↪Thanatos Sand Heidegger seems to possess all of Nietzsche’s conceit but none of his wit or talent for self-criticism.
Heidegger himself seems to be filled with pride everytime he has found a complicated and forbidding formula and then treats it as if it had been delivered by an oracle.
Being and Time
— Beebert
It's easy to define Heidegger in terms of other philosophers, but harder to define N or K in terms of others.
In the evolution thread I was challenging whether we needed the word animal at all and you were defending it's indispensability as a classification. Yet Judith Butler seems happy to dispose of the biology of gender or sex for viewing gender as a performance.
Do you support this stance in contradiction of your advocacy for a concrete definition of animal?
I defended the idea of words as power tools and constructs.
It would be helpful Thanatos, if you could present an argument from one the thinkers you mentioned and show how it will or could improve life.
I appreciate some of what I have read concerning Foucault but Has he been applied in a radical way?
I am not keen on what I have read from Butler Which seems to be typical left wing bias and word games.
He believed that the Christ is a kind of agent.
God is the ground of being. He's an example of how a person can be a Christian and also be what in Spinoza's time was called atheist.
And indeed the use made of slaves and of tame animals is not very different; for both with their bodies minister to the needs of life.
Aristotle, Politics
You have proved my point Thanatos Sand.
Thanatos Sand I wasn't educated by Jesuits, but I read Bernard McGinn's book about Eckhart. Eckhart did not believe that God is a person.
The more mystical Christians are, the less they tend to believe in a personal God.
I tend to think of mystics of all types as having fundamentally similar outlooks. God is an underlying creative force... something like that.
but the image of Abraham in Fear and Trembling is one any mystic would understand.
Sorry.. you're right, I should have noted it. My thought processes tend to be a little amorphous.
There are few things less intellectual or philosophical than judging a thinker, particularly a brilliant one, on one paragraph.
— Thanatos Sand
I was not judging her whole output I was just highlighting the problem of the inaccessibility of ideas deemed radical (or otherwise). Continental philosophers have sometimes deliberately written in a convoluted manner as a stylistic choice.
If someone is starving in a poor country or struggling on the breadline in affluent country or behaving stupidly and damaging the environment and other lives how much time have we got to decipher this prose?
I am not saying these philosophers have nothing to offer or that they cannot be be profitably adapted and adopted but that doesn't mean you can't have campaigning and immediately accessible philosophy.
It seems non philosophers have been more powerful than philosophers at causing moral change. They simply demanded change and highlighted cruelty. It is easier to ignore or dismiss a position if it is presented in an elongated over analytic style.
Judith Butler was famously awarded a bad writing prize and other criticism for this piece of writing.
To me a radical philosopher should say things that are logical and coherent and approachable to be of real value or motivation.
Why is the world so dysfunctional? I think bad individual and social philosophy is a big cause
A much larger portion of the human population used to want to 'know the truth'. Intuitively, the reason why is obvious. Now, many would rather not know. Others don't care about all that, because they believe that they'll be fine without knowing it. Some know but do not want others to know, etc, etc...
However, it is a post truth world, because dishonesty and insincerity used to be much more widely considered unacceptable. Monetary corruption in government used to be considered unacceptable. Politicians lying used to be considered unacceptable. News media peddling known falsehoods used to be considered unacceptable. Elected officials deliberately peddling known falsehoods used to be considered unacceptable.
It used to be the case that the evidence currently at hand would be more than sufficient to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that one Paul Manafort was/is a Russian operative.
That may still be the case.
If it is not, then nothing would.
Those that view the evidence and arrive at any other conclusion are the ones required to justify that conclusion, for the evidence speaks for itself, bearing witness to the contrary.
When one enters into a philosophical debate, s/he volunteers to justify and/or ground any assertions made.
Refusing to answer pertinent questions is grounds for dismissal.
In order to know what one is talking about when discussing what reporting is true and what reporting is not the participant must first know what sorts of things can be true/false and what makes them so...
There are several contributors here who represent an attitude that Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, and the DNC, are the root of all evil in US politics, and possibly the world .
— Wayfarer
That seems a rather purposeful misrepresentation of our positions here, Wayfarer,
— Erik
we're not in a "Post-Truth" world; were in the "same-lack-of-Truth-we've-always-had world.
— Thanatos Sand
George. W. Bush lied about Saddam Hussain having WMD's, leading to a disastrous Iraq War.
Obama straight-up lied about having the NSA unconstitutionally monitor our phones when he knew perfectly well they were absolutely doing so.
Reagan lied to the country about taking money from Iran weapons deals to finance the horrendous Contas.
— Thanatos Sand
The fact you see these lies as better than Trump's is pretty sad.
— Thanatos Sand
For those who wonder about the aforementioned preservation, I want only to bring your attention to how the Russian investigation progressed. Initially there was scant but solid evidence that Russian operatives were involved in attempting to influence the election. I mean, some of the people who were in Comey's sights were long known to be acting as Russian operatives(literally by decree). That is, some were already under investigation.
As a direct result of someone who is already known to be working as a Russian operative(by decree) being hired by the Trump campaign, that results in possible collusion, and as such warrants furthering the investigation into one Paul Manafort. During Manafort's brief tenure working directly with Trump, Sessions, Michael Flynn, Steve Bannon, and the rest the Trump team, the Republican National platform underwent quite the remarkable change. Very few reports were produced. Even fewer people were aware of the aforementioned direct evidence that had already been gathered by the American intelligence community.
The change was the most favorable one possible to Russia and her best interests. A connection is quickly drawn between the meddling and Manafort and the platform change.
Trump wins.
Barack Hussein Obama used the powers bestowed upon the office of the presidency of the United States of America to have as many intelligence officers as legally possible to have their hands upon whatever evidence had been previously gathered.
Trump fires Comey.
Trump, for obvious reasons draws attention to himself... I mean he is an attention whore if I've ever came across one.
I find Thanatos to be the most clear-headed and honest participant in this debate. He obviously doesn't like Trump the man, and I'd imagine (based upon his very progressive positions outlined in other threads) he likes his political agenda even less.
There's a bit of deliciousness hereabouts...
A hallmark of the post truth world, as has been noted ad nauseum, is to distract attention away from importance and towards trivial bullshit. This move is realized with several means. The thread will bear witness to this, as an astute reader ought see by now.
In real life...
The American nation is on the verge of constitutional crisis. That is the root.
Obama foresaw what he left unsaid. I thank him for preserving the evidence, and history will look upon him favorably regarding that matter.
↪Thanatos Sand Actually it is prescription drugs like opioids that are killing 10s of thousands of people each year and hospitals that are killing hundreds of thousands, making hospitals after cancer and heart disease.
So in a sense staying away from hospitals is a good lifestyle practice right after eating veggies and fruits.
Thanatos Sand Wars use to be great money makers for government and the top 1% but nowadays healthcare is much more lucrative. Tens of $trillions and growing. And it's people such as yourself who serve as unpaid marketers for this money-making machine.