Comments

  • Disability
    "Intersectionality", as it's called.

    Central to both the social and critical models of disability, but external to the medical model.
  • Disability
    Fine. Bear in mind that what I said here is in response to a request. In my opinion, the social security system in the US is appalling.
  • Disability
    I can go in to the deficiencies of the US social security system in more detail, if that's where you want to go. That's usually seen negatively, as bashing America, and would be a bit off-topic, but happy to do so if it serves some purpose.

    All of which is not to say that our system is ideal. Far from it.
  • Disability
    Cool.frank
    Yeah, not so much. Leaves me pretty cold, really. :grimace:
  • Disability
    These are people she has met personally.

    And yes, we have also been involved in exposing scams.
  • Disability
    You're such a compassionate person Banno.frank

    Come on, you know me better. Not I, Wife.

    I'm not posturing, I'm pointing to a problem. And you did ask.
  • Disability
    How would you say it stacks up to the USA's?Moliere
    We've sent aid packages to folk we know in the US who have not been able to get the support they need.

    Yeah, I know. Shocking.


    Everyone I've ever met who was living "on disability" (receiving SSI payments) was doing pretty well.frank
    Not what we see, on various international forums for folk with disabilities. The situation is pretty dire.

    And you have a president who openly mocks disability.


    Hey, you guys asked.
  • A quandary: How do we know there isn’t anything beyond our reality?
    None of the possible worlds could be the actual world, as that would constitute an invalid difference, within the collection of possible worlds, one would be the actual world.Metaphysician Undercover
    Risible.

    One of the possible worlds is the actual world.

    Either that, or the actual world is not possible.
  • First vs Third person: Where's the mystery?
    I've always seen it as a way of re-framing the debate in analytical termsWayfarer
    Analytic philosophy is a broad church.

    But that last paragaph is somewhat ambiguous. You see qualia as a way of undermining Chalmers? But for him the “hard problem” relies on the reality/cogency of qualia.
  • Is it true when right wingers say 'lefties are just as intolerant as right-wingers'?
    I keep seeing "right winger" as "right whinger".

    There's something very deep in that.

    It is like saying 'you are intolerant because you do not tolerate racism'unimportant

    Yep.

    Tolerance is often insufficient. It will not do to simply tolerate divergence while still despising it. The further step is to accept divergence. We accept multiculturalism, LGBQTI+, disability and so on as aspects of human variation. Racism, we don't accept, but tolerate; that is, we refrain from denying them civil rights or using coercion against them so long as they abide by the law. This is quite different from accepting racism itself. Acceptance applies to people’s identities, capacities, and ways of life; tolerance applies, in limited fashion, to people whose doctrines we reject.

    The grammar of tolerance and acceptance is context-dependent. Acceptance cannot apply to doctrines that deny the very conditions for ethical coexistence. Coherent belief revision requires distinguishing between beliefs about human variation (to accept) and beliefs about harmful ideologies (to interpret but not accept).

    The left doesn’t conflate tolerance and acceptance; it simply applies each concept to its appropriate domain. Flattening them into a single “more vs. less tolerant” scale misses the ethical point.
  • A quandary: How do we know there isn’t anything beyond our reality?
    So for some p, the possibility of p ends when p occurs and for other p it doesn't. Furthermore, the ending of the possibility of my winning the Kentucky Derby 2025 does not depend on whether I win or lose or even take part. It depends only the the race happening. The disappearance of this specific p depends only on the date, not on whether I win or not.Ludwig V

    Yep. This is formalised by accessibility relations. metaphysically, before the race is run, both the worlds in which you win and those in which you do not are accessible; any might become the actual world. After you win, only the worlds in which you win are accessible. Semantically, both before and after the race is won, we can access both the worlds in which you won and those in which you did not.

    Conflating these is the exact error Meta repeatedly makes.
  • First vs Third person: Where's the mystery?
    What you are describing is not conceptual ambiguity, but rather epistemic ambiguity.hypericin
    I don't think so. Rather what you see as epistemic - an inability to know if someone is conscious - is the result of thinking about a family of related notions as if they were a single notion.

    It's a mistake to think of consciousness only in terms of having a particular object, some private quale. The very idea of a private definition of consciousness is a philosophical artefact born of misusing words like “experience” and “inner” together with a misguided notion of essential characteristics. A picture that holds us enthralled.

    Now I think I've demonstrated that, over the last page or so. I don't see that there is an account of qualia that can hold it's own.

    None of what I've said here is to claim that we are not conscious. That's a common error hereabouts. What is shown is the poverty of adopting only one account, the possession of quale, as the arbiter of consciousness.
  • Disability
    Thanks for doing your homework... :wink:

    For what it's wort, the NDIS here differentiates disability/impairment on the one hand form medical issues on the other, using the following criteria:

    1. A disability is permanent.
    2. A disability involves a substantial reduction in functional capacity.
    3. A disability must affect a person’s ability to work, study, or take part in social life, and they must likely need long-term supports.

    The impairment must be functional and permanent and require support. That's very much following the medical model. It reinforces the deficit model, framing disability as a problem for an individual body, not as a disjunction between that body and its environment. It presumes the evaluative place of a "normal" body, an unquestioned baseline. It arbitrarily rejects chronic illness, which would otherwise count as a disability. It ignores lived experience of fluctuating or episodic disability.

    Now my advocacy has been towards a capabilities focus, looking at the valued human capabilities that are restricted, and what supports enable the person to actually realise them. In this framing consideration of the impairment is replaced by consideration of what supports are needed to allow the person to achieve their capabilities. "assistance with daily living" and "mobility supports" changes to "self-care" and "social participation".

    This approach has wide recognition, and underpinned the initial vision of the NDIS, but met opposition in the implementation, the bean-counters not being familiar with capabilities-based metrics. The dynamic between medical and social models is ongoing.

    Given that dynamic, considerations involving critical theory are a long way from the centre of the discussion.
  • A quandary: How do we know there isn’t anything beyond our reality?
    If you take a set of possible worlds, and apply some realist principles to deduce "the actual world"...Metaphysician Undercover
    Again, again, again, That's not what is being proposed. Any of the possible worlds could be the actual world - hence, "there is no modal difference between the actual world and the other possible worlds". Modal theory does not tell us which possible world is actual.

    Your presumption that it does is exactly your confusing the modal and the metaphysical, your denial of p→◇p.

    This is a pretty tedious conversation. You make the very same error, repeatedly. The actual world is one of the possible worlds. If you deny this, you must also deny reflexivity, which is to say you deny that we can talk about the actual world. You restrict yourself to quite simplistic and unusable modal systems.

    All of which was set out formally, last week, and remains unaddressed.

    But it's helping my post count. So carry on.
  • First vs Third person: Where's the mystery?
    So we accept a poor definition over contemplating that consciousness is an ambivalent notion?

    In first aid we are taught to test to see if someone is unconscious by asking for a response - "can you hear me? Open your eyes! What's your name? Squeeze my hand!". Some folk tend to forget this sort of thing doesn't apply to jellyfish and rocks.

    In extremis, people may be conscious but unresponsive, which has led to a body of work looking for "no-report" tests for consciousness. One suggestion is that medical folk look for the "neural correlate of consciousness", which face the problem of how to establish conscious experience without first-person evidence. No-report paradigms rely on eye-movement, neuro-imaging, or physiological measures as indicators of consciousness. The trouble with no-report approaches is that they tend to diagnose cases of consciousness as cases of unconsciousness, the “bored monkey” problem, in which a monkey appears unconscious because it fails to follow the red dot, when it's just bored. Perhaps the panpsychists are right, and we are attributing unconsciousness ot rocks that are simply bored.

    At the other extreme, would it make sense to insist that someone was unconscious, despite their protests to the contrary?

    Is it that we have not yet found a clean and clear definition of consciousness, or is it that consciousness is not one thing, with a clean and clear definition?

    Should we shoehorn consciousness into a definition, or learn to work with a level of ambiguity?
  • A quandary: How do we know there isn’t anything beyond our reality?
    That's true. But the fact that the existence of the statement that Mount Everest is 29,000 ft high depends on human beings, does not show that the existence of Mount Everest depends on human beings at all. De re and de dicto.Ludwig V
    Thank you.
  • A quandary: How do we know there isn’t anything beyond our reality?
    The semantic model does not commit us to the existence of its content. But if the actual world is affirmed to be a part of that semantic model, as you and others here continue to insist, then this is contrary to realism which assumes that the actual world is independent from any semantic model.Metaphysician Undercover
    As if we could not talk about the actual world.

    You can't have it both ways, assert that the actual world is a part of a semantic model, with no claims to existence, and also assert that there is a real independent, existing actual world.Metaphysician Undercover
    Because, as explained many times, it's not the semantic model that shows which possible world is actual.

    But you cannot see this. That's about you, I suppose.
  • Disability
    A bit of a stretch, maybe. But there is a respect for persons in, say Nussbaum and Witt, both classists, that is not found in what passes for Aristotelianism in the forum; and there might be some overlap. Witt is pretty wild in some regards.




    I ran it through ChatGPT just to get an outline
    4. Where links could be drawn
    Relational flourishing:
    Witt’s Aristotelianism already sees flourishing as dependent on social structures and relationships.
    Crip theory critiques which structures are assumed “normal” or beneficial. One could interpret Crip theory as offering a critical corrective to Aristotelian flourishing: some “social goods” may harm disabled or neurodivergent people.
    Negative capability / non-identical:
    Crip theory, influenced by Adorno, highlights that some embodied or cognitive realities resist assimilation into normative categories.
    Aristotelianism could, in principle, incorporate this: flourishing might include non-normative capacities as ethically and socially valuable.
    Virtue as adaptation vs critique:
    Crip theory emphasizes structural change to enable flourishing rather than asking individuals to conform to pre-existing norms.
    This can be mapped to Aristotelian virtue ethics if virtues are reconceived not just as personal excellences but as capacities enabled by just social institutions.
    5. Key tension
    Aristotelianism tends to prescribe a “function” as a normative guide.
    Crip theory tends to deconstruct normative function, especially when it enforces ableist or exclusionary ideals.
    So the link is subtle: Witt’s Aristotelianism gives a framework for evaluating flourishing relationally, while Crip theory radicalizes the very assumptions about what counts as “flourishing” or “capacity.” The two could enter dialogue if you reconceive Aristotelian function in pluralistic or critical terms.



    That second tension, the deconstruction of normativity, is something I have time for, and outside of Aristotelian thinking.
  • Disability
    Fair. We don't have your background.
  • Disability
    There's a huge body of critical theory relating to disability. "Crip theory" in particular.

    Given the response to the pretty modest proposals in the OP, the audience here might be a bit too... shocked for a productive discussion.
  • Disability
    Seems simple enough. For the staff, one grumpy patient. For the man, yet another trip to an unfamiliar space full of people who will not listen. The cumulative effect of emotional micro trauma, of having to repeat the same thing over an over. It's a common grievance for folk with disabilities.
  • Disability
    ...but I think he'd be able to eat, though he might end up with mashed potatoes on his hands.frank
    Two things. Why should it be you making that judgement rather than him? For you to decide that him getting in a mess is OK? And what hospital is this, so I can avoid it. Sounds like the staff morale is shite.

    Added: AS in, this seems not to be an issue of disability, but of hospital management.
  • Disability
    Pardon me, but I didn't think you meant morally when you asked that question.L'éléphant
    The presumption that a disability is a deficit does exactly that, no? Perhaps not moral - although there are those who say disability is caused by the sins of the parents - but it's at least evaluative. This is the experience of folk with disabilities.
  • Disability
    The point was to increase staff time at shift change.frank
    In order to save them having to come back when the poor bugger couldn't eat. Call me picky, but being able to eat seems important to patient wellbeing.
  • Disability
    The study of human anatomy is where to start.L'éléphant
    SO a statistical average? And that provides an ought here?

    Are you sure that's a good argument? How do we go from "you don't have a hand" to "You ought have a hand"?
  • Disability
    Was his request unreasonable?

    He saved staff time by improving communication at the shift change.
  • A quandary: How do we know there isn’t anything beyond our reality?
    Why should a semantic model commit us to the existence of the things quantified over? Your whole edifice still depends on an equivocation between what is and what is said. It's as if you were to chastise Tolkien because Hobbits are not real. nThe confusion is yours.
  • Transwomen are women. Transmen are men. True or false?
    If I recall correctly, @Philosophim had strong reservations concerning regret after gender-affirmation surgery. Studies I found show that regret is a factor, however at low levels, but note methodological issues. It doesn't appear to be a strong enough factor to inform policy.
  • Transwomen are women. Transmen are men. True or false?
    The presumption, in , seems to be that transitioning does not treat gender dysphoria.

    That is, from what I have seen, factually incorrect. Meta-studies are readily available to justify this position.

    Note that we have moved to empirical studies, rather then considering conceptual issues. We are no longer doing philosophy.
  • Bannings
    Only in that I'm here when I could be setting more seed trays. But I like doing both, and think I've a reasonable balance. Wife might disagree.
  • Disability
    , yep.

    DO you find it interesting how ubiquitous and indelible the idea of deficit is?
  • Disability
    The critique of social contract dogma is particularly salient:

    People with disabilities may not be free or independent; and those with severe mental disabilities may be unequal. Nussbaum argues that such people should nevertheless be considered full citizens entitled to dignified lives, even if no one could gain from cooperating with them. She notes that the social contract tradition has always denied the reality of dependency, despite the obvious fact that everyone is dependent on others during infancy, old age, injury, and illness. Historically women have done most of the largely unpaid work of caring for dependents, so by ignoring women, the social contract theorists conveniently evaded the thorny issue of justice for dependents and caregivers. Nussbaum argues that justice for people with disabilities should include whatever special arrangements are required for them to lead a dignified life, and the work of caring for them should be socially recognized, fairly distributed, and fairly compensated.Jean Chambers
  • Disability
    ...impairments...Moliere
    Why not just that some folk dance on their legs, others in their chair?

    Note that this removes the impairment?

    Hence, re-focus on capabilities.

    That view is expounded by Nussbaum in a discussion of disability, in Frontiers of Justice. Taht;s a link to a review you might find interesting. It's an Aristotelian approach...

    But quite unlike those Aristotelian approaches usually seen in these fora.
  • Bannings
    I know you are joking and are reflecting upon years of participation.Paine

    ....yesss....

    ....joking....

    :fear:
  • A quandary: How do we know there isn’t anything beyond our reality?
    But I don't thoroughly understand either or metaphysical.Ludwig V

    Good, since it is a topic of ongoing discussion. Just not much in the way @Metaphysician Undercover suggests.
  • A new home for TPF
    If there were enough interest, we might try a discussion on ChatGPT to see what happens.
  • Bannings
    @Jamal as the pusher man.

    I can quite any time I like...
  • A new home for TPF
    I was looking at the ChatGPT function that allowed group discussions. Within that discussion, a participant can openly ask the AI to explain or to find resources.

    Folk treat this as an "authority", but of course any authority here would be granted by the participants, not presumed. That is, if you disagree with the AI's response, then you could openly ask it for an alternate response, to ground your objection.

    Might this serve to excrete the bullshit from a discussion? Perhaps. It might be interesting to try.