Racism is a form of laziness insofar as a racist deduces from flimsy and superficial generalizations and does so without verification. Unfortunately, this species of thinking manifests in racists and so-called anti-racists alike. — NOS4A2
I would also add that it represented the most refined and ‘verified’ thinking among the intellectuals — Joshs
What George Kelly could ad is that: Man, in his open conspiracy to pursue his self-interest, always claims to be doing it "for the children"; and some of those children in future generations will look back and excuse him for "not knowing any better. — James Riley
— Joshs
Kelly, like the phenomenologists , Heidegger and embodied cognitive theorists , rejects the quaint enlightenment notion of self-interest, which implies an atomized , autonomous subject split off from a world. — Joshs
To the extent the greatest modern philosophers held racist views they were, as I implied, just establishment conservatives justifying the maintenance of the status quo. That would include any that today, looking back, we might view as enlightenment icons. The real question (and the one historians love to dig for and often find) is who was challenging their thinking at the time? What happened to their writings? Maybe they weren't "establishment" and didn't get the time of day? Nevertheless, they are often found in obscure, dark recesses of the stacks; but, if they don't serve today's conservative interest then they don't get any oxygen now either. — James Riley
Good luck finding those
mysteriously hidden ‘liberals’ from past centuries. You won’t find them — Joshs
The previous leading edge of ethical thought is always going to appear backward to contemporary minds. — Joshs
you are concentrating on nefarious motives rather than issues of knowledge. — Joshs
Your philosophy is just more apologetics for man in furtherance of his open conspiracy to look the other way while pursing a not-so-enlightened self-interest. "They didn't know any better back then!" "Even the best minds back then thought it was okay!" — James Riley
What if that were true? How would it change the way you look at people who disappoint your moral standards? — Joshs
And they would belt you in the mouth for impugning their motives. — Joshs
It never occurs to either side that the other believes deeply that their approach is unimpeachably ethical. — Joshs
Which is why I agree with Ken Gergen — Joshs
Until about 150 years ago many, if not most, philosophers and scientists in Europe and the U.S. accepted as fact what we would now label as racist ideas. Was it because they were weak-minded, stupid and not rational? Or was it because ideas about many aspects of human nature evolve over long periods of time? — Joshs
:100: :fire:The leading minds of the day are those who history and hindsight prove to have been correct, regardless of whether the dominant paradigm (white? Eurocentric? Whatever) debated with them. To assume they did not exist because they were marginalized, or not recorded, or because their works were lost, or have not yet been found, is to assume there was no debate at the time. If that were the case, then the dominant paradigm simply failed to ask the leading minds of the day. Such are the forces of conservativism. — James Riley
Our history is recorded in books and oral traditions and art and dance a — James Riley
— Joshs
Your post rings of the old "nasty, brutish and short" assessment of our former selves, which also hints of an indictment against indigenous people. Analogizing early childhood development to societal evolution is the same thing. More of that white (?) western (?) justification of the myths we tell ourselves about ourselves to make ourselves feel better about ourselves so we can righteously and indignantly belt others in the mouth with impunity when, in a lapse of judgement, that other might make so bold as to be honest with himself and inquire about the same with he who would belt him — James Riley
not only have we not changed all that much in the last 200,000 years, but we really aren't any better or more worthy than the man who sat at the mouth of the cave and chipped a spear point from a rock — James Riley
we continue to avail ourselves of our nature, — James Riley
One need not be a true genius to leapfrog over his era's level of cultural and scientific understanding. — James Riley
Your post rings of the old "nasty, brutish and short" assessment of our former selves, which also hints of an indictment against indigenous people. Analogizing early childhood development to societal evolution is the same thing. More of that white (?) western (?) justification of the myths we tell ourselves about ourselves to make ourselves feel better about ourselves so we can righteously and indignantly belt others in the mouth with impunity when, in a lapse of judgement, that other might make so bold as to be honest with himself and inquire about the same with he who would belt him — James Riley
not only have we not changed all that much in the last 200,000 years, but we really aren't any better or more worthy than the man who sat at the mouth of the cave and chipped a spear point from a rock — James Riley
we continue to avail ourselves of our nature, — James Riley
One need not be a true genius to leapfrog over his era's level of cultural and scientific understanding. — James Riley
Such a perspective, it seems to me , is at odds with all that came after Hegel in psychology and the other social sciences , in biology , in politics and philosophy. — Joshs
Racism is an invented concept by individuals and society in order to cope with the "fear of the unknown", but through biased and fallacy-heavy reasoning aimed it at different looking people. It's the Dunning-Kruger process of intellect that formed it, not intelligence or intellect when used properly. — Christoffer
Moreover, he concluded that Africans were not inferior to the rest of mankind 'concerning healthy faculties of understanding, excellent natural talents and mental capacities',[17] and wrote the following:
Finally, I am of opinion that after all these numerous instances I have brought together of negroes of capacity, it would not be difficult to mention entire well-known provinces of Europe, from out of which you would not easily expect to obtain off-hand such good authors, poets, philosophers, and correspondents of the Paris Academy; and on the other hand, there is no so-called savage nation known under the sun which has so much distinguished itself by such examples of perfectibility and original capacity for scientific culture, and thereby attached itself so closely to the most civilized nations of the earth, as the Negro.[18]
He did not consider his "degenerative hypothesis" as racist and sharply criticized Christoph Meiners, an early practitioner of scientific racialism, as well as Samuel Thomas von Sömmerring, who concluded from autopsies that Africans were an inferior race.[19] Blumenbach wrote three other essays stating non-white peoples were capable of excelling in arts and sciences in reaction against racialists of his time.[20] — Wiki
Showing gratitude for the accomplishments of our forebears is appropriate. — Benkei
:up:I think people would do well to teach grace, humility and gratitude instead of pride. Reserve pride for those who "deserve" it. — James Riley
I don't understand pride. I'm not saying anything about it, good or bad. I'm looking for insight from others. What good is it? What purpose does it serve? Where did it come from? I have the same concerns about the word "deserve." But that's another thread I reckon. — James Riley
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