Whenever I get to your construct
thought/belief
— creativesoul
I get stuck and must move on to a different post, thread, forum or activity to reboot my mind. — Banno
There are two uses of the word in play. One is about what we take to be true. The other is akin to absolute truth. — frank
The focus should be on the conflicts that arise due to these two uses, not annointing one to be correct usage and the other incorrect. — frank
So, now we have an interesting situation. The quote in your OP says that everything is a matter of interpretation. I interpret Tarski to be referring to an actuality in his t-sentence. Maybe Tarski thinks he is not. Is there a privileged interpretation of the T-sentence? What would determine the truth in this case? — Janus
What sorts of things can be true, and what makes them so?
— creativesoul
You want us to list the things that all truths have in common? — Banno
Truth-makers are a distraction, not a help — Banno
The late Russell tried to drop propositions in favor of beliefs, but it's generally accepted that that doesnt work. — frank
You've flippantly dismissed out of hand and/or derided everything I've explained, so I'm not sure you deserve one. — NOS4A2
The general claim that I object to is that Trump supporters are crystal clear about what’s important. — praxis
I think one of the things in our purview is to change the kinds of conversations that dominate the public space, and change the terms of what is important. I think the power of this is massively underestimated: normalizing ideas, altering the landscape of what is possible. The right I think understood this incredibly well, and still continues to. — StreetlightX
if it is truly DEFINITIONAL, then it's not really racism, is it. — tim wood
The challenge, as always, is to recognize it, understand how privilege is made manifest, and fight for those who are deprived of it.
— Maw
Ok. I recognize it and realize when failures are the result of bad decisions versus a bad environment. — Hanover
Emotions like the ones I mentioned (fear, anger, insecurity) that a person has not found a means to discharge and thus are "trapped" in his mind.
This can be somewhat benign. Lets say I spilled a cup of coffee over my desk and it frustrated me. This emotion then needs to be discharged. I may go for a walk or perform some physical exercise. I may express my frustration verbally towards a colleague. Or I may bottle it up and be moody for the rest of the day. Since the source of frustration is gone, this sort of emotion tends to resolve itself in time.
It can also be more severe in nature. Imagine the same sort of process, but with a heavier emotional load. Perhaps someone has had a difficult relationship with their parents. Perhaps someone was deeply hurt in a relationship. It is possibly for such events to become internalized, whereby the actual source of the emotion is gone, but the mind itself becomes the new source. This starts getting in the realm of mental trauma. — Tzeentch
Is it good to use as defense against an inconsiderate or insulting attack of some kind? — schopenhauer1
If behaving morally/ethically requires being considerate to others, and being mean is a kind of inconsiderate behaviour, then yes... by definition alone mean people are immoral.
— creativesoul
Ok, but then what is the basis for being considerate? At what times should one be considerate and at what times should one not? Is it all the time? Is it good to use as defense against an inconsiderate or insulting attack of some kind? — schopenhauer1
...all moral value is a kind of value... — Bartricks
Something being valued is not equivalent to something being morally valuable. — creativesoul