I don't mind people suggesting that. — Andrew4Handel
Because therapy can help a lot in changing beliefs like this.
It's just a matter of how much you want to change and whether you can accept help or not. — Terrapin Station
I am aware of the history of the term, but Smith never referred to market forces as an "invisible hand". Indeed Smith's usage of the term is highly questionable, since the term is never explained and seems rather like a deus ex machina (and Smith may have meant literal divine intervention) to salvage a conclusion that otherwise just would not follow. — Echarmion
Whimsical bullshit. Marxism is as failed as it was from the start, there is just a new generation that hasn't ever seen Marxism-Leninism in reality and hence the left can blissfully forget everything about all the failed experiments that all ended up in tragedy. — ssu
Are you being sarcastic here? There is no such thing as an "invisible hand". — Echarmion
Trouble is, it's not an economic solution but an ethical one; and hence it is quite unlikely that folk will choose it. — Banno
So why the question? — Old Brian
In short NOTHING about ‘beauty’ is sociocultural, so to speak. — I like sushi
I don’t see how our aesthetic disposition has changed. I don’t see how our approach has changed either. — I like sushi
And now non sequitor and incoherence. The reason, I suspect, you're so slick is because there is no bone in you anywhere, just jelly. And not a good jelly. — tim wood
Are you unable to tolerate his t-shirt? — NOS4A2
You had to add “lynching a journalist” to make it sound like the guy was being intolerant. — NOS4A2
Clearly wearing a t-shirt is not lynching a journalist. There is only one intolerant person in the photo, and it is the person holding the camera. — NOS4A2
No, we should not tolerate the intolerant. — NOS4A2
No, what’s bad is surreptitiously taking a picture of someone’s t-shirt and spreading it among the uncritical masses on twitter for political gain. — NOS4A2
Saying that aesthetics is "philosophy of beauty" is a lot like saying that philosophy is "love of wisdom." There are perspectives from which it makes sense to say both, but they're pretty specific, limited perspectives that don't tell you very much about the activities we actually do as philosophy or aesthetics. — Terrapin Station
I don’t think our political approach to aesthetics has changed other than by means of propaganda spilling into advertising and such. It’s always been there though. Is that the kind of thing you’re looking at? — I like sushi
How have our approaches to aesthetics changed across history? — StreetlightX
