. A lot of what people've been doing are completely unnecessary - you don't need to go to a school for an education, you don't need to go to the stadium to watch a game and enjoy it, you don't need to go out so often, you don't need to be in an office to do some jobs, you don't need to shake hands or kiss to greet someone, etc.; the mobile phone, the internet, and TV are true marvels of the modern age. Notice that in every case, an essence has been extracted and retained while the merely accessory has been discarded. This is essentialism philosophy blooming in all its glory.
If one is to believe the news, there's less air pollution, rivers and oceans have become cleaner, etc. Does this not, in its own way, prove that much of the damage humans are doing to the environment comes from non-essential activity?
How long will this hiatus in human hyperactivity last? Will we come out on the other side changed for the better or will we return to our old ways and forget the lesson of essentialism this pandemic is teaching us? — TheMadFool
If you call a man a dick does that mean being an asshole is a male quality to the extent that being an asshole means being a bastard to the extent being a bastard is like being a dick?
— Hanover
I know plenty of women who are dicks.
So... — creativesoul
From my perspective, you've learned the wrong lesson, which isn't that we ought to reconfigure the way we maintain our hedonistic lifestyle, but instead to recognize there are higher goods than hedonism — Hanover
isn't that we ought to reconfigure the way we maintain our hedonistic lifestyle, but instead to recognize there are higher goods than hedonism. — Hanover
This crisis has obliterated the credibility of the scientific community for those who were already skeptical, especially to the extent that scientists are used to form public policy. — Hanover
Doesn't this still imply reconfiguring the hedonistic lifestyle? If we want a cleaner world we should consume less...
Or if we want to avoid pandemics we should take a cue from the Japanese and stop hugging, shaking hands and kiss for greetings.
Or we can learn from the South Koreans and be done with privacy. — Benkei
grieve every death like the rest of you guys, but I think anyone who believes in the accuracy of the reporting or the various agencies without considering political motives here is terribly naive. This crisis has obliterated the credibility of the scientific community for those who were already skeptical, especially to the extent that scientists are used to form public policy. — Hanover
My suggestion is that the primary lesson of this slowed pace of life isn't that we now have been shown that we can reconfigure our world so that remote learning and working, for example, can now become the norm, but it's that we might want to rethink how important the busyness of our lives was to our overall well being in the first place (which I do not describe in simplistic hedonistic terms). — Hanover
We could say it's because of the strict social distancing that has occurred in the US
Because general social distancing has been used, all those models regarding virus epidemics can be thrown off.This is a drop from a prediction of around 240,000, which is a quarter of what we were first told. — Hanover
Because general social distancing has been used, all those models regarding virus epidemics can be thrown off. — ssu
Nice to hear that Sweden is close to your heart on this issue!Despite claims to the opposite, the “Swedish model” survives another week, with Swedish doctors and scientists staying course. This week will be crucial. — NOS4A2
I was referring to the higher estimates of hundreds of thousands and even millions.No, the one that assumed optimum social distancing predicted 81000 deaths by August.
Go back and listen to what that Swedish epidemiologist said about how we don't know this virus yet. He was right. — frank
Never said I was right. Especially about the future.Then you're still wrong. — frank
You'll get the answer at the earliest in the summer and at the latest next year or so. You see, the lock-down option works instantly, but the effectiveness of the herd immunity strategy can be seen only later.
And the media and politicians, don't have any patience.
Americans are trained from birth to be good producers and consumers. Retraining would take a very long time, and it would require a desire to change. — praxis
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.