The main problem with dirty sexual jokes in the Shoutbox is that they are quite often not as funny or as dirty as we would have hoped for. — Bitter Crank
Thank you Posty for raising this issue and thank you Baden for declining to act as a censor. — Marcus de Brun
I think it's perfectly possible to ask yourself from within your own dream whether you are dreaming or not. Some people can in fact do just that (lucid dreamers). — Fafner
Yes, but those limits can only be apparent to a person who can doubt or have a lack in knowledge. Therefore your hands are real, and the evil demon is... lying?But again, if the skeptic is only a local and not a global one [...] — Fafner
Once again, the skeptic can restrict the scope of his skeptical claim and exclude the possibility of doubting one's doubt. — Fafner
Are you certain of that? Or is that just your way of defining solipsism? — Janus
Doesn't it only, more modestly, presuppose that you don't know that solipsism is the case? — Janus
It seems to me that even if this inference is correct, it still would not refute skepticism because the skeptic need not argue for strict solipsism (in your sense) for his argument to be disastrous for knowledge. — Fafner
Well, if doubt can only exist when there is lack of certainty, and if one can doubt whether solipsism is an actuality, then at most it follows that solipsism is not certain. — Fafner
But I can't see how that proves anything about the existence of my hands. — Fafner
concerning your question, I'm not sure what you mean by "epistemological solipsism", could you elaborate? — Fafner
I'm not sure I understand your point here. — Pseudonym
Indeed the delusion of externality, and rationality is the most dangerous of all, as Bitter Crank describes. — unenlightened
I don't really think there are hinge propositions, but I adopted the vocabulary because it was appropriate. Hinge propositions, as used in philosophy, are a gloss of certainty on a statement of incommensurability. — fdrake
The only problem to be solved is that of the human psychology." — Marcus de Brun
These, I think are among the casualties of the psy-ops we call 'advertising', along with the anorexics, shopaholics, gambling addicts, and so on. Fear, jealousy, hatred, are easy to invoke and manipulate and powerful motivators; tied to sexual frustration and negative identity - you're only worth what you can spend. — unenlightened
I'm not sure one can reason with it so much as attempt to show that another logic is possible - beginning, perhaps, by trying to show that sexuality is situated beyond a economic circuit of mere supply and demand; people are not 'goods': they have autonomy which must be engaged with and appealed to - even at - especially at - the risk of rejection. 'Goods' don't reject you, for a start. — StreetlightX
