hardening of ideology — Shawn
Bona fide is the sine qua non of communication. — unenlightened
This is necessarily the case as the lie is necessarily parasitic on truthful communication. At the point where one cannot ever trust the response, one stops asking even such paranoid [sic] questions... — unenlightened
we are, in the west at least, a super litigious society. It is difficult to be convinced in bona fides as a mechanism of trust. — ENOAH
Rather than risk life and limb, or face some course of violent retaliation, people could often rely on the good faith of their neighbors to get along. — NOS4A2
But Good Faith nowadays proves to be more difficult than knavery. I don't have any developed theory, but I would propose that the reason for this is an increase in the domain of law, it's scope as a pseudo morality, and the thousand-and-one ways with which it allows an authority to intervene our interactions. — NOS4A2
In short, we aren't free enough for Good Faith. — NOS4A2
You have surely noticed how people are kind and polite when they need something from you, but very quickly change their attitude once you provide them with help. — SpaceDweller
Well, they constitute quite a bit of society and human interactions and always have, before and after the time of the Roman Republic. — Ciceronianus
So yeah, there is no bona fide either or anything similar like Winner school, human society is becoming very cold and rude centered around money. — SpaceDweller
Haven't done that for a long time. Had one positive and one really shitty experience in IT contract work. In the latter, a corporation - don't know what size - was ripping off a municipal government, but we got out unscathed. IBM Canada was mostly okay, faith-wise, if not in executive decisions; a couple of other US subsidiaries were more or less inefficient and top-heavy. We always got paid, but were not always happy. — Vera Mont
Of course. They take place in every supermarket, at every pedestrian crossing, in every bank, school, hospital and home every hour of the day. Were it not so, society would unravel and cease to function. — Vera Mont
What I also suspect, however, is that we have become addicted to catastrophe and stories of doom and zombie apocalypse and many believe that the state of humanity is rotten to the core and that meaning has been lost and the end is nigh. — Tom Storm
How does the sublimation frame help you make sense of people? — Tom Storm
How do you think it works in Musk’s case? — Tom Storm
Are you saying that someone who is hyperactive and successful (and probably lucky) has harnessed their anxiety and channeled (sublimated) this into useful enterprises? — Tom Storm
I think there are various spins to sublimation - depending upon the era of the psychologist. Isn't the idea that it's a defence mechanism involving socially unacceptable impulses or behaviors which are transformed (sublimated) into socially acceptable actions or behaviors? — Tom Storm
The example often used is that of a sociopath who becomes a surgeon - channelling their antisocial urges (cutting people up) and taking risks with life without emotion. — Tom Storm
How well do you know Musk in order to arrive at this? — Tom Storm
Start with "Godel numbering in terms of an isomorphism". — TonesInDeepFreeze
Just the tendency of some people (even biographers) to think they can explain a thinker's work based on their imagining of a writer's psychological state. Conjecture. Or even the claim that they know what a writer intended meaning based on the writer's (putative) psychological state. Whatever that means. — Tom Storm
I think it depends on their philosophy. — Leontiskos
But I recognize that old school criticism would have it that the artist and their life is the context of a work when fully understood. I think this has limited application and is subject to many flights of psychologizing fancy. — Tom Storm
Dang, this Rorty essay is the gift that keeps on giving... — schopenhauer1
This gets to one of my confusions with contemporary "philosophy as therapy," and therapy in general. The goal seems to be "to feel good," rather than "to be good." — Count Timothy von Icarus