Heck, I've never known anyone who has evinced the belief that when they die, they will go to heaven. — Wayfarer
What's wrong with "naive, ad hoc, unsystematic, uneducated" listening to music? How many know how to play an electronic guitar? How many know the history of pop-music or rock?
How are those people who don't know all that about pop or rock music so different in their liking of the music from those who do? — ssu
Sorry, but it's really not a relevant difference. Yeah, if you know how to play the guitar, you might really appreciate more some virtuoso, yet is that really relevant?
I think more relevant is the hostility we take towards some music that isn't "for us". Hostility to classical music is actually quite similar to the hostility towards country music or the music "ordinary people" listen to. The music that the peasant, the redneck, the yokel, listens to in their shabby bars and gatherings. Why is that music so bad?
Take away the social or class construct around it, a lot of music is quite interesting to listen to.
Are your friends all of one gender, ethnicity, religion and country of origin? — Joshs
And yet you have transcended enough gaps in understanding to embrace them as friends.
Recently Whoopi said the Holocaust wasn't about race, it was about man's inhumanity towards man. — Ree Zen
I think American employees should have some protection on how easily their employers can fire them. — ssu
But what you're putting forth so far excuses, for example, the way the Nazis treated the Jews during WWII. "The attributes that are to be valued in the Jews were invisible to the Nazis. The Nazis acted ethically, in accordance with their insight into the Jews."
— baker
That’s exactly right. Ethical intent was not the issue. Lack of insight was. The Jew for centuries represented the alien interloper in European thought. The intent wasn’t to see them as alien and thus morally suspect. Antisemitism was and still is the product of a failure to transcend the gap between cultures. — Joshs
Antisemitism was and still is the product of a failure to transcend the gap between cultures.
Some people...? If you are calling me a patronising, bossy arsehole I ask you to refrain from this in future. — Tom Storm
As to building up an image as a bad guy, the Russians nee Soviets did, have done, a more than adequate job all on their own. — tim wood
the miraclulous nature of everyday reality. — karl stone
Of course none of us can guess at Madonna's motivations, but this all seems to be the typical trajectory of a restless showbiz type who constantly playacts with charged but superficial images and appearances in an endless quest, and by association with such images, to remain relevant and interesting. I wonder if it's all just surfaces for her and if there is any depth at all. — Tom Storm
So, all facts considered, things are not necessarily quite as simple as they might appear to be, and a degree of critical analysis can’t be a bad thing. Unless we choose to not analyze the inconvenient bits that most people prefer to overlook or cover up. — Apollodorus
The only evidence we could ever have for someone's "enlightenment" would be behavior that indicates a disposition of predominant concern for others. — Janus
Do you see humans as "the measure of all things", that humans are the ones who decide what is and could be, and humans get to decide this for all other beings?
— baker
No. Definitely not. — javra
Technology aside, human awareness is able to understand and analyze its own meta-cognition, issues of meta-ethics, the ontological nature of the cosmos, advanced probability theory, and so forth. No other living being currently known to us exhibits any indication of holding an awareness that is so capable.
If all the classical music heaped up over the centuries serves "no wholesome purpose", what in God's name does? — Bitter Crank
The elite have different cultural and practical predispositions than the lower class, so it only makes sense that they experience things differently. — baker
Money or influence doesn't make you hear things differently. — ssu
On the other hand, it's understandable that people don't have as a sport hobby polo as horses are expensive. But listening to classical music isn't. — ssu
Yeah, better to just be a patronizing, bossy asshole, right.
— baker
Is that a recommendation or a question? — Tom Storm
Injuries can occur in ballet and breakdancing (don’t know of too many being spectators to gardening). — javra
For the admiration of skill and stamina, one can also watch ballet, or breakdancing, or do gardening. — baker
The difference between combat sports and these activities is that combat sports address preparedness for real life physical conflict. Yes, it would be wonderful if physical conflict never occurred and we’d all live in some impossible heaven on earth. That’s not the world I live in. And so, at least as a youngster, I would watch safely played out combat sports not wanting blood spilled but wanting to learn from others about optimal physical self-defense. As I said, admiring skill and stamina.
If you don't agree with Maslow's hierarchy, is it
a) trying to make a hierarchy that is the problem
b) trying to make a list of basic and more complex needs that is a problem
c) the attempt to do either is the problem
d) the human condition is too complex for anything this basic and unscientific — schopenhauer1
The way Biden has spoken sounds a lot like they are trying to provoke/encourage Putin into a war. — I like sushi
And just why would there be a right for Russia for a 'buffer state'? — ssu
Just don't want you to be typing stupid stuff on the internet when you should be in the hospital. — frank
No, it’s an approach to ethics that makes the ability to act ‘ethically’ a function of insight, and no internalization of standards will get around that fact, because it’s not a question of ethical intent but of insight. Wanting to do the right thing, and having all manner of rules and guidelines for dong the right thing, are worthless if the attributes within another that are to be valued are invisible to one. — Joshs
Gosh Baker, those comments sound bitter. — Tom Storm
Can the GR end world bigotry and fuckwit behavior? Of course not. Neither can any religious code or ethical system. Are you looking for magic spells that will somehow compel ethical behavior?
Do that, and you will be perceived as a pansy, and exploited.
— baker
Has that been your experience?
Then why bother with the GR?
— baker
Absolutist thinking. If it isn't a 100% done deal it isn't worth doing? Strange.
That's bizarre. Only the neurotic think before they act. The normal person is always sure they have done no wrong and can do no wrong.
— baker
Where the hell do you live? In my experience the normal person (whatever that means) has insight and often reflects on their behavior. And as people mature and grow they often reflect more and deeper. And, as for only neurotics thinking before they act, that's a fascinating frame and I would say it's wrong.
Indeed. It makes them strive to grow up, grow strong, and make sure nobody can do to them what they can do to others.
— baker
That's a jaundiced view of human nature and, quite frankly, having seen many children grow up, I have yet to encounter this phenomenon unless a child was abused or neglected in some way.
Bad day?
The point is not that the GR will fix the world. The point is it can be a useful frame, a teaching aid, or a navigation point.
I think this is the nub of it. There are no different cultural interpretations I know of where murdering or thieving or lying are considered cool. — Tom Storm
So, I have this question: "Is there any meaning talking about 'materialism' to materialists, since they can't see or think that there's anything else than matter, anyway?" — Alkis Piskas
Did Dr Johnson refute Berkeley or just hurt his foot? — Edmund
Is contempt for death (or maybe bravery in the face of death) a virtue? It's been portrayed as admirable, at least, even into modern times. — Ciceronianus
There is something virtuous, or at least admirable, about facing the inevitable without care or with a laugh. Certainly that was the case with the Romans. I wonder if that's the case because bravery is admired or useless misery and weakness despised. — Ciceronianus
For the admiration of skill and stamina within a context that safeguards against what would occur in real life combat where nothing is barred. For example, when someone falls to the ground in a boxing match they're left alone and helped out after a few seconds - rather than having their skull pounded into the hard ground by the opponent (which, for example, happened to a friend of mine in high school when I wasn't there; fortunately resulted in nothing worse than a broken nose). Wanting to see the latter would be bloodlust. Not wanting to see it occur would be an absence of bloodlust. — javra
I don't have a problem with this since I am not a philosopher, but I wonder if it counts as philosophy. When you think about the impressive jargon and thought games inherent in, for instance, phenomenology - all that Epoché and lifeworld hermeneutics, this seems somewhat lacking in depth... or pretention... — Tom Storm
And if one wanted to, one may add the crucial difference that in this case the evidence of cure seems to be absent ... — Apollodorus
Thanks. Yes, spiritual can be problematic. As you say there are so few simple words that can be used as an alternative in a plain English discussion of such matters. — Tom Storm
One of my teams at work is called Spiritual Care and while that might sound delightfully vague, it does significant work helping people who are sick and in palliative care make sense of death and loss and find hope and connection to others.
The examples I gave dealt with limitations on ethical treatment of others resulting from lack of insight into their capabilities. — Joshs
It is saying treat others with the consideration you would appreciate - honour their preferences as you would want them to honour yours. — Tom Storm
If you keep kosher then you may need to understand that your neighbour keeps halal. The GR is therefore not asking you to expect your neighbour to accept kosher but to accept that they have their own observances... — Tom Storm
True. There are no guarantees in life, period. — Tom Storm
I think the GR mainly applies to the self as a guiding principle
When kids misbehave to others there's a famous phrase parents tend to use - "How would you like it if they did that to you?" I've generally found kids get this formulation of the GR instantly. — Tom Storm
What I like about the GR is that it is an invitation to see the rights of others as inviolable.
If so, nirvana can only be arrived at by accident and not deliberately. — Agent Smith
It's not hard to understand - many artists do mainstream, compromised work for the money and exposure. This often annoys and frustrates because anything they might want to do with a richer imaginative vision is simply a risk and unlikely to sell. Audiences are frustrating and this often breeds contempt for the stuff which sells. — Tom Storm
Let me ask you and other doubters here: why do you think there are such things as term limits or division of power in modern democracies, if not to control for such a risk? — Olivier5
Take Erdogan: he started as a democrat and ends as a tyran. Same with Bonaparte, or the French socialists in the 90s, or the Lula administration in Brasil. — Olivier5
