Isaac, look at the math and the logic. — Roger Gregoire
Must must must. What is it with this must?? — baker
A philosopher is supposed to "give all ideas a fair shake" — baker
Oops, I've got "Nv" representing two different things. Corrected equation: — Roger Gregoire
What do you mean? — baker
if one doesn't believe in objective morality, then how can one hope to get along with others in the pursuit of some common goal (which is, presumably, what politics is about, ie. the pursuit of some common goal)? — baker
a philosopher is still a human and still in the process of learning, so to him, there are ideas that are new, even if someone else might have known those ideas for a long time. — baker
Assuming that you are right is one thing. Proving it to others is another. — Harry Hindu
Once you try to prove it to others and they don't agree, at that point you may want to revisit your assumption. — Harry Hindu
I'm not saying that you being wrong is the only possibility if someone disagrees, just that it is a possibility to be considered. — Harry Hindu
If you don't consider that, then you would be no better than the person you are arguing with that you assume is wrong and just won't admit it, or even consider it. — Harry Hindu
To think that you can assume that you are right without having to prove it to others - without having exposed your ideas to open criticism - is the problem. — Harry Hindu
If you were interested, you might wonder what I mean by 'social' and 'delegitimising'. — unenlightened
The better you behave the more undeserved the suffering you undergo becomes and the more deserving of pleasure you become. There's the desert of pleasure generated - at least typically - by one's undergoing undeserved suffering, and then there's the desert of pleasure generated by the fact one has behaved well. So, someone who leads a very saintly life may well deserve much, much more pleasure than they received in their life - which is terrible, of course, for it is a great injustice if a person does not get the pleasure they deserve. And any suffering they endure will be, from a moral perspective, much much worse than it would be if they hadn't behaved so well. — Bartricks
to reply in kind, I assume you've done extensive research into the nature of desert and the nature of morality and haven't just posted on a public forum from a position of philosophical ignorance? — Bartricks
Is the argument that if I am critical of psychiatry, I must be in favour of murder and suicide? — unenlightened
necessarily social, and necessarily delegitimising. — unenlightened
That's a very shallow cover for an ad hominem attack. — counterpunch
I haven't read everything, but I have read extensively. It's always open to you to cite your hypothetical:
alternative (equally scientific) positions — counterpunch
The problem with politically correct lefty keyboard warriors; apart from their overwhelming ignorance — counterpunch
Madness is necessarily social, and necessarily delegitimising. — unenlightened
there is the possibility that the reason they disagree with you is because you are wrong. — Harry Hindu
Presumably a philosopher will stay open to new ideas indefinitely, so that any conclusion will, at most, be just temporary. — baker
If this were true, then we could simply lock up all healthy immune people in quarantine, and voila, then we would magically achieve herd immunity and save all the vulnerable people. — Roger Gregoire
A philosopher is supposed to "give all ideas a fair shake" — baker
After learning a language I can know that all husbands are married but I can't know that all men are married, and that is how the distinction is made. — Michael
Its not possible for us both to be objectively correct, but it is possible for both of to be objectively wrong. — Harry Hindu
A group-thinker doesn't know what is wrong or right. Group-thinkers look to the group to tell them what is wrong or right. This is pleading to popularity and authority, which are logical fallacies, therefore cannot be the objectively right thing to do. — Harry Hindu
I don't see any costs in there, nor risk assessments. — Isaac
Me either. It's almost as if that's not possible at this stage. — counterpunch
Why, at one time - did people carve glaciers into chunks and transport the ice thousands of miles, when they could just have invented the refrigerator? — counterpunch
East Anglia ONE - UK offshore wind array, 102 turbines, 7 MW each, producing 714 MW - enough for 600,000 homes. It took 10 years to build, and cost £2.5bn.
The UK has 30 million homes. So roughly, that would require 6000 windmills, costing £1500bn - ish. Only from 2030 - UK government intend phasing out petrol cars, adding the transport energy demand of 30 million cars to the national grid. So 10,000 windmills costing £2500bn. Plus storage facilities - because wind is intermittent. Wind turbines have a working life of around 25 years, and then need replacing. — counterpunch
What are the environmental consequences of doing so? — creativesoul
You have somehow narrowed a lot of arguments I've made into a lifeguard that is woken up. A clever trick, but it's like summing up someone's whole life story in a one liner joke. — schopenhauer1
some of the suffering we undergo we deserve to undergo by dint of our behaviour. Suffering that you deserve to undergo doesn't, at least not typically, make one deserving of pleasure. — Bartricks
parents owe their children a decent living for having, of their own free will, subjected them to a life in a world in which having a decent living is needed if one is to have a reasonable prospect of happiness. — Bartricks
At my hospital they stopped doing elective surgeries during the blitz and devoted surgical ICUs to COVID. We just started doing that again. Space isn't an issue for us because we're gigantic. Staffing limits our capacity. That's true across the country. — frank
You can stock basics (although we use plastic, which means all that stuff has expiration dates), but we learn from the disease what we need in terms of supportive equipment. — frank
If ebola evolved into something less deadly and more transmissible, we don't know if we would need ventilators. We'll have to find out if it happens. — frank
So this is mostly wrong, but I've talked to you about it before, and I don't see any reason to go through it again. — frank
That's why "they" hated Trump. He wasn't for sale. — synthesis
They can actually figure things out and don't really need any more experts to screw things up. — synthesis
Following Habermas (and discourse theory in general) if you are entering into a genuine dialog, then you must not only be prepared to offer reasons but also be persuaded by them. — Pantagruel
People who don't have strong opinions one way or the other and just try to give all ideas a fair shake — Pfhorrest
Well there's always the possibility that you are or I am wrong, no? — ChatteringMonkey
Everyone learns where the weaknesses were and what we should have done. — frank
Your attitude toward the vaccine perplexes me. — frank
how do you think people's response to hearing 22,00 children a day die from poverty is going to have changed? — Isaac
Who cares? — frank
You might not think they are right, but you could be wrong. — Pantagruel
ideological (dis)agreement — Pfhorrest
They could be right. — Pantagruel
following your categorization someone who disagrees with you can only incorrect, because they are either confused/not informed enough/to be converted (middle group) stupid/misguided (4th group), or morally corrupt (5th group). Doesn't seem all that respectful to me. — ChatteringMonkey
Empiricism is a philosophical position. — Pantagruel
I like to think that, when I absorb the nuances of Mannheim's thought, or Heidegger's, I am in a way bringing the force of their intellects to bear on current situations. — Pantagruel
a detailed analysis of the way that social membership steers political and ideological domination... — Pantagruel
If you really don't believe that great historical works contain elements of current merit and value, then you're probably not in the right place — Pantagruel
I was thinking specifically of cases where one knows the person in question and has seen them fall in with bad views in real time. I think of my parents in this category; I know from a lifetime of experience they are well-intentioned and loving (albeit severely flawed) people at heart, but they've also both been suckered in by whatever they're reading on the internet into believing stuff on the edges of Qanon territory. — Pfhorrest
I'm actually just starting a detailed analysis of the way that social membership steers political and ideological domination through an ongoing process ... All centered on Mannheim's sociology of knowledge — Pantagruel
I don't mean to suggest that we should treat the truly ridiculous ideas of the "other side" as legitimate like that, but only that we shouldn't treat the people as enemies merely for not having made up their minds about them, because that then frames us and the undecided as enemies, as so inclines them to whatever side is opposite ours. We should be clear in our view that those ideas are not worth consideration, but we should convey that in a way that's more like warning a stranger away from a path they may not have seen the dangers of, and less like attacking an enemy for daring to even consider going down that path. — Pfhorrest
it's the people in the middle group who feed into the second-to-last, and treating them like enemies only makes them more likely to shy away from our side and get suckered in with our enemies — Pfhorrest
