Then threatening people with eternal hellfire and burning them at the stakes are good practices, for they work!What makes something true is how well it works. — Athena
Yes, the Holy Inquisition were "looking for God in everyone" as well.I do not know the first person who said "look for God in everyone", I just know doing so has a positive effect.
But today is not yet the end of the story.In the short term the Nazis were very successful, but today, Germany acknowledges the wrong done to Jews, and through education attempts to right the wrong and prevent it from happening again. The US occupies land held by indigenous people, and we have learned they were right about our planet being a living organism and that we need to protect ecosystems so they work as evolved to work.
Read again. Whose letters are you using to write this?The Romans conquered the Greeks but it is the Greeks who live on in our understanding of democracy and through the philosophy we share and science we develop.
One doesn't actually need respect for people in such discussions. It's not like one intends to take them out for dinner afterwards or start a company together.However, I can see Pfhorrest frustration maintaining respect for people — schopenhauer1
Of course, but then the criterion "Giving all ideas a fair consideration, at one's discretion" becomes moot, and there is, for all practical intents and purposes, no difference anymore between a philosopher and an ideologue.I don't see how that follows. Either the philosopher is deciding at random which ideas to give a fair shake, or he is deciding based on some factor. If the latter, its not prima facie impossible that such a factor might, by chance, never arise. — Isaac
*hrmph*Either way, is there some minimum number of ideas then one must give a fair shake in order to count as a philosopher? If I give one idea fair shake in my teens, am I then set for life to be a dogmatic idealities and still be called a philosopher?
The kind of power that gets people locked up in institutions with white padded cells.because if he can't do them then he can't do all things. If I can do everything you can do, but I can also draw square circles then I have more power than you. — Bartricks
Can you say, "People who refuse to integrate into the socio-economic system in which they live and insist on being a minority thereby risk ostracism"?It's the sledge-hammer of examples, but can you say holocaust? — tim wood
Well, if his own actual standard of truth telling is duplicity, then he can be called neither a hypocrite nor wrong ...Whatever the motivation - it's wrong by his own standards of truth telling. — yebiga
The individual is fundamental to Christianity, because without the individual, the whole prospect of the Judgment and of eternal heaven or eternal damnation fails. Christianity stands and falls with the prospect of the Judgment.dispute his often cited claim that our Judeo-Christian heritage plays a central role in formulating the Western World's greatest ideal: the Individual. — yebiga
Because they all need it and rely on it:Yet, Peterson repeatedly makes this judeo-chrisitian claim and the claim is never challenged. In fact even atheists like Harris have failed to call him out on it.
What does drawing square circles or making superheavy rocks have to do with omnipotence??it is to prove that omnipotence is a quality which is not possible. — god must be atheist
Who commanded that?Then there is the commandment, look for God in everyone and "there but for the grace of God so I". — Athena
While those with prejudice laugh at you and win in the battle of life.We are all in this together so it behooves us to make things as pleasant as we can. :wink: I will do what I can to get to kumbaya-happy.
A Christian with questions and problems! How capital!My difficulty as well. The notion - any notion - of "ought" or "should" outside their correct grammatical usage, is imo fraught. And to suffer for Him? How does that work?
At bottom, if the Bible were just any book I would agree with you 100%. But for a Christian it is not just any book (and just what exactly for a Christian it is has changed over the past 200 years). I am a default Christian — tim wood
What are you talking about??A social situation like this couldn't have happened over night, as if there was no history to it. It seems unlikely that women somehow wouldn't be complicit in it.
— baker
Their country, their rules.
— baker
Well, you have emptied both the ignorant barrel and the stupid barrel; just what are you working on? Are you suggesting that what is wrong on one side of an arbitrary line is right on the other? — tim wood
Meet you there!I'm not sure anyone ridicules old spinsters. — Kenosha Kid
Nobody is talking about an "adoring crowd", but about a woman not being good enough to be loved. Not pretty enough, not rich enough, not successful enough to be loved by a man.One can grow old graciously, without demanding an adoring crowd, and without giving a crap that no one thinks you're hot shit anymore. — Kenosha Kid
Why do you believe that overcoming prejudice is important?I do believe that overcoming prejudice is important, and is an ethical ideal, so I am asking to what extent can we reach this ideal, in order for people to live more harmoniously with all others? — Jack Cummins
To be clear: You're looking for the principles by which love of wisdom proceeds, right?Who isn't? — Isaac
Some people are by default opposed to consider any other views than their own (some religious people are like that, some politicians, some psychologists, for example). So that's one group of people who aren't willing to give all ideas a fair shake, ever. Some of these people can rightly be considered ideologues, some are just so authoritarian that they don't allow anything else to exist in their proximity, some are extremely narcissistic.A philosopher is willing to give all ideas a fair shake, if and when he decides to do so.
— baker
Who isn't? — Isaac
Easy for you to say, as long as you don't face the prospect of becomig the ridiculed old spinster.Only if you value what's lost, in which case you'd opt in. — Kenosha Kid
There's a difference between having strong opinions and voicing strong opinions in a particular social setting.How do people who don't have strong opinions one way or the other take any action at all? These people sound positively dangerous to me, in a dynamic situation such as real life. — Isaac
In other words, good reasons. — Pfhorrest
Awww. You're trying to clearly delineate a philosopher's efforts that testify of his love of wisdom, you're looking for the principles by which love of wisdom proceeds, right?And you're not willing to give any other views a fair shake? — Isaac
And if God can't draw a square circle, then he's not omnipotent, right?Many charge that god can't create a stone he can't lift, therefore he is not omnipotent. — god must be atheist
And doing so comes at a cost. It's not free.But one has the freedom to not opt into that. — Kenosha Kid
An argument in favor of not having children is specific in that it is aimed at people making an important change in their lives.would like to be able to convince people of its soundness. But my priority is to find out whether it actually is sound. After all, it is irresponsible to try and convince people of a view whose truth one is unsure about. So the priority should be to check if a view is true - which one does by careful rational scrutiny.
It can often be hard to appreciate a good argument - hard to recognise just how much probative force it has. Most people prefer soundbites and simplicity and don't have much time to give a view the amount of thought it needs to uncover its problems or to see its truth. — Bartricks
A social situation like this couldn't have happened over night, as if there was no history to it. It seems unlikely that women somehow wouldn't be complicit in it.R-i-g-h-t! When a woman gives offence in those cultures she's burned, stoned, beaten to death, hanged - what else?. The offence? The sensibilities of some man were offended. — tim wood
Whereas in "civilized" countries, a woman needs to live up to a certain standard, or no man will want her, and she will be ridiculed for being an old spinster. Well, at least she can take solace in not having acid thrown into her fce!It was wrong, but qualitatively different from the need to wear a chador outdoors at all times for fear of violent attack. — Kenosha Kid
???During the Gulf War it was reported that (as I recall) in Saudi Arabia a US Army NCO, an MP, in uniform in a local grocery store was struck by a man with a whip - not hard. She ignored it and was struck again. She drew her service weapon and theirs was an international incident (no one got shot). He was a local enforcer of religious codes, and her head was uncovered. To the shame of us all, she was restricted to base. — tim wood
It's politically correct to call it a "choice".But that doesn't mean we should perpetuate the myth that it's a question of choice when the choice is often a chador or a face full of acid. — Kenosha Kid
I think that most people who think science defines the world are proponets of scietism, and therefore, very much assume that science is the one that has all the answers to moral questions.I think most people who think are not moral realists because they also think science defines the world and science cannot discuss morality; therefore, it is assumed morality has no meaning. — Constance
And you think there are people who don't think?most people who think
I've been around Buddhism for some 20 years. In this time I have encountered so many ideas about what meditation "truly is" (and the supposedly peace-loving Buddhists and proponents of mindfulness viciously fighting over it) that by now, all of these ideas seem equally valid/invalid. It really depends on whom you ask.I don't see why you are averse to Kierkegaard. He "speaks" (thought he does it with style, with far too much style--the extended metaphors are maddening) what meditation IS.
I wonder where Nietzsche got that idea from."The most general formula on which every religion and morality is founded is: "Do this and that, refrain from this and that--then you will be happy! — deusidex
Relative to my current state of knowledge and understanding.So how are you judging it to be 'the best' explanation? — Isaac
And how do you propose to do that??As I said, remove the fear of violence for not wearing it — Kenosha Kid
Do Christian nuns _want_ to wear miniskirts? I doubt it.Anyway, coming to the main issue the OP is about, why aren't Christian nuns allowed to dress in miniskirts? — TheMadFool
Have you ever thought about how revealing Victorian dresses actually are?Nevertheless, received opinion suggests that, for a woman, covering her body is a demonstration of her modesty and her refusal to validate the sexual objectification of women by men.
(I tried to find the news article about it, but it's been awhile.) When Madeleine Albright was in her official capacity talking to women from Muslim countries (I forgot exactly from which country), she spoke to them on the assumption that those women felt oppressed and Albright saw herself as some kind of savior to them, or at least, to commiserate with them. But those Muslim women clearly told her that they didn't feel oppressed.Given that's the case, there's no legitimate reason for us to be offended or concerned about Moslem women and their hijabs, burqas, niqabs, and chadors.
But women are complicit in this. A complex social situation doesn't come about just by the actions of one party, in this case, men.It's a two-way street then. Men influence women and, conversely, women influence men too. Yet, this is no well-balanced relationship as far as I can tell; men have the upper hand. A simple proof of this is that, ceteris paribus, men control the wealth of the world, also wield power in greater numbers, and as they say, whoever has the gold makes the rules. I'm quite sure that men were/are one up on women and will be for the foreseeable future. The perfect conditions then for the status quo to remain as it is for a long time to come.
Because to begin with, people, unless they are pathologically narcissistic, have an existential need to believe there is more to their preferences than just subjective whims and molecular chance.No doubt such people exist, but that wasn't my question. My question was "why must lack of objectivity preclude commonality?", not "why may it do so in some circumstances?" — Isaac
This is giving men too much credit. The idea that a half of the population is supposedly under the thumb of the other half of the population is problematic, to say the least.That's the other extreme of male chauvinism's effect on women. — TheMadFool
There comes a point when it's important not to be an ass, Buridan's or otherwise.So you seem now to be saying that a philosopher is not, after all supposed to give all ideas a fair shake, but rather only those which would be neither a rehash, nor fruitless? — Isaac
What can I do, there's still a smidgen of a romantic in me, thinking that politics ought to be about, you know, getting things done. Silly me!It's becoming increasingly clear that you have an idiosyncratic idea of what politics is. — Kenosha Kid
The point of the commandment of having no other gods before Jehovah is that the believer is willing to have no other gods before Jehovah even when it's not particularly convenient or popular to do so.Paul, on the other hand, did indeed suffer - so what, exactly, is the suffering for, and for what purpose if it is necessary? — tim wood
