No, Tiff, you're amiss in thinking that that's what I was thinking. I took care with the wording of my prior comment which you referenced. I merely noted that it was after the aforementioned event that your behaviour towards me noticeably changed - and I was not the only one to take notice.
You may well have had a bee in your bonnet long before that encounter. I accept that, with marked indifference. — Sapientia
Yes Sapientia, your attitude changed, followed by a marked change in your behavior. To which I did follow the forum protocol and converse with the administration asking for moderation, so I am glad that you are aware that others noticed more than just me. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
The "Bee in my Bonnet" is not the way you as a fellow forum member trea — ArguingWAristotleTiff
The "Bee in my Bonnet" is not the way you as a fellow forum member treat others in a condescending attitude, it is when you are a moderator with that same condescending attitude towards forum members that is unbecoming of a leader. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
First Essay, Sections 10-12
SUMMARY
Nietzsche suggests that the "slave revolt in morality" begins when ressentiment, or resentment, becomes a creative force. Slave morality is essentially negative and reactive, originating in a denial of everything that is different from it. It looks outward and says "No" to the antagonistic external forces that oppose and oppress it. Master morality, on the other hand, concerns itself very little with what is outside of it. The low, the "bad," is an afterthought and is noticed only as a contrast that brings out more strongly the superiority of the noble ones. — Spark Notes summary of The Genealogy of Morals
I do not care for your hyperbolic, one-sided, verbal lynchings, and I will not permit them to drag me down to your eager satisfaction. You wish to characterise myself and others - male others - as dastardly villains, whilst venerate others - female others - as saints, or rather, damsels in distress. It is all so superficial and sexist, and the worst part of it is that you seem to think you're combating sexism as opposed to succumbing to it. — Sapientia
source link.Philosophy remains the most male-dominated discipline in the humanities, both in its population and its combative methods. Instruction in philosophy often consists of being reprimanded for mistakes so small you need a magnifying glass to see them. At its worst, philosophy is something you do against an opponent. Your job is to take the most mean-minded interpretation you can of the other person's view and show its absurdity. And repeat until submission. Certainly the method has the merits of encouraging precision, but at the same time it is highly off-putting for those who do not overflow with self-confidence.
One tutor of mine, the very talented Hidé Ishiguro, who broke through many barriers to rise to her position as reader in philosophy, had a different approach. Sitting on the edge of her chair to pay full attention to what we said, she would take our stumbling comments, tidy them up, give them back, and tell us how they related to the history of the subject. She would observe that the views we were advancing, even if wrong, had been held by great philosophers of the past. Instead of feeling that we had embarrassed ourselves once again, we came away with the feeling: "I can do this!". Rather than a pedantic scrap over the details, her tutorials were a model of politeness and encouragement. Which makes me wonder: if philosophy is to be more "gender friendly", do philosophers have first to act, well, if not in more "ladylike" fashion, then at least with greater decorum?
The "Bee in my Bonnet" is not the way you as a fellow forum member treat others in a condescending attitude, it is when you are a moderator with that same condescending attitude towards forum members that is unbecoming of a leader. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
War remains the most male-dominated form of conflict, both in its population and its combative methods. The solution to make war more "gender friendly" is to employ greater decorum (Y) .Philosophy remains the most male-dominated discipline in the humanities, both in its population and its combative methods.
Moderators facilitate discussion, they don’t lead discussion. — praxis
I didn't expect you to be thrilled by my complaints. I do expect the moderators in general to respond carefully to reasoned and evidenced criticism. I criticised your posting behaviour in a particular case and a particular circumstance. What I wish, is for you to stop moderating, and for the other moderators to take stock and make an effort to change the ambience of the forum. — unenlightened
I do not deny being sexist, I am a product of the culture. — unenlightened
The lack of women is merely a symptom of a cultural one-sidedness that excludes people like me - by which I mean people like I would wish I was, and like to blame people like you and Agustino for not being more so. — unenlightened
Excuse me, but fuck that! — unenlightened
It wasn't that long ago that I began to feel a condescending attitude being expressed lavishly over myself and other longtime members and asked politely in thread to tone it down, which was met with more of the same condescending attitude and I walked away from the thread instead of resorting to what is happening here. Within 24 hours, on a completely different thread, my post was met with another snarky reply directly to me. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
I admit that I can come across as condescending. I have admitted as much in the past. Sometimes I think to myself, "This is something I should work on", and other times I think, "I may express myself as strongly as I like, so long as it is in accordance with the guidelines, so take it or leave it". — Sapientia
The guidelines and rules are to enforce a minimum level of decorum. Certainly you can do better than that? — Benkei
I personally don't think you're a very effective communicator and it stems from the fact that you think you don't need to take other people's feelings into account when expressing yourself but expect them to accept the way you express yourself. — Benkei
I said in some regards, philosophy, just like war, is conflictual by nature. Not in all regards, but in some it is. If you cannot stand to take part in the battle of ideas - and it doesn't matter why - then perhaps philosophy is not for you, just like a career in the military is probably not for you if you don't like conflict - your gender for that matter is irrelevant.To regard philosophy as an analogue of war really says it all. — unenlightened
Not everyone believes that war is madness. What would you say, for example, to a general with a career in the military? Would you tell him that he's wasted his life fighting for the wrong things, and being engaged in the wrong profession? I think the military and war can have their value.War is madness, and this philosophy is also madness. — unenlightened
What does that have to do with anything? I think might and right are two different things. But yes, might is required to make right in this world at least. Might is required to restrain criminals, keep evil at bay, etc.Is this what you want, that might makes right? — unenlightened
Some would probably consider the self-referential faux flirtation theme in the Shout box sexist, for example. Maybe they're right, but not clearly so in my view. I see it as more of a parody of sexual behaviour, and though it may have a fairly short shelf life, generally harmless. — Baden
I thought we were going with the "won’t happen, but we can always wish". — Michael
A day later and in a fluke accident at an NRA rally, every rabid gun-toting redneck dies horribly of self-inflicted gun wounds. — Benkei
If Sapientia had said that, he may very well have caught flak for it. Maybe my point is only that we all have a bit of Kevin in us that we need to be aware of. — Baden
I do not care for your hyperbolic, one-sided, verbal lynchings, and I will not permit them to drag me down to your eager satisfaction. You wish to characterise myself and others - male others - as dastardly villains, whilst venerate others - female others - as saints, or rather, damsels in distress. It is all so superficial and sexist, and the worst part of it is that you seem to think you're combating sexism as opposed to succumbing to it.
Generally, I don't think this forum is sexist — jamalrob
The guidelines and rules are to enforce a minimum level of decorum. Certainly you can do better than that? — Benkei
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