What I presented was an argument. — Bartricks
This was the argument I just made:
1. Morality is made of God's attitudes
2. Genocides have never been right
3. Therefore genocides have never been approved of by God — Bartricks
"Yeah, but some people think God wants genocides. So there!" — Bartricks
Why don't you answer my question? Do you think genocides have always been wrong or that they were right sometimes even though they are wrong now? — Bartricks
What were you trying to say? What is your off the peg criticism of divine command theory?
Do you think genocides used to be right, or were they always wrong? Clarify that first — Bartricks
They have good ideas in the east.
Now, once more, what were you trying to say? — Bartricks
Whether you "could debauch and murder through life and get to an eternal paradise via deathbed conversion" is not something one can attribute to Jesus. This is more the approach of a corrupt bureaucracy (aka holy mother church). — Bitter Crank
I think the difficulty in grasping it is that idealism requires a kind of perceptual shift - something which Schopenhauer has also stated in the Preface to his book. — Wayfarer
True. But neither one is a robot. — Cuthbert
That is what transcendence has always sought, through philosophical discipline and askesis. Not that I expect that will be understood. — Wayfarer
In the name of logic, reason and truth you yourself may be inclined to demonize certain right wing political views ( Trumpism, Qanon) that you believe are
either irrational, illogical or false. But do you really understand why they hold those views, where they came from, and how similar that process was to the formation of your own ‘rational’ views? — Joshs
It is more like a value system
that is produced by being disseminated among a culture, from one to the next to the next. They don’t demonize groups but aim to establish interchange. — Joshs
But what happens when you replace supposedly nailed down content ( God, categories of the understanding, independently existing empirical objects, deterministically causal mechanism) with process? This is what postmodernists do. They see patterns of always intricately changing belonging where others see the arbitrariness of fixed mechanistic causation. The former finds an intrinsic relationality between events, the latter only find extrinsic pre-assigned causation. — Joshs
What I find extraordinarily powerful about Derrida and various related postmodernisms from an ethical
point of view is that they allow for a more intimate relationship of understanding between people than the more traditional philosophies they critique. — Joshs
I agree, but I see that as a quasi-Kantian point. And Braver's book on antirealism, which I mentioned above, basically moves from Kant toward that view expressed above. While I do agree with you, it's still a form of 'negative' metaphysics, using the very organ whose flaws are being pointed out to delineate that organ's limits. And yet I mostly agree. I'd just say the maybe we also have to be humble about our knowledge of the limits of our knowledge. (And this seems to bite back too.) — igjugarjuk
I'm obsessed with all of them, veering especially between philosophy and prose. Not long ago I read Joyce's bio, studied Ulysses, and continued plugging away at FW, largely reading books about it, which means enjoying fragments in the context of interpretation. I've composed various fragments in that style myself. As I see it, some of the more exciting philosophers just brought in a killer new metaphor. So it's nonfictional in its seriousness but literary in its method. — igjugarjuk
Joyce was huge, so I mostly agree. But Nietzsche has golden moments that make him as big as anybody. — igjugarjuk
Perhaps we never just 'are,' because 'we' are ethical entities ('fictions') with serious work to do. To be an 'I' is to be responsible for a past and and future, smeared out over the present between memory and fear, sins and promises. 'I am the first mammal to make plans.'
I was on a Joyce kick recently, and Ulysses is great. The stuff that goes through our minds, flowing flowing flowing. — igjugarjuk
Maybe just imagine philosophers as protagonists in Greek tragedies, desperate to fend off the gods with the final hieroglyphic. — igjugarjuk
Unless of course the responsible and autonomous self is just an effect of discursive practices within a community. — Joshs