Biden also broke literally every campaign promise he ever made — Streetlight
therefore...? — jorndoe
No.So you first imply that Russia are late to the negotiating table, then that no position they might come with is reasonable anyway. — Isaac
LONDON, June 3 (Reuters) - Senegal's President Macky Sall said Russia's Vladimir Putin had told him on Friday he was ready to enable the export of Ukrainian grain to ease a global food crisis that is hitting Africa especially hard.
"President #Putin has expressed to us his willingness to facilitate the export of Ukrainian cereals," Sall wrote on Twitter after meeting Putin in his role as chairman of the African Union.
Russia was also ready to ensure the export of its own wheat and fertiliser, Sall said after the talks in the Russian Black Sea resort of Sochi on day 100 of Putin's invasion of Ukraine.
Yeah, obviously after the Kyiv operation didn't work out so well, he had to limit his objectives. Your apologetics are astounding.Putin has said he's not looking for regime change in Ukraine. You didn't believe that. Your bias is astounding. — Isaac
Don't forget the artificiality of Ukraine as a sovereign state too. Yeah, Putin has annexed Crimea, then has fought a proxy war in Ukraine for eight years and then assaulted with the full force of the Russian Army Ukraine. So yes, when he attacked Ukraine on the 24th February, Putin clearly had the objective to take over the country, at least Kyiv and NovoRossija, perhaps to install a puppet government in place in Kyiv. And obviously he has had to limit his objectives.but Putin mentions something about Ukrainians and Russians being 'one people' some time back and that's enough for you to impute a clear intention to take over the whole country. — Isaac
Yeah, obviously after the Kyiv operation didn't work out so well, he had to limit his objectives. — ssu
Therefore we ought to stop looking at potential solutions presented by one of these 'sides' as if they were beneficent manna from heaven with no downsides.
There's only one issue (beyond the pointless moralising others seem to delight in) and that's whether we lend our support to our own governments (and media). Decisions such as joining NATO, sending weapons, taking part in negotiations, the terms of those negotiations... all involve an assessment of honesty, intent and integrity on both sides. Treating one side as saints and the other as the devil gives an inaccurate assessment of how those decisions will impact the people they are made on behalf of. — Isaac
what's wrong with evil fighting evil in a contained battlefield? — Metaphysician Undercover
Guterres has already tried to get something done with the blockade already last month. It could be a way forward. And I think it would be good that the UN would gain some role in the conflict. — ssu
when he attacked Ukraine on the 24th February, Putin clearly had the objective to take over the country, at least Kyiv and NovoRossija, perhaps to install a puppet government in place in Kyiv. And obviously he has had to limit his objectives. — ssu
So it implies taking Ukraine as far as Kyiv. — Olivier5
Again, not sufficient for what, to whom, why? — neomac
I'm not going to hand-hold you through the argument. If you can't remember where we are, that's your loss. I asked about methods for determining ideas which were wrong, your appealed to 'aggregate methods', I asked what they might be and you said… — Isaac
If we are in a forum debating things we can link sources, provide arguments , offer definitions. — neomac
Now you're saying that is not, in fact sufficient to determine wrong arguments at all, but further — Isaac
whenever I found your arguments fallacious as straw man, misquotations, contradictions, question begging claims, lack of evidence, blatant lies, etc.) or questionable on factual or explanatory bases, I argued for it. — neomac
Except that all of the above are completely subjective, so you've still given nothing other than your judgement as a measure. Arguments are wrong because you think they are. — Isaac
I try to identify the logic structure of the argument, — neomac
Now you're saying you don't. Which is it? — Isaac
I’m mainly interested in reasoning over pertinent arguments on their own merits, more than in resulting opinion polls and intelligence contests — neomac
It's entirely an 'intelligence contest'. — Isaac
Great. So let's have those methods then. You keep vaguely pointing to the existence of these supposedly 'rational' methods (which I've somehow missed in my academic career thus far - which ought to be of concern to the British education system), yet you're clandestine about the details. Are they secret? — Isaac
you started talking about possibilities (“possible interpretations”, “could perfectly rationally”), yet you concluded your argument with a fact (“And indeed, many have” concluded that perfectly rationally look at those facts and conclude etc.) giving the impression that the possibilities you were talking about were actually the case — neomac
It is a fact that many have reached different conclusions. I can't see what your problem is with that. Are you saying that all parties agree on this? — Isaac
Not sure about that either. First, I have no idea how one would or could calculate such a probability — neomac
There's no need to calculate it. It's sufficient that it exists. In order for a country to be called 'a security threat' is is simply definitional that their probability of causing harm has to be above some threshold — Isaac
'De-nazify' doesn't "literally" mean 'force regime change' any more than it "literally" means 'take over'.
It "literally" means 'remove Nazis'. As an objective it could have been satisfied by anything from destroying the Azov battalion, to changing legislation, to killing every last person Putin even vaguely suspected of being slightly right-wing. — Isaac
In fact Putin had already in 2014-2015 bullied to Western leaders that he can "roll the tanks to Kharkiv and Kyiv easily".Macron had said Putin "wanted to seize control of the whole of Ukraine. He will, in his own words, carry out his operation to 'de-Nazify' Ukraine to the end," a senior aide to the French leader told the AFP news agency. — Olivier5
This is very bizarre semantics. It's difficult to understand Putin's words at the start of the war as anything else than regime change as stated. Now the objectives might have been lowered.'De-nazify' doesn't "literally" mean 'force regime change' any more than it "literally" means 'take over'.
It "literally" means 'remove Nazis'. As an objective it could have been satisfied by anything from destroying the Azov battalion, to changing legislation, to killing every last person Putin even vaguely suspected of being slightly right-wing. — Isaac
The poor sods the two 'evils' get to do their fighting for them. — Isaac
The Innocents caught in the crossfire, or deliberately targeted.
The poor, who inevitability pay the most for the damage both sides have done to their livelihoods. — Isaac
those activities are governed by epistemic rules that we can fail to follow: arguments can be flawed formally or informally; definitions can be contradictory, circular, semantic nonsense or ambiguous; evidences can be from unreliable source or misreported or misunderstood or non-pertinent etc. — neomac
What do you mean by “completely subjective”? I’m not giving you my judgement as a measure! I gave you arguments for you to assess based on rules you actually do, can and must share and apply to play the game of assessing rationally peoples’ claims and arguments, mine and yours included. — neomac
I were to believe things completely subjectively, what would even be the point to provide arguments to discriminate what is more or less rational? — neomac
I could simply claim you are a Russian troll/bot, that you claimed that Russians are morally justified in bombing, killing, raping, looting Ukrainians, or that Mearsheimer is paid by Russians. — neomac
That objectively is a false claim. I never said “I don’t try to identify the logic structure of the argument” in my previous post. You can prove me wrong by quoting exactly where I wrote “I don’t try to identify the logic structure of the argument”, can you? No, you can’t. And that your claim is objectively false is independent from our political orientations. — neomac
I have no idea what academic career you have/had and in what field, but it would be shocking to discover you didn’t apply some standard academic methodology to prepare and assess your students’ tests for example, or some standard scientific methodology when making and publishing your research — neomac
this is how I would navigate our differences rationally. And I would expect you to do the same with me, if you want to be rationally compelling to me. — neomac
Lately you made an objection to me where you evidently failed to logically process a modus tollens. — neomac
It would be easier to talk about risks in qualitative terms (e.g. very unlikely, unlikely, possible, very likely, practically certain ) for example after consulting and aggregating the feedback from experts in different strategic domains. — neomac
Clearly, the Nazis which Putin desires to remove are supported by the present Ukrainian government — Metaphysician Undercover
It's difficult to understand Putin's words at the start of the war as anything else than regime change — ssu
I think that this history of aggression, the actions taken by Russia, speak more clearly than words. — ssu
There's no different treatment.You take Biden's word as evidence of America's intent (despite a similar history of aggression), yet with Putin, you look to his actions, not his words. Why the different treatment? — Isaac
There's no different treatment. — ssu
"History" is not a storage space for America's bad shit, to be sequestered and lopped off as an academic's concern. — Streetlight
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.