So, in American culture of 2020, there are many guns available for individuals to use. Criticize the society for the number of guns. However, only an individual can pick up a gun, point it at you, and pull the trigger. That's the fault of the individual. — Bitter Crank
Sure, but what I’m getting at is that it’s someone’s fault that we have so many guns too. I just get the idea that some people treat society as if it was a separate entity capable of making decisions. It’s not. Decisions are made by people with their own agendas and intentions. So instead of criticizing society for the number of guns, we should criticize the people who caused that (the founders of the constitution, I suppose), and those who perpetuate this status quo (judges who interpreted the 2nd. Amendment in a certain way, advocates, etc.).
So the issue is if, when people do things together, there is a something that is worthy of it's own name. — Banno
I guess that’s one way to put it, but the bigger issue is what is more likely to cause change; blaming society or people? To me, blaming society is too broad to be very useful. How do I change society? Whereas blaming specific people, or groups of people, at least let’s me know where I need to stand with my picket sign.
Framed in this context, it's easy to see that a claim like "it's society's fault" makes sense only in the case of society applying a negative selection pressure on certain individual predelictions and that in turn causing negative pyschological effects down the line that manifests in myriad ways at the individual level. — TheMadFool
If I create a machine, and that machine creates a machine that kills people, who is responsible for those deaths? And let’s assume the machines are conscious and have free will, for the sake of argument.
Their ideas and practices, their organisation and many things. — Judaka
So if all Americans were dead, would American culture/society still exist? Things like ideas, practices, etc. are just parts of people, right?
Look at how society develops as a result of technology, overseas ideas, soft power from other countries or music, culture develops through food, drugs, religion. — Judaka
All things created and perpetuated by people...
Even if society was just all individuals making choices, why would you ask people to take responsibility for someone else's choices? — Judaka
I’m not. As a practical matter, I consider everyone to be responsible for their own actions. But you can’t be responsible for what happens to you, like getting arrested, being discriminated against, etc. Who’s responsible for things like that?
Why would that mean someone can't blame society even if they thought that meant "the individual choices which have impacted me"? — Judaka
Because that wouldn’t be accurate. I’m not saying that individual choices have no effect on other individuals. I’m saying that each person should be blamed for their individual actions, instead of society.
Yes, people ultimately choose whether to be violent or not, even if there are particular environment or social factors which influenced them, they still go to jail for their crimes. — Judaka
My point is that these factors are themselves all caused by people.
You haven't even said who you're really arguing with just "them goddamn folk who blame society". — Judaka
I’m not really arguing with anyone. I’m asking questions. Perhaps you mistake questions for arguments?
Everything about this thread is mediocre and I've spent too much time on it already. — Judaka
I’ll happily waste as much of your time as you allow.
:smile:
Prussian military order is a few establish the policy and then they can all be killed, but the policy is still in force. — Athena
But the cause is still those few who established the policies. I think we should move away from blaming things like society or policies, and towards the people who create/perpetuate them. If the point of ascribing blame is to create change, then the focus should be narrow. Society encompasses many things, some good, some bad, but when we blame society as a whole the good seems to be overlooked, or overshadowed by whatever we’re railing against to be changed. We don’t want the entire society to change (at least not usually), we want particular parts of it to change that are created/ spurred on by particular people. It’s those people that need to change, not some abstract notion of society.
Effectively that is what we have but the parts of computer are organic. The parts are humans following policy and who expect everyone to follow policy. — Athena
But there is still no need to be complicit in a system you feel is corrupt. Following orders aren’t the only option you have. And no, you’re very unlikely to have the power to change or influence much beyond your personal inner circle, but that’s precisely how change takes place over time. It just takes a lot of people, and a lot of time being the change they wish to see in the world, to paraphrase Gandhi.
And the very powerful media people are not being responsible people, but total prostitutes doing whatever it takes to accumulate wealth. — Athena
Perfect! This is a good example of what I mean. Holding particular people responsible, rather than just “the media.”