Yeah so I just want mundane things, good relationships, low stress, and family that I can keep from imploding. — Wosret
The light at the end of the tunnel may be an express train bearing down on you. — Bitter Crank
I had the same experience with two other languages I was exposed to. Turkish and Arabic. When I started to study Turkish on my own, I also had the chance to practice it in real life, so it was fast and easy (even though almost all of it is gone now). I haven't had the chance to practice Arabic and so learning was far more slow and hard. — Πετροκότσυφας
Perhaps, it is too much to demand from a person that they are full of compassion and self-love to be able to apply the golden rule effectively? After all, the world can be a crummy place, and things do happen that make life less fun or appealing. — Posty McPostface
So, how does that work in terms of the laws being applied uniformly and fairly? Putting that kind of flexibility in the hands of judges increases the risk of unfairness. It also increases the possibility of punishing people less than lawmakers want. In the US, laws with minimum penalties have been popular because they take the discretion out of the hands of judges. Now that approach is falling out of favor because of the high costs of keeping people in prison. — T Clark
However, in many regards, the golden rule has been brushed aside or not taken into serious consideration in courts of law and su — Posty McPostface
- Mills vs. MeekingThe literal rule of construction, whatever the qualifications with which it is expressed, must give way to a statutory injunction to prefer a construction which would promote the purpose of an Act to one which would not, especially where that purpose is set out in the Act....as a matter of construction to repair the defect, then this must be done. However, if the literal meaning of a provision is to be modified by reference to the purposes of the Act, the modification must be precisely identifiable as that which is necessary to effectuate those purposes and it must be consistent with the wording otherwise adopted by the draftsman. [Section 15AA] requires a court to construe an Act, not to rewrite it, in the light of its purposes.
It sounded like the Amish punishment for rape was not very severe, to say the least. And in a society where you're allowed to kill a relative because you think they've been possessed by an evil spirit, there is no recourse. — Marchesk
The figures you quote are disgraceful and I'm certain there are a hundred more such examples, but I'm not seeing the link you're making between these abominations and intelligence. Are you suggesting that everyone knows what's going on but weaves elaborate deceptions to convince themselves they're not monsters for spending more money on perfume than women's health?
Whilst I'm sure such a thing goes on, it would mean that less intelligent people should be less able to deceive themselves and so act more compassionately, but I really don't think this is a pattern we actually see. — Inter Alia
The bourgeoisie, through its established mode of production, produces the seeds of its own destruction: the working class. — Marx
The reason for this is that we can not "feel" the connection between sacrifices today and goals 50 to 100 years into the future , even). — Bitter Crank
But... stop eating fish and meat today so that agriculture/aquaculture will be more sustainable in 2067? Tax ourselves today to pay for a project that won't be done until 2099? Plant 1 billion trees by 2025 so that in 2125 we can cut them down and build shelters? We can imagine it, but we can't really believe in it. And we may not be able to tell whether the expensive, time-consuming project that won't be done 82 years from now will work, or will be worth it. — Bitter Crank
Take a spoonful of cod liver oil everyday now so your body will be healthy 60 years from now when you are 80 years old? I don't think so. — Bitter Crank
Now, a friend is in a similar situation, they did bad on a test, and you notice that they seem down and angry or frustrated. Your reaction won't (I hope) be that same as what you told yourself for getting a bad grade on your final. You would console them or tell them that next time they'll do better, or that it just wasn't a good day. — Posty McPostface
Note that I feminized Tyrannosaurus. Equality must be applied to Vertebrate Paleontology. Female monsters resent being erased; being rendered invisible; being silenced; being remarked upon only when they have laid an egg.
There is no end to the evils of patriarchy... — Bitter Crank
Gender roles arent simply imposed by culture onto individuals in a top-down fashion but also make sense to many of them relative to their own larger worldviews — Joshs
Slogans proscribing violence against women, using a voabulary of social appropriateness and norms, tend to essentialize an issue which needs a more relativistic approaches understanding. Such legalistic, moralistic approaches run the risk of being complcit in what they oppose, and may only perpetuate the problem by failing to grasp underlying causes. — Joshs
I dont see their issues in terms of a failure to be in touch with reality, but rather a need to understand themselves and others in their own terms more effectively. — Joshs
Are there other possibilities? — anonymous66
We, as individuals, are not just cogs of a community we belong it. You mentioned psychotheraeputic venues. This could imply that the difficulites individuals face in understanding themselves sand others sexually is one of pathology, although you may not have meant it in that way. To me, sexual undestanding is a subset of larger belief systems that evolve culturally. Think of cultural movements like the Rennaissance, enlightenment, modernism and the postmodern. These eras express overlapping conceptions of the world in art, literature, philosophy, science and music. They also mark changing erotic worldviews. — Joshs
Quite the reverse in my opinion. I don't know where this "sexually repressive environment" of which you speak is located. Maybe among the Mormons, the Amish, and certain Muslim immigrants? Everywhere else in the U.S. and the West as a whole the ideology of sexual liberation reigns victorious. I don't know how much more "complete" it can get. — Thorongil
Do you always write pure rubbish, or can you cite scientific research which establishes this fact? How were you made aware that the hard problem had been solved? — Galuchat
Perhaps "good science" should be rooted in its consistent ability to predict future events instead of its ability to be falsifiable — MonfortS26
A more permissive sexual cultural would be helpful, but it would have to include an active environment of sexual education, including legitimate venues and institutions for safe, serious, reflective and mindful sexual exploration. — Joshs
If they're socialistic countries and if they're working then socialism does work, so the question is contradictory. What you've been told isn't true. — Michael
Evelyn Underhill, arguably the most learned scholar on Christian mysticism, disagrees. She argues to some length that mystical experiences are unitive; She says that William James' "four marks" of mysticism aren't sufficient, and she lays out her own four instead: — Noble Dust
For the record, I have no qualms about demeaning his beliefs, or the beliefs of anyone else here. If his beliefs are ridiculous, then ridicule is fine by me. Ridicule away! — Sapientia
Simple - That education is not about sitting in a school room learning History and English Literature, that it can be about working at a rewarding job in a safe and nurturing environment, but that is currently illegal even if it's what a child wants. That it is a blatant denial of the child's human right by ignoring their stated wishes and instead forcing them to attend an institution, and allowing that institution to punish without trial and deny free speech just because they're children. It's not a complicated argument. — Inter Alia
but physically imprisoning then in a school building, forcing them on pain of further imprisonment to sit down and shut up (all of which does actual medically demonstrable harm to their well-being), just so that they can be force-fed some useless crap about the Roman Empire is absolutely fine is it? — Inter Alia
No you haven't shown, you stated, I've shown two studies which demonstrate no link between formal education and generalised development of brain functions such as moral reasoning or domain-general ability. You have supplied no study to support your assertion that formal education develops anything in the brain that education on a farm or at a mechanic's workshop would not. — Inter Alia
So you're suggesting that tribal cultures are socially underdeveloped because they don't have any books? That sounds like something out of Victorian colonialism.
It is outrageous to suggest that a child who isn't in school is in any way suffering the equivalent damage as a child who is the victim of such neglect as was seen in the Romanian orphanages. Plenty of people home educate, plenty adopt 'Free to learn' approaches such as advocated by Peter Gray at Sudbury School, there are thousands of children living in tribal cultures across the world who do not have a formal education but simply adopt their parent's role's as they grow up. Are you suggesting all these cultures are neglecting children to the extent seen in the Romanian orphanages? — Inter Alia
But way more than one person has had a mystical experience. (Hey there! Now I'm back to making real arguments). — Noble Dust
Sitting for too long causes demonstrable medical harm. Would you like me to post some of the other 20 similar studies I have available? — Inter Alia
Who said anything about forced labour. It school that doing the forcing, I'm talking about the child's ability to choose which is taken from them by authoritarian rules about working age and full time education. It's already illegal to force anyone to work, child or adult. It doesn't require additional draconian age restrictions. — Inter Alia
So having a child do healthy satisfying, and rewarding outdoor work on, say, a ranch would be a bad thing, but physically imprisoning then in a school building, forcing them on pain of further imprisonment to sit down and shut up (all of which does actual medically demonstrable harm to their well-being), just so that they can be force-fed some useless crap about the Roman Empire is absolutely fine is it? — Inter Alia
I have been trying to make myself clear on this thread for a couple of days and have made no headway. I think that's for several reasons - 1) It's a hard thing to get across. The same words mean different things to different people. 2) I've been trying for a long time to figure out a way that I find satisfactory to describe the experiences and ideas I am talking about. I haven't been able to so far. It's probably silly of me to think that if I can just figure out to say it right everyone will see what I'm talking about. 3) The ideas are probably alien to the way people think about the world 4) I think the fact that you talk about the ideas I'm trying to get across as a type of psychopathology and Sapientia calls them "patently absurd" indicates intellectual rigidity on your parts. — T Clark
I guess I don't see mystical experiences as so out of the ordinary. I don't think they are mysterious at all. I wasn't really thinking about Catholics when I talked about billions of people, I was thinking of Eastern religions and philosophies, although you are probably right to include Western religions too. I have my own idea what "mystical" means. I haven't studied comparative religion much, so maybe what I am talking about is not what others usually think of as mystical. — T Clark