It's when reason values you. Duh! — Echarmion
What is free will, if we have one. — lepriçok
So where, in your opinion, these first principles reside? — lepriçok
Has being or existence layers that are beyond physics? — lepriçok
. If I am morally valuable — Bartricks
Can speech-censoring as a means to mitigate/overcome unnecessary suffering (of those who would take psycho-affective (?) damage from such speech), ultimately achieve such? — Blurrosier
My usage should be obvious - there is a physical world and a metaphysical one. The physical world is sensory, or empirical, whereas metaphysical is supersensory. Philosophers argue what these two realities are — lepriçok
Of course. But I haven't said anything about some system to make them be trustworthy. I said it was immoral behavior. You brought in the issue of enforcement. Why does judging someone immoral entail enforcement? while judging someone an asshole does not? I don't think these things should be legislated against. — Coben
How does my labeling such meanness immoral stop them from expressing themselves? — Coben
The classical theory of freedom views it as free will which further on is the ability/right to freely choose. This principle can be transferred to the metaphysical level, discussing if there are metaphysical causes adverse to free choice. Metaphysical entities are not obvious and we can only speculate if they have or don't have real effect on our choices. Empirical causes are obvious and our free or forced choice is evident to every person. So my question is, which point of view is more important in libertarianism. Should libertarianism be metaphysical or empirical. How this distinction is related to the question of religion, and is it necessary for libertarians to be atheists. The opposite to freedom empirically is dependence, slavery. Are we slaves to God as well? Is it good or we should rebel? — lepriçok
The latter. I had lengthy first hand experience. The cadres "induce" the subalterns to transfer their "affections" from the previous authority to them instead. It can be cloaked in all sorts of sentimentality, dynamism or superior-looking mystique but beware. The cadres will select individuals who are pliable enough "material" to represent a privileged element within the subalterns, initially making very sure to imply that it is the rest of us subalterns that are electing those. Hence the pretence at democracy. Further "elections" will be more contrived if they don't become less frequent. Dumbing down the system, and relying on the prevalence of a forelock-tugging mentality in the first place, are features.
These operatives and ringleaders wear the aura of semi “rehabilitated” IRA, or Italian revolutionaries, or Yaxley-Cummings “people” types. And they embed themselves everywhere. I mean everywhere. Religions, commerce. They render what we thought was hitherto proper authority, completely ineffective, no matter if there are still a few old-style seniors of attempted goodwill around. There is no recourse and there are no channels of responsibility-taking. — Fine Doubter
Who said anything about enforcing? — Coben
In what sense. That seems like a moral judgment via an expressive label. He's an asshole, he does asshole things, but he's not immoral seems odd to me. — Coben
I don't think that holds. 'a bit' is a vague term — Coben
my argument refutes all rival positions. You genuinely don't have the first idea how arguments work, do you? Yet you're confident you do, and confident I'm wrong. It's an all too common combination. — Bartricks
Progressive reality is what all aspects of nature presents to us. — True Point
Observational reality is what an individual presents to us, which is subject to personal interpretation. — True Point
The question is; if truth is a native of our ideology and not an accurate representation of REALITY, why do we rely on people for the truth, when their truth is based on observation? — True Point
Trolling research lists contagion as one of the problematic results of online nastiness. Everyone acting out their PTSD, thereby triggering someone else's PTSD, and so on. Meanness metastasizes, like cancer. — uncanni
So emotional pain is not a real thing? — schopenhauer1
I would say you have the higher burden of proof. — ZhouBoTong
Based on your quote above (yes taken to extremes), there is not ONE SINGLE HUMAN that we can call racist. — ZhouBoTong
Thomas Jefferson wrote "all men are created equal". He owned slaves that did nothing wrong other than being born black. What possible justification is MORE likely than racism? — ZhouBoTong
If I can provide a letter from FDR referring to "white supremacy", is that evidence of racism? — ZhouBoTong
Right. Which we can never know for sure. But we can make some pretty solid assumptions based on their words and deeds. — ZhouBoTong
Well, sure. But I want to be able to trust people. — Coben
Simply saying that better educated people would not agree with me — Isaac
So, ad populum arguments are fair use when they suit you? — Isaac
A measurement is a concept. — Isaac
the division by which we name it and think of it as one thing (as opposed to another) is not. — Isaac
Where does the stuff stop being 'air' and start being 'plastic'? That's subjective — Isaac
but feeling (dis)comfort with specific bodily features generally correlated with males and females, right? Feeling (dis)comfort about having a penis/vag, breasts, body hair, etc? This is not about "identification as a" whatever, internal or external. It's about feelings about external sex features. — Pfhorrest
Yes, because the concept of "gender" is used both to refer to the social stuff and to the feelings about your physical sex, and I want to disambiguate that, so that we can talk about one without having to talk about the other. — Pfhorrest
this is about having the language to talk about how people feel about their bodies without referencing all that social stuff. — Pfhorrest
No. I think it's independent of my brain — Isaac
No, I think the device is an artificial division of the stuff reality is made of. — Isaac
Yes. As I said all there can really be (if there's anything at all) is a sea of heterogeneous stuff. The device (as opposed to its immediate surroundings) is an artificial division of that stuff I've made up, the readings are more artificial divisions of that stuff I made up. — Isaac
it's just about wanting to have a body shaped like a woman's body. — Pfhorrest