Some animals eat plants, some animals eat other animals. There is nothing superior or inferior about either group, and choosing to be a plant eating animal isn't more moral than being a meat eating animal. — Bitter Crank
so what is Hume's point? — Agustino
If the act does not harm or affect anyone, and no one knows that it has been committed, and will never find out, how harmful can it be? If it isn't harmful, can it be immoral? — Bitter Crank
We are social creatures and so the potential has to be socially constructed. It has to come from us collectively and pragmatically. — apokrisis
You are still speaking as if it can only - Romantically - come from within each of us in a personal and individual fashion. But this is about us as social creatures and what that means in terms of flourishing. — apokrisis
Please explain how I am committing the fallacy of begging the question? I fail to see it. — NKBJ
But since I presuppose one reality, one universe, I'll stick to all things that are in existence are "natural" in the sense that they obey the laws of nature. — NKBJ
Everything that exists is natural. — NKBJ
The point of of this thought experiment is to determine whether or not positive and negative feelings such as pain and pleasure are essential in our conception of morality. — Purple Pond
Just because we can't put in words the "essence" of a male or female doesn't mean there aren't specific characteristics that the constitute them. — Purple Pond
Again, pain on the Platonic account would be a privation of some good thing, like health. Pain is the lack of a good that otherwise would exist. — Thorongil
But doesn't that shift the "evil" to whatever it is that makes escape impossible. So it is not the pain as such. It is the torturer - and the degree to which you would assign moral agency to that entity. — apokrisis
Can we do something about Holocausts and antelope being hunted for sport? Of course. So is the evil an irredeemable aspect of existence itself? You are not showing that. — apokrisis
This is what I'm complaining about. You don't seem prepared to make a proper argument. You talk about the effect as if it has no cause - no reasons. You attempt to close down a proper discussion by calling the pain itself an irredeemable evil. And then from that faulty premise, you will draw the familiar anti-natalist truths. — apokrisis
Prima facie? Sure, but I'm not willing to go as far as to say that they are unredeemable. How could one possibly know that? — Thorongil
Good in what sense? I'm sure you're aware of the long Platonic tradition that equates being with goodness, so that inasmuch as something merely exists, it is good. — Thorongil
What goes on in the animal kingdom isn't barbaric -- it is life. — Bitter Crank
It looks like you are saying that the goods of life are only had at the expense of the possibility of something very bad. Is that the main idea? I know that sounds simplistic, but that's all I can get when I put the main points together. But maybe I am not getting the idea of conditional goods and absolute bads here. — schopenhauer1
That it is futile to try to arrive at any purely objective reality.
Agnosticism on steroids, kind of.
I have also heard it this way: postmodern theory, unlike what its critics would have you believe, is not epistemological relativism. It is, rather, a sociological recognition of the totalizing, repressive nature of modernist/Enlightenment principles and their implementation. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
But when I struggle to find strong rebukes from the majority, I fear for our intellectual lives. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
I can't speak for other people, but I can say that I gravitate to speakers/writers who are humble and who show that they recognize and respect views opposed to their own. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
What makes them difficult for me to even begin to swallow without immediate nausea and indigestion, never mind accept, is their "us" vs. "them" posture. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Depends on how it is interpreted. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
I don't recall any direct interaction with a radical feminist. Only indirect interaction, such as reading a blog.
My experience has been that when discussing gender issues with those who have feminist attitudes my words get distorted by very volatile people who do not listen to what I am trying to say or make any effort to empathize with me and my concerns.
You can't get to truth/reality if people are not going to let your inquiry develop.
It is about being able to fully function intellectually. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
But then they do not respect other people's right to speak their mind. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
This thread is not about feminism--I only brought it up as what made me conscious of what we might be looking at--but if we are going to talk about it let's remember that feminists regularly disrespect men's rights activists even though "MRAs" are simply voicing their concerns, venting their frustrations, etc. They regularly, as I understand it, do whatever they can to silence men's rights activists--pressuring places into not hosting men's rights events; removing "Men's Rights Are Human Rights" signs; etc.
Calling pro-choice people "baby killers" is bad enough. Then we get feminists calling men's rights activists "misogynists", among other things. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
I can empathize.
But making life difficult for those who honestly seek the truth is counterproductive. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
If people feel like they have been forced into silence and are not being heard they make their voices heard through, oh, voting Donald Trump into the most powerful position in the world and catching the polling industry, the experts, and the punditry completely off guard, the narrative goes. Sounds about right to me. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Everything, no matter if it is an idea, a worldview, a theory, a concept, a discipline, a tradition, etc. is understood to be just one of many possible ways of knowing and understanding.
I do not think that I just described a postmodern view. A postmodern view is more like "There are no truths. There are only truth claims". — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Anyway, after spending the past two hours browsing the Web and reading about radical feminism I am beginning to think that there is a significant number, if not a majority, of people whose minds are made up about reality, are closed to anything more than a tweak here or there in that reality, and are solely in the business of making everything conform to that reality.
It is settled: in all of history (and probably pre-history) men have been oppressors and women have been the oppressed. This is the ultimate reality. Any inquiry--development of new technology, scientific exploration of the cosmos, further researching and writing history, etc--must be done according to that reality. Any failure to go along with this understanding and service to it is complicity to evil, continued suffering, etc.
And people think that religions are controlling and dominating?! — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Maybe it has been extremely naive of me, but 99% of the time when I read or hear ideas I take them with the writer/speaker saying "I respect views opposed to my views, although I disagree with them. I am open to hearing alternative views. I know I could be wrong. If I am proven wrong, more power to me".
Apparently with some very influential and determined people in the world it is, rather, "This is the way things were in the past. This is the way things are. This is the way things are going to be. Period. Either accept that or get out of my way." — WISDOMfromPO-MO
No more than an infant being potentially an adult or a 16 year old kid being a potential adult
So by that logic you are arguing for infanticide and overall genocide of anyone under 18. — LostThomist
The fact that he is such an extremely popular public intellectual in the US tends to contract your view of him as "jejune" and "uninteresting", Darth ? — Dachshund
Pinker is one of those intellectuals who feel it necessary to provide an opinion on everything outside his main area of work, which, as a result, are usually jejune, uninteresting, or just plain wrong. — Maw
Fertilization may be a necessary condition for personhood, but it is not a sufficient condition. It's is potential, but not actual. An important, and necessary distinction. Your claim is essentially that a gamete, or a collection of cells, is isomorphic to a conscious, thinking, feeling, and viable being is ludicrous. Otherwise, there is little difference between a collection of cells that potentially form a human life, and a collection of cells that potentially form the life of, say, another mammal. — Maw
What does "activism in antinatalism" look like in practice? Do you just not get laid? — Maw
What is a Philosopher? — René Descartes