Its inversion was espoused by Aristippus of Cyrene: I am an alien everywhere. — The Great Whatever
it seems fatuous to claim citizenship in the whole world. — Bitter Crank
Some "citizens of the world" I have met seem more like parasites viewing the whole world as a potential host. — Bitter Crank
We see ourselves much more as "one world" than we once did. Or maybe like an ocean liner without life boats: Different classes on board, but if the ship goes down, all go down with it. — Bitter Crank
An objective founded and created on political ideals that is achievable in reality? Realism doesn't mean that one has to accept the World as it is. Realism is that we try to change things in a way that can be possible in reality. Not the "assume that people are totally different and then this will work"-option.So, to rephrase my first question -- what is the relationship between realism and political ideals, and what do we mean when we say "realistic" in a political context? — Moliere
This doesn't strike me as either an accurate or an informative explanation of cosmopolitanism. In political philosophy, cosmopolitans reject the legitimacy and moral relevance of borders and the division of people into separate political communities (e.g., states). The moral equivalent would be to reject the notion that we owe more to family than friends, more to friends than strangers, more to countrymen than foreigners, etc. We could sum this up as belonging to a single moral and political community, but it certainly doesn't entail that we in fact have shared values and morals. It may not even entail that we should have shared values and morals.Cosmopolitanism is the idea that all humans (and presumably animals as well) belong to a single global community, with shared values, morals, etc. Having such a community seems to me to be a great way to stop international conflict. — darthbarracuda
In the political philosophy literature, cosmopolitanism is used as a way of increasing our responsibilities, not decreasing or shifting them. In many ways, it is a response to the nationalist attempt to limit whom we are responsible to. And while utilitarians are cosmopolitans in theory, some (e.g., Singer) shift our responsibilities in practice. So non-utilitarian theories of cosmopolitanism could also be seen as pushing back against that sort of tendency (here I am thinking particularly of Charles Beitz, who argues for expanding the Rawlsian approach beyond the limits of individual states).I suspect "citizens of the world" of attempting to evade their local responsibilities — Bitter Crank
That is the thing one has to ponder, Moliere.That's a good refinement. I agree with you. But even then -- how do you determine the realm of possibility?
Even in a vague way? Obviously you can't determine the future precisely. But this is a common rhetorical move -- that such and such belief is not "realistic" when compared to human nature. That determination is oft taken for granted. How does one determine the bounds of possibility, in your opinion? — Moliere
I find the idea of cosmopolitanism very appealing. But is it realistic? Can it be done? See below. — darthbarracuda
It is as clear as the sun to plenty of us and as real as our hands and legs — Πετροκότσυφας
For the same reasons we form non-global villages (e.g., social cooperation, economic benefits, a unified justice system).Why should we want to be a global village? — Agustino
This is just as true within states as it is between states. Eliminating borders doesn't require eliminating differences (as I noted above when clarifying what cosmopolitans actually claim).There are different peoples, different cultures and different values on the face of the Earth. — Agustino
This is just as true within states as it is between states. Eliminating borders doesn't require eliminating differences (as I noted above when clarifying what cosmopolitans actually claim). — Postmodern Beatnik
In the political philosophy literature, cosmopolitanism is used as a way of increasing our responsibilities, not decreasing or shifting them. In many ways, it is a response to the nationalist attempt to limit whom we are responsible to. And while utilitarians are cosmopolitans in theory, some (e.g., Singer) shift our responsibilities in practice. So non-utilitarian theories of cosmopolitanism could also be seen as pushing back against that sort of tendency (here I am thinking particularly of Charles Beitz, who argues for expanding the Rawlsian approach beyond the limits of individual states). — Postmodern Beatnik
If we're talking about literal villages, then sure. But then they expand. Or they spawn a new generation of inhabitants, which ends up split between those who accept the old values and those who have new ideas. They form countries. The United States was formed by a group of people who shared certain key values, but disagreed on a lot of other things. Ideological divisions within the Communist Party ensured that the USSR was always run by a paranoiac. And the whole point of Rawlsian political philosophy is to separate the right from the good, allowing people to live as they choose so long as they live within the law. It is fundamentally an acknowledgment that you can't force uniformity onto a society—even if you begin with it.Would you not agree that, in practice, non-global villages are generally formed, in large majority, by people sharing the same cultures and values? — Agustino
When groups come together, they often blend some of their practices. This is just the natural process of cultural exchange, and it happens regardless of whether we have borders or not. But I do not think that putting people into a single state will lead to the elimination of all differences between groups. We see cultural differences survive political integration all the time during times of mass immigration. In the US, for instance, there are still many distinct cultural communities despite several of the groups having immigrated over a century ago.But don't you think that in practice this is what will happen? — Agustino
Why should we want to be a global village? — Agustino
This Western bullshit regarding cosmopolitanism is just that - imperialist bullshit aimed at imposing the same way of life over the whole Earth. It's nothing more than a petty justification for totalitarianism. — Agustino
We see cultural differences survive political integration all the time — Postmodern Beatnik
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