I would feel the same way if they were hoarding limited resources, but not necessarily for wealth, which is what I thought we were writing about. — NOS4A2
The fact that Dewey used a more ‘ordinary’ vocabulary(did he really? You think his notion of pragmatic is the everyday notion, or a profound change in its sense?) didn’t seem to help him gain acceptance. He was ignored by mainstream psychology for 90 years. In some ways his vocabulary was less accessible or ‘ordinary’ than Heidegger’s. — Joshs
If it occurs through mutual contract I can respect it. If it is stolen my blood boils.
What do you think about it? — NOS4A2
o I don’t believe in theft, whether it is legal or not. My conscience forbids me from coercing some to give their wealth to others. I do believe, however, in charity, philanthropy, and willingly helping others in need. — NOS4A2
The Assyrians did not ring the earth with military bases and conduct violent military campaigns on every continent bar Antartica. — StreetlightX
The internet is isn't introducing something new. It's just speeding things up. — frank
Frankl gives no philosophical proof of this statement — Rafaella Leon
With or without the world, he would act the same way. Acts then acquire a supra-temporal, supra-historical meaning, that is, eternally man should do so before the world exists or when it ceases to exist. Here action is taken as the direct expression of a divine quality that acts without the existence of the world. — Rafaella Leon
The American crisis is not generated by the perverted effects of mass communication. It is generated by the contradictions that emerge from the racist nature of the most violent country of all time". — StreetlightX
Good lord, how does one convey an innovation in thought WITHOUT either using the common stock uncommonly or inventing neologisms? — Joshs
Sounds like a recipe for mediocrity. I wonder how much of that ‘common stock of words’ would remain if we removed the contributions of writers in innumerable fields of culture who thought them up in their armchairs(Plato, Freud, Shakespeare,etc). — Joshs
Again, it's not that philosophy is "misusing" language, and OLP is arguing that it is using it correctly. — Antony Nickles
f you read Philosophical Investigations, it is full of open-ended questions — Antony Nickles
And again, the claim of OLP is hyperbolic — Antony Nickles
I guess it's all over for the US if this is how the president behaves. — unenlightened
So tell me how is it possible that the most admired man in America (according to a Gallup poll) had fewer votes than Joe Blow, who couldn't bring fifty people together at a rally? — Rafaella Leon
Because they cannot alter change, and due to a fondness for authority and order, conservatives are often the hand-maiden of socialism, insofar as compromises and appeasement have led to greater state control (See Bismarck and the foundation of the modern welfare state). — NOS4A2
Just because the GOP in America is in chaos doesn't mean that conservatism around the World is in chaos and has been defeated by right-wing populists. — ssu
Warning: this is a leftist forum and you will be attacked unceasingly if you disagree with them.
Edit: correction, the forum is dominated by leftists. — Brett
Until today, I didn’t know who was Chesterton, so, thank you for this post. — Hrvoje
I think Trump should be arrested and stripped of his powers immediately. — Wayfarer
You must be able to visualize future positions and assess all possible counter play. It's about sight and pattern recognition, not rationality. — BitconnectCarlos
I recall reading somewhere that aesthetics used to the fashion in chess at some point in history, don't recall what era. — praxis
Starting from Gibbons onward (and very likely with similar views given by even older historians), the most cherished reason for cultural decay has been seen as moral decay, the culture becoming decadent, rude and obsessed with wealth and losing it's belief in the values that the culture has upheld as important earlier. The moral judgment is quite apparent. — ssu
What would a reasonable degree of probability, how can we decide that before it’s required? Especially under conditions of stress, or too little time or limited information. Maybe this depends to a large degree on the people who make these decisions, who we elect to govern us? Then again the same people governing during a period of peace may not be the people needed in more stressful times.
How do you think you might respond in a similar situation? Is there a situation where if you could, or had to, you might disregard the law? — Brett
That is not quite what is going on. If you have a look at that part in the full speech you see that Cicero is making a very orthodox legal argument, namely, "this is a clear-cut case of self-defense. We all have right to defend ourselves. The law lets us kill robbers who come to us in the night. Logically, this principle should apply in this situation." — afterthegame
What situation could there be, where the law was to be dispensed with, that could prove it necessary before dispensing the law. It seems to me that from the point of view of those dispensing with the law they’re saying that it’s only by dispensing the law in the first place that we will know how necessary it was. — Brett
