Labor contracts are a feature of capitalism, but hardly the single defining one. In any case, a lot of work today is remote and online so this "place of production" is becoming an anachronism. Work often doesn't need to be done in an office. In many cases employees just need their own computers and network to get work done, this isn't a 1950s factory. Work is changing very rapidly and increasingly virtual. — BitconnectCarlos
What if there's many employers and few employees? What if the employees are strongly organized? What if they're financially secure and don't need work? This is definitely not true. If the wages aren't there you're not going to recruit the right people. There are definitely certain labor markets where things are tilted in favor of the employee. — BitconnectCarlos
I have always been told to that I was crazy, there is something wrong with me and other things, which I understand it is a way of coping with some one that has a different points of views. Never the less, here I am, unclear on what do with this at this point. Any assistance would be appreciated. — Kiingarian
It is certainly true that people have views on the validity of their views, the truth of their beliefs, and so on. — unenlightened
Beliefs are can be judged by the coherency of the logic employed, their validity, their consistency and other evaluations which focus on essentially directly gauging the belief's quality. Regardless of this "quality", beliefs make up a person's understanding of themselves and what goes on around them. The impact of a belief on how a person perceives themselves and what goes on around them can also be measured as an impact on the effect of their perception or interpretation in other areas. These impacts on other areas could generally be characterised as emotional, psychological, financial, social and any number of additional categories. — Judaka
This is what I am pointing out that you are not even trying to do in the op; rather you present as uncontroversial a measurable, — unenlightened
But actively promoting falsehood is difficult, because I do believe in the value of truth, and so it doesn't come naturally. I guess that it is - more than a benefit or utility calculation - more a matter of virtue-building for me. You try to practice good habits that you think will be good longterm, and actively promoting falsehoods seem counter to that even if it would be beneficial — ChatteringMonkey
That's maybe a better example — ChatteringMonkey
Right, here's the thing though, why would it be an interesting question if not because we assume that truth has some beneficial effects. What would an argument that says accuracy/truth should trump benefit regardless even look like? — ChatteringMonkey
so I guess that is my answer, truth has utility, and insofar that utility doesn't weight up against the utility of say the belief a religious person has (or dis-utility that person would experience), truth isn't worth it. — ChatteringMonkey
In case of the narcissist maybe in practice its more a question of short term effects (hurt feelings, blow to the ego) vs long term effects (a more reasonable self-image) that is the effective difference. — ChatteringMonkey
Another example could be viewing the objective vs relative morality debate through the consequences of each being held by the majority in a society as opposed to which is correct. For example, that one led to decreased crime, increased feelings of safety, purpose, belonging and so on and was thus producing superior effects. If you knew that the one which produced the superior effects was the one you believed to be incorrect, would you oppose its promotion or support it? — Judaka
I don't think public dialogue, the beliefs we bounce around in society, is about accuracy and validity in the first place. It think it's about where we want to go, and what we should do to get there... so not about "is" but about "ought be" (descriptive vs prescriptive). — ChatteringMonkey
Is narcissism an example of someone's preference? It's selection seems to be external, e.g. modernity is producing more narcissists. — Kenosha Kid
The example of narcissism is useful, and the links to the articles too. I had not come across much research on the way in which narcissism can be beneficial. — Jack Cummins
I will explain what I mean. If you think about the religious person, their inner narrative is often in dialogue with a personal God In contrast to this, as many do not have religious beliefs, inner dialogue is often in connection with significant others and people in general. So, in that way a sense of self is often based on others' opinions and the social construction of identity. — Jack Cummins
So, in that way a sense of self is often based on others' opinions and the social construction of identity. — Jack Cummins
I can see how personal property will likely be used to create power differentials, but not how it is impossible to have personal property in an egalitarian society. — Kenosha Kid
The thesis of my previous thread on this topic was that HGs wouldn't need have need for an additional socialisation of fairness (or most other things): their neurobiology and their precise situation would uniquely identify the correct course of action or, to put it another way, what their natural morality would dictate would be exactly in line with what they would want to do — Kenosha Kid
Could you explain this? Might be the fastest ever resolution to a thread with this length OP. — Kenosha Kid
To put this in context, I'm interested in why we have (had) the social structures we have (had), and whether there are more optimal ways of organising ourselves that are more in line with what makes us uniquely ultra-social, as well as explaining long-term trends away from e.g. feudalism toward some kind of global social group where egalitarianism and altruism are once again becoming dominant. — Kenosha Kid
Could we not have built an egalitarian society of hunter-fisher-gatherer-storers? — Kenosha Kid
We conceptualise our relation to ideas into affected structures such as language, and then reify these concepts as if the emotional, political or cultural significance we attribute is inherent in its meaning — Possibility
Valuing this quality as an appearance, isolated from either actual effective change or awareness of a broader reality, is where I think the issue lies. — Possibility
For this I will appeal to the textbook definition: — kudos
So, what do you think it means in the definition mean where it says, "...in such a way as to reflect or conform to an overarching set of aims or values"? The word has an admixture of usage in psychological and sociological writing, but why choose this word 'narrative,' as opposed to just 'subjective reality'? — kudos
The word is sometimes used as a type of metaphor for form and content that represents to us something about individuals and the group. — kudos
In the stories we typically see narratives revolve around some clear quest of good against evil or conflict to be resolved. But ideals are more than just our goals and desired outcomes, they can also be states that reassure, confirm, satisfy, and amalgamate. In a story, when you see the hero fail, doesn't it become so much more powerful when he does so because of some trait we envisage as being worth overcoming? And it makes it more satisfying to see when they do finally confirm and satisfy our shared beliefs about such things as the need for bravery, friendship, and so on. So it is in individual and group life, where failed states do not follow only cold machinations, but can take on a narrative tint in the sense that they reflect what is considered good and right by the group and the individuals that make it up. — kudos
The term is affected, though, by one’s relative position to the idea. — Possibility
So those who employ a broader awareness in thinking without aggressively attacking the attitudes of others are now (understandably) distancing themselves from the term ‘woke’. — Possibility
The fact is that most of us are ‘woke’ (broadly and inclusively aware) in some aspects, but not all. It’s a work in progress, and we don’t always have the patience for a broader awareness in thinking all the time. — Possibility
They involve juxtaposition of individual and group ideals with practicality — kudos
Their role as a whole masks their implicit and symbolic side, which constructs their transitory existence to appear like something static. — kudos
But essential to it is that it differs on each viewing and is constantly reordering and reimagining the ideals of individuals and the group. — kudos
Narratives also tend to craft language with which to express themselves, like “narrative logic.” From my own experience, the magnitude of the language is related to it’s form and content. The more radical, sexual, or violent the form and content is, the more so the types of desires and ideals that tend to present themselves. This is no surprise if you think of it as being expressive or at least something that can only be fully realized through expression. — kudos
If we could press a button and eliminate ethnic histories there'd certainly be some not outlandish case for doing so — BitconnectCarlos
no, i want outsiders - if they choose to engage - to engage as a partner, not as parent or a king unless the offense is very egregious. other cultures will have problems, just like yours, but it's all about how you address it. it's about tact. — BitconnectCarlos
you can talk about british history, french history, irish history - it's fine to celebrate that heritage and your connection with it. i'm fine with "german pride" as long as it strongly rejects nazism - again, its all about the story behind it.
there is no "white racial history." brits are not poles who are not czechs who are not italians. there is no "white history." — BitconnectCarlos
Why are narration and bias connected, is it not possible to narrate in an unbiased way? By the word ‘biased’ I’m taking it to mean being exposed as predisposed to making decisions in an unfair or prejudiced way; is this the way you mean it? — kudos
What’s frequently called ‘objective truth’ is like narration. However, narration is associated with unreality, but narration is the sublation of unreality so as to appear in the guise of plainly concrete reality. In film for instance, narration guides the story but has the common characteristic feature of being real events experienced by a subject. As I see it bias and challenging of narration is opposed to this because it’s about emphasis and definitiveness.
To talk about narration as if the real and unreal could be easily distinguished is something like weaving a narrative within a narrative. As if there is a position from which our actions - in a narrative sense - could be judged like a movie where we claim to know what is real and what not, isn’t that a kind of illusion don’t you think? — kudos
Yeah, under Judaka's ideas there would just be no Jewish people or Jewish identity. I've already been over this with Judaka and I don't feel like rehashing this.
Assimilation can always be an option, but it should never be something to be pushed or forced on a group of people. It takes an incredible degree of arrogance to come as a complete outsider to another group and just tell them outright that they need to "be like us" or "become western" - whatever that means. We've already seen this narrative play out so many times in the Western world like with the Native Americans I just can't believe some people haven't learned by now. — BitconnectCarlos
Being ethnically inclusive is not power sharing. Why not let the remaining tribal chiefs of Aborigine run the government? The ones that are left. — schopenhauer1
The point was that ethnic conflict was part of Western history. I'm not taking the bait on these red herrings. I never said this is the case. — schopenhauer1
When your way of life won, and you did all the nasty things to get your way, you can start being "inclusive" and hand-wringing about your misdeeds after-the-fact. And then, in ultimate irony start being the social justice warriors on behalf of everyone else because you "learned your lesson". — schopenhauer1
Of course not.. It's easy to say when you're already in the green zone, buddy. How convenient. You can't go back in time, no.. But to proclaim "But we eximplify blah blah because NOW there is no conflict".. Not sure I buy it. — schopenhauer1
Wait, are you denying that British-European history did basically take control of Australia? — schopenhauer1
When your way of life won, and you did all the nasty things to get your way, you can start being "inclusive" and hand-wringing about your misdeeds after-the-fact. — schopenhauer1