However, it may be going the other way and perhaps the philosophers have fallen in love with the words and ideas which they speak, a bit like Narcissus gazing at himself in the water. — Jack Cummins
Your asking 'what makes legitimacy legimate' is roughly like asking 'why does 1 + 1 equal 2? — Wayfarer
Not wasting any more time on this. — Wayfarer
Perhaps the problem is that sex has been repressed and suppressed area of discussion within philosophy, while being the centre of many other aspects of culture. Perhaps this tension is arising in the cracks, as part of cultural collapse. Perhaps the unconscious is bursting through like a raging fire. — Jack Cummins
Did he think first we should achieve happiness which then will make us virtuous? — deusidex
Wrong. The original, «What it's "Legitimacy"», is nonsense. — jamalrob
It was not in a legitimate grammatical form. — Wayfarer
I would say that the term 'legitimacy' could be used and abused politically as an idea of entitlement, backed up within a legal framework. — Jack Cummins
Legitimation traditionally consisted of actions aligning with social and ethical norms, hence conformity with accepted religious interpretation and authority. — Pantagruel
I haven't read him, so I'm sure you know better than I. But as God is described as "nada" according to this version of the Lord's Prayer in Hemingway's story, "nada" is God", and so "nada" is the creator of all. So, from nothing comes something--creatio ex nihilo. That of course isn't necessarily what Hemingway intended to express, but it's an interesting inference from the substitution of nothing for God in the prayer — Ciceronianus the White
Thread title makes no sense and is grammatically broken — Wayfarer
Fixed, thanks — jamalrob
More broadly, means 'fixed in law' or 'recognised within a legal framework'. It can therefore be both a moral topic, and a political tool. To claim that something is illegitimate is to denigrate it, conversely, something 'legitimate' is authentic, genuine, or real. — Wayfarer
I think that this reminds us of our limited human view. — Jack Cummins
"Our Nada who art in Nada, Nada be thy name." — Ciceronianus the White
But is it selfish to want to be young again? — TiredThinker
The very lack of clarity of thought could lead to an unconscious mass destruction. — Jack Cummins
The implication is that the mind can survive beyond death as an independent entity in its own right. — Jack Cummins
Another perspective I endorse is systems philosophy, which doesn't contradict the symbiosis of the metaphysical and the physical you describe. — Pantagruel
whether the material world is the most absolute form of reality — Jack Cummins
I am a "melioristic optimist." — Pantagruel
It seems as though you are stuck in a materialist metaphysic? — Pantagruel
equates 'Being' or 'reality' with matter." — Pantagruel
it's just I feel like they foresaw something in him. — thewonder
They both resented Stirner and his philosophy for expressing what the individual most covets: The total freedom of the concept of "group". — Gus Lamarch
Gus, have you ever thought about giving the answer, "Neutral Evil", to the question as to what you Dungeons and Dragons alignment would be, but thought twice about it? I'd, in good faith, take you for a chaotic neutral — thewonder
there's just this aspect of Egoism that I've never been able not to let unnerve me. — thewonder
"why is there something rather than nothing" — Wheatley
I can see why an Egoist, such as yourself, would take both a disliking and fascination to the most notable detractors of "Saint Max". Marxism-Leninism really does have almost nothing to do with the theories of Marx and Engels, though. — thewonder
A strange aside: I'm pretty sure that the section of The German Ideology, a text that I don't really at all like, critiquing the philosophy of Max Stirner is actually longer than The Ego and Its Own. — thewonder
I realise that you are probably not suicidal — Jack Cummins
I think that nihilism needs to engage with despair rather than simply stating it as a conclusion. — Jack Cummins
only one of possible conclusions to come to. — Jack Cummins
it is based on the way in which you see truth, which is a fair measure. — Jack Cummins
Karl Marx's — thewonder
Isn't this just a prosaic way of saying "nothing really matters"? — Pantagruel
So the goal of going for a walk is to sit down, because every walk ends in a rest? — unenlightened
What do you think of Nietzsche's idea of eternal recurrence? It is something that I do wonder about at times. Perhaps in aeons of time I will be writing this post once again, if everything is repeated in cycles.
The only problem I would see with the idea is, would it be exactly the same? Any slight difference would alter everything. Would the exact same individuals exist or not? For that reason, I think that the idea of eternal recurrence may be more of a symbolic truth, rather than a literal one. But it does give scope for speculation as we look into the abyss. Perhaps the idea of the eternal recurrence symbolises possibilities, and seeing beyond the moment into eternity. — Jack Cummins
One point which I would make here is that you speak of the lack of purpose in the universe and I would say how can we know? Really, we all probably project our fantasised views of how life works onto the universe. It is much bigger than us and the concerns of our human egoism. — Jack Cummins
What I do think though, is that while we are not likely to know the answers fully, the biggest danger is the route of nihilism because then we become just like the people who are indifferent. We would just give up. Personally, I read and question deeply but my ideas shift around quite a bit. — Jack Cummins
Your starting point was the question of utopia vs. dystopia. I believe that it is not possible to create an actual utopia but I still believe that it is better to focus on what possible changes can be made for the better rather than collapse into nihilism. — Jack Cummins
but ideally, articles should be accessible to intelligent and curious lay-people, those who aren't familiar with the literature — jamalrob
This is my observation — Harry Kaethler
It was read. We decided no. Sorry for the delay. — fdrake
But the whole question of annihilation as a goal that is a good question. — Jack Cummins
I used to believe in life after death. — Jack Cummins
The idea of egoism is extremely compelling - for it cannot be denied that the individual often finds his egoistic (hedonistic?) interests second to those of society, until one remembers that he was not always able to wipe his own arse, let alone feed himself, wash his clothes, make his bed — counterpunch
He would have to be a complete psychopath to forget that his egoistic self was born helpless, ignorant and dependent, and was nurtured at the bosom of his mother, in the schoolroom, and at an apprenticeship, where others put their egoistic desires second to his development. Do you suggest the individual just soak up all that social benefit and then declare himself owing nothing to anyone but his own egoistic purposes? — counterpunch
Even in his prime man is dependent on others, and the social division of labour. Either he will be constantly occupied building himself a house, making his own cloth and pots, raising crops (and not be able to do any of those things as well as a specialist) or, to pursue his own egoistic purposes he must necessarily outsource all kinds of needs. — counterpunch
He could live in squalor, I suppose - like Diogenes, but what kind of egoistic purposes can a squalid individual pursue? He eats scraps with the dogs, but he is free? It's compelling, but it fails. It's not honest. — counterpunch
No. That's not right. Human beings lived as hunter gatherers, in tribal groups of around 40-120. Then, these tribal groups joined together to form civilisations. To join together, to prevent any little dispute splitting society along tribal lines, they needed laws, and so needed to justify law and order in society. They made God the objective authority for law and order. It was a convenience - not a lie, and civilisation has conferred huge benefits.
I'm getting a heavy Nietzsche vibe from you, but Nietzsche was wrong. Primitive man was not an amoral individualist. He was a tribal animal, and could not have survived unless he were also a moral animal that shared food, and protected the women and the young. Man has a moral sense - that was made explicit when tribes joined together, and needed God to justify law and order in society.
That was the 'inversion of values' of which Nietzsche wrote - not from individual to social, not the strong fooled by the weak, but an implicit tribal morality made explicit in a multi-tribal society. This is the "lie" - but there was never an individual, amoral freedom to call truth. We are, and have always been constrained by the moral requirements of society - tribal, and later, multi-tribal. — counterpunch
Ah yeah, I remember him now. Could be. Although email and IP are different. — Baden
We probably would not be able to reknit an unraveled civilization. — Bitter Crank