However, some people seem to slip into these sorts of discussions and take it as a carte blanche to vent their personal grievances with men on the rest of the world. Suddenly gestures of genuine affection become symbols of male oppression, and fatherhood becomes a means of enacting a power fantasy (as per one of the articles that was linked earlier). — Tzeentch
I hope it's not rude to lump you both into the same answer, but you touch on similar themes. — Isaac
Secondly, there's the whole space-on-the-front-page question. I get that there's some intersectionality with these issues - patriarchy, racism, capitalism - but intersectionality is not what Mirren is promoting (I'm using her here as an example, I don't want to focus too heavily on the details), there's no "...and this is what fuels the oppression of the working class" at the end. Gods, she'd have to swallow a hell of a bitter pill to add that.
...
Women's rights have made amazing progress, we have equality enshrined in some quite powerful laws. Trans activism only really took off a few years ago and already there are laws protecting that group, and social pressure among at least the liberal classes is enormous to accommodate. — Isaac
We don't need Helen Mirren to be 'slightly-oppressed' because she shares a chromosome arrangement with victims of FGM, and this is important, because the next most oppressed group to the poor victim of FGM is probably the fucking monster who just carried it out, not some wealthy actress who happens to also have ovaries. — Isaac
I have absolutely no respect for anyone who can't tell the difference, and until the former is sorted, any space wasted on whatever minor inconvenience the latter might have to endure is a travesty — Isaac
but rarely, it seems to me, in Anglo philosophy. — Wayfarer
I could answer but I've already gone way over the line discussing the posting styles of members here. I allowed myself to start this thread for the wider issues it might raise and never intended to get into a back and forth about how people write. I had my reasons for giving in and doing just that, but no more. — Srap Tasmaner
↪fdrake You're doing Joshs not @Wayfarer, and they're actually quite different. — Srap Tasmaner
You respond that positions like "the cat is on the mat" are part of a modern trend of seeing cats as being located on mats, but in the past people used to think of cats as being more likely on armchairs. — Isaac
So what flaming hoops did I fail to jump through? — Wayfarer
Yeah, that's not bad. I've figured out what philosophy really is dozens of times, but I'm starting to think you can just not do that. — Srap Tasmaner
That’s up to you. — Wayfarer
Do they think that an attack on patriarchy is an attack on males by females? — Amity
Again, your experience is more extensive than mine. Where did you come across this behaviour? — Amity
But in real life most people who aren't familiar with feminism think that a man calling themselves a feminist is trying to get sex — Moliere
the expression as a kind of virtue signal for partners rather than a serious political or philosophical commitment with a whole body of thought behind it. — Moliere
Have you written anything? Apart from on here... — Amity
Do you think Daly would appreciate having a gender-neutral pronoun applied to her? — Amity
So, you were drawn to the book...because you already have a strong interest in gender theory and language and theology? Or just because.
Daly sounds like someone that should have a thread of her own! Touches all the hot spots. — Amity
Questions were raised as to what is 'Masculinity' or a 'Real Man' as opposed to what? — Amity
'm wondering how you came to know her and her work. — Amity
How on earth is using a term like 'witch' liberatory? Because there is no longer the threat of male persecution? Nevertheless, it still has negative connotations. Who wants to be called a 'hag'? — Amity
Oh yeah, I am that flirty, bewitching female. Males succumb to the sprinkling of my magical prowess. Driven to lust and beyond. And so it is, the female has the power. For all of 15 minutes. — Amity
An interesting transformation from 'lady' to 'crone'. Do any of the labels apply? — Amity
Initially, I thought you were having a bit of a laugh. — Amity
Not sure whether the intention was to subvert 'patriarchal feminine sexuality' - whatever that is. — Amity
Is it the expectation that a woman isn't a woman unless she is married and has kids? — Amity
Perhaps a prime example of the masculine - wanting to 'sow his wild oats' before a settled monogamy with all-important kids. — Amity
Is it that the quip supplied by Crystal is only about the desire for an orgasm, or even a simulation? — Amity
Is it surprising that a woman of a certain age ( a 'crone' ?!) still has sexual drives/needs? — Amity
"Yes!" x15 - con accelerando e crescendo...until release...and then... — Amity
I blame fdrake - the mad, male mod for increasing the momentum of 'The Fight of the Butterflies'. — Amity
There are many cases where admitting you are in the wrong is advantageous, especially to people close to you. I agree, and often the stakes of these cases are fairly low, so one can afford to be honest. — Judaka
What are you saying makes it better? — Judaka
I admire one who acts like this, and I sometimes think people are overly frightened of giving even an inch. Won't tolerate the slightest admission of guilt in any regard, and thus, refuse to "own" any wrongdoing. The entire process of moral judgement seems fixed upon this initial wrongdoing, the attempt to characterise something, for instance, as malicious or deserved makes up the dispute.
Ultimately, to do as you suggest can only work so long as one doesn't instantly lose control of the narrative by admitting any guilt. While I admire it, isn't it generally smarter to obfuscate or contest instead?
Surely, one should at least calculate the chances of whether their reasoning will be accepted? There are no assurances against the repercussions one would want to avoid after providing a justification. Success might just depend on an ability to be convincing.
To me, the essential problem here is that one can't admit something is immoral and do it anyway. As if that actually stops anyone, it just means one must come up with justifications. — Judaka
My second point is that people shouldn't aim to solve contradictions in their views when it comes to morality because you'll just end up believing the lies you create. The absurd moral epiphanies people have to think of just to morally justify a belief formed for personal or political reasons. If you're just going to use mental gymnastics to morally justify your belief, why even bother? Just acknowledge the environment is coercive and unreasonable and make up a lie instead. You'll only end up having a completely nonsensical and incoherent worldview otherwise. — Judaka
I admit my response is largely based on what he was saying about 30 years ago. So maybe he applies the simplifying logic of dichotomies and symmetry breaking to brain architecture now? — apokrisis
hese are modelling constructs. What there is instead is a running habit of discrimination where we are continually dividing our phenomenal existence along those lines. At every scale of biological and neurological being, from metabolism, to immunology, to feet acting on ground, we are having to decide what is self, what is other. — apokrisis
So no sense of self or knowledge of the world needs to be genetically baked in. A baby’s neurology will self-organise around the central idea that there is the part of the world that is the handled, and the part of its world which is thus the handler. — apokrisis
This assumes that the 'representational capacity' is indeed part of its 'material constitution', when it is the nature of representational capacity, and whether this can be explained in terms of material constitution, which is at issue! — Wayfarer
I mean, it doesn't seem fit for purpose in undermining fundamentalism and female genital mutilation; these might be better undermined by variant interpretations of scripture. — Jamal
But being strongly critical of politically ascendent religion is not the same as being critical of belief in God as such — Jamal
On the other hand, even in those circumstances, I can't really see how militant atheism would be either effective or necessary, since for most Muslims, their religion is just what gives shape and meaning to their lives at the ordinary everyday level. It's a luxury for me to say it, but it still looks to me like religion as such is not the problem, but the social and geopolitical situation in which religious divisions take on greater significance than otherwise. — Jamal
If that’s true that’s interesting. Between Chomsky’s comments and a number of lectures/debates I’ve watched, and some SEP reading. — Mikie