Comments

  • A Neo-Aristotelian Perspective on Gender Theory
    Interesting response, thanks. But I'm still not sure why Christianity was convincing to you.

    To attempt a more sophisticated answer to your original question about "Christian context", I think where I live (in the US) right now what we seem to be witnessing is the elimination of classical liberalism as a viable politics any more, and so what we are left with is the battleground between the two other ideologies, conservatism and leftism. Biden, for example, governed from the left.Colo Millz

    I'm not sure “left” and “right” have much meaning these days in politics. Isn’t what we’re living in really corporatism, with huge companies and their owners siphoning up the wealth of the land? I thought Biden was a centrist. Trump isn’t a conservative; he may be an authoritarian, right-wing statist, but he doesn’t seem interested in conserving many traditions. Australia, where I am, is still a liberal and generally progressive country, although we currently have a Labor government that’s somewhat to the right. I don’t think most voters have much understanding or interest in liberalism or of left–right politics; it’s seems to be driven by emotion and how they belvie a party or candidate will affect them financially.
  • A Neo-Aristotelian Perspective on Gender Theory
    Wow, you cover a lot of eclectic views there.

    The trans thing I am much less clear about - I am not particularly a fan of trans women playing rugby with the girls, for example, I don't think that's fair.Colo Millz

    I don’t support all trans activist demands. But I think the issues of sports, prisons, and toilets are relatively minor and are matters we can negotiate and develop procedural responses to.

    I have some fairly strong conservative leanings. For me the story of the Bible and the kerygma of the "Christ event" is one of the most extraordinary, unexpected, exciting things to ever exist in history.Colo Millz

    Why do you choose to believe this story over Islam, Hinduism or Buddhism's extraordinary stories?
  • A Neo-Aristotelian Perspective on Gender Theory
    I come from a fairly progressive country and the Christian tradition I grew up in here is inclusive and welcoming to gay and trans people - right wing anti-modernist Christianity is less familiar to me. I am not sure if Caputo has written on gay or trans rights, but his history suggests an identification with marginalized oppressed groups.

    What is your position on homosexuality and how do you see it in a Christian context?
  • A Neo-Aristotelian Perspective on Gender Theory
    Nicely written response.

    I am reminded of David Bentley Hart's quip on his blog:

    among the fundamentalists I include not just the white evangelical fundamentalists, I mean a lot of the Thomists I know. They might not be six day creationists, but they read the Bible as a set of propositional algorithms for constructing social reality. They don’t read it as the inspired occasion of reading that requires interpretation, tact, speculative daring, and the sense that there is the law of love, and the law of the spirit, without which the text slays.

    Of course, conservative Christians are often critical of Hart because they disagree with his understanding of the Gospels as a call to inclusion and diversity, not that they would frame it this way... .

    What we might need in these discussions are philosophically adroit theists who are not aligned with reactionary, anti-enlightenment projects. Ultimately these debates usually end up as tedious theism-versus-atheism worldview arguments.
  • A Neo-Aristotelian Perspective on Gender Theory
    MacIntyre argues that all modern moral philosophies that drop teleology have ended up here, without always knowing it. And the problem is that emotivism cannot provide any rational justification for moral claims, expressing only preferences. It is not open to abuse because it makes no substantive claims that can be abused.Jamal

    I guess @Banno would probably point to something like Nussbaum’s capability framework as a more useful approach.

    I was an emotivist for some time. And I tended to view the art of rational justification as a kind of game; something we do within certain conversational contexts. The source of most of our beliefs is emotional or affective, with reasoning supplied post hoc to make them appear coherent or justified or part of theism's plan. I think emotivism may be returning. Perhaps it would be beneficial if people stopped debating right and wrong and instead understood themselves as having an aesthetic, affective relationship to the world. :wink:

    The solution, arguably, is not to discard neo-Aristotelian ideas of essence, but to show how it can be used well, setting out a more humane, and more inclusive teleology—like one that shows how the telos of a human being is fulfilled in relationships of love and mutual flourishing, which can take many forms. I want to say that abandoning the concept of human nature and purpose because it's open to misuse is to surrender the very ground on which we can build a progressive vision of the good life.Jamal

    So, does this make you a foundationalist? Do you think, for instance, Rorty’s neopragmatic view of morality is limited because it doesn’t rely on objective moral truths or universal principles? If all things are socially constructed, contingent conversations, then why do anything in particular?
  • A Neo-Aristotelian Perspective on Gender Theory
    You can be loving and kind to people while also recognizing that they have an illness that, if you truly love them, you would make reasonable efforts to cure.Bob Ross

    I don’t believe one can be appropriately loving to someone whose identity one denies and considers perversion. I don’t think there’s anyway we can resolve this one. The gap comes before your use of Aristotle - it’s between your version of theism and my version of atheism. All we can do ultimately to attempt to settle this is vote in a way that best supports our views.
  • A Neo-Aristotelian Perspective on Gender Theory
    I disagree with this. I think what the Christian conservative use of neo-Aristotelian ideas of essence shows is that teleological frameworks are powerful and thus open to abuse. It's what makes them philosophically substantive, in contrast to the emotivism criticized by MacIntyre.Jamal

    Fair enough. I've had a similar conversation with some Thomists sover the years.
  • A Neo-Aristotelian Perspective on Gender Theory
    Me, I'm definitely not on the fence. I'll make a post about it, maybe.Jamal

    Please do.
  • The purpose of philosophy
    Which leads me to ask - what questions of an urgent / topical nature today can be best addressed, or perhaps just effectively addressed, with philosophy? Are there discussions on subjects now that will seem just as urgent in 15 years as discussions of AI have proven to be? I would love to hear some predictions, or be pointed towards urgent current topics in philosophy.Jeremy Murray

    I don’t think any question requires philosophy, and certainly not if it’s to be settled by an educative political process. Seems to me all matters are settled by the ongoing conversations societies have with each other. These are, of course, based on philosophically derived notions, but not in a systematic or deliberate way. And our values will change as the older folk die off and the younger, more progressive types dominate (they in turn will be the conservative fogies of tomorrow).

    I have to confess to not caring about AI. There’s a lot of alarmist verbiage written about it. My view is that any reading or tentative understandings of the matter will do nothing to manage or deal with any changes coming.

    Canadian philosopher Joseph Heath noted on his substack that many of his colleagues seem to be 'sitting out' many fraught contemporary subjectsJeremy Murray

    I'm a big fan of sitting out controversies and pseudo problems. Many either go away or are integrated into culture as the old folk and their values die out.
  • A Neo-Aristotelian Perspective on Gender Theory
    Isn’t this the point where many theists refer to the Fall, human imperfection, and, if they’re particularly ardent, Satan? Which gets me wondering: Is evil unnatural? Is Satan the god of the unnatural?
  • What is right and what is wrong and how do we know?
    I agree that the record of our species reveals both tendencies in abundance: tenderness and atrocity, rescue and massacre.Truth Seeker

    I often think this is like an Ouroboros....without atrocity we wouldn't discover self-sacrifice and healing. Can it be that both are necessary? (Personally I don't think so but it scans superficially).

    I'm going to ask some tougher questions and I'm not intending to sound rude. :pray:

    So when I say compassion is the more natural relational core, I don’t mean it is the statistically dominant behaviour, but that it reveals the more fundamental truth of coexistence.Truth Seeker

    But how do you demonstrate this? Isn't this just a statement of your belief rather than an evidence based claim?

    In this light, Compassionism isn’t the claim that humans are compassionate, but that compassion names the deepest possibility of what it means to be. The conqueror and the caregiver are both human, but only the latter manifests what humanity is capable of when it fully hears its own ontological vocation.Truth Seeker

    But that only holds if you've already decided that compassion is better than conquest. That sounds more like a statement rooted in a nominal Christian value system. So how can you actually demonstrate that compassion is better? What makes it superior, philosophically or practically?

    To me, you can reach your conclusion if you begin with the axiom that human wellbeing should be our goal and build from there. But that’s a choice you have to consciously make. I don’t think it’s self-evident.
  • A Neo-Aristotelian Perspective on Gender Theory
    Can we agree on this (notwithstanding the semantic disputes)???Bob Ross

    I'm not an essentialist, and I tend to see notions of 'male' and 'female' as evolving and changing over time. As I’ve said, I'm not a gender theorist. What matters most is recognising that trans people are here to stay. We need to learn how to live with this reality, not suppress it or label it deviant, just as much of the world has come to accept homosexuality as part of the spectrum of normal human experience.

    Sex is a creative act, it’s not limited to procreation. It can be a flight of fancy, a search for pleasure, a quest for meaning, a release of tension, intimacy, a form of recreation, a duty, even a way of avoiding responsibility. I'm not going to put a fence around it.
  • What is right and what is wrong and how do we know?
    I don’t mean that ethics emerges as a factual property within Being, but that in the event of encounter - when another’s vulnerability impinges on me -Truth Seeker

    Thanks for the clarification.

    To put it less abstractly: when we encounter pain - human or non-human - we do not first deduce an ethical rule; we are already moved. That movement of concern is the disclosure of Being’s relational core.Truth Seeker

    Certainly, this seems true in the cultures I know. But what about cultures that appear deaf to the suffering of tribes not their own, those who cheerfully kill children? That too seems an authentic expression of human behaviour across millennia. Is it possible to determine which is the more natural relational core: the urge to conquer, maim, and vanquish, or the call for empathy? I’ve always assumed that with humans, it could go either way.
  • Are trans gender rights human rights?
    Isn't all human discourse a contingent product of cultural and linguistic practices? Everything exists within layers of constructs and frameworks. Human rights remain a meaningful and useful frame until some other construct supersedes them.
  • Are trans gender rights human rights?
    I am getting the feeling that most people on this board have very little understanding or familiarity with trans gender viewpoints, culture, and activism. I've been studying them for the last two years, so I admit my awareness of the subject is painted by that. It appears I am unlikely to have a good conversation on these boards as people appear very in the dark or have a very limited take on the issue. That's ok, philosophy has not been in sync with the culture for some time now, and its not surprising that a modern day philosophical issue like this is not being properly tackled here.Philosophim

    My view of this issue is untheorized and based on my experience knowing and working with numerous trans people, both men and women. I support most trans rights on the grounds of solidarity and the need to minimize harm and stigma. I’m not aligned with or aware of every activist claim, and I also recognize that trans people vary in their thinking. I’ve known some who reject gender theory entirely. Most of the trans people I’ve known come to their identity through personal experience rather than gender politics. Some are later influenced or radicalized by that politics, but it would be a mistake to assume activism shapes all trans identities. And I know you haven’t said that.

    I broadly support all five rights you mentioned, except where specific circumstances make their application genuinely problematic. My main reservation concerns medical treatment for minors; I believe age, maturity, and clinical judgment must guide decisions, so point four would need qualifications around safeguarding and informed consent.

    My position comes from both personal experience and ethical reasoning. Having worked with and known trans people, I’ve seen the distress caused by denying recognition or access to care. That distress may be “subjective,” but it is real and morally relevant, I woudl hold that reducing it is part of our responsibility to respect human dignity and autonomy.

    I view being transgender not as a mental illness (as some do) but as a mode of human identity. Comparing it to schizophrenia or other delusional conditions misunderstands the nature of gender identity: it is not a pathology to be suppressed but a lived reality to be supported. I also find it interesting how some who do not support treatment of mental illness do support it for trans, probably because transphobia informs their view.

    If we accept that gender identity is how people experince their selfhood, as something fundamental to a person’s being, then society shoudl facilitate and provide the means for trans people to live authentically and safely. That includes access to accurate identity documents, social recognition, protection from harm, and healthcare aligned with their needs.

    Gender theory isn't relevant to my take on trans. My view is pragmatic. People have always identified and alwasy will identity as a gender different to mainstream expectation (I'm avoiding gender discourse here). We don’t need a metaphysical theory of gender to defend trans rights. What matters is whether our practices reduce suffering and allow people to live freely and without humiliation. Trans rights stand on the basic moral ground that they lessen cruelty and create space for self-determination. Moral progress depends on empathy and persuasion, not on appeals to absolute truth. I'd take the view that a decent society lets people define themselves without fear and measures dignity by the freedom to live honestly, not by an obedience to inherited categories.

    Now, before anyone says, “But what if someone wants to identify as an air-conditioning manifold?” I would simply respond that such an identity lacks the historical depth and pragmatic grounding that give meaning to categories like gender. There’s no shared social context, language, or lived experience to make that identification useful.
  • What is right and what is wrong and how do we know?
    Thank you very much for your excellent question. Levinas’s meontological move in Totality and Infinity is precisely what I had in mind when I spoke of the ethical and the ontological as “two inflections of the same opening.” For Levinas, ethics is first philosophy because it arises not within Being but before it - me ontos, beyond-Being. The face of the Other interrupts ontology’s self-enclosure; it calls me from a height I did not posit, demanding responsibility prior to any theoretical stance. In that sense, Levinas radicalizes Heidegger’s Geworfenheit (thrownness): I am not only thrown into Being but summoned beyond it.

    Where I diverge slightly is in emphasis. Levinas’s meontology can sound like a complete rupture - an absolute outside to Being. I read it, rather, as the self-transcendence of Being itself, its capacity to exceed its own totalization through the ethical relation. In other words, the ethical call is not alien to ontology but its deepest disclosure: Being showing itself as vulnerable and relational. The “firstness” of ethics is not chronological or hierarchical but modal: the primordial tone of existence as care, exposure, and obligation.
    Truth Seeker

    Does this include non-human animals? Forgive me a few quesions as I find this difficult to follow - and I am unclear how ethics can arise in this way. Doesn't a capacity to describe ethics presuppose an account of what is?

    What you have written also sounds highly abstract and metaphorical. How can one demonstrate that ethics is the “deepest disclosure” of Being?
  • A Neo-Aristotelian Perspective on Gender Theory
    Like I said before, you are presupposing that it is true that homosexual acts are not ‘morally corrupt’; and then based off of that saying it is not degenerate. I understand from your view that makes sense, but in mine it doesn’t because it is immoral (viz., ‘morally corrupt’). What we would need to discuss is why.Bob Ross

    Yes, I think this is the nub of it.

    Would you say that homosexuality falls into this category because, in your view, God is against it? And does your reasoning come post hoc, have you used reason to shore up a religious view you already held?

    The problem with reason, for me, is that although it's difficult to escape its use, rationality can be used to justify anything. In the end, it often comes down to whether one is convinced or not and that may be informed more by our affective judgements and intuition than reasoning.

    Would it be fair to say that you have an almost Thomist veneration of reason?
  • A Neo-Aristotelian Perspective on Gender Theory
    Calling people degenerate is bigotry.

    Even if it really is degenerate? This is the basic, colloquial definition of bigotry:

    “obstinate or unreasonable attachment to a belief, opinion, or faction, in particular prejudice against a person or people on the basis of their membership of a particular group.”
    Bob Ross

    As I said, I was going to leave you with the last word on this, but I wanted to correct something. You are right. I misspoke - my sentence above is wrong. One can presumably use “degenerate” to accurately describe some people’s activities.

    Of course, I would not include gay people or most sexual acts, like fellatio, as you do. Calling gay people and their preferences morally corrupt or less than human, which “degeneracy” implies, would qualify as bigotry.

    Do you think engaging in BDSM, e.g., is not sexually degenerate? If not, then what would count as sexually degenerate under your view and would any concession of the possibility of sexual degeneracy be considered bigotry on your view?Bob Ross

    I’m not someone who reaches for “degenerate” as a descriptive term in most serious discussions. What consenting adults do is not my business. One might be able to apply the term upon the actions and lives of Trump or Epstein.

    I'd like to start a thread on disagreement.
  • A Neo-Aristotelian Perspective on Gender Theory
    It seems way to convenient to label your most prominent opposition in America as all writing bigotry by noting that homosexuality, transgenderism, and sexually degenerate behavior is bad (for those participating in it).Bob Ross

    Calling people degenerate is bigotry. To use your terminology, this much is 'obviously true'. If I said theists are delusional and need to be cured of their magical thinking, that would be the same thing.

    Notice that you didn’t engage with what I said because it is obviously true. A sex organ is not designed to be inserted in an anus; even if you believe that it is morally permissible to do so. The fact you resort to name-calling as an evasion technique instead of rebuttling my position is saddening.Bob Ross

    Notice that you haven't presented an 'argument' to refute. You made a belief claim that you haven’t demonstrated to be true, and I pointed this out. First, there’s the problem that you haven’t demonstrated that any part of us is “designed,” and you’ve also failed to make the case that a sex organ is not designed to be inserted into an anus, you’ve merely stated an opinion. We use our parts of our bodies for any number of things. And you never answered my question: when a man puts his penis in a woman’s mouth, is that also a violation of design according to you? Or using fingers for typing? Who decides what counts as a violation of usage and who decides what counts as design?

    Now, even if we take a neutral view that human bodies evolved over time to have certain functions, that still doesn’t amount to an argument against using a penis for anal sex. People can use their bodies in surprising, eccentric, and creative ways to experience pleasure — from dance to sex. Who gets to decide what counts as “unnatural”? In most cases, if it can be done, it's natural.

    I don’t believe in re-educating dissenters. I am fine with free speech; however, it is commonly accepted that people who are extremely mentally (or/and physically) unwell need desperate help and they may be confined for a while for their own safety to themselves (like suicidal people for example). Should everyone who has a mental illness be put in a camp? No.Bob Ross

    This is disingenuous. Comparing someone who might be suicidal or violent (or 'extremely mentally unwell") to someone who is gay or trans is just a case of you applying a label of mental illness on a phenomenon what you dislike or are afraid of. It would be no different to me claiming that Christians who are deluded into thinking there’s a magic sky wizard should be given counselling to remove their faith and become “normal.”

    Wouldn’t you agree that being homosexual or transgender is a result of socio-psychological disorders or/and biological developmental issues?Bob Ross

    No, that seems to be another bigoted position.

    Then you are, in fact, labeling your opposition as bigoted instead of refuting their position. I could easily say the same thing about your views: it doesn’t help further the conversation.Bob Ross

    Not really. If you say gay and tans people are deviant, you are saying bigoted things. You are presenting a moral judgment founded in bias and stigma. It's textbook bigotry.

    You do understand that the hugely popular conservative view right now in America is that transgenderism is a mental illness—right? You keep pretending like this is a crazy, outlandish, bigoted, and ‘transphobic’ position to take; and keep straw manning the position with name-calling and baseless assumptions to evade engaging in the discussion. Acknowledging that something is a mental illness does not entail that one hates people who have it….do you really not believe that???Bob Ross

    That's just an example of argumentum ad populum. I'm sure as many Americans probably think the world is only 6,000 years old. Who cares how many think something? And by the way, I didn't say that these pejorative views were "outlandish" or "crazy" I said they were bigoted. I am well aware of positions held by some in the Right. And I don't live in America.

    I’m not evading anything, you’re simply failing to offer any coherent reasoning for a position. Saying “the penis isn’t designed for anal sex” isn’t an argument; it’s just an unsupported assertion. If that’s the level of reasoning being offered, what exactly is there to engage with? Pointing out the lack of evidence or logic isn’t evasion.

    And there’s a broader problem: conflating anal sex with homosexuality is primitive. Many gay men do not like or practice anal sex, and there are lesbians for whom this framing is entirely irrelevant. Your view on lesbians? Reducing homosexuality to a particular sex act is a crude simplification. The point people have been making (and that you seem to be evading) is that anal sex is a sexual act that transcends sexual preference. You cannot use it to portray gay people as somehow inherently 'against nature' or whatever it might be.

    Anyway, I'll let you have the last word since this seems to be going nowhere. I suspect that we don't have enough in common to build a productive conversation. I have nothing against you as a person and wish you well. I have no doubt that you are sincere and doing the best you can with your thinking and I would say the same applies to me. I’d be interested in a thread soem time about how we can have conversations with people who don’t share basic axioms or frameworks, and how we can develop a society that allows for pluralism.
  • A Neo-Aristotelian Perspective on Gender Theory
    you didn't even try to answer the question, because you know I am right that the sex organs are not designed to be put in the anus (irregardless if you think men will tend to do it or tend to like to do it).Bob Ross

    One's penis can go anywhere one chooses (with consent). But anal sex is not compulsory, right? No one is saying it is, although it's a common heterosexual activity. And a question of 'design' has not been demonstrated. A penis fits inside holes. Are you also against sticking a penis in a woman's mouth? Where do you get the idea that any particular kind of sex act is somehow wrong?
  • A Neo-Aristotelian Perspective on Gender Theory
    A bigotry charge is a serious accusation: why do you think people who disagree with your political views are all bigots?Bob Ross

    I'm not saying you are a bigot i said what you wrote was bigoted. But you may well be a bigot too.

    Notice your language:

    1. Sexually deviant, homosexual, and transgender behaviors and practicesBob Ross

    I think we should have government programs for studying transgenderism to cure it and they should have programs that help transgenders be curedBob Ross

    Both of these read like bigotry. "Let's cure those deviants."

    I don’t support Stalin: that’s a blatant straw man.Bob Ross

    I didn’t say you support Stalin, I compared that re-education approach to a Stalinist one. I think that’s fair; he was big on re-educating dissenters. What you think about Stalin is irrelevant to my point.

    Wouldn’t you agree that being homosexual or transgender is a result of socio-psychological disorders or/and biological developmental issues?Bob Ross

    No, and this is another bigoted position.

    Do you think a part of our biological programming is to insert a sex organ into an organ designed to defecate?Bob Ross

    I don’t know you to establish how seriously you offer this, but that sentence reads like something a child would write, surely? I can't help but feel some compassion for you that your religion appears to have made you so reductive and homophobic.

    I could be wrong but from what I read here my view would be that it might benefit you to stop hiding behind theories, metaphysics, and fundamentalist religion, and get out into the real world. Spend time with lots of different kinds of people for a few years. Maybe some real-world exposure will help you understand the diversity and beauty in people who differ from your prescribed notions. And that perhaps what needs to change is you, not them.

    Either way, it may be that we don’t share enough foundational axioms to have a fruitful discussion. All I really wanted to do here was point out that your outlook looks bigoted on this matter and (since hating on trans people is a popular sport for many) to express a different view from yours. Job done.

    That said, I’m glad you feel confident expressing your opinions here for us all to explore. It’s interesting to see what comes out in response, Perhaps it reveals a little more about the true nature of some of our members.
  • A Neo-Aristotelian Perspective on Gender Theory
    Thanks for articulating your views further. To me they seem to be founded in bigotry, but no doubt you think I’m wrong too, so I guess we’re a microcosm of our times.

    Re abortion: I'm not concerned where life begins.

    The issue for me is that no one has the right to use another person’s body without their consent, even to preserve life. For the pregnant, this means a person is not morally obligated to sustain a fetus, regardless of whether it is considered a “person,” because a right to life does not include the right to forcibly use someone else’s body. And this principle applies universally: just as no one is required to donate a kidney or remain attached to life-support to save another, no one can be compelled to maintain a pregnancy, making abortion permissible on the basis of bodily autonomy and self-ownership.

    For you, then, what are the ‘major issues’ related to transgenderism?Bob Ross

    Well, unlike you, I don’t have any “major issues” with trans people. It’s pragmatic: social policies can negotiate this one. Let them be. Are there some assholes and bizarre activists among them? Sure. But the same can be said of Christianity, Islam and almost every identity.

    Your idea that we can “cure” them seems antediluvian or Stalinist. Let’s cure gay people too, huh?

    Do you think gay folk need to be cured of their homosexuality?

    Do you get your moral views from a particular interpretation of Christianity?
  • A Neo-Aristotelian Perspective on Gender Theory
    My thoughts are that all you're doing is cloaking bigotry with philosophy to give it the appearance of intellectual depth, as part of a hateful and destructive reactionary political and religious movement.Jamal

    There's a bit of this around these days. Metaphysics is a good place to hide.
  • A Neo-Aristotelian Perspective on Gender Theory
    Liberalism in America tends to want the social and legal acceptance of:

    1. Sexually deviant, homosexual, and transgender behaviors and practices;
    2. The treatment of people relative to what they want to be as opposed to what they are (e.g., gender affirmation, putting the preferred gender on driver’s licenses, allowing men to enter female bathrooms, allowing men to play in female sports, etc.);
    3. No enforceable immigration policies;
    4. Murdering of children in the womb;
    Bob Ross

    From my perspective your language seems bigoted and cruel. But I do understand that people think this way.

    I think progressives around the world would probably want:

    1) For individuals to live free of bigotry and for homosexuality and trans people to be able to live as they want.

    2) A woman's right to have bodily autonomy and self-determination.

    I would agree with these too. I do believe in immigration policies, so let’s set that one aside.

    I’m not a theorist, nor do I much care for the curlicues of argumentation about essentialism, sex, or whatever else people bring into this debate.

    At its core, the trans issue is a matter of pragmatism. Trans people exist, have always existed, and will continue to exist, denying them serves no one. Why not simply accept this reality?

    No doubt there are ways of regulating and incorporating trans people into society that work for most. Minor issues, such as prisons, toilets, or sport, can be resolved and are distractions from the deeper question of identity. I'm not interested in how we choreograph prisons or sport to accommodate an evolving understanding of gender. Let's leave those to social policy processes.

    What do you have against trans people? Is it ultimately that you believe they go against God?
  • The purpose of philosophy
    So I ask for examples of these dangerous questions it's the purpose of philosophy to ask and address.Ciceronianus

    I see what you’re saying: what counts as a dangerous question in one country might not be in another. Here in Australia, no one much cares about God or gods. You’re rarely going to find controversy about teaching evolution or privileging science over religious dogma.

    But there are enough questions (often with essentialist themes) which seem to provoke antipathy. What is a woman? What is gender? Is taxation theft, or is it the price we pay for civilisation? Is morality objective or just a matter of custom? What is racism? What counts as true? Plenty of wars have been started in pursuit of answers to these sorts of questions.
  • Banning AI Altogether
    But an AI Nietzsche without hormones and a fragile sense of masculinity won't need to overcompensate so much...
  • Banning AI Altogether
    What will we make of... an AI Nietzsche?Banno

    I wonder if their reading will be existentialist or post-modern. No doubt we'll be able to pick.
  • amoralism and moralism in the age of christianity (or post christianity)
    Just checking - does this work the other way? Would it also be naive and idealistic to think a person of high status could correctly measure or evaluate the words and actions of a person of low status.
    — Tom Storm
    This is moot, because the person of higher status is automatically correct by virtue of their higher status.
    baker

    I don’t think this is moot. In my experience, low-status people can and do question those of higher status. And changes may result.

    Look, I'm not an elitist. I'm interested in having a measure of peace of mind and not becoming cynical and jaded in the face of injustice.

    If you look at popular religion/spirituality, as well as popular psychology, the advice usually goes in the direction that the ordinary person (who doesn't have the means to revenge themselves) should embrace a type of amoralist, anomic stance where they are quietly okay with whatever happens or is done to them (or others). Morality doesn't seem to be something everyone could afford.
    baker

    Ok, thanks for the clarification.

    I'm not sure I share this understanding. I guess I'd need to understand this through specific examples rather than abstract principles.
  • The purpose of philosophy
    I don't think I ever implied that the purpose of philosophy is to play social status games. I'm also not claiming that everyone should approach or be a philosopher. I'm merely pointing out the purpose. Can you not be a plumber but understand the purpose and value of understanding plumbing? Of course. Does everyone need to understand or partake in plumbing? Of course not.Philosophim

    I never said you did. :wink: I was simply responding to an argument often made when people start talking about purpose.

    Notice how in traditional culture, but also in many situations in modern culture, asking questions is the domain of the person who holds the higher status.baker

    I’ve not noticed that. Certainly, in the cultures I know here, people of all status commonly ask difficult questions and are sometimes insolent while doing so. What do you count as a traditional culture?

    In Australian culture low status workers habitually question and sometimes harass the management and ruling classes.
  • The purpose of philosophy
    While the answer, "The love of wisdom" may be the definition, it doesn't answer the deeper and more important question of, "What is the purpose of philosophy?"Philosophim

    True enough: although I suspect purpose may be plural. I doubt it could ever be one thing.

    My issue with the ususal definition is: what does “love of” actually mean, and what is wisdom? The hermeneutics of either of these broad, portentous terms could keep us guessing forever.

    Many of us have met enough people who claim a love of wisdom without ever cultivating it for themselves.

    But here’s another question. Does it matter? When people say they aren’t interested in philosophy to those who aspire to be, there’s a tendency to hold them in mild contempt, or at least to consider them somehow inferior. I suspect, however, that having no interest in philosophy can be a perfectly legitimate way of being. It may simply be dispositional, and I wouldn’t want to live in a world where philosophy must appeal to everyone, and those who aren’t interested are somehow suspect and intrinsically plebeian. That said, there's probably a right way and a wrong way to be disinterested.

    Never stop questioning? Maybe have a reason to question, first.Ciceronianus

    Quite. But one might consider: how is it that one comes to the view that anything should be questioned at all? I suspect one needs a skeptical bent to begin with.
  • How to use AI effectively to do philosophy.
    Looks like a robust framework to me. I wonder if there is also room for a speculative and creative tool there, something about: Use AI for imaginative and speculative inquiry to model inventive scenarios and challenge conventional limits of imagination. Or something like that.
  • amoralism and moralism in the age of christianity (or post christianity)
    I still think it's naive and idealistic to think a person of low status could correctly measure or evaluate the words and actions of a person of high status. It's naive and idealistic to think that the same measurments apply to everyone, regardless of status. This doesn't mean that one must think of the higher-ups as infallible, but that one is not in a position to judge them. A quietism as summarized by the priest above seems to be a much more viable way to live, in contrast to wasting one's resources in a futile pursuit of "justice", or becoming cynical and jaded (and worse) upon realizing that one's sense of right and wrong cannot be acted on in cases that seem to need it most.baker

    Just checking - does this work the other way? Would it also be naive and idealistic to think a person of high status could correctly measure or evaluate the words and actions of a person of low status. And I'm also interested in what you count as high status.
  • Transcendental Ego
    Rational being? Speaking of delusional... Let's just say, that if we are ourselves rational beings, and yet we are at war with each other throughout history, then "rationally" we must be possessed by irrational beings that overwhelm us at every turn.unenlightened

    I see what you mean. But does rational mean level headed and peaceable? It just means capable of reasoning. One so capable can be simultaneously a total cunt. I think Kant (not to be confused with the epithet I just used) argued that our use of reason would eventually lead us to a state of harmony and order, but I’m fairly sure he didn’t think we were there already.
  • Why do many people belive the appeal to tradition is some inviolable trump card?
    There are countless other cultural traditions, considered 'harmless' and beneficial such as Christmas which I am sure many here indulge. Can't stand that rubbish. I am not against partying but why have it over some stupid thing like that, which most people don't believe in now anyway?unimportant

    I think it’s reasonable to challenge arguments from tradition. If someone says something is a matter of tradition, I think the first response should be to question it. But that’s just a personal preference. Misogyny, homophobia, slavery, and many other bigotries and harmful practices are traditional. The defence that a group has always done something a certain way is not a definitive justification. And the question might be, “Whose tradition?” Is it tradition for the nobility to exploit peasants and does this make it right? Is democracy and liberalism a tradition? I’m sure many of the people who defend tradition may not be so enthusiastic about those two institutions.

    When does something become a tradition and is there any agreement on how it works?
  • The value of the given / the already-given
    Ha ha! Well if I'm going to go, let it be Zoroastrianism.
  • The value of the given / the already-given
    Sorry, but I remain skeptical about your calling yourself an atheistAstorre

    You’re welcome to be skeptical, makes no difference
    to my disbelief.
  • What is right and what is wrong and how do we know?
    Christopher Hitchens may not have been a professional philosopher, but I don’t think that diminishes the depth or value of his insights. What I find interesting about what he says about God is not technical philosophy but moral and existential clarity.

    He challenges the assumption that belief in God automatically makes a person moral, and he exposes the moral contradictions in many religious doctrines - especially those that sanctify cruelty, fear, or submission. He asks uncomfortable but necessary questions: If God is good, why does he permit suffering? If morality depends on divine command, does that make genocide or slavery good if commanded by God?

    Hitchens also reminds us that we can find meaning, awe, and compassion without invoking the supernatural. He combined reason, moral passion, and literary brilliance - showing that intellectual honesty and empathy can coexist.
    Truth Seeker

    I’m an atheist and I mostly enjoyed him, but I wouldn’t say Hitchens was deep or insightful, he simply recycled the usual secular free thought ideas that had been offered since Ingersoll and before. All of the Hitch's “thinking” consisted of familiar atheist talking points I’d already encountered when reading Madalyn O’Hair decades before he took them up.

    The morality argument is a particularly creaky and venerable position. But many have overlooked that since Christians cannot agree on what is morally good or not ( on issues like capital punishment, stem cell research, abortion, homosexuality, trans rights, gun ownership, war, welfare reform, taxation, feminism, etc, etc) one can hardly argue that they have an objective grounding for morality. What they appear to have are multiple and contradictory interpretations of guesswork and speculations regarding which version of god may be real and what it thinks.
  • The value of the given / the already-given
    To whom are you grateful for all these things?

    Or do you merely appreciate them?

    Expressing gratitude is quite popular these days (google "gratitude journal"), yet most often, what these people are talking about is appreciation, not actual gratitude.

    Gratitude is painful, uncomfortable. To be grateful is to be grateful to someone, and this puts one into an inferior position. To be grateful means to acknowledge one's indebtedness. To acknowledge one's insufficiency, one's dependence. To be grateful means to acknowledge that one's position in the intricate web of dependecies is precarious.
    With that, gratitude evokes a sobering emotion toward life, a disenchantment.
    baker

    Interesting that you raise this. I was going to say earlier that for me, gratitude feels like an indebtedness to a mystery for this fragile state of good fortune, which could disappear in a nanosecond. There is in fact a vulnerability built into it, and a deep sense of precariousness. But I guess my experience of gratitude doesn’t accord precisely with the classical use of the word; there’s also, built into it, an appreciation.

    Do you feel gratitude?