We learn and grow by doing what Tom Storm described as modifying our ways of interpreting events. Each of us differs in how much emphasis , if any, we place on imperfections that deserve a judgement of blame, and thus provide an opportunity for forgiveness. When it comes to making sense of the imperfections of others, It sounds to me like blame and forgiveness are more useful concepts for you than they are for Tom. — Joshs
Why should we frame ourselves in this fashion? Is it anything more than a way of thinking that grew out of the Enlightenment and its Romantic reaction? The modern moral economy.
How could we be actually "imperfect in our being", except as some over the top social judgement? Why do we have to be the one that changes to fit the norms rather than thinking strategically about how we can tip the social game-playing in our own favour?
So what I am saying is that you are just uncritically going along with this idea that it really is all on us as individuals to police our behaviour and strive to find that upright citizen apparently lost somewhere in our inner confusions and emotional turmoil.
This is certainly the game that modern society would like you to play. Socially, and nowadays economically. "If you suck at life, you need to pull yourself together and try a hell of a lot harder, sonny boy."
And how can you ever feel forgiven for failing if you are in fact being socially labelled as just innately "a failure"?
Of course, traditional societies can be far more constraining on the self even if everyone realises that they are just following the cultural norms. Putting on the required masks.
And the modern world can be lived in a guilt-free and openly negotiated fashion. If we live in families or societies that can own up to their mistakes and roll with them, then forgiveness gets easier in both directions.
It becomes the smoothly flowing economy of debts incurred and debts paid. Messages received and new attitudes promised on both sides of the equation. — apokrisis
I think "to love" is as good as "forgive" but does something closer to what Tom Storm is getting at. — AmadeusD
I think forgiveness has far more to do with dealing with your reaction to an event, than it has to do with your thoughts on the actor. — AmadeusD
Your posts make me think you do not understand forgiveness, — Leontiskos
You say, "Sorry, I will pay for the damages." I say, "Don't worry about it."
That is an instance of forgiveness. You did something wrong and thereby incurred a debt, and then the debt was forgiven. That's forgiveness. — Leontiskos
Is self blame harmful? Should one do it? and if one does it then the next obvious step must be to forgive yourself. — Nimish
OK. So, why did Deadwood, in particular, come to mind as a possibility? — Amity
Perhaps the educators didn't inspire - or just not to your taste. — Amity
Curious as to the question and response. Tom, what made you ask? — Amity
Heh, heh, why Tom Storm, what are you suggesting? — Constance
Apparently this is hard to see, as is made clear by all of the Wittgenstein fans at this forum, who entirely fail to understand this basic point: ethics and value are transcendental. — Constance
Admittedly, his somewhat Idealistic worldview seems, not just ambiguous but dead wrong, to those who are committed to a worldview of Materialism and Scientism. That's the ambiguity of opposing perspectives on reality. Is that where you are coming from? :smile: — Gnomon
And yet we revel in the cultural renderings of it: expensive funerals, Hallowe'en, silly movies and tv serials about undertakers, zombies, etc; scary movies about war, serial killers and random violent events — Vera Mont
What is your opinion on these things? Am I right in believing that in the contemporary world our brains are less tuned towards the fear of death? — Eros1982
Misogyny is not simply hatred of women. When an Ancient Greek man said I'm glad to be born a Greek, a man and not a woman, that is a brand of misogyny. — isomorph
I find this curious. Does this mean a person in a wheelchair is by definition less than fully human? A blind person?
— Tom Storm
That's exactly what I'm not saying, and what I said can't be construed in that way. — isomorph
There are a collection of traits that may be expressed differently in individuals, so to define an essence ( for instance running is an essence of being human, some people can't run so they are less human) is to create second class citizens. — isomorph
Worth reading, would you say? — Jamal
Yesterday I indulged my nostalgia by watching clips of the Japanese TV series Monkey, which was on British TV, and apparently in Australia too, back in the 80s. — Jamal
If the aim of physics is to produce a coherent account of how physical things are, then it presupposes coherence, and hence logic. — Banno
( for instance running is an essence of being human, some people can't run so they are less human) — isomorph
In Plato's time slavery was an institution, their own brand of misogyny, which meant that these people did not qualify as essential human beings. — isomorph
How is 'human condition;' a useful frame?
— Tom Storm
we are humans on this earth. — isomorph
I think it very much depends on the reader and which books they choose to read. — Fooloso4
To be brief: if one is studying books and thinking about them, is he looking forward or backwards, and in which direction is he living his life? And if the books themselves are determinant, we can ask if the books themselves are forward-looking or back? — tim wood
My own tentative answer is that books look backwards and are a part of life but not life itself. And further, to live a life, a person must at some point turn away from books – to embrace other occupations and multiply them, not fly them! — tim wood
(Though I recognize that using the term might have the unfortunate effect of supporting essentialism in the minds of some.) — wonderer1
To oversimplify, we humans are creatures of instinct as much, more, than we are of learning and socialization. We are born with the capacity and drive for language. Our minds are structured by evolution to perceive, learn, and act in the world in a way that keeps us alive. — T Clark
The human condition is what we deal with on this earth. — isomorph
Does idealism break physics? — bert1
I have a strong belief in the existence and importance of human nature. I tend to growl when I think someone might be questioning that belief — T Clark
I don't think you've clearly stated exactly what it is you're trying to say in simple words. The quotations you've provided seem to cloud your meaning instead of making it clearer. — T Clark
It might help to try and look at why we keep coming back to these same arguments. I think it to do with the vanity of small differences. We agree on pretty much everything except that final wording, where you say that the world is a construction of the mind, and I point out that the construction is dependent on stuff outside the mind.
I am not at all convinced we are in any substantive disagreement. — Banno
Presumably, if you give Wigner's friend a gas mask and put her in the box with the cat, the situation for Schrödinger, outside the box, remains unchanged... the cat is alive and dead; yet the situation for Wigner's friend is different - they can see the cat.
And crucially, Wigner's friend and Schrödinger will agree that this is the case. The rules of physics remain the same for both observers.
I'm not keen on philosophers indulging in speculative physics, but it's worth pointing out that "Shut up and calculate!" is itself a worthy metaphysical option:
To shut up and calculate, then, recognises that there are limits to our pathways for understanding. Our only option as scientists is to look, predict and test. This might not be as glamorous an offering as the interpretations we can construct in our minds, but it is the royal road to real knowledge.
— Quantum Wittgenstein — Banno
Even though it is right, its authority cannot be assumed. It confabulates. — Banno
Who says Christian family values aren't identity politics? — ucarr
Yes, there is no coherent way to render mind ontologically fundamental, since the notion has its roots only in our naively intuitive apprehension of our own experience. Wayfarer claims he doesn't agree with Kastrup's "mind at large", which I would say is itself an incoherent idea, but he apparently cannot offer any coherent alternative. So, all he can do is vaguely gesture towards something he doesn't seem to want to give up, rather than being able to state a cogent position constituting an ontology. — Janus
With some apprehension, I want to declare that in America, the sacred artifact is not the Holy Cross, but rather the loaded gun — ucarr
There is only one party in the United States, the Property Party … and it has two right wings: Republican and Democrat. Republicans are a bit stupider, more rigid, more doctrinaire in their laissez-faire capitalism than the Democrats, who are cuter, prettier, a bit more corrupt — until recently … and more willing than the Republicans to make small adjustments when the poor, the black, the anti-imperialists get out of hand. But, essentially, there is no difference between the two parties.”
Some folk here (perhaps Wayfarer is an example) have an interest in and sympathy for religious/spiritual metaphysics. I wonder if that sometimes engenders an uncomfortable loyalty to ontological idealist metaphysics of a Berkeleyan stripe. If so, it needn't in my view. Just as realism does not entail physicalism, even though they too are natural partners. — bert1