EndogenousRebel
Even a mean person is trying their best, right?
Brutal
Yeah.Brutal
I don't know what you mean, but it was an analogy.What's this supposed to mean? Are you saying Nietzsche is irrational?
Either way if you're trying to disprove the reality of LOTR for some reason, then you have an odd obession with disproving something which purportly you claim has no merit in the first place. That obession in itself seems much more harmful than the subject which it claims to criticize. Wouldn't it be more rational to ignore it?
So you aren't really interested in truth.... makes for awkward conversation then.Yeah.
As a Christian I think Nietzsche is what happens when you try to engineer a society by your own will. One has to be really spiritually awake to distinguish what is true in the eyes of God to really pursue righteousness. I think the moment you replace faith with a system or something self-engineered you bring in something profane into your soul. Nietzsche brought all his celebral might to try and stay pure to himself, because the system that was given to him wasn't really what God had intended. If anything I like to think that Nietzsche has been forgiven by God and is resting for all the trouble he endured. That I think would be justice. Earth was hell for him enough.
Faith is religious concept where people believe whatever religions doctrine happens to be now.I'm not saying he's wrong, I perfectly empathize with his thoughts. His notions aren't really in the category of true or false because they're more an exploration of "faithlessness". I see his experience as another hue in the experiences of mankind.
Yeah.Brutal
As a Christian I think Nietzsche is what happens when you try to engineer a society by your own will. One has to be really spiritually awake to distinguish what is true in the eyes of God to really pursue righteousness. I think the moment you replace faith with a system or something self-engineered you bring in something profane into your soul. Nietzsche brought all his celebral might to try and stay pure to himself, because the system that was given to him wasn't really what God had intended. If anything I like to think that Nietzsche has been forgiven by God and is resting for all the trouble he endured. That I think would be justice. Earth was hell for him enough.
This is what Nietzsche considered Christianity alienated from reality and people.Maybe that is where the analytical betrays us. However the sanctimonious preaching of people who preach faith is hideous to most who are devout to analysis.
But unlike LOTR people actually act on biblical knowledge.
But like LOTR its a question of how much Bible can be actually tested against reality.
I would not fault a medieval person for explaining lighting as result of Thor striking hammer and anvil.
I would not fault people in LOTR fan club imitating orcs or speaking elvis.
People who have no faith, still have to act on beliefs and assumptions.
Because people act on the world, and the world acts on them.
Things are in reality based in various ways in social context, but the natural world seems pretty consistent.
The origins of why you believe what you believe are not observable by me, and vice versa. Why ought I believe that the seed planted in you were not constructed by man and not God? To me as I've made clear throughout the thread, they are the same thing.
If God created a world that corrupts man, then God willed it. Then if the task man, does not include moving towards "perfection"- warts and all, then well you must appeal to "God works in mysterious ways".
So you're now saying being religious is okay?I don't know what you mean, but it was an analogy.What's this supposed to mean? Are you saying Nietzsche is irrational?
Either way if you're trying to disprove the reality of LOTR for some reason, then you have an odd obession with disproving something which purportly you claim has no merit in the first place. That obession in itself seems much more harmful than the subject which it claims to criticize. Wouldn't it be more rational to ignore it?
Bible is story telling. Its how people in the past learned to adopt culture and learn.
Since in Jesus times, for mere plebs schools did not exist, religion was also educational device.
But Nietzsche lived in a world where people already had access to wider education.
There were more literate people, and people used more concepts and understood more things in life than people around year zero who were still living rather limited lives.
Its kind of like today you don't have to worry about people being wholly illiterate.
But unlike LOTR people actually act on biblical knowledge.
But like LOTR its a question of how much Bible can be actually tested against reality.
I would not fault a medieval person for explaining lighting as result of Thor striking hammer and anvil.
I would not fault people in LOTR fan club imitating orcs or speaking elvis.
I'm not entirely sure what you mean when you say I'm not interested in the truth. Truth that god does or does not exist? Truth in the sense that Nietzche accurately wrote down what he felt and experienced? Or something like truth that his notions resonate with oneself? Because I find truth when I read the Psalms sometimes, as much as I find 'truth' in Nietzche's experiences with faith or notions of gods. I think if you read Nietzche strictly through the eyes of an atheist you're missing much of the sadder aspects of Nietzche's thoughts. His writings are rife with cues on his psychological state of mind, like how the Psalms can show you the depth and spiritual fragility of the psalmist.So you aren't really interested in truth.... makes for awkward conversation then.Yeah.
As a Christian I think Nietzsche is what happens when you try to engineer a society by your own will. One has to be really spiritually awake to distinguish what is true in the eyes of God to really pursue righteousness. I think the moment you replace faith with a system or something self-engineered you bring in something profane into your soul. Nietzsche brought all his celebral might to try and stay pure to himself, because the system that was given to him wasn't really what God had intended. If anything I like to think that Nietzsche has been forgiven by God and is resting for all the trouble he endured. That I think would be justice. Earth was hell for him enough.
Honestly I don't know. Maybe it is, maybe it is not.So you're now saying being religious is okay?
Wait? Its all about feelings and experiences? I did not know that.Truth in the sense that Nietzche accurately wrote down what he felt and experienced?
OK. As far as I know his psychological state was questioned, but of that, most of it is apocryphal and speculative.His writings are rife with cues on his psychological state of mind, like how the Psalms can show you the depth and spiritual fragility of the psalmist.
So.. what did you really mean when you said that what I wrote wasn't really related or interested in truth?Honestly I don't know. Maybe it is, maybe it is not.So you're now saying being religious is okay?
It definitely depends on what you do with that religion.
Wait? Its all about feelings and experiences? I did not know that.Truth in the sense that Nietzche accurately wrote down what he felt and experienced?
OK. As far as I know his psychological state was questioned, but of that, most of it is apocryphal and speculative.His writings are rife with cues on his psychological state of mind, like how the Psalms can show you the depth and spiritual fragility of the psalmist.
I have heard lots of people assume that this means his writings were megalomanica and what not.
You were talking about Nietzsche, but not his work, which is just a way to undermine some position with strawman.So.. what did you really mean when you said that what I wrote wasn't really related or interested in truth?
Rationalization, means you try to say something rational about irrational position, to prove your position.To me his works are an ode to his faithlessness and him trying to rationalize it the best he can.
Many people are sick or crazy. None are perfect.Hm, I've had my share of psychological instability so I pretty much understand where Nietzsche was. Later on in his life I think the anxiety and stress got to him that he turned hypersensitive, and then had a manic episode.
You know, it reminds me of Edgar Allan Poe. In some sense Nietzsche is just like him. We might marvel at the certain feelings or mood they can provide to us, but if you really understand the circumstances in which they were developed, it goes to show the depths of human morality and fragility. I think in a more perfect world we would need to strive to help people who are in those kinds of predicaments, not to egg on or place it on a pedestal. I don't think anyone would want their own children to end up suffering like Nietzsche or someone like Poe.
I don't follow.You were talking about Nietzsche, but not his work, which is just a way to undermine some position with strawman.So.. what did you really mean when you said that what I wrote wasn't really related or interested in truth?
Rationalization, means you try to say something rational about irrational position, to prove your position.To me his works are an ode to his faithlessness and him trying to rationalize it the best he can.
So you are saying him pointing out something is wrong with Christianity is irrational position and he was just nut trying to use rational thoughts to oppose religion.
Trouble is that his job as philosopher is to arrive at certain level of knowing or understanding, even if not truth impeccable truth.
Sometimes philosophy is about reaching a point of thinking, not necessarily what science does where the knowing must correlate with reality and be testable.
So philosophy is about knowing how to arrive at truth.
Science is arriving at the truth, no matter how dumb, or smart you are.
Many people are sick or crazy. None are perfect.Hm, I've had my share of psychological instability so I pretty much understand where Nietzsche was. Later on in his life I think the anxiety and stress got to him that he turned hypersensitive, and then had a manic episode.
You know, it reminds me of Edgar Allan Poe. In some sense Nietzsche is just like him. We might marvel at the certain feelings or mood they can provide to us, but if you really understand the circumstances in which they were developed, it goes to show the depths of human morality and fragility. I think in a more perfect world we would need to strive to help people who are in those kinds of predicaments, not to egg on or place it on a pedestal. I don't think anyone would want their own children to end up suffering like Nietzsche or someone like Poe.
Newton was nuts and miserable.
John Nash was nuts.
Steven Hawking was miserable.
Kierkegaard was nuts and miserable.
Jung was nuts at least some part of his life.
We can dismiss their works on that basis, or empathize with their dead ghosts.
How do you distinguish his point of view as being tainted by his affliction and result of thinking and training.
And maybe you are right.
Does him being miserable erase the quality of his work, or make it lesser philosophy, or you are saying his word don't stand on their own merit?
If something is rationalization, then that is exactly what philosophers cannot do.I think you're misunderstanding my words. I mean rationalization as in trying to 'explain'. His method is more closer to polemics. I was merely echoing what you wrote in some post above, that you cannot approach religion through rationality, or something.
Could be.I would say Nietzsche was nuts to a higher degree than most of the people you mentioned there.
That might be true. Never said Nietzsche was the mightiest of them all, or that what he wrote is shattering the world paradigms.Newton was respected during his time and was honored and had a place in society. John Nash had a stable job and was coveted for his ideas on game theory. Steven Hawking was respected until his death and his intellectual labor is known by most people. Kierkegaarad wasn't really nuts, just really depressed- but I would also say that Kierkegaarad didn't forward anything during his own lifetime that put a mark on Christiandom as a whole. In fact I feel like, through what I read of Kierkegaarad, he was disregarded by the Christian system at the time. Jung, he was famous when he was alive. Also notice that in continental philosophy, no one really builds on what Nietzsche wrote. Lots of philosophers are fans or are influenced by him, but they never really forward his style of existentialism. Philosophers who really did forward cultural development were people like Ludwig Feuerbach, who really did influence Nietzsche himself to a high degree.
If I were to posit Gods, I like the Platonic Forms idea. Thus these concepts being more real than our reality, emerge in our reality and within us.
I'm more likely to follow a religion with large pantheon such as ancient Greek mythology, as at the very least they tried to derive knowledge from representations.
Zues, being the ego, Aries being our aggression, Gaia being the Earth such and such.
This unifying supreme being would be the universe itself for me. Very different from what you are getting at. My interpretation says that we are all a part of God in a way.
Consciousness is flow – it is energy in a medium.
the background space of the universe there being would be one unified whole.
all energy would be felt by the being of total reality.
like we feel the energy in us.
I guess I wasn't clear enough about what I meant here by "intelligent".2) If they thought that they were intelligent, then they should at least realise that the point of not trying when the game is rigged, is because there isn't anything more you could do in 100% of circumstances. So to say that "the individual could do more in 80% of circumstances", implies that the game isn't all that rigged, but merely that you are given the impresssion that the game is rigged, so that even when you can do things in your benefit, if you are a moron, then you will give up before you start.
Thus, the smart move is to do more in 80% of circumstances. So the intelligent person would see through the illusion, realise that it's in their interest to do what they could when they could, and so would do what is in their interest.
Yes I brought this up pretty much from the start.
Is the avoidance of narcissism and this consideration of a pluralistic moral system the only way to not be a stupid, evil, or otherwise winny bitch? Sounds like a brain crunching process to figure out how you are going to tango with reality.
You mean to make it sound easy if one is smart. It is not easy. That is one of the reasons people don't like change. When people feel secure in their position, is when they like change the least.
Not sure what you mean here by "methodology".The Institution of Science is not some scared cow that is escaping my criticism. That being said, science itself is a methology. It is redundant to add this qualification.
And here I thought that Boomers were people born between 1946 and 1964, likeBoomers colloquially speaking are people that have been "blue pilled" by ideas coming from the boomer era.
Before WW2, the sorts of criticisms that people now level at their countries, would have been considered indications that the critic was a traitor to their own country and their own people.Post WW2 nations came together after the horrifying scene of war and got drunk on idealisms and sold the next generation propaganda about patriotism and what radicalism was to them.
He can in the UK. Most countries, actually.Prescriptivism is advice that one is suggested to act on. A doctor prescribes medication. He cannot force that medicine down the throat although, through his diagnostic opinion, you probably should.
Well, you can do that. But you have to consider how software updates work. The Linux Foundation updates contain feature updates and bug fixes based on their bug reports and feature requests. Who exactly makes these demands? Why, the Linux users, of course.If I am prescribing anything, I suppose I would say that people take a good look at the world that people just blindly accept. Conventions work until they don't. Conventions should be updated like an operating system as people become familiar with the architecture of it and abuse the weak points as much as they can.
I have not prescribed a response to what one should do about these. I have just been making the case, that there is an inherent problem right down to the core of the human condition regardless if such institutions or society exist or not.
That has been studied immensely. Most people who went to Ivy League schools and similar schools like Eton in the UK, tend to start planning their child's application to such schools before they are even born.Do you think people that go to Ivy League (really any higher tier) schools play the same game you are playing? We are all playing the game of life really, but how different do you think their parameters and dials are?
Mega-rich people hire accountants who know clever tax loopholes that can save them millions, even billions. However, there's no shortage of con-artists who will claim to say the same, in order to fleece people with more money than brains. So the only way the mega-rich stay mega-rich, is by doing a heck of a lot of work themselves making sure that the people they hire, are competent and trustworthy.Books out here teaching us to not "think like a poor person", meanwhile the upper class pays other people to think for them, and in fact the more you can do so, the better your odds of success are. You're already poor as soon as you start thinking in terms of performing labor.
They sell you on that ideology, because it's what you want to believe. You want to believe that they are pure evil and you are purely good, that the world is unfair to you. It justifies you feeling like you deserve to be where you are, because you think the world is unfair. So you never feel like you should make more of an effort to become anything more than what you already are.They meet you with a smile on their face and think about how they will use you and choose how much they can respect you based on what you tell them what you can do for them. Hell they even got you to buy into an ideology that allows them to exploit you, the world just seems like it's perfectly made for them, and that is the only thing they will ever love about you.
A few years ago, I attended a funeral of a friend who used to live on a council estate. We all went around to a friend of his who lived on the same estate, for his wake. While we were there, a friend of theirs came in, sat down, and started smoking what looked like a small pipe, which we quickly realised was a crack pipe.You don't know enough deplorable people. I have been sitting in the car with someone who throws their fast food bag out the window and act like they didn't do anything questionable.
I don't just hang out with middle class people who don't have a criminal record and have been to university and have a nice job, whose worst crimes that they aren't afraid to let people know about, are eating junk food and chucking rubbish out of the window.Even despite how much I've talked down to humanity, you seem to be giving me a run for my money every time we get into a prolonged exchange.
The anti-smoking lobby argued that anyone who opposed the smoking ban was just being selfish and not caring about health of the people who used to work in restaurants and pubs.Again, I would just blame this on the prior generation doing a poor job at passing on valuable traditions to the following generation.In the UK, most people met in the local pub. As a result, the local pub became the unofficial de-facto community centre.People used to have at least communities they could be loyal to, but that seems to be dying out, and it is because cynicism is wining (imo).
1) But then prices on beer in pubs were increased by 800%, while beer bought from supermarkets was kept incredibly cheap. This of course meant that people were drinking at home and thus increased alcoholism, especially in kids, as they were seeing their dads drinking beer in front of them every night.
2) But at this point, a lot of smokers were still going to the pub, in order to ensure they wouldn't smoke at home where their kids would breath in their second-hand smoke. So about 50% of people in pubs were smokers. The smoking ban was then introduced with insane legislation that made it uncomfortable to go to the pub and smoke, and formed an unconscious motivation to stay at home and smoke and drink.
By this point, most pubs were struggling due to massive losses of sales, that most of them closed down or became family restaurants where you went for lunch, but not to hang out.
3) Add to that everyone going online or on their phone, and people didn't even realise that they weren't socialising anymore.
So the unofficial community centres were vary carefully phased out.
This has the advantage for politicians that people no longer gather and talk verbally where they can talk about issues where the government cannot monitor their speech and suppress it, and where the people used to plan demonstrations to force politicians to change things for the better.
So now, fighting despots has become much harder.
Of course, the lack of human social contact has also resulted in a pandemic of mental illness. Do your policiticians care about your welfare?
I equate people to wolves.You seem to equate people to sheep. Which is true, but if we are taught something and we enjoy that thing, we will seek it out despite any obstacles. Such as smoking.
The little that I picked up that Kant said that made any sense, such as his Maxim of Universality, has turned out to be an incredibly clever way of understanding why popular ideas so often turn out to have extremely deleterious side-effects, and how to ensure that an idea can become popular and still be wildly successful.One can say that Kant didn't mean to be a self-help guru, and that regardless of what he said, if you only look at Kant you are missing a lot.
Nope.But the poor people are taught that the poor people are compliant and obedient, and the rich people don't follow any rules. This gives the poor people the impression that to be powerful, they have to break the rules and act as a "lone wolf". So those who seek to become powerful, act alone and in a disorganised fashion, which makes them easily overcome by an organised and highly disciplined troop of soldiers from a regiment formed from the sons of the wealthy upper classes.
SHeeps and dogs are not nature, they are breed and domesticated pet projects of humans.Sheep regularly go off on their own, which is why there are so many stories of shepherds having to chase sheep that have gone off on their own. The only animals that sheep obey, are professional sheepdogs like Alsatians.
platonism is just maths that could exist.
platonism is just maths that could exist.
what does exist is either conscious or unconscious.
You can call anger mars and love venus as it is within you, you are living cosmos.
but what if something is aware of all things inside it?
what if the universe is self-aware at the highest level?
you me and everything.
that would not be platonic that would just be the consequence of existence existing.
maybe it has a will, everything acting on everything from a single point of unity.
But if you are usefully intelligent in the form of wisdom, and you know what really matters, then you will probably realise that you'll probably make a lot more money with a lot less stress and be a lot happier by being a plumber.
If you are good at things like calculus and modern physics, but not that good at understanding what really matters, you may find that you'll spend your days and nights studying calculus, only to end being in an office under pressure every day to make targets, or end up making navigational systems for WMDs and then bitterly regret your career choices.
Not sure what you mean here by "methodology".The Institution of Science is not some scared cow that is escaping my criticism. That being said, science itself is a methology. It is redundant to add this qualification.
IME, accountants are called "methodological", because they follow a strict set of rules that dictates their process, in such a way that anyone following the same methodology should come up with the same results.
As you pointed out, scientists like to "ask interesting questions" and come up with their own theories. But no-one seems to say how scientists go from "observing evidence" to "coming up with the particular theory they thought of." It's almost as though they just pick what to observe, what to theorise, and the details of their experiments, by whatever happens to pop into the scientist's head at the time.
Can you say what things are methodologies and what are not? So that I can have a categorical list so that I can compare science to your lists and see which list science belongs in?
And here I thought that Boomers were people born between 1946 and 1964, likeBoomers colloquially speaking are people that have been "blue pilled" by ideas coming from the boomer era.
Bill Clinton (born 1946), Obama (born 1961) and Oprah Winfrey (1954).
How silly of me.
Since you define boomers by ideas coming from "the boomer era", either your definition is circular and so meaningless, or you mean that "Boomers colloquially speaking are people that have been "blue pilled" by ideas coming from the era they were born and raised in." Then any Millennials that were "blue pilled" by ideas coming from the era they were born and raised in, i.e. any <illennials that were "blue pilled" by ideas coming from the Millennial Era, are also Boomers.
See what I did there?
Before WW2, the sorts of criticisms that people now level at their countries, would have been considered indications that the critic was a traitor to their own country and their own people.Post WW2 nations came together after the horrifying scene of war and got drunk on idealisms and sold the next generation propaganda about patriotism and what radicalism was to them.
A large part of the reason why you see so many Westerners being critical of their own nations nowadays, including criticising their own politicians and their own institutions, and including saying their own people were racist, sexist and homophobic, was because they were so horrified of what the German people had done out of patriotism for their country, and were terrified of becoming like a patriotic Nazi Germany. So they went the other way entirely.
An example of this is people's reaction to 9/11. IIRC, polls that asked what would happen if another airliner was heading for another skyscraper, that had hundreds of innocent passengers, showed that most Americans would approve shooting down the plane, while most Germans would approve letting it crash.
The Americans are afraid of being as complacent as they were before WW2, that allowed Nazi Germany to rise and take power, and so would rather take out the plane to save innocent lives in the skyscraper. The Germans are afraid of becoming like Nazis, and so would rather not shoot any civilians, and if that means lots more will die as a result.You seem to have a lot of boomer mentality. Is that bad? Perhaps you hold pride in it? The only observation I made is that people who are reminiscent of such things are very touchy about said beliefs, perhaps not for a bad reason, but it comes off as childish when someone kinda just blows off what someone is saying in favor of protecting long held beliefs.
He can in the UK. Most countries, actually.Prescriptivism is advice that one is suggested to act on. A doctor prescribes medication. He cannot force that medicine down the throat although, through his diagnostic opinion, you probably should.
All that is needed is 2 doctors to state that he is liable to cause harm to himself or others for no good reason, to be declared in a state where the state has a duty to act against his will for his protection and the protection of others. It's called "sectioning" in the UK. It's a pretty standard ruling that also exists in the USA.
As long as the doctor is willing to state that the person is physically harming himself for no good reason by refusing to take such a medication, and he can get at least 1 other doctor in the world to agree with him, he can override the patient's will.
Well, you can do that. But you have to consider how software updates work. The Linux Foundation updates contain feature updates and bug fixes based on their bug reports and feature requests. Who exactly makes these demands? Why, the Linux users, of course.If I am prescribing anything, I suppose I would say that people take a good look at the world that people just blindly accept. Conventions work until they don't. Conventions should be updated like an operating system as people become familiar with the architecture of it and abuse the weak points as much as they can.
I have not prescribed a response to what one should do about these. I have just been making the case, that there is an inherent problem right down to the core of the human condition regardless if such institutions or society exist or not.
What happens if an OS manufacturer has issues that a user of said OS is unhappy with, e.g. Windows users? Then if the OS manufacturer doesn't fix enough of those issues to satisfy them, they'll try switch to another OS, such as all those Windows users who switched to MacBooks and all those Windows users who switched to Linux.
The equivalent, say, for the Democratic Party, would be if the Democratic voters publicly criticise the Democratic Party, and if the Democratic Party don't fix the issues, then they'd vote for the Republican Party instead.
But from i see, most criticisms of Democrat voters seem aimed at the Republican Party. When things are not fixed, Democrat voters seem to think/say the reason is that not enough people are voting Democrat and seek to convince even more people to vote Democrat.
So what happens in modern politics tends to be the opposite of what happens with software, and that's even with the progressives. IME, most modern social issues also seem to have behavioural patterns more like modern politics, and the opposite of what we see happens with software updates.
That has been studied immensely. Most people who went to Ivy League schools and similar schools like Eton in the UK, tend to start planning their child's application to such schools before they are even born.Do you think people that go to Ivy League (really any higher tier) schools play the same game you are playing? We are all playing the game of life really, but how different do you think their parameters and dials are?
If you were told by your dad that he had chosen your university before you were even born, what would your reaction be?
I've seen interviews of the kids in these private schools. They tended to say things like "I feel very privileged and grateful to be able to attend such a great school, and intend to not waste my privilege by making as much use of my privilege as I can".
Imagine if a white person in the USA said that he feels very privileged and grateful to be born white, and intends to make the maximum use of the privileges that come with being born white.
You are told to disrespect your parents, to do as you please, to see your privileges as unfairness, and that it is immoral to gain from your privileges.
They are told to respect their parents, to follow their parents' plans for them, to see their privileges as lucky breaks, and that it is immoral to waste their privileges.
platonism is just maths that could exist.
Maths is pretty mean tbh. Also a man made construct that is only incidently correlating with reality. (Gödel's incompleteness theorems)
platonism is just maths that could exist.
what does exist is either conscious or unconscious.
You can call anger mars and love venus as it is within you, you are living cosmos.
but what if something is aware of all things inside it?
what if the universe is self-aware at the highest level?
you me and everything.
that would not be platonic that would just be the consequence of existence existing.
maybe it has a will, everything acting on everything from a single point of unity.
Maybe your brains is too connected to itself. Nudge nudge.
My mental health crisis was comparable to a psychedelic experience. I believe that the system that is my brain is isolated from everything else and there is nothing to make me believe otherwise, even though sometimes parts of my brain might sometimes make it feel like that is not so.
Personally I think I prefer this, like an isolated wire that is not reacting with anything else if my closed system excersices control. I don't know why you would want some other even accross the world to effect you in an instant, because that is what it sounds like you believe. Quantum theories might be your salvation here, but I would think that such a thing would only matter in some instances with specific particles. I'm just talking out my ass though.
To me this is merely a potentiality. the first time you became self-conscious in your youth, you had no idea what you were made of, and a lot of your old self would be lost to you outside of what other people tell you. Some of why you are the way you are lost to you unless there are people around you who know what you were, and then you are risking buying into inaccuracies and such.What I think is that we do not have to experience what is observing us.
If something is rationalization, then that is exactly what philosophers cannot do.I think you're misunderstanding my words. I mean rationalization as in trying to 'explain'. His method is more closer to polemics. I was merely echoing what you wrote in some post above, that you cannot approach religion through rationality, or something.
In philosophy that is a carnal sin.
Not saying he never did, but even if we don't agree with someones reasoning, does not mean its rationalization.
Rationalizations is like saying I ate chocolate for dinner, because chocolate makes me slim. Even if its not true. You might says chocolate is not good for dinner.
You rationalization would be it makes me happy, and therefore I am slim.
That is blatant rationalization.
Do you really think Nietzsche was going to analyze or use logic to dismantle religion?
Could be.I would say Nietzsche was nuts to a higher degree than most of the people you mentioned there.
That might be true. Never said Nietzsche was the mightiest of them all, or that what he wrote is shattering the world paradigms.Newton was respected during his time and was honored and had a place in society. John Nash had a stable job and was coveted for his ideas on game theory. Steven Hawking was respected until his death and his intellectual labor is known by most people. Kierkegaarad wasn't really nuts, just really depressed- but I would also say that Kierkegaarad didn't forward anything during his own lifetime that put a mark on Christiandom as a whole. In fact I feel like, through what I read of Kierkegaarad, he was disregarded by the Christian system at the time. Jung, he was famous when he was alive. Also notice that in continental philosophy, no one really builds on what Nietzsche wrote. Lots of philosophers are fans or are influenced by him, but they never really forward his style of existentialism. Philosophers who really did forward cultural development were people like Ludwig Feuerbach, who really did influence Nietzsche himself to a high degree.
But to dismiss his work on account no one build on his work is kind of remotely post fact.
More importantly his book that I quoted is exactly the opposite of prescriptive and he is working hard to be anything, but an enclosed system where it tells you how to be. There is clear reason why its called Anti Christ.
Literally the opposite of trying to preach and tell people what to do.
He is opening a avenue of people trying to not be oppressed or be limited by conventions or cultural a priory reasoning.
His book is aimed at Christianity mainly as that is the cultural background he understands as well that is literally the whole point of his work.
Nazis were Christian socialist, would you say that about Christianity.I don't dismiss Nietzsche's works, but I don't see his works as something that adds onto to the program of human civilization. In fact, you can argue that it did the opposite: that it lent strength to facist powers during the early 20th century, whether Nietzsche wanted to or not, and legitimized facist movements through a sense of 'philosophy'. It might be a crude comparison, but Jordan Peterson could be a figure that might be analogous to Nietzsche, that he argues for sense of life, but lends strength to unforeseen political implications which neither of the figures most likely wanted. That in itself shows you that the notions Nietzsche held had sinister implications when culturally manifested.
Nazis were Christian socialist, would you say that about Christianity.I don't dismiss Nietzsche's works, but I don't see his works as something that adds onto to the program of human civilization. In fact, you can argue that it did the opposite: that it lent strength to facist powers during the early 20th century, whether Nietzsche wanted to or not, and legitimized facist movements through a sense of 'philosophy'. It might be a crude comparison, but Jordan Peterson could be a figure that might be analogous to Nietzsche, that he argues for sense of life, but lends strength to unforeseen political implications which neither of the figures most likely wanted. That in itself shows you that the notions Nietzsche held had sinister implications when culturally manifested.
They also read Buddhist books and carried them with them.
Would you say they were following Buddha?
Ideology has been used and books alike with all kinds of ulterior motives.
Even the bible one could argue, but then if anyone can interpret it anyway they like its hard to say how can one miss use it.
Plus Nietzsche talking about Germans .... well he had very low opinion of them.
Then again Nazis were not exactly about reading the damn books, so they basically just used Nietzsche as symbol.
Its even hard to say what impact he could have had on Germans as whole.
I mean they could be used that way sure.It doesn't really matter what Nietzsche thought about Nazis. What matters is that somehow his writings resonated with them and helped with carry on their facism. Would you agree that elements of Nietzsche's writings, especially about the Ubermensch, can help forward facist ideals?
I doubt Nazi Germany was built on Nietzsche's work. I think whether that book existed or not they would have done the same stuff.Again, Nietzsche himself might not have agreed, but in the light of history, did they or did they not provide some intellectual strength to Nazism?
I think you generally don't care for the wellbeing of society or just are apathetically ammoral.I mean they could be used that way sure.It doesn't really matter what Nietzsche thought about Nazis. What matters is that somehow his writings resonated with them and helped with carry on their facism. Would you agree that elements of Nietzsche's writings, especially about the Ubermensch, can help forward facist ideals?
That isn't what I said. I said that the book lent support for the cause of facism. If you lived during the times of the facists in the 30s and 40s of the 20th century, wouldn't you try to denounce anything that would support that kind of movement?I doubt Nazi Germany was built on Nietzsche's work. I think whether that book existed or not they would have done the same stuff.Again, Nietzsche himself might not have agreed, but in the light of history, did they or did they not provide some intellectual strength to Nazism?
Politics is often result of more than few simple factors.
That being said Nietzsche did not invent war nor power principals that humans behave by.
I think you generally don't care for the wellbeing of society or just are apathetically ammoral.I mean they could be used that way sure.It doesn't really matter what Nietzsche thought about Nazis. What matters is that somehow his writings resonated with them and helped with carry on their facism. Would you agree that elements of Nietzsche's writings, especially about the Ubermensch, can help forward facist ideals?
That isn't what I said. I said that the book lent support for the cause of facism. If you lived during the times of the facists in the 30s and 40s of the 20th century, wouldn't you try to denounce anything that would support that kind of movement?I doubt Nazi Germany was built on Nietzsche's work. I think whether that book existed or not they would have done the same stuff.Again, Nietzsche himself might not have agreed, but in the light of history, did they or did they not provide some intellectual strength to Nazism?
Politics is often result of more than few simple factors.
That being said Nietzsche did not invent war nor power principals that humans behave by.
What you think is OK, but not true so what do I care, if you think something, about something, without any supporting evidence. Or reason.I think you generally don't care for the wellbeing of society or just are apathetically ammoral.
So now you are going to burn books or treat the content according to what Nazis though of the book?That isn't what I said. I said that the book lent support for the cause of facism. If you lived during the times of the facists in the 30s and 40s of the 20th century, wouldn't you try to denounce anything that would support that kind of movement?
What you think is OK, but not true so what do I care, if you think something, about something, without any supporting evidence. Or reason.I think you generally don't care for the wellbeing of society or just are apathetically ammoral.
You can start by denouncing it? It's clear you haven't thought about the implications Nietzsche had during the imperal era. It's only in the 60s that Nietzsche was cleared of his affliation to Nazism. Before then it was widely known that Nietzsche's works gave intellectual backing to facism.So now you are going to burn books or treat the content according to what Nazis though of the book?That isn't what I said. I said that the book lent support for the cause of facism. If you lived during the times of the facists in the 30s and 40s of the 20th century, wouldn't you try to denounce anything that would support that kind of movement?
Kind of like saying Marx is responsible for Lenin or something.
He provided others analysis that they **could refer to...
Just because he built some sort of ethos from the content of his words, doesn't save his work from being distorted to conveniently fit what some man down the line wanted it to.
You as a Christian don't see the irony in what you're saying or are trying to use it at some point yourself?
After 200 years of Nietzsche I'm sure that's a pretty easy claim to make, hard to prove. I'm seeing a pattern here.He provided others analysis that they **could refer to...
Just because he built some sort of ethos from the content of his words, doesn't save his work from being distorted to conveniently fit what some man down the line wanted it to.
You as a Christian don't see the irony in what you're saying or are trying to use it at some point yourself?
I'm not saying anything definitive, I'm arguing a point that Nietzsche didn't help forward humanity in some meaningful sense, but that it could be argued that he influenced people to act more ideologically at a time when facism was at its height. I think in the context of history, with the convergence of the World Wars, Nietzsche has had a more negative impact on the world. If the early 20th century was peaceful and the industrial revolution continued on without much conflict, it could be said that Nietzsche brought on a transformation regarding religious culture and society in general. But as we all know, that didn't happen. This isn't the fault of Nietzsche, but rather one of circumstance. Either way, my question still stands. What did Nietzsche bring to the world that helped progress humanity in some sense?
Also. Then again.... Some arguments don't necessarily have to be definitive truths.Ah, we're talking about truths now?
Maybe if Czechoslovakia weren't a complete doormat, and did not roll over, when Germany invaded, we would not have WWII. But then they would have to read Nietzsche to know, that humanity behaves in such way.You can start by denouncing it? It's clear you haven't thought about the implications Nietzsche had during the imperal era. It's only in the 60s that Nietzsche was cleared of his affliation to Nazism. Before then it was widely known that Nietzsche's works gave intellectual backing to facism.
Let's try this again: in what way did Nietzsche's work help forward human civilization?
Good point, but at the same time, hard to answer.What did Nietzsche bring to the world that helped progress humanity in some sense?
I gather that a lot more people in Western countries make the effort to learn Elvish than make the effort to learn Biblical Hebrew.But unlike LOTR people actually act on biblical knowledge.
Except that LOTR is quite literally fiction, and even the most diehard of LOTR fans could not deny that Tolkien himself would say he made it up. You can't test it against reality, and if you did, the results are meaningless, because it's pure fiction.But like LOTR its a question of how much Bible can be actually tested against reality.
I would not fault a medieval person for explaining lighting as result of Thor striking hammer and anvil.
I would not fault people in LOTR fan club imitating orcs or speaking elvis.
Analysis is like vitamins. In small amounts, they improve whatever you have already. But in large doses, at best, you just p*ss it out the other end, and it's a total waste of your time & effort.Maybe that is where the analytical betrays us.
Those who are "devout" about analysis will probably end up spend so much time analysing that they will end up with analysis paralysis.However the sanctimonious preaching of people who preach faith is hideous to most who are devout to analysis.
I would say analysis paralysis happens when you have all the means to do something- but don't because you are combing through details you have already done "sufficiently".Analysis is like vitamins. In small amounts, they improve whatever you have already. But in large doses, at best, you just p*ss it out the other end, and it's a total waste of your time & effort.Maybe that is where the analytical betrays us.
Those who are "devout" about analysis will probably end up spend so much time analysing that they will end up with analysis paralysis.However the sanctimonious preaching of people who preach faith is hideous to most who are devout to analysis.![]()
You're damn right, the Ultimate Morality, which is to say, the Objective Morality is therefore determines by the ultimate Judge.It's simple. Power decides what is right and wrong.
We as humans have our own mortal morality let's say, and it's very flexible depending on context and what we (some of us) decide.
But it seems that, in a manner of speaking, change manifests via the movement of "energy" in one way or another.
Of course the variables are limitless. We have to consider what is an instance of "Power" and what is not.
A chemical reaction "just is". But when something/someone "wields" that, it becomes power. I'm not necessarily including intent, though that may be an issue.
Anyways, it is still a grave issue that humans have to contend with, as it is at the core of pathological thinking and game theory rationals. It all starts at the individual level, then goes into the group setting, and then society..
I think every culture/sub-culture has it's Matrix "take the blue pill or the red pill" moments, and accommodates people who take either.Since society is a Positive-Fiction, believed by people who inhabit it, and is built Upon Culture and Institutions who enforce law on morality on itself, therefore a society built upon Religion in other words, bult upon a Fiction of Strong Objective Morality is stronger compared to one of Atheist and Secular Values.
Sounds like eugenics. Killing these obvious sociopaths just means the intelligent wolfs in sheep's clothing breed more.Morality is all about how you "Feel".
Mostly genetic but not "outside" the universe.
God does not prevent bad things nor does she punish.
She simply has empathy. She sees all.
Why do things happen? She would know.
But what is the prescription? Only how you "Feel".
Can people agree? yes. it is how feeling got into the genes.
We kill the sociopaths.
That way the tribe did not fall apart.
But then there were outsiders.
And they invaded.
So we defended ourselves.
Evolution in action.
Logical means you start with axioms.A religious person can answer a praxeological and Ethical Question with Logical Consistency, of why a certain action is 'wrong' (Albeit a logically Lazy one); because God said so.
This is Why I believe that Atheists can never have a Morally Objective Reason why a certain action can be categorized as wrong or right, other then a utilitarian consideration on Happiness vs Suffering of himself or others, but then again such utilitarian morality is a flimsy one, this is my objection with Sam Harris' Moral Structure.
If you publically torture a person in a giant Stadium, you broadcast it as a superbowl opening event, 10 million people cheer as this guy gets his skin removed in front of their TVs. How could you say it's morally wrong?
I agree that Empiricism is important factor in determening moral judgement, but empiricism by itself tells us nothing why an action has moral weight, the question is bassically answered by Humme with Utilitarianism; the idea that Utility, ie: Wellbeing is good, and therefore moral.Empiricism, is very strong, and coopted by everyone even if incorrectly. Some people are understandably skeptical of empiricism they didn't "see" as verified, but usually that is because they have a competing belief that is more important to them than whatever empiricism has to say.
I would be weary of thinking your cohort have a monopoly of a certain rationality, as I see such mentalities as divisive. A sort of elitism/naivete.
Well, as I said and that you have agreed on your first post, delegating God to judge objective morality is a rationally consistent take. If you take the assumption that Power is determines morality, which is ultimately the case we assume to be true.The reality being that just because your belief system is has ancient roots (dogma), doesn't make it any more rationally compelling than the hip new moral system that may or may not actually be better. I would bet on the newer prototype or morallity tbh.
Agree on this one, religious people are stuck in the trap of stagnation sometimes.It (religion) would honestly be better off integrating the new realities into it's moral systems, but it can't because people that typically hold on to traditions do so because new things scare them.
Ok, why is Sentience valuable? And why is Suffering something bad? If I decide to become a dog killer, going around slicing the neck of Dogs, and hiding from Cops, why shouldn't I do it? What If I'm a Psychopath?Not eating swine for example is a pointless thing to adhere to. The people of that time, in absence of good protocol for dealing with diasease that comes with eating close relatives of ours, the pig. Now we shouldn't eat pig perhaps because they are sentient? Yes, no? Idk, I know I feel bad when I eat meat, yet I still do it. I hardly buy it myself but when I'm craving the taste and I feel like treating myself.
Well, as I said and that you have agreed on your first post, delegating God to judge objective morality is a rationally consistent take. If you take the assumption that Power is determines morality, which is ultimately the case we assume to be true.
Now, I wouldn't call utilitarianism hip and new, The Utilitarianism that Sam Harris and you I imagine subscribe to is rooted in Hume, harris just wrote a new Fatwa on how to apply natural science on Utilitarianism.
Ultimately Secular Utilitarianism and Moral Empiricism Suffer from two main practical and rational problem; one, that it has flimsy epistimological basis on how to morally judge certain actions, Take the assumption that torture or rape is 'bad', why? Because it brings suffering and suffering is non-utility, and non-utility is bad, why What if I don't care about it? Well the argument boils down to the fact that the The Government will punish your ass, inlined with the assumption that Power=Monopoly on Morality.
However what if the Government isn't here, since you don't care about suffering of others and can't be bothered to follow Utiitarianist morality, the reason why torture is bad, becomes hard to define. Epistimologically Flimsy.
Now if I'm a religious person subscribing to Islam or Cristianity, the reason why rape is bad is becasue god will fry my ass. And since Power=Morality therefore The Objectively sound answer is that rape is bad because god said so. I can't choose to run away from god or ignore my covenent with god like I can do with a Government.
Two, it has practical problems, in implementing this morality in a society, since people are more inclined to be motivated by emotions and meta-physical believe, a system based on 'science' will be less socially effective, than one based on Religion.
Therefore, Utilitarianism, even fails at being utilitarian.
Agree on this one, religious people are stuck in the trap of stagnation sometimes.It (religion) would honestly be better off integrating the new realities into it's moral systems, but it can't because people that typically hold on to traditions do so because new things scare them.
Ok, why is Sentience valuable? And why is Suffering something bad? If I decide to become a dog killer, going around slicing the neck of Dogs, and hiding from Cops, why shouldn't I do it? What If I'm a Psychopath?Not eating swine for example is a pointless thing to adhere to. The people of that time, in absence of good protocol for dealing with diasease that comes with eating close relatives of ours, the pig. Now we shouldn't eat pig perhaps because they are sentient? Yes, no? Idk, I know I feel bad when I eat meat, yet I still do it. I hardly buy it myself but when I'm craving the taste and I feel like treating myself.