We can borrow from them...to the betterment of capitalism...and at no significant cost to the underling capitalistic system. — Frank Apisa
I'm sure he does appear strong in some places. It's a big country, though. I don't see him connecting with swing voters, especially after the promise to legalize pot with an executive order IIRC.
I love the guy. I'd love to have him as president. On the national level, he's a weak candidate. — frank
Stick with your condescending attitude about your fellow citizens. If you are an American, that is.
And insanity? People have believed in silly things (like the Soviet Union), but that doesn't make them insane. And calling them insane won't help. On the contrary. Your inability to notice (or understand) my or Bitter Cranks point about this just shows how deep this problem goes.
People like you simply show that the polarization is real. And it will not go away. — ssu
The Democratic field is obviously weak. — frank
Yes. Not only that, but they are totally insane if they don't disagree Xtrix. Those climate deniers! — ssu
That "voters are stupid" is something of a class smear. Most voters are working class, by virtue of their composing by far the largest segment of potential voters. Dismissing most people as stupid leaves you with the narcissists, lunatics, megalomaniacs, and manipulating creeps who want to run things. — Bitter Crank
BTW, how do you happen to be exempt from your sweeping generalization? — Bitter Crank
So anyone voting GOP is insane. — ssu
Even if it's insane, we need some from the "insane" party to join in a coalition to make meaningful change. — Relativist
Yes, Xtrix, how can thinking people vote Republican? — ssu
Not ALL Republicans deny anthropogenic global warming. This article mentions some (somewhat) positive things put forward by Republicans. The tone of the article is negative toward what they're doing, but it does at least show that they're accepting that its occuring. — Relativist
At least here it's not so bad as in Sweden, but it could go there. — ssu
I don't think we do have the numbers in the swing states, and it's probable Republicans will be fired up if a "socialist" runs. — Relativist
Will anything change for me personally? No. — Noah Te Stroete
I may even sit out the General due to another fact, viz. if voting really made a difference, they would make it illegal. — Noah Te Stroete
The pro-Bernie/Warren folks suggest they'll energize the base and bring more people out. IMO, this will result in them winning Blue states by a bigger margin than Hillary did in 2016 (which doesn't garner any more electoral votes), but it raises the risk of losing the swing states. — Relativist
The only interesting, pragmatic and meaningful context to talk under the theme of subject/object, is the mind-body problem — Zelebg
would think most philosophers would be against activism given the mob mentality it often results in — NOS4A2
philosophy at its most potent defarmiliarizes the world, casting it in terms and grammars that are not of its own. It's only by keeping this distance in place that philosophy resists an impotent re-doubling of the world in thought. — StreetlightX
I’d be interested to know for sure but it appears to me that most lived a life removed from what was going on around them. — Brett
For context, I'm with Kant 100% that we get reality 'filtered.' I'm just not sure that his particular system is stable or eternally correct. What Heidegger, Wittgenstein, and Derrida have to say about language makes the situation more complicated, IMV. — mask
which is why we're referred to as beings. — Wayfarer
Heidegger was entirely right to inject time into any analysis of things, even though he tethered that injection to (a certain conception of) death in a way I find problematic. — StreetlightX
This would be forgetfulness or ignorance of 'tool being' or equipment as ready to hand but not 'present.' — mask
So even if a person jettisons the death and authenticity stuff, the unveiling description of all the structure of the mundane that we usually ignore as too close to us is a game changer. — mask
Because it makes a difference as to what kind of thing the transcendental subject is. Collapsing the noumenon into the thing-in-itself idealizes the thing-in-itself in a way that makes Kant... Fichte. It makes all the difference in the world. — StreetlightX
I’m mostly in that camp with your friends. He does well to make clear some of Husserl’s ideas, but overall he narrows the phenomenological interest to language alone. — I like sushi
In phenomenological terms the whole subject/object issue isn’t much of an issue at all. — I like sushi
I like Heidegger, especially the lectures that made him famous among students well before Being and Time. Have you read any of the early stuff or perhaps The Young Heidegger by Van Buren? Having looked at the early stuff, it's clear to me that Blattner's Heidegger's Temporal Idealism gets 'death' wrong. It's nothing so complicated. It's just the possibility of our own death, certain but indeterminate. Memento mori! — mask
Theory's subject-object device is part of an epistemological project that neglects our primary, non-theoretical kind of existence --the same experience of sharing a world of tools and words that makes such a theory possible in the first place. — mask
