Do you really think that I'm the only person for which it is more of a chore than an art — Sapientia
No it wasn't – I'm sorry if you read it that way. In the context of the post, those were clearly suggestions for someone like-minded, of what I thought were good ideas. If you think they're not, okay, you disagree with me, but I don't see why that is grounds for outrage. I think you're wrong, but last I checked, I'm allowed to think that without there being an outrage over it, as if I personally offended you. — The Great Whatever
Considering I wasn't addressing you or talking about you, I don't know why you'd think that. — The Great Whatever
But you haven't explained why an individual's opinion on what it is should matter to me. — The Great Whatever
If you knowingly provide a place for racists, xenophobes, anti-semites and sexists to loudly proclaim their views to a large audience, and express no remorse over those views, and profit from them - well, yes, it's possible that you may share none of their passionate hatreds. — csalisbury
But, if you don't, and still publish, that makes you one deeply cynical son of a bitch. And someone that cynical isn't likely to balk at anything, should it serve him. — csalisbury
Like the claim that if Bannon's anti semitic that's ok bc everyone hates each other anyway! lol)
If you're free to say that sort of thing, in the way that you did, then why aren't I similarly free to object to it or express outrage? Doesn't it work both ways? — Sapientia
Well, I thought that you were just telling people what they should do or care about or appreciate, when, for me, that sort of thing is more a matter of personal preference, taste, what you find appealing, or enjoy doing. Hobbies and such. And I got the impression that you were looking down your nose at others who don't share your opinion or preferences or whatever. — Sapientia
You're free to, sure, but I just don't see what relevance or argumentative force it has on the conversation. — The Great Whatever
OK, well, I disagree. These things aren't just a matter of personal preference or taste, and transcend the individual. And culture transcends hobbies, and is more important than them. — The Great Whatever
The argumentative force behind my comment would have been the implication that for people like me, going to church or cooking might not be worthwhile or a better way of spending time. So any kind of general advice or demands that someone like me should go to church or spend more time cooking might be wrongheaded. — Sapientia
Yeah, we disagree. Whether or not a Marvel movie is crappy is very much a matter of personal preference or taste. Perhaps not entirely, but very much so. — Sapientia
I don't think it has to be church specifically, but most human beings are not happy living a purely material existence and require some form of spiritual enrichment. — The Great Whatever
Nothing of the sort, in my opinion, is provided by 'the open society' as it is in America now. The gambit of American culture is that we can live a purely material existence, and I think that's not so. And generally, I think Christianity is a richer and more interesting tradition than that coming out of its detractors. — The Great Whatever
Nah, I think they're crappy. People might like them, but that doesn't make them not crappy. It's a matter of personal taste how you find the movie, but that's not the issue. — The Great Whatever
Then perhaps I'm simply not like most human beings. I don't ever feel the need to use mumbo-jumbo terms like "spiritual enrichment". Do I require it? Do I yearn for it? I'm not even sure what it is, but if it's anything like church, then I already have something of an opinion on it, and I trust my opinion more than I trust yours. — Sapientia
Well, these terms that you're using are a bit vague, so I'm not quite sure what you even mean. What's a purely material existence? I could live without Christianity, and I don't think that it would be such a great loss. — Sapientia
And you thinking they're crappy doesn't make them not good, either. — Sapientia
Okay? I don't know why you're telling me all this. — The Great Whatever
A material existence would involve the means for physical survival and maybe reproduction, lack of pain, and possibly entertainment and the experience of pleasure and comfort and interest. Most people find an existence consisting of only these things unsatisfactory, because they don't provide any context or method for living life self-consciously, with a narrative history and vision of what it means to live in a certain way as part of a certain people. — The Great Whatever
I think the dominant opinion among educated people in the West is now that some sort of nihilism is self-evident, and that meaning is something that must be projected onto the universe by individual effort. — The Great Whatever
But this seems to be due to a lack of experience with meaning and culture, which people then take to be the normal state of things. — The Great Whatever
I never said it did. Their being crappy makes them crappy, obviously. I say it because it's true; it's not true because I say it. — The Great Whatever
I don't really understand what I'm supposed to get out of talking to you, Sapientia. Not to be rude or anything, but I just don't see what purpose this line of conversation is serving, or what point you're trying to make, so I'm going to desist. Taking snippets from people's posts and saying you disagree or that they outrage or confuse you, or calling them boring, just doesn't seem to be an interesting way to discuss anything, and I don't get why you do it. — The Great Whatever
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