Well, if one is to maintain that some form of inequality must exist for value to have meaning then be ready to be discriminated against or, far worse, prepare yourself for this inevitable event: being killed, cut to pieces, cooked, and served to the being just that much higher in value than you as you are compared to animals and plants you consume on a daily basis. — TheMadFool
Too, the very notion of value understood in your terms doesn't make sense. To think higher and lower values are essential for value to be meaningful sounds very much like saying slavery must exist and that misogyny and that racism must exist to give meaning to value. That doesn't sound right to me — TheMadFool
Good! I hadn't even been thinking about incentive.
Any other thoughts? — Srap Tasmaner
We'll just have to agree on your terms. I make some distinctions I like and find useful but not everyone does.
Some of what you're describing I would call "institutional racism" and it bugs me that Wikipedia redirects "systemic racism" there. I think of institutional racism as the codifying of racist choices within an institutional structure — Srap Tasmaner
it allows members of that institution to avoid responsibility. "Look, if it were up to me, I'd hire you. But we just don't hire colored people, company policy. I'm not saying it's right, or that I wouldn't change it if I could, but I just work here." — Srap Tasmaner
Some things like mandatory minimums are kind of a grey area for me because they're certainly "in effect racist" but they are not explicitly racist — Srap Tasmaner
B: "If so, it's not because they are black, so what's the real reason?"
— Pro Hominem
But like... social facts are causal too. People drive on the side of the road they drive on because it's a norm. If you're happy to disentangle race from science, and you know the history of the concepts, that doesn't mean disentangling race from causality, no? People really are treated differently because of their race, that's the very essence of racism - be it a personal prejudice, an implicit stereotype, an apartheid system or systemic effects. If someone's racial profiled - yeah, it's because of their race. If someone avoids all of that horrible bollocks; yeah, it's also because of their race — fdrake
If we're happy to say that people get racially profiled because they're black; it's an act of racism and implicit stereotyping — fdrake
Then we should be happy to say that people aren't exposed to some risks, or have relative advantages, because they are white. And that's white privilege. — fdrake
If you want the causal chain spelled out:
skin colour -racial signification> assigned attributes+treatments — fdrake
Here's a hard question: to learn how to play tic-tac-toe, do you have to know that you don't know how to play tic-tac-toe? — Srap Tasmaner
By racially marked I simply mean that one's race is, as it were, re-marked upon, whether in word or deed. A kind of racial intentionality as it were - to experience race as race; as distinct from those experiences of race which are not experienced in racial terms - as with your hypothetical police interaction.
— StreetlightX
You don't see anything here or in the last handful of posts he and I have exchanged? Nothing that rings true? — Srap Tasmaner
But when you put the word "systemic" in front of the word "racism", do you mean something else? Something like "racism without gaps"? I truly don't know. Attributing qualities besides skin tone based on skin tone, I would just call "racist". Do you just mean "lots of people having racist ideas"? If so, I suppose I agree after all, I just make allowances for people not to be all-day-everyday racist, in this sense. You only need to be racist once in a while to do your part. (Like maybe you want your dog to have a fun day and that bird-watcher is just so annoying.) — Srap Tasmaner
Systemic racism is differences in experiences and outcomes that correlates to an improbable degree with which race your society, at large, assigns you. It is evidence of the holding, at least now and then, of racist attitudes because, being improbable, it must consist of racist behavior. As I say, "in effect racist". — Srap Tasmaner
I think the consequences are really different, largely invisible, but no fewer. — Srap Tasmaner
I am saying that within these confines, we should strive for language and thinking that is more accurate and nuanced than "white people bad!"
— Pro Hominem
Cool, 'cause that's not what white privilege is - although I understand that for you, seeing the word 'white' can mean nothing other than some kind of slight because at no point have you ever had to deal with being racially marked in that way. — StreetlightX
But you're not going to deny that a whole lot of people count you as white and that this has consequences, are you? — Srap Tasmaner
A reckoning with 'white' privilege in particular is a recognition that the ability to sail through life being racially unmarked is not something that many others are afforded. — StreetlightX
I mean, there's something comic - truly hilarious - about the dude above who reckons that he can just 'reject' racial labels. One has to ask: how does this play out when you're being shot at by a cop? "I reject this!". Oh goody, racism is cancelled, everyone can go home. I mean these people really think racism is some kind of discursive phenomenon, the kind of thing you can just reason about over a coffee table. — StreetlightX
Their experience of race - or lack thereof - is so far removed from any reality that they really think it's just some kind of moot-court exercise in which if one disavows with a clear, strong voice, then all will be right with the world. — StreetlightX
it's just some kind of moot-court exercise in which if one disavows with a clear, strong voice, then all will be right with the world. If only George Floyd had 'rejected' being knelt on. — StreetlightX
A: "Black children are 5 times more likely to drown in swimming pools"
B: "You are aware race doesn't really exist, right?"
vs
A: (car fails to start) "These parts are Jewish!"
B: "You are aware race doesn't really exist, right?"
I imagine you imagine you are doing the latter. From my perspective, it looks like you are doing the former. I draw that conclusion because you are being hostile to the concept of race in a discussion regarding a critical concept used to highlight racial disparities rooted in discrimination. Surely the difference between the two is obvious to you. — fdrake
My kids have seen me play chess, and when little would sometimes want to "play chess like dad" by moving pieces around on the board. They're playing something, but it's not chess. They don't know how to play chess. Even when I played this game with them, my ability to play chess didn't turn what I was doing into playing chess. We were still only playing whatever that game was. — Srap Tasmaner
This looks like a deflection. You seem to fully understand racialisation as a societal mechanism (people are sorted into racial categories by skin colour blah blah blah) and now apparently me pointing out that this happens regardless of individuals' choices to identify as a race member is a racist act — fdrake
I still think it's a social fact that people are racialised. That's what I'm pointing out. The lack of scientific basis for sorting people into races biologically and blah blah is something much different. — fdrake
If you're white or black, you're white or black whether you accept it or not. Those are the breaks. That is the social fact of racialisation. If you are uncomfortable with being seen as your race... Welcome to the racial binning process, please enjoy your stay — fdrake
What if the clocks are all labeled "Here"?
What if they're labeled as you say but their times are only a few minutes apart?
What if speaking a natural language isn't like looking at a shelf full of clocks? — Srap Tasmaner
If you want an awareness neutral concept of membership, think of it is set membership - you belong in a group whether you like it or not — fdrake
Yes, to know a word is being misused is to know it's definition. However, it isn't necessary for us to know the correct definition of, say, the word "chair" to realize that words are being misused. — TheMadFool
Imagine an array of clocks before you, all showing different times. What conclusion can you draw? You don't need to know the correct time to realize that some or all of the clocks are showing the wrong time. Right? — TheMadFool
How many of these types of users are on this forum then? — substantivalism
:rofl: Sorry but you could be charitable instead of disparaging. After all, according to you, I'm not playing with a full deck. — TheMadFool
I believe that a more historically correct and rationally sound labeling for these two ideas would be "post-theist", and "pre-rational".
— Pro Hominem
Understandable. If I have to label myself, I prefer 'antitheist' (or just freethinker). — 180 Proof
Yes, but only, as you agree, in "ordinary" language but language is a bona fide philosophical subject and we bring the tools of philsophy to bear on "ordinary" language we realize how clumsily people have been using this extraordinary tool we possess. — TheMadFool
The recent book by Susan Cain addresses that very question. Ironically, she is a lawyer, who gets paid to stand in front of strangers and talk. Innate Introversion is not Destiny, nor an excuse for becoming a cave-dwelling hermit.
Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quiet:_The_Power_of_Introverts_in_a_World_That_Can%27t_Stop_Talking — Gnomon
I have established parameters for value equal worth, while you have not. — Joel Evans
Social awkwardness seems to be typical of Intellectuals, and especially Philosophers. Throughout history philosophers (e.g. Socrates) were noted for either never marrying, or for ignoring their families. One explanation for this peculiarity, or uniqueness if you prefer, may be that deep thinkers tend to be Introverts. :nerd:
Introvert : a person predominantly concerned with their own thoughts and feelings rather than with external things.
4 Reasons Highly Intelligent People Are Often Socially Inept : https://shynesssocialanxiety.com/socially-inept/
Are Introverts Highly Intellectuals? : https://psych2go.net/are-introverts-highly-intellectuals/ — Gnomon
Nothing. Why?
— Pro Hominem
:rofl: So goats have amplitudes and thoughts are red?
Perhaps a more familiar example will clarify it for you: colorless green ideas sleep furiously. — TheMadFool
There's the problem and you recgonize it but only, it seems, subconsciously."Widely accepted" meaning misses the mark in philosophy or so I hear. This kind of freedom in word usage inevitably plonks everyone outside the gates of confusion, no? — TheMadFool
The goat has an amplitude of red thoughts. What's wrong with the preceding sentence? — TheMadFool
However, at this juncture, I feel the necessity to bring into the discussion the notion of misuse, germane to the issue of definitions as occasions when a word like "chair" is inappropriately applied to objects. If we follow Daniel Bonevac's logic, and I'm sure he's not alone in this, there's no such thing as misuse of words, there is never an error in applying words to objects - every single time a word is used, it's always used correctly. Preposterous!? — TheMadFool
etc.....Responses from the Community headed your way:
1. You don't understand Wittgenstein, like, at all. — Srap Tasmaner
What personal investments are at stake in the discussion? — fdrake
I've been pondering death quite a bit, as usual. It is a constant thought of mine, partly because I never expected to live a long life and have faced it quite a few times. The compulsive thoughts are not due to fear, but instead a loss of what to do next, and a curiosity in the loss of fear to be some sort of abnormality that would effect optimizing function and habits. — Cobra
↪Pro Hominem
I'm good with that. We agree on so much, I think the remaining differences are mostly semantic. If I have new thoughts I'll come back to this.
It was a good discussion and I look forward to seeing you elsewhere on the forum. — Srap Tasmaner
↪180 Proof The essence of the disagreement I think we'll find here is that you're opposed to answers the grounds or operations of which are inaccessible - or nonexistent
— tim wood
No. I'm not "opposed" to them because they are not even answers. Avowals, at most, not propositions.
The answer has an historical basis.
So does astrology.
As to there ain't no why, why ain't there no why?
(1) The only answer to the fundamental / ultimate Why that doesn't beg its own question (i.e. precipitate an infinite regress) is There is no fundamental / ultimate Why.
(2) And as I wrote
Also, "the why" of existence presupposes an 'intentional causal agent' that exists prior to any existence at all which is viciously circular (and/or a category mistake).
— 180 Proof
In other words, it's a pseudo-question - just Bronze Age woo-woo nonsense which philosophy perennially attempts to exorcize — 180 Proof
You overlook my reference to history. Christianity gave a leg up to science. In no sense am I giving over to anything supernatural; it's just the historical fact. It needn't have been Christianity - but it was. The only salient point here is the utility of the idea of one god over many, as the author of one set of rules instead of many sets of inconsistent rules. This evolution starts - well, maybe not starts - has a significant waypoint in Greek Paganism and the Greek view of nature as imperfect. Which already had the tectonic tensions of Pythagorean number, Aristotelian description, and Plato's ideal (Platonic?) models. But this didn't really resolve until Galileo, and still has not completely resolved. Psychology is barely a science, and mainly descriptive; biology, mainly descriptive. — tim wood
But what made science a science was the essentially Christian idea, as opposed to the Greek, that God made nature, thus it could not be imperfect, thus it was something definite and a proper subject for science, the task of the scientist to find out not what imperfect nature is approximately, but what perfect nature is in fact and actually. No voodoo/woowoo here, just history. — tim wood
Most scientists - those worth the name who think about the underpinnings of their subjects at all - believe just this: that if it falls down today, it won't fall sideways tomorrow, unless there's a good reason. Logos, law, god - what's the difference when they're all impenetrable beliefs? — tim wood
On the other hand, I think there are interesting things to say about positions of dominance people are unaware they hold. When I see a young man and a young woman at a coffee shop and the guy is talking 90% of the time, I think, "I used to be that asshat." (And there's data on speaking time in conversations between men and women.) I think that kind of thing is worth knowing about for so many reasons. — Srap Tasmaner