry of the picture plane. A cube is a spatial object--a die--that when looked at does not show its back.
So, cubism is about how the picture plane is presented. — Jackson
He had a digital idea of perception much like today. — Jackson
No offense, but I never read stuff just because someone posts it quoting someone. Make an argument — Jackson
What is that exactly? — Jackson
Pretty good summary of Kant. And I don't agree with Kant at all — Jackson
I still don’t know what his theory of art is. Can you explain it?
Regarding aesthetics, people have been having sublime aesthetic experiences and transcending the duality of good and evil for thousands of years. — praxis
Do you think Nietzsche’s ideas as a whole have been absorbed, at least by most atheistic thinkers?
— Joshs
I sincerely hope — praxis