Comments

  • Public Displays of Mourning
    Why do you think this happens? Is it confined to a related group of cultures or is it world-wide?
    Do you do this yourself - follow the procession on screen, or leave flowers and messages at the site?
    What do you think about the practice?
    How do you feel about it?
    Vera Mont

    I found the public grief over the empty Princess Diana absurd. This was the first time I was aware of this kind of OTT phenomenon. I would probably pop it under the category of public hysteria or a type of social virus. And unsurprisingly there was only a modest reaction to her death after the first anniversary.

    From a more banal perspective, I tend to think that we've been living in a new age of romanticism, with cults of personality and public displays of success/celebration/grief/loss/rage a tawdry aspect of a particular urgency to share personal stories and feelings with the rest of the world. The talk show (Donahue, Oprah, Dr Phil, et al) probably helped to establish the model. The internet, of course, allows us all to wallow in bubbles of orgiastic, self-regarding paroxysms of anger or grief.
  • Duty: An Open Letter on a Philosophy Forum
    Good points. There seems to be a hierarchy of duty. How does one determine which one should override the other?
  • Duty: An Open Letter on a Philosophy Forum
    Some say that the people might need to rise up in the United States because we are increasingly having to choose between fascism and neoliberalism - all the while the oligarchs line their pockets.ToothyMaw

    I don't think neo-liberalism is incompatible with fascism. Not enough of a choice there for me.

    I will define duty as: a feeling of obligation brought about by expectation that is irreducible; it exists only as a meta-construction - as recursive and a sum of its parts - and yet it is a very basic concept understood by pretty much everybody.ToothyMaw

    I can't make much sense out of your definition of duty. The 'intuition that we ought to do a particular thing' perhaps? Of course duty is value free and it can be attached to any kind of person or action.

    everyone craves dutyToothyMaw

    How can you demonstrate that everyone craves duty? Is duty not just a sublimation for purpose? Everyone, perhaps, craves purpose?


    The best leaders know that duty begets duty.ToothyMaw

    Not sure what that means. Can you provide an example of a leader doing such?
  • A question for Christians
    I'm referring to the only experience we can talk about with some authority - the mortal life.

    I don't think anyone knows what the allegory of heaven means exactly. Hence my latter point.
  • A question for Christians
    If God is indeed a king with legions at his command why would he allow his son to mistreated? Why would christ allow himself and his devoted followers to be tortured and murdered? it is a strange salvation that involves the obliteration of the flesh for the sake of the something sacred like the soul.Average

    Suffering is kind of the point of most forms of Christianity, isn't it?

    1 Peter 4:12-13 (NIV):

    Dear friends, do not be surprised at the fiery ordeal that has come on you to test you, as though something strange were happening to you. But rejoice inasmuch as you participate in the sufferings of Christ so that you may be overjoyed when his glory is revealed.

    The Bible is an anthology, a series of allegories, dozens of separate books, written across a period of well over 1000 years, it is interpreted in multiple ways and there are thousands of Christian sects and denominations today, with their own preferred understanding of scripture. How could we narrow it down to something like the plot of a movie?
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    For Americans, I don't think Biden will do much for Americans who are not wealthy because he himself belongs to the elite group. For Trump, he at least cares for the numbers and statistics such as inflation and unemployment rate and want them to look good. Isn't this the reason why Trump has so many supporters?Hailey

    No, I think most of us know this is wrong. Trump doesn't appear to give a shit about anything but getting elected and he knows his base is comprised of many working people, so he needs to say things that seem pro worker. But can you name substantive initiatives that he delivered?

    Biden, may have failed in many respects, but has actually been seen by many as pro-worker, despite being an elderly, privileged white guy.

    I noticed this from a well known American Labor newspaper.

    https://labortribune.com/30-things-biden-has-done-to-help-workers/
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    I certainly agree that deep down Biden is a more formidable foe to oppsing countries to the US.Hailey

    I don't see that. I am referring to his work as a politician, doing the work of a politician - infrastructure, clean energy, mental health, healthcare - being able to talk about policy and implementation of programs, not just lame point scoring. But this is getting dull, I'm not an American, so it's not my world. :wink:

    Guess what's happening here? :cool:jgill

    Surely not...
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    Or perhaps I'm just gullible to Trump's speeches and interviews where he appears to be more sensible and competent than Baiden.Hailey

    That's interesting, I can't imagine Trump ever appearing more sensible or competent than Biden. I'm not an American, so the matter is largely academic. Trump feels more like a stand up comedian than a politician and I can see how some people might be drawn to the spectacle.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    But I was simply relating what I thought might be an answer to the question by ↪schopenhauer1jgill

    Fair enough.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    Hint: He made an attempt to stop illegal immigration along the southern border. He made an attempt to influence NATO members to pay more their share. He met with tyrants to try to reduce tensions. . . .. feel free to ridicule.jgill

    OK. Are you saying that there is a positive and effective side to Trump's Presidency, or just that these items listed are also part of the popular perception - at the less wacky end of things?
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    I imagine that for some Chinese, Trump is popular because he promises to drag America down. I've met a number of hard core Marxists who hope he'll get in because they think it will lead to a system breakdown and a revolution.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    That is to say, party-ism truly "trumps" ideas of fairness. Democracies must be set up with respect for the game above all else. But here's the even more intriguing part of this mess. It's not just that Trump is flouting the rules of the game. It is the willingness of those who support the cult of personality to the point where, they don' even recognize it as flouting the rules. They will say, "he didn't really do anything wrong", or even worse, equivocate and say, "he is doing no worse than X, Y, Z politician". And thus, this political gaslighting is the new narrative.schopenhauer1

    I think this is right.

    It's the otherwise well-tempered folks that would vote for him that is the riddle to be solved.schopenhauer1

    This is a more hair-raising idea and I agree, that's some riddle.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    The institutions that have tasked themselves with informing the public have failed in that regard.NOS4A2

    I know hating the media is a popular sport amongst people, right or left-wing. No one ever seems satisfied that the media properly represents their interests and the media is always too right, or too left, or too partisan, too phony, or too corporate... Which is why people seem to pick the media outlet (in the old days, the newspaper/magazine) which best reflects their values and intellectual capacity. I'm not in a position to analyze the media landscape and I consume very little journalism. It mostly bores me, for one thing.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    Do you remember any of the parallels he drew?Fooloso4

    The discussion comes around halfway through this. Both men also see movies like The Matrix, Dark City, Blade Runner as belonging to a tradition dealing in gnostic themes. Our reality being the fraught product of a demiurge and that there is 'special knowledge' available to those who want to know the truth.

  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    f you look at a lot of the QAnon stuff, there is this theme of "a storm is coming" with Trump returning to destroy the forces of evil in a sort of political apocalypse. It's all couched in very mythic language with Trump being seen as a savior which ties right in with evangelicals' belief that Trump is appointed by God. The other side of the coin is the apathy, disinterest or sheer mental laziness in not fact-checking anything. If it's anti-Trump they reject it, and if it's pro-Trump or against his enemies, they accept it.GRWelsh

    Yes, a fair depiction. I noticed that academic and theologian David Bentley Hart, in a conversation with Peter O'Leary, calls this a modern reworking/revival of Gnostic mythos.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    (e.g. Rupert Murdoch media properties have made tens of billions (USD) on shamelessly spewing bullshit in the US & UK, for instance, since the Reagan-Thatcher era that has helped to normalize 'populist cynicism'.)180 Proof

    Yep. No question. Here too (Murdoch's Sky News).

    Seditionist-Traitor-Rapist1 is a stubbornly persistent symptom that, IMO, is struggling to metastasize nationally, maybe even globally. Is that alarmist hyperbole? :mask:180 Proof

    I hear you.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    Mine was more general. It's the sense in which Trump has jaded the entire political scene - the expecation that 'all politicians are liars anyway' (so what does it matter if Trump lies?), who's to say what is true, all the instutitions of government are basically malignant, the whole system is rotten so let's destroy it - those kinds of cynical tropes.Wayfarer

    I got ya. Fair call.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    In 1989 I was living in Washington, DC when I'd found Peter Sloterdijk's ominous Critique of Cynical Reason180 Proof

    That looks exceptionally interesting and vast. I guess I hadn't factored in the idea of cynicism as the era's worldview, a kind of coping mechanism against a world of swirling change and uncertainty. I wonder if this is a different account of cynicism than @wayfarer had in mind? I generally think of cynics as passionless, passive and incredulous of human decency. Tump voters, such as I understand them, seem engaged, passionate and credulous. You understand this stuff well; thoughts?
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    Apathy in respect of the facts - like, they don't care what he's been shown to have done, they won't watch or read the reports, and if they do, they will re- interpret them to suit their narrativeWayfarer

    I hear you but I suspect they are unable to do differently and are part of a faith-based value system, not unlike the Catholic Church in its prime.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    This is what makes the Trump candidacy (should it be realised) so utterly malignant - the fact that he can rely on the apathy and cynicism of his supporters to gain ground by wholly illegitimate means.Wayfarer

    Reasonable questions but is it apathy and cynicism from supporters? Or do you think many of them accept the Trump narrative as true believers in a war against a corrupt 'business as usual' political process? If this phenomenon operates similarly to a cult, then it's a highly complex situation.
  • Avi Loeb Claims to have found evidence of alien technology
    As you would imagine, there's a good deal of money to be made out of the UFO speaking/writing circuit. I've watched Ross's various 'documentaries' he is careful, but it's clear he has an audience in mind and seems to have re-launched a flagging career. But some of his research is intriguing.

    Nevertheless I am interested in the claims. There are several high profile whistle blowers - the other notable one is Luis Elizondo - Coulthart has used him too.

    Presumably, they can kind of materialise or de-materialise.Wayfarer

    I think this is becoming accepted in the 'lore' now. And it goes back to earlier accounts. A famous one I have a slight connection to is Westall, which also seemed to feature 'vanishing and 'reappearing' back in 1966.
  • Encounters with Reality / happiness or suffering ?
    I guess it’s for the sake of self introspection which can yield useful knowledge about oneself.simplyG

    Interesting. I hear this often and I think what you say is fair - but I just can't think of a single example of where I have yielded useful knowledge about myself in any such process.

    To me it strikes as unhealthy as individuals should have a healthy level of curiosity of what is happening outside their little world.simplyG

    I guess we have to now because of the global effects of untrammelled capitalism and environmental degradation. But it wasn't that long ago what was happening in the next village didn't much matter. I think it is ok to only be aware of your own bubble, as long as this doesn't cause harm to others. The fundamentalist Christian, Fox News watching bubble is not so good.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    Roughly 60% of the country thinks this guy is a crook and should stand trial before the election.Mikie

    But what percentage of these will vote?

    I am somewhat reassured by what @Wayfarer and @180 Proof are saying. I have no connections to America and don't follow politics, nor do I understand the priorities of voters there or here in Australia. I was surprised that Trump's popular vote actually went up in 2020, despite the previous 4 years, so I'm prepared for anything.
  • Avi Loeb Claims to have found evidence of alien technology
    If an advanced intelligence that has figured it all out tried to explain it to us, could we understand the explanation? Or at least get the gist of it?RogueAI

    I doubt it, but how could we know? I did see an interview with (I think) Neil deGrasse Tyson and Richard Dawkins talking about potential alien intelligence with them suggesting that the difference between us and aliens might be comparable to the difference between us and chimpanzees. I guess it all hinges upon whether useful communication would even be possible between an advanced species and us.
  • How to choose what to believe?
    There are countries that raise their people to be dumb and deprieve their ability to be skeptical so that their rule can be secured.Hailey

    What countries do you have in mind and can you provide an example?
  • Avi Loeb Claims to have found evidence of alien technology
    I don’t buy any of that conspiracy theory stuff. Governments can barely organise the quotidian things they’re supposed to organise, let alone conspiracies to deceive.Wayfarer

    Yep. That's about it.
  • How to choose what to believe?
    I don't think it's the government. We are much more socialized by our families, communities, schools, jobs, TV, the internet.T Clark

    Agree.

    Not trusting government to the point of paranoia is a popular culture trope and a bit convenient.

    how do we know what to believe in?Hailey

    You can ask that question about anything - religion, media, science, universities, advertising, knowledge in general...

    You really need to take things matter by matter and work through them with the information available. Perhaps you can name an issue that you are struggling to get a grip on?
  • Encounters with Reality / happiness or suffering ?
    Perhaps reality can only be accepted once one has attained sufficient enlightenments.Kevin Tan

    I'm not sure what you mean by the word 'reality'.
  • Encounters with Reality / happiness or suffering ?
    I undertand.

    Whenever I tell someone that I take those, I perceive that they think I take them for pleasurejavi2541997

    Sometimes people need medication. We would not take this view with a diabetic who needs regular insulin medication.
  • Avi Loeb Claims to have found evidence of alien technology
    They would have to be able to traverse the distances involved in some way other than literally travelling from there to here - something which would appear to us as supernatural, but which would in reality be a form of science unknown and probably inconceivable to humans.Wayfarer

    No question. I think we tend to set odd limits on our speculative thinking when it comes to potential alien technology. I keep hearing people talking about human understandings of time and space as if these would necessarily apply to an advanced civilisation.
  • Encounters with Reality / happiness or suffering ?
    But I wonder if one of the ways of facing unhappiness is to accept itjavi2541997

    Yes. I think the default setting for most emotional states is to accept it - happy or not. We often assume how we feel is normal. We may not even be certain what it is we are feeling. Nevertheless, off we go, looking for distractions.

    I take everyday Bromazepam and CBDjavi2541997

    I wasn't referring to prescribed medication under treatment. I was thinking about self-medicating indiscriminately with booze and other substances.
  • Encounters with Reality / happiness or suffering ?
    I'm not entirely sure what you are asking or trying to communicate. Is it what reasons people might have to pursue philosophical enquiry?

    But why philosophy anyway ? If a person is happy who needs it ? It’s often recognised that life is suffering and ignorance is bliss but are these just convenient aphorisms or is the truth somewhere in between?simplyG

    Philosophy might be many things, but, whether a person is happy or unhappy, it often involves examining beliefs and presuppositions to determine whether they are true or justified.

    Philosophy is only going to appeal to a percentage of people who have any reason to be interested in the subject. People have all sorts of ways to manage unhappiness; substance use, consumerism, hobbies, travel and other distractions, not philosophy so much. For some, religion may play a role.

    From this perspective it appears that reality in this day and age (especially with social media involved) is a type of social bubble which is self created by the choices of the individualsimplyG

    I remember people complaining about others living in bubbles well before the internet. There's always been the issue of people inhabiting a class or social group which has its own rules and values and is often ignorant of the wider world. In the days of newspapers, we often knew what bubble people belonged to by what paper/magazine they had delivered.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    He lost fair and square last time, and he's going to keep losing (even if he were on the ballot, which I doubt). I think whatever power Trump wields rests on the illusion that he's powerful. If people stop believing it, he'll have no power. It's a real emperor's new clothes scenario.Wayfarer

    I hope you're right, but what I see (and I hope I'm wrong) is that the Trump phenomena isn't about putative power exactly. It's that Trump and Trumpism has precisely the right enemies in an era of burgeoning tribalism, surging right-wing nationalism and the burning nostalgia for 'golden eras'.

    Trump's seductive because he is hated by disdainful elites, intellectuals, the bureaucracy, professional politicians, mainstream media, liberal lawyers, progressives, academics, apparatchiks of political correctness, educated professionals, cosmopolitan urbanites, pious Hollywood celebrities and virtue signalling rich folk.

    He's become almost a perfect folk hero for these disgruntled and irrational times; an outlaw whose magnitude is endlessly renewed by the onslaught of continuing invective, scorn and legal 'persecution' faced by Trump and his people. Somehow he's managed to combine being underdog and overlord.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    And as I've said many times, how can he even be part of a contest, if he doesn't agree to abide by the rules, which he patently ignores and flouts. Wouldn't even be allowed into a tennis tournament with that attitude, let alone an election for public office.Wayfarer

    From where I'm sitting Trump looks more and more the undefeatable superhero, the rebel, the outlaw, the legend. Where we're going, we don't need facts...
  • Literary writing process
    I used to have the same approach as yours. Side hustle as a writer some years ago now - I wrote some TV drama and a lot of newspaper journalism and an unpublished novel some years ago. I have friends who are novelists - there doesn't seem to be a right path. Some plan meticulously, some let the characters write the tale. I suspect the key is to just keep writing and reflect on how it can be improved. Read a lot.
  • What is truth?
    I think the really important part here is the way this account shows the other accounts hereabouts to be erroneous. So far I've tried to show that for the pragmatic account, but it should also show how the idea that we can throw out truth and just have belief is flawed; or that it's just a feeling; or reality; or some evolved reaction; and so on, through pretty much the whole gamete of BS hereabouts.

    But Frank made another good point, that truth is very basic; so basic that most folk have trouble seeing how basic it is and insist on more complex explanations.
    Banno

    Nice! Thank you again.
  • What is truth?
    You might forgive me for being somewhat formal, but one way to set out what "...is true" does is found in a very simple construction, the T-sentence. Take an arbitrary sentence, say "The beans are cooking". That sentence will be true precisely in the case that the beans are indeed cooking. We can write:
    "The beans are cooking" is true if and only if the beans are cooking.
    Notice that on the left hand side, the sentence "The beans are cooking" is being talked about, but on the right hand side it is being used.

    Pick another sentence, this time one that is false: "London is the capital of France". We can write
    "London is the capital of France" is true if and only if London is the capital of France.
    It looks odd, but consider it careful, and you will see that it is true. London is not the capital of France, but if it where, then "London is the capital of France" would be true.

    Generalising this, for any sentence you might choose - let's call it "p" - we can write what's called a "T-sentence":
    "p" is true if and only if p
    ...where what we do is write any sentence we like in to the place occupied by p.

    A couple of other points. Notice that this works for sentences, and not for other uses of "...is true" like "The bench top is true" or "Jeff is true to his friends". And notice also how little this tells us about truth. Other definitions will say that truth is this or that, and provide profound expositions - philosophers call these the classical or sometimes the substantive theories. What these have in common is that they are wrong. The T-sentence approach, and others related to it, downplay the import of "truth", saying it is a performance or it is redundant or that it needs to be deflated.

    One final point. Notice the difference between "what is truth?" and "which sentences are true?" Your OP asked the former. The latter is much harder, and there is good reason to think no general answer can be given.

    https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/truth/#TarTheTru
    And yes, to those who have been here before, there are complications, but the first step is to move away from substantive approaches to the issue. Lies to children.
    Banno

    That's helpful and succinctly written. Appreciate it. I read a paper and saw a lecture by Simon Blackburn on the deflationary account of truth and was immediately interested in this approach. Seems to arrest endless theoretical postulations about the 'nature' of truth and gets to the practical business end.

    So this approach seems to combine a linguistic account with an empirical account of matters. Is that fair?

    How does this apply to claims like, 'it is true that Jesus rose from the dead'? The approach would seem to say this fact is true, if it is true (that JC rose from the dead). But establishing the truth of some claims is fraught. We have no way to verify such a claim. Uses of the word true are all over the place in our culture. Would you say that deflationary truth relies upon an evidentiary approach?