...you can't force philosophy on people. — Janus
Governmental policy is all about what ought and/or ought not be done. Politics is all about government. All political positions on the role of government are inherently philosophical. Thus, whenever a politician openly degrades philosophy, they ought very well be taken to task. — creativesoul
What can be done is provide the American public with an accurate timeline of events showing which policies resulted in unwanted consequences for Americans overall, and which politicians voted for those policies, as a means to produce a well informed electorate. — creativesoul
philosophical truths, which I hold to lie in the intersection between logical/mathematical and rhetorical/artistic truths — Pfhorrest
Hence my puzzlement that Joshs thinks "We find something better and only then do we see the limits of the previous approach". Recognising the problem seems an essential first step. — Banno
Seems to me I need to make the point again. Morality is not about collectives, it's about the Other. The poverty of the myth of the individual is that it just fails to address the Other, and so fails to enter into moral discussion. Self-interest cannot form the basis for morality, because morality begins when one puts the interests of an Other ahead of one's own interests. In this sense individualism is the antithesis of morality.Thinking collectively... — NOS4A2
Seems to me I need to make the point again. Morality is not about collectives, it's about the Other. The poverty of the myth of the individual is that it just fails to address the Other, and so fails to enter into moral discussion. Self-interest cannot form the basis for morality, because morality begins when one puts the interests of an Other ahead of one's own interests. In this sense individualism is the antithesis of morality.
The Other is not a collective; it is the person before you, now. The plurality is not a collective, but the Other. — Banno
Oh, perhaps you are right, but I'm not sure that matters. Random tabloid articles and fictitious accounts are the tools of the iconoclast. Žižek uses them to set out the ideologies he seeks to undermine. His application of Hegelian dialectic is second to none....he suffers from quite serious problems in terms of scholarship. — Manuel
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.