Having read myself sociology also I truly beg to differ.Those are not seperate. Remove the "neomarxist" aspects of those studies and one fails to teach objective truths about the topic, society, its people and their relations. — TheWillowOfDarkness
No. Of course not.Again, how do you know that? In a deterministic universe, can not everything be expressed as an algorithm? — Echarmion
Nope, Terrapin Stations view is totally sound, understandable and I agree with it. And you were saying that there is a push to stop these fields. Well, not even that review website is up and as Terrapin Station explained, it's rather far fetched that this would mount to an academic subject to be erased away.You're clutching at straws. — Izat So
Never underestimate the tribalism, the vitriol and utter hatred of the other side in American politics. The GOP won't go along. Above all, those people who hated Hillary so much simply won't go along either. Both sides can live very comfortably in their own echo chambers.As Trump said long ago, he could shoot someone dead on Fifth Ave, and his supporters would applaud. Evidence of Trump's unfitness, ineptitude, and mendacity pile up all around him, but Fox and Friends continue to provide cover. It can't go on like this. I think the facts of the case are such as to demand impeachment. If the GOP won't go along, well it's on their heads. The facts are in the public domain. — Wayfarer
Served with duty their country honorably and very successfully.What did they do to earn 82 million? — Benkei
Ah, your favorite JP. Let's look into this with a simple Google search:nobody is seeking to shut down Feminist Studies departments
— ssu
https://www.thestar.com/news/gta/2017/11/10/u-of-t-profs-proposed-website-would-target-professors-teaching-womens-and-ethnic-studies.html — Izat So
(See Professor Abandons Plan for List of ‘Neo-Marxist Course Content’Jordan Peterson, an outspoken and controversial psychology professor at the University of Toronto known for his public refusals to use gender-neutral pronouns, started a new campaign against the perceived excesses of campus liberalism. But amid criticism he abandoned the plan.
The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reported that Peterson planned to build a website that would have listed courses containing “postmodern neo-Marxist course content,” in an effort to decrease enrollment in those courses. The list was intended to reach beyond University of Toronto courses.
"We're going to start with a website in the next month and a half that will be designed to help students and parents identify postmodern content in courses so that they can avoid them," Peterson told Canadian broadcaster CTV.
In a YouTube video posted to his personal account, he highlighted English literature, anthropology, sociology, women’s studies and ethnic studies as the types of courses “that have to go.”
Professors at the University of Toronto expressed concern that they would be targeted by such a list, which also led to fears of harassment.
"Instructors of the potentially targeted courses believe that their autonomy as educators may be under threat. The proposed website has created a climate of fear and intimidation," the University of Toronto Faculty Association said in a statement to Canadian media.
Peterson, on Twitter, later said he was not going to go ahead with the plan.
Then 'the software' simply isn't a traditional mathematical algorithm.The obvious counter argument is that human brains also just follow a well written software. — Echarmion
And that is quite different from a Turing Machine which basically uses simple math to follow an algorithm. What we do extremely well and are masters in, and computers might do in the future, is recognizing patterns. This importance of patterns is the reason why math and computing is so dominant. Yet we can do even better: we can handle information that has no pattern, is unique. We have this utterly incredible ability to make a narrative: First happened this, the happened a totally new thing...then Harry Hindu made a comment from another perspective. That's not computation. You cannot extrapolate from the start a pattern that will tell the rest (and your comment). There is no pattern to be computed. And that makes us so awesome compared to Turing Machines.It means that you can create amalgams of previous experiences or ideas. All new ideas consist of previous experiences. A purple polka dotted people eater can't be thought of without having the concepts of purple, polka dots, people, and eating prior to creating it in your mind. — Harry Hindu
And typically you need the human to choose just what is useful. In a nutshell, computers have a really big problem of 'thinking out of the box'. It really is a theoretical, logical problem for them. I think that people are simply in denial about this because basically they don't understand just how a Turing Machine works.Most new ideas arent useful unless they apply to the world in some way. Computers can be programmed to assemble information in unique ways and then try to apply it to some goal in the world, and its usefulness is dependent upon how it relates to some truth in the world. — Harry Hindu
Well, we can argue if humans are conscious or not! Or think about it in this way: what does it mean to be creative, to have a new idea? Did someone tell you exactly how you should get a new idea?And what makes you think humans do not have these limitations? The way our brains function and create new connections is based on a fixed set of rules. — Echarmion
We agree on something. Perhaps it should be good to ask here what you see as a problem with PC extremism? Can you give an example?SSU, you have misrepresentated my position. I do think people should talk about PC issues because I think that there are some problems with PC extremism. What I don't get is why pundits seem so much more concerned about the relatively piddling cases of political correctness gone bad than the rise of the right with its potentially deadly xenophobia and misogyny. — Izat So
Topics like immigration or wealth distribution are important topics to be debated even if with the first topic it is the far right and in the latter it is the far left that seek to dominate the discourse...as if they are the only ones critical about the subject. We shouldn't fall into this kind of thinking as it is the traditional way how the extremists seek to dominate the discussion and shut down, push out other moderate views. And naturally their opponents like this: what would be better for leftists to have the ability to paint the whole right with swastikas and for the right to paint the left with Soviet style hammers and sickles.Furthermore, the pundits, "thought leaders", inadvertently appear to the xenophobes and the misogynists to give them some legitimation. They can talk about tempering political correctness rather than trying to shut down Feminist Studies departments. — Izat So
Please read carefully what I said. Turing Machine simply cannot perform the task "do something else than what is given in your program in a way not defined in the program. Whatever neural network mimicking machine deep learning we are talking about, IN THE PROGRAM there has to be specific instructions how to learn, how to rewrite the program. An algorithm following Turing Machine cannot do anything else. This is crucial to understand because it goes to the mathematical essence on just how a Turing Machine and an algorithm works. This is also the reason why computers can win in games: there are confined rules what to do and a game cannot evolve to something totally else with different objectives and different rules. This is based on what a Turing Machine does.Also, computer programs exist that improve their "own" code and chip design. — Kippo
Does anything do other than what has been programmed into it? — TheMadFool
A discussion of terrorism and trends in terrorism would surely be interesting.I think it's also vital to note, per the article, that while there were about 7x more terrorist attacks in the 70s vs. the 2010s (regardless of ideological motivation), there were only 32 more deaths in the 70s than in the 2010s (which doesn't include 2017-2019), so the vast majority of left-wing terrorist attacks (+70%) were non-lethal, while a higher proportion of right-wing attacks are lethal. — Maw
Again these odd deductions: that if people think PC culture has gone too far / might go too far, they obviously (your words), obviously are feeling threatened by the rising fortunes of women and minorities.Extreme PC is relatively rare, in my experience, and I can't understand why anyone would be offended with social justice, unless they are in some sense feeling threatened by the rising fortunes of women and minorities. — Izat So
So you start a thread on Political correctness...B-b-b-b-ut I can't make tasteless jokes anymore and that's the most important thing!
— StreetlightX
Indeed! — Izat So
terrorism isn't on the rise in the long run
— ssu
No, it isn't - except in the US since Trump and the largest proportion by far is right wing

And the evidence shows the right is more dangerous than the extreme PC front. — Izat So

No it's unbearable."Mastermind"?? Forgive me, but the irony is almost unbearable — Wayfarer
And this opinion you have stated quite clearly: that basically those who criticize PC are basically enablers of the alt-right either purposefully or unintentionally, but they still do that. And that the extreme right is on the rise.I know JP is not alt right, if that's what you're suggesting. But he is known to be attractive to some sects of the alt right. - As has been said many times, when you have an expectation of privilege (reasonable or not), equality looks like oppression. Hence all the trumped up hoopla about PC. — Izat So
25 percent of Americans are traditional or devoted conservatives, and their views are far outside the American mainstream. Some 8 percent of Americans are progressive activists, and their views are even less typical. By contrast, the two-thirds of Americans who don’t belong to either extreme constitute an “exhausted majority.” Their members “share a sense of fatigue with our polarized national conversation, a willingness to be flexible in their political viewpoints, and a lack of voice in the national conversation.”
Or maybe they just to close their ranks even more and become even more dedicated to "the cause".. If they can be fooled by nonsense, it's a valuable thing to fool them and let it be known that they were fooled. Maybe that will teach them to be more critical, more intellectually honest. — Terrapin Station
The below picture is not photoshopped. In the picture there is the now former (then acting) President of Finland Tarja Halonen (President of Finland 2000-2012) holding a flag with a very observable swastika.So it's not the least surprising that Jordan Peterson has a large unsavoury following of alt right supporters.
This is not photoshopped. — Izat So


Oh your are just too old, Bitter Crank. You seem to get your notions and definitions as how they were used in the 20th Century when these things were far more, dare I say, solid."Political Correctness", "the left", "the Right", are all a bit difficult to discuss because the terms are too fluid. We put the fluid terms in our squirt guns and aim as well as we can.
It seems to me that there is no necessary link between "the left" and "the right" these days. — Bitter Crank
. If you are a true Christian you will be an environmentalist as well. The reason is that God did not create all the beauty around us so that it can be blindly plundered, and blindly plundering nature will not earn you any favors with God. — Ilya B Shambat
Then God said, “Let us make man in our image, after our likeness. And let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over the livestock and over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.” So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them. And God blessed them. And God said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over every living thing that moves on the earth.
This new idea is basically saying that that the physical universe that everyone sees, all the matter, all the physical objects only exists because humans perceive it as that. ItBreitenberg (848532) resembles a sort of mass hallucination that is being used to make sense of the mathematical relationships of objects. While this does seem quite far-fetched, according to Kastrup, it’s gaining ground.
Embracing your tribe?But the protesters are anti-democratic. Whereas Farage and co. who lied their way to a narrow victory for a cause the most destructive version of which they are now pursuing with gusto against the will of the majority of both Parliament and the public are... Where was I going with this? — Baden
So saying that political violence isn't OK means... that I find it more objectionable than selling arms to Saudi Arabia???You'd have to be suffering from some degree of mental illness (at least I didn't say 'you'd have to be bonkers'!) to argue that kicking a few fascist arses (shock/horror!) is more morally objectionable to, random example, selling arms to Saudi Arabia to bomb Yemeni civilians (business as usual...). — Baden
You seem not to know the term justice state, oikeusvaltio in Finnish. The proper definition would be perhaps Rechtsstaat, where the power of the state is limited in order to protect citizens from the arbitrary exercise of authority. The citizens share legally based civil liberties and can use the courts. So hence my referral not only a state to be a democracy, but a justice state also.What about violence between "justice" states? — Baden

What's your position on that? Ok, for massive military campaigns but not for neutralizing fascist bullies on the streets? Or no? — Baden
You're asking far too much...My claim is that you don't have a coherent ethical position on violence. Show me I'm wrong. — Baden
Jesus Christ, of course they can be! And it's on the individual to look at where he or she draws the line with direct action. Yet what I do not accept is political violence in countries that are basically justice states. Here, now. Not France of 1940-1944.I'm saying forget the "politics" for a moment and ask yourself could an antifa member be seriously ethically engaged? Is that possible? — Baden
And they opposed an actual occupier, an enemy. But I think you can understand that I was talking about the present and the West in general. The US isn't under enemy occupation. And neither is France. Or Finland. And when we have a democracy (at least I live in one), I wouldn't call for, tolerate or accept political violence.No idea what you're talking about. But putting everyone who uses violence on the same ethical terms is madness. And yes, the FR were the "terrorists". — Baden
I put to par only those that engage in violence and terrorism. They are indeed equal, no matter on what side they are.Also, putting anti-fascists on a par with fascists in terms of the language used to describe them is hardly ideologically neutral. — Baden
I recall correctly from a FBI document published before Charlottesville: right-wing terrorism is typical done by individuals in an act rising from opportunity. They (the FBI) knew their home-grown terrorists actually quite well. Having more than one person makes it a terrorist cell, you know. If I remember correctly, there was just one terrorist.Like the small fringe cabal of fine neo-nazis that murdered Heather Heyer in Charlottesvile? The police clearly handled that great. — Baden
Seriously???? You start to remind me of the calls for arming teachers when there is a school shooting.But if there had been enough antifa to beat the living shit out of those guys and prevent the killing, they'd have been labelled a terrorist threat. Makes ya wonder. — Baden
Not my police. But the FBI typically looks at any movement left or right.ssu really needs to read the news more often — Maw
Not really. If you think that to be a vigilante is totally OK or that the police cannot handle some small fringe cabal of neonazis, then I have to disagree. Sorry, but the violence part I simply disagree with.Without better context, this is like saying penicillin needs the existence of bacteria to work as an antibiotic. Which is true, but also really misses the point. — fdrake
Does he really? Typically terrorism isn't tolerated.And if your opponent takes their gloves off? — fdrake
But do we have really a fascist state? Is there truly a threat of it? You see the RAF (Rote Armee Fraktion) believed that they indeed lived in a nazi-Germany (in West-Germany) and then retorted to violence. Yet that idea of a fraction then igniting the revolution simply didn't happen.I don't buy that antifa like strategies are only justified when we already have a fascist state. Their entire schtick is preventative. — fdrake
Having gloves on is basically what a representational democracy and justice state is about. Discussion does matter. Belief in elections does matter.Should have touched on this. Why aren't things like deplatforming, institutional subterfuge, and counter protest legitimate moves again? If you and your opponent both have the gloves on, the discussion usually does not matter, direct action about it is elsewhere. — fdrake
It simply isn't subverted as it was in the 20th Century. Especially when focusing on the West, the idea that democracy is in peril is simply an overblown idea typically used to agitate your own side. One really has to have the perspective here: totalitarian ideologies as Marxism-Leninism and National Socialism aren't coming back after the catastrophic 20th Century.. I'm kind of baffled that you don't see how fragile democracy is and how persistently it is subverted. — fdrake
From the UK I'm not so well informed. But I would assume you have a similar phenomenon as we have here in our idyllic Nordic wellfare state. It starts with neonazi-or-similar movement (usually founded somewhere else) goes on a march with their own silly flags and then there is the counter-protest and in between the police that keep the two separated. Nothing typically happens, but the only thing what is created is a huge media frenzy about the issue.I'm most familiar with the UK, so let's go with that. — fdrake
But they don't reject violence. As I've said, both neonazis and the antifa need each other.What they actually do is counterprotest far right groups and dangerous ideologues, disrupt their organisations however possible (usually without violence). — fdrake
Your babbling over a false narrative, which you haven't explained. Weinstein has gone over these issues in other far lengthier discussions, which there is no reason to say would be false.give a shit about him giving a false narrative on a major news network. — Maw
Yes.The question is: what exactly is the reasoning behind the principle of progressive taxation? Are we saying to wealthy people that they have to pay more just because they can? — tinman917
That's your problem.That doesn’t sound right. — tinman917
OK, you don't get my point in this issue. Fine, on forwards.Not only did Bret mischaracterize the event via email — Maw
It's America. That he later goes to talk to the media and goes on talk shows can be seen as a quite logical. After all, he hasn't his earlier job anymore. And there aren't so many professor level people interviewed in the US media. Hence among the filmstars, comedians and other celebrities your run-of-the-mill college professor here isn't so bad. And Weinstein isn't a provocateur like Milo or Ben Shapiro. It's simply delirious to think that this professor designed this when sending an email, just as in the case of the Yale Hollywood costume email. As I've said all along, the whole oddity of the event made it a media issue.but, far worse, he went on Tucker Carlson's show and in front of an audience of millions did not correct Tucker Carlson when the latter framed the event as "student activists demanding that all white people leave campus, or else" and asking if they protested Bret directly because "he did not leave campus because he's white". — Maw
