Epidemics keep getting bigger, too. — Vera Mont
So, no, epidemics / pandemics are not getting 'bigger' compared to historical data. — universeness
The operative words there are "so far". This the fourth or so iteration of coronavirus and it hasn't gone away, though people like to pretend otherwise. The past is not the future.5 COVID-19 pandemic 6.9–28.3 million 0.1–0.4%, so far. — universeness
In this Review, we consider the extent to which these recent global changes have increased the risk of infectious disease outbreaks, even as improved sanitation and access to health care have resulted in considerable progress worldwide.
More than 1 billion people are at risk because of a , Ryan McNeill, a deputy editor of data journalism at Reuters, told CBS News. He is one of the authors of a recent series exploring hot spots around the world. In West Africa, 1 in 5 people lives in a high-risk "jump zone," which Reuters describes as areas with the greatest likelihood of viruses jumping from bats to humans. Parts of Southeast Asia are also areas of concern. In South America, deforestation has created more high-risk areas than anywhere else in the world, McNeill said.
Perhap orga is only mecha's way of – raison d'être for – making more mecha. :smirk:Your mecha based technophilia, seems to trump your biophilia. :sad: — universeness
What is the thinking and belief system that fosters warfare?
— 0 thru 9
Follow-the-leader. — Vera Mont
They were rights under American law. You have no power to rescind them, and they continue to go unpunished. Indeed, many of the fortunes acquired then, by those methods, continue in the possession of similar people through inheritance and consolidation. The privilege accruing to those robber barons is still enjoyed by their descendants. — Vera Mont
Horsefeathers! When you kill someone they end up dead - you can't fail to notice. You can't not know that someone chained up in the damp, dark, rat-infested cargo hold of a ship is unhappy. You don't whip them to make them feel better: you do it to hurt them.
People were not any dumber than we are. Human brain capacity hasn't changed much since Neanderthal man. And morality wasn't invented in 400BCE Athens: stone age people knew right and wrong. They also knew that what is detrimental to one person may benefit another, so as long as the benefit is to them and the harm - no matter how much or how grievous a harm - is to a designated scapegoat, it's fine.
People then, just like the people now, just like the people in ancient times, knew what they were doing. They didn't care, just as they don't care now, what damage results from serving their short-term gains.
Who gives a damn what happens three generations down the line?
Much worse, they very often go out of their way to do harm when they have nothing to gain, out of hate, fear, resentment, to satisfy a lust, or simply for entertainment. — Vera Mont
Sometimes I wonder who (or what) the top leader is. Who’s giving the orders? — 0 thru 9
Presidents, ministers, corporations? Banks? — 0 thru 9
A giant quantum computer overseen by workers in dark robes? — 0 thru 9
Your generalised historical description of those events are accurate and you know I fully agree that they cannot be justified. My question to you then becomes. Do you think many more humans, all around the planet, now utterly condemn those events, than ever have in the past? If you agree, then does that not speak well for the progression of the general enlightenment of our species? I would also say to Athena, that I think such improvements in general enlightenment, are happening, despite regressive god posit influences or old Greco/Roman fables. My main argument with you Vera , is, as you know, your at times, general disdain of your entire species, because of the vile actions of a nefarious few. — universeness
Yes, I agree. — Vera Mont
That being said, there will be those who haven't even noticed it, tucked away as it is.
I haven't read it all. Only sampled a few pages. That was enough for me to 'pipe in'.
I felt the need to question. But that's me being me. Avoiding housework. — Amity
I would first, again clearly state, my lack of academic qualifications in philosophy. — universeness
Plato and Socrates believed these teachers and their rhetorical teachings were dangerous because they promised anyone the ability to make compelling arguments in courts and the assembly without a clear sense of the values that should guide this kind of speech.
Chapter 2: The “Origins” of Rhetorical Theory
https://open.lib.umn.edu/rhetoricaltheory/chapter/chapter-2/#:~:text=Plato%20and%20Socrates%20believed%20these,guide%20this%20kind%20of%20speech.
Moral, is a matter of cause and effect. When the consequences are good it is moral. If the consequences are bad it is immoral.
— Athena
How would this understanding apply to something like abortion? I think that for any normal person abortion 'feels' wrong, so one consequence of it is a bad feeling. That indicates that it's immoral, according to the cause & effect view. On the other hand, studies indicate that legalizing abortion reduces crime/poverty, a good consequence.
Things become less clear when it comes to personal rights, authority, and tradition. The values that shape our personal and social identities often disagree on the consequences of abortion. — praxis
In the case of ancient Athens, abortion was not forbidden by law. However, this right was not directed at the woman and her sovereignty over her body but at the rights of the father of the child she was carrying (Flacelière, 1971).May 19, 2023
Ancient Athenian Women and the issue of abortion
https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/archaeology-classics-and-egyptology/blog/2023/ancient-athenian-women-abortion/#:~:text=In%20the%20case%20of%20ancient,carrying%20(Flaceli%C3%A8re%2C%201971).
If she does not want to be a mother and/or does not have the ability to provide for the child, the effect of her pregnancy will not be good. — Athena
Unwilling parents have been known to rise to the occasion and a child add much to their lives, so the overall effect could turn out to be good in many cases, in which case your cause-and-effect moral theory doesn't pan-out so well. — praxis
Unwilling is not the same as unable. — Vera Mont
Yes, some able but unwilling parents have 'risen to the occasion' in some ways. Usually by giving up what they wanted to do with their own lives for what they needed to to do for the child. However, many more able but unwilling parents either attempted to rise to the occasion and failed, having to give child up, willingly or more often by force, and some end up hurting or killing the child while some raise the child so badly that he or she becomes another liability to society. Overall, not a happy outcome for the people involved or for society. — Vera Mont
Getting them to care, is the problem.How long do you think it will take the capitalist to realize their is a problem with their formula for wealth? — Athena
That's just not true. I very much agree with Education! Education! Education! I just don't see much value in any emphasis on Greek/Athenian values or on the musings of ancient thinkers such as Plato or Aristotle. I prefer more contemporary musings.That is not easy, no one pays attention to what I have to say about logos, education, or democracy — Athena
There would seem to be no moral issue for women who are unable to give birth, given that there's no choice in the matter. — praxis
You seem to be suggesting that forcing birth, or rather that making abortion illegal is immoral because in some cases it may result in bad consequences. — praxis
Why are you identifying giving birth as the cause of the bad result? — praxis
These people don't desire war, or mass shootings or terrorism or genocide; those are just some of the means to get things done. They just want to own more stuff, so they promote and support men who get things done . And because we humans are tribal, we always follow men who get things done. Except, of course, they don't: we do. The 'leaders' are absolutely sure of what is wrong, who is to blame and how it must be fixed. They are very good at communicating their certainty - and we are so thirsty for certainty, we'll follow them anywhere for just another drop. In pursuit of certainty, we are eager to take direction from them, take instruction, take orders, take up arms and leave our individual selves behind, just to have a meaning in their cause.
Of course, when it comes time to charge, the modern leader is usually in a tent or bunker or dining room far behind the lines. And his invisible, anonymous backers are farther back still, ready to abandon any 'leader' who falters, loses his grip on the peons or is defeated by some other leader. — Vera Mont
Interesting. Why do you think that computer is our best hope?A giant quantum computer overseen by workers in dark robes?
— 0 thru 9
White lab coats. That computer is our best hope of redemption, because the aliens are not coming. — Vera Mont
He who despairs of the human condition is a coward, but he who has hope for it is a fool. — Albert Camus
Of course they do! Lots of women who can't give birth adopt babies from women who could and didn't want to, or children taken away from parents who could not or would not adequately rise to parenthood, or import one from a country too poor to care for all of its children, or commission a surrogate or buy one on the black market. All those children are available and negotiable. — Vera Mont
I will say now that forcing parenthood on the unwilling will always have bad consequences, especially for the unwanted child. — Vera Mont
I did not identify the birth as the cause of a bad result, but rather the forcing of a child on unwilling parent(s). — Vera Mont
I can imagine it, but that image doesn't fit with anything I've seen in the real world.You can't even imagine parents who were initially unwilling but ended up with a good outcome for themselves and their initially unwanted child??? — praxis
suggesting that morality is essentially rational, that it "is a matter of cause & effect" is false and misguided. — praxis
How does society look at mothers who need help supporting a child? Is she honored almost as much as the Great Earth Mother or is she shamed and marginalized? Will her child be welcomed by the community and be valued by this community? It is not just the mother and child we need to consider but also the community the child is being born into. — Athena
Why do you think that computer is our best hope?
— 0 thru 9
Humans have so far proved incapable of rational resource management. — Vera Mont
Fine. I didn't say a word about morality. But now it's here... — Vera Mont
He who despairs of the human condition is a coward, but he who has hope for it is a fool. — Albert Camus
He was a candle who burned at both ends, lit by an older, fluttering flame ...He who despairs of the human condition is a coward, but he who has hope for it is a fool.
— Albert Camus
Sounds like a man who experienced a lot of self-contradiction. He probably died quite young in a car accident. — universeness
Oh, plenty of hope, an infinite amount of hope – but not for us. — Franz Kafka
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.