Ecmandu wrote:I've already answered how ought one live..,
Hallucinate reality from eternal forms.
It's the factual answer to the question ...
Here's another factual answer to a question:
What up?
How's it going?
Nice day, isn't it?
The factual answer is that "there are some things I appreciate about the day". One of them is not some homeless person who died of hypothermia today!!
But you're not that kind of person.
You're the kind of person who says "fine". You have no nuance, you are always attempting psycho-neuro-linguistic programming on your victims to be attractive to females, you are not really a compelling or difficult person to understand.
iambiguous wrote:Ecmandu wrote:I've already answered how ought one live..,
Hallucinate reality from eternal forms.
It's the factual answer to the question ...
Here's another factual answer to a question:
What up?
How's it going?
Nice day, isn't it?
The factual answer is that "there are some things I appreciate about the day". One of them is not some homeless person who died of hypothermia today!!
But you're not that kind of person.
You're the kind of person who says "fine". You have no nuance, you are always attempting psycho-neuro-linguistic programming on your victims to be attractive to females, you are not really a compelling or difficult person to understand.
You're a Kid, aren't you?![]()
Seriously though, thanks but no thanks.
iambiguous wrote:Seriously though, thanks but no thanks.
Now, I'm not arguing that if you don't, I win. I'm merely pointing that this is what is of interest to me when the tools of philosophy come to revolve around the question, "how ought one to live"?
Ecmandu wrote:Months ago, in a more direct response to that cut and paste thing, i told iambiguous that he seems confused in a way that he hypothetically could have been born as anyone with a differing view ... so how should he choose one. I replied something like: you weren't born as anyone, you were born as you, so stop blaming others by incident of birth for your problems to this regard, and listen to them as well.
Oh well.
He won't even discuss the stuff that supposedly interests him.But if there is very clear truth in advertising. Like X is all I will discuss. I want it in this format. Everything else I will ignore - and he needs to,then, ignore it, like he does in this thread. Then people can directly see he will not really look at the underpinnings of his position or his behavior in the discussion, his misinterpretations and false dilemmas, his metaphysics, etc. and they can choose to have him as a partner or not.
iambiguous wrote:Thanks, but no thanks.
This is precisely the sort intellectual contraption that I have no interest in exchanging here at ILP.
I am intrigued only given the extent to which those who embrace one or another rendition of moral objectivism, are able to convey to me why, in their own conflicted interactions with others, they are not down in the hole that "I" am in.
This one:
If I am always of the opinion that 1] my own values are rooted in dasein and 2] that there are no objective values "I" can reach, then every time I make one particular moral/political leap, I am admitting that I might have gone in the other direction...or that I might just as well have gone in the other direction. Then "I" begins to fracture and fragment to the point there is nothing able to actually keep it all together. At least not with respect to choosing sides morally and politically.
And, in particular, I am interested in exploring the value judgments of others, such that they are able to encompass them descriptively by noting an actual existential trajectory combining experiences, relationships and ideas.
As I do here.
1] I was raised in the belly of the working class beast. My family/community were very conservative. Abortion was a sin.
2] I was drafted into the Army and while on my "tour of duty" in Vietnam I happened upon politically radical folks who reconfigured my thinking about abortion. And God and lots of other things.
3] after I left the Army, I enrolled in college and became further involved in left wing politics. It was all the rage back then. I became a feminist. I married a feminist. I wholeheartedly embraced a woman's right to choose.
4] then came the calamity with Mary and John. I loved them both but their engagement was foundering on the rocks that was Mary's choice to abort their unborn baby.
5] back and forth we all went. I supported Mary but I could understand the points that John was making. I could understand the arguments being made on both sides. John was right from his side and Mary was right from hers.
6] I read William Barrett's Irrational Man and came upon his conjectures regarding "rival goods".
7] Then, over time, I abandoned an objectivist frame of mind that revolved around Marxism/feminism. Instead, I became more and more embedded in existentialism. And then as more years passed I became an advocate for moral nihilism.
Finally, in noting how the manner in which I construe the meaning of dasein here -- viewtopic.php?f=1&t=176529 -- is not pertinent to their own sense of self out in an is/ought world bursting at the seams with both conflicting goods and the "real world" components embedded historically in political economy.
You'll either take your points above there or you won't.
Now, I'm not arguing that if you don't, I win. I'm merely pointing that this is what is of interest to me when the tools of philosophy come to revolve around the question, "how ought one to live"?
Peter Kropotkin wrote:I agree with iambiguous…..
you do have the right to fight the battles you want to fight,
not necessarily all the battles... just the ones you want to fight....
and quite often I won't engage with certain people because I know
where it will go and frankly, I am not interested in wasting my time
with them.....
as one gets older, time becomes more important then any other aspect,
and wasting one's time with certain people is just not worth it.....
it is an example of wisdom, picking one's battles....
Kropotkin
Karpel Tunnel wrote:iambiguous wrote:Seriously though, thanks but no thanks.
andNow, I'm not arguing that if you don't, I win. I'm merely pointing that this is what is of interest to me when the tools of philosophy come to revolve around the question, "how ought one to live"?
Good trend. Lovely trend. A not engaging with anything outside the issue you want to talk about up front, no as if you are engaging with his points. No positioning yourself (except around age, but still the trend is great)
Karpel Tunnel wrote: I think the problem has comes up, at least for me, when it seemed like a more mutual discussion is potentially on the table, as is generally expected, even welcomed in discussion forums. But if all else is completely ignored, as is done in this thread and a clear statement is made....
Karpel Tunnel wrote: My issue is X, period. All else I ignore. If you have trouble with my approach or assumptions or philosophy, I am not interested. I have one exact role for people who respond to me, all else is of no interest and I will not engage with it.
Karpel Tunnel wrote: A clear 'just do this or I am not interested' have a nice day. Keeping it just to your threads, so none of your posts can be confused with participating in the intentions of the other OP writers or participants in those threads.
Karpel Tunnel wrote: On the other hand the culture of philosophical disussion or really discussion in general requires the utterly clear and limited approach you took here. No engagement at all with the other person's positions or criticisms. None. No labeling the other person. No psychic stuff - the age thing is minor. Here's my goal, and it is the only one. All else will be utterly ignored.
No need to repeat what your goal is, no need for the cutting and pasting. A link, perhaps if you encounter someone you never encountered before. This avoids seeming to be responding when you are not. And when it appears in other discussions seems like an attempt to derail or a misunderstanding of what other people's goals are. Their goals do not matter to you, which is fine. Keep yourself from being noise for them, as you did here. This is all I will discuss + link. Nothing more. This will eliminate, for example the entire need for long campaigns with me or Phyllo and anyone else like us in the future. These discussions have not given you what you want, the one single goal you have. These tangents can be completely avoided by the concise approach here. The first post could simply have been like your last here. No repetition of the position. No possible confusion on a reader's part that you are engaging in mutual discussion.
phyllo wrote:He won't even discuss the stuff that supposedly interests him.But if there is very clear truth in advertising. Like X is all I will discuss. I want it in this format. Everything else I will ignore - and he needs to,then, ignore it, like he does in this thread. Then people can directly see he will not really look at the underpinnings of his position or his behavior in the discussion, his misinterpretations and false dilemmas, his metaphysics, etc. and they can choose to have him as a partner or not.
There is no concrete example that you can provide which he will consider as adequate.
phyllo wrote: There is no answer to "how ought one to live?" which is adequate.
phyllo wrote: There is no description of "I" which is adequate.
phyllo wrote: He either says that he doesn't understand what you are saying, or he thinks it's beside the point or it's just another "intellectual contraption'. If it looks like it's getting too "close to earth", he goes back to the abstractions ... epistemology, deontology, etc.
Ecmandu wrote:I already gave you the answer iambiguous.
If we can hallucinate our reality from eternal forms without impinging on others doing the same, then we not only solve the sense of a stable "I", we also solve all moral problems.
Ecmandu wrote:I already gave you the answer iambiguous.
If we can hallucinate our reality from eternal forms without impinging on others doing the same, then we not only solve the sense of a stable "I", we also solve all moral problems.
Well, on the surface he is asking for a method to resolve all conflicting goods without force. IOW for an objectivist to step forward, show via text arguments that will and should convince all rational people and continue to do so one all issues. I say on the surface because his could be a rhetorical position, as in he does not think they can and mainly wants to throw the gauntlet down and watch the objectivist fail or run. These are not mutually exclusive, also. He could be doing the latter rhetorical posturing but also be at the same time hoping for the former type of objectivist to appear, winning him over and lifting him up from his hole, not via self-help ideas, even if these are scientifically supported.phyllo wrote:Have any of you guys been able to discuss with Iambig the stuff that he is interested in and in the way that he expects?
If yes, then please provide a link to those discussions.
I don't think it has happened. (Unless I'm wrong.)
Okay, let's concentrate on this because it's fairly typical.phyllo wrote:
There is no answer to "how ought one to live?" which is adequate.
On the contrary, the moral and political objectivists insist that of course there is.
But it's got to be theirs.
Right?
Karpel Tunnel wrote:
I guess my sense has been that he is a terrible discussion partner, it is as if his ideas are not to be challenged, though he will nevertheless, misleadingly, interact with challenges, sort of.
Just describing how the threads progress. (or rather don't progress.)More huffing and puffing about the problem being me.
Karpel Tunnel wrote:Well, on the surface he is asking for a method to resolve all conflicting goods without force. IOW for an objectivist to step forward, show via text arguments that will and should convince all rational people and continue to do so one all issues.
phyllo wrote:Okay, let's concentrate on this because it's fairly typical.phyllo wrote:
There is no answer to "how ought one to live?" which is adequate.
On the contrary, the moral and political objectivists insist that of course there is.
But it's got to be theirs.
Right?
Instead of exploring "how ought one live" in a discussion, you dismiss the answers as some objectivists insisting on something ... forcing their views onto you.
Not even a simple proposal on how to live has been made and you already have your back up.
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