What if I decide to eat simply less meat? — Cheshire
labeling other people's moral choices with your judgement. — Cheshire
A person buying a burger has zero effect on your life — Cheshire
You wouldn't want someone telling you right and wrong would you? — Cheshire
I agree, bringing up different examples of moral and immoral actions isn't helpful. — Cheshire
It creates of subtext of needing to guilt trip people as if they can't make a decision without your approval. — Cheshire
Then, assuming they owe you justification for how they live — Cheshire
it's an unpleasant implicit superiority or simply lacking the willingness to respect others right to make their own mistakes. — Cheshire
then yes you will need prove it's as bad as torturing people for fun. — Cheshire
when a vegan imposes their judgement on others knowing full well they did (and probably still do on occasion) use animals as means to an end. — Cheshire
So, the alternative you have presented is the realistic belief that it's 'not bad' in all circumstances. — Cheshire
or do you have a novel definition of this as well — Cheshire
If it were a more reasonable position there wouldn't be a need to emotionalize it with "cruelty" — Cheshire
and compare the general public to thieves and murders. — Cheshire
Maybe it's just unreasonable to take an absolutist position and then hold everyone else to it — Cheshire
It's dishonest to label every pain felt by animal for the production of food as "cruelty". It merely serves as shock value to gain a false moral position. People have balanced the notion of using animals and respecting their lifeforce for 10s of thousands of years. It wasn't discovered by vegans. — Cheshire
Do you ensure the fair pay and working conditions of the people picking your vegetables? — Cheshire
So, a minimal amount of pain is inflicted. — Cheshire
Putting a lobster in the freezer till it falls asleep is not the same as beating an animal for fun. — Cheshire
I think it's the part where you tell other adults what they should and shouldn't eat that gives veganism a cringe twitch. — Cheshire
what I'd say is rather more like this: I think that if you stop purchasing the products of animal cruelty, you will be a more moral person than if you don't, in a way similar to how a person who stopped murdering and stealing would be more moral than what he'd be if he chose to instead continue doing those things. — Amalac
The constant equivocation between minimal pain and outright cruelty. — Cheshire
Or put another way for illustration. Do people constantly hound you for moral guidance in general? Aside from sandwich construction? If they don't need your assistance in making moral decisions most of the time, then why suppose it's appropriate or invited in this regard. — Cheshire
And thus you also have vegan evangelists. — ssu
Don't predators cause suffering to their prey? — ssu
And humans have domesticated animals and farmed them from around 11 000 - 9 000 BC — ssu
That this has been a necessity for our present numbers of humans and our society and culture should be considered too. — ssu
When organisms are consumed, approximately 10% of the energy in the food is fixed into their flesh and is available for next trophic level (carnivores or omnivores). When a carnivore or an omnivore in turn consumes that animal, only about 10% of energy is fixed in its flesh for the higher level.
For example, the Sun releases 10,000 J of energy, then plants take only 100 J of energy from sunlight (Only 1% of energy is taken up by plants from sun); thereafter, a deer would take 10 J (10% of energy) from the plant. A wolf eating the deer would only take 1 J (10% of energy from deer). A human eating the wolf would take 0.1J (10% of energy from wolf), etc.
In fact, the examples of other animals "farming" shows that this basically is a symbiotic relationship which humans as being smart animals have advanced. — ssu
Everything dies eventually and some might say that the suffering at the end of life in a state of nature is comparable to the suffering of culling. — Nils Loc
Could vegans embrace insects as a food or is there still concern over taking life. I'm not so sure being ethically opposed to eating insects makes much sense from an appeal to suffering. — Nils Loc
the simply fact is that if you have chosen one diet, you should let other people choose their diet as independently also. Simple manners — ssu
The more you label something as wrong, more people will do it. I agree with the Vegan cause but people will still eat meat cause it has become taboo and vegans are making this behavior very attractive. — TheQuestion
2) Vegans are becoming more of a dogmatic secular group than that of a activist movement and they’re losing creditibility because of it. When you shame meat eaters is no longer about the cause or the environment but about your personal beliefs. What the individual perceives as what is morally right or wrong. And the original message gets lost and is seen as something different. — TheQuestion
Similarly you could make the case that humane farming of animals for food might cause less suffering than animals experience in a state of nature. For example the winter cull is probably kind of brutal for animals that didn't consume sufficient calories during the warmer season. If farmers could manage their farms well enough to assess degrees of suffering and to expertly cull animals that are suffering, this might provide better conditions for animals compared to the state of nature. — Nils Loc
I didn't say is not possible but consider this analogy of a doctor.
If a Doctor has a patient with gangrene and need to have a limb severed. You don’t rip off the arm, the patient will go into shock and die. Prep work is needed to properly remove the infected limb surgically. So the patient can survive.
Slavery in US history has record of that. Was it the right thing to do, yes obviously but not without struggle. — TheQuestion
It doesn't matter if it's cruel or not is an addiction, is like having a moral debate with a meth addict. — TheQuestion
You have animal cruelty but statics show agricultural kill about 1.5 million native animals like gophers, foxes and other small creatures by agricultural machinery alone. Meaning if you order a salads you still indirectly contribute to a animals death in some way.
Does that mean vegans kill more animals than meat eaters? No. — TheQuestion
But I do find there protest through veganism very ineffective, for one there is the sensitivity factor.
Food is addicting and very delicious and people are not motivated to care about where there food come from — TheQuestion
There is the money factor, your fighting against a industry that makes annually $152.5 billion in meat packing and processing and $65.6 billion in poultry slaughter and processin. So you have to take in account how it can effect the nations economy if a radical change was implemented. — TheQuestion
Meat eating can be justified ethically, provided that one lives honorably and does something worthwhile with one's life. — baker
One thing we want to achieve is preservation of the phenomena. Is the sentence "Socrates wrote The Republic" using the name "Socrates" correctly to refer to Socrates and saying something false about him; or using the name incorrectly by introducing a false description and therefore referring to Plato? Kripke (in those lectures) would say we would tend to say the former. — Cuthbert
If the essence of "Socrates" is every property in the absence of which something encountered in the universe is not Socrates, then the same criterion can be used to determine correct and incorrect use of the name "Socrates" - and vice-versa - perhaps? — Cuthbert
Socrates might have died aged 2 and it would still have been Socrates the very same person, as Kripke said. — Cuthbert
Nothing that constitutes an essence of a triangle is present in a Kanizsa "triangle". — AgentSmith
Is there a triangle? — AgentSmith
This is one of the criteria of essence. It's the properties without which a thing could not be the thing that it is. — Cuthbert
The "essence" of a thing appears to have meant "those of its properties which it cannot change without losing its identity." Socrates may be sometimes happy, sometimes sad; sometimes well, sometimes ill. Since he can change these properties without ceasing to be Socrates, they are no part of his essence.
But it is supposed to be of the essence of Socrates that he is a man, though a Pythagorean, who believes in transmigration, will not admit this. In fact, the question of "essence" is one as to the use of words. We apply the same name, on different occasions, to somewhat different occurrences, which we regard as manifestations of a single "thing" or "person." In fact, however, this is only a verbal convenience.
The "essence" of Socrates thus consists of those properties in the absence of which we should not use the name "Socrates." The question is purely linguistic: a word may have an essence, but a thing cannot. — Russell
It's possible that Ludwig Wittgenstein's claim that words lack an essence is a sign of sorts that the OP is on the right track. — AgentSmith
The affirmative assumes logic psychologism — 180 Proof
I don't think he is making an argument there at all, he seem to be just stating what he thinks is the case, and why we tend to believe in essences... i.e. because we wish it. — ChatteringMonkey
Yes, and it cuts both ways, wishing doesn't have a necessary relation with truth either way... there are just putting the emphasis on the other way (because that is where the tradition they are criticizing was coming from I guess). — ChatteringMonkey
Various definitions (of religion) are therefore acceptable; However, those that imply that religion "is nothing more than" an instrument of secular, social or psychological needs are not acceptable(for example, that its meaning is reducible to its function in social integration); they are empirical statements (false, I believe) and can be rejected beforehand as parts of a definition.
Which country is that If you wanna share it of course? — dimosthenis9
Really seems extremely weird to me that there aren't places as to keep permanently people with mental illnesses. Are they spread all over the streets everywhere?? Are there only private mental hospitals that you have to pay for and your family can't afford it? — dimosthenis9
Especially if money is an issue for your family. — dimosthenis9
Make a serious discussion with all the family members (even distant members), ask for their financial help (it is not a shame at all, you are family after all and they probably know already your situation). Send emails everywhere to each one hospital in your country or other countries too describing your situation.
At a desperate effort, even ask for donation as to raise money for that. Go for it via Internet etc. Remember the goal is one :"Get your sister in a place where she could get help" so chaise it till the end. — dimosthenis9
you suffer also by having to live with her it won't change anything at all. It will just make suffering persons 2, and that's all. — dimosthenis9
Morally, you should all work together to help your sister. Takes shifts in who looks out for her. — rocksteady88
You simply cannot practically look after someone in such a fugue state as an individual while they are in that crisis mode. It is hopefully possible for the professionals to stabilise your sister, get her sleeping regularly and less paranoid and non-violent. There are drug treatments that can help, and a quiet un-stressful environment helps too. Gardening, work with animals, woodland management... — unenlightened
There is no morality that requires you to do the impossible, or what you have no idea how to do. Perhaps there will be times when you can help, but perhaps the family relationship will actually make it impossible for you to help, but on the contrary, will make your presence an aggravating factor. — unenlightened
Listen to the professionals, but with a little scepticism, and refuse to take on more responsibility than you can reliably cope with. — unenlightened
the mental hospitals in your country certainly can keep people for more than a month. — tim wood
Where should she go? If there is a place, it's the business of the hospital to direct you to it or itself to keep her. — tim wood
And there is the question of medicines: are there any she can take that would work? — tim wood
Another thought: paranoid schizophrenia can be a diagnosis of convenience. — tim wood
If your country has nothing, then two things: it's a barbaric state, and you need a different country - easier than replacing leadership. — tim wood
Bottom line, all the pain you may feel on behalf of your sister will avail you nothing and cost you much. Set limits for yourself and stick to them. — tim wood
I don't accept any contradictions. Thinking a contradiction 'can' be true is not equivelent to thinking it is actually true. — Bartricks
it is impossible for anything at the same time to be and not to be — Aristotle
But here's the catch, when a therapist helps a patient they are doing so because it is their job to help them, and not because they are care. And at the end of the day, nobody has actually cared about the mentally sick however much help they get. My question is: How valuable is the help of those who do not actually care? — Wheatley
An able physician is more useful to a patient than the most devoted friend, and progress in medical knowledge does more for the health of the community than ill-informed philanthropy. Nevertheless, an element of benevolence is essential even here if any but the rich are to profit by scientific discoveries. — Russell
The ‘postmodern’ writers I particularly admire are Derrida , Foucault, Deleuze, Heidegger ( yes, I consider him to be postmodern) , and Wittgenstein. — Joshs
To be fair , if your only exposure to ‘postmodern philosophy’ is Sokal’s book, you really need to read primary sources — Joshs
Matthew Ratcliffe is one of the leading writers on cognition and emotion. Here are two articles showing why he considers Heidegger’s work of affect and mood so relevant to current theorizing in psychology.
https://www.academia.edu/458309/Why_Mood_Matters
https://www.academia.edu/458222/Heideggers_Attunement_and_the_Neuropsychology_of_Emotion — Joshs
He would have appeared as incoherent as Derrida does to many today. — Joshs
Try going back 200 years and simplifying him for the average person of the late 1700’s — Joshs
If you’re going g to compare philosophy and science , then recognize how often it happens that a new philosophical work is dismissed and ignored for decades by academics who blame the author’s style rather than their own limitations. — Joshs
Then suddenly the philosopher is rediscovered by a new generation of scientists who are ready to absorb what the philosopher was saying. This is happening now with Husserl, Merleau-Ponty and Heidegger. — Joshs
I guess if Chomsky and Popper agree with us, we must be right. — T Clark
What do you think? — Wheatley
Is a sexed equation? Perhaps it is. Let us make the hypothesis that it is insofar as it privileges the speed of light over other speeds that are vitally necessary to us. What seems to me to indicate the possibly sexed nature o f the equation is not directly its uses by nuclear weapons, rather it is having privileged what goes the fastest... — Luce Irigaray
If you can't say it simply and clearly, keep quiet, and keep working on it till you can
Maths is made up. — Banno
Even as a nonmathematician, I simply can't imagine that such a beautiful/elegant equation like Euler's Identity could be false. It has to be true, nothing so aesthetically pleasing could be false. — TheMadFool
Initially, I wanted to discuss truthiness in the context of ethics, my intuitive response being that to a good person what would happen is moral laws will have a truthiness to them - no logic, no argument, no reasoning, just the firm belief that moral laws simply have to be true. — TheMadFool
When people begin to philosophize they seem to think it necessary to make themselves artificially stupid. — Russell
The violinist is innocent and his life is in danger. But nevertheless, he's not entitled to restrict your freedom for 9 months so that he may live. — Bartricks
Regarding Russell, who correctly denies the possibility of imagining space with nothing in it, for to do so is to imagine the non-existence of that which contains the subject thinking space as empty of all things, a contradiction, Kant stipulates that by objects space is thought to be empty of, are those external to he who is thinking, from which is derived the principle that space is no more than the necessary condition by which objects relate to each other as such, or, relate to us as mere phenomena. — Mww
in order that certain sensations may relate to something without me (that is, to something which occupies a different part of space from that in which I am); in like manner, in order that I may represent them not merely as without, of, and near to each other, but also in separate places, the representation of space must already exist as a foundation....” — Mww
In fact, in “The Metaphysical Principles in the Foundations of Natural Science”, Kant refutes Newton’s iteration of both absolute time and space, which ironically enough, predates Einstein by a century, and even though Einstein had precious little appreciation of Kant, at least in some respects. — Mww
Anyway....hope this helps. — Mww