Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Apr 04, 2023 11:15 pm
Addendum:
'serious philosophers' - a kind of faux superiority
from below posing. It means that you said something that seems to fit his image of what a philosopher might say, so it is wrong and too abstract. When he is abstract and uses terms like dasein, that's not being the negative version of a serious philosopher, that's being, metaphorically, a working class hero bringing heart and manual tools to help a fellow traveller.
I use "serious philosopher" as a caricature for those in philosophy forums that, in my own rooted existentially in dasein personal opinion, encompass their own "moral philosophy" largely up in the "ethical theory" clouds. It's a judgment call on my part.
But, again, we would need to focus in on an exchange relating to a particular set of circumstances to differentiate the distinctions I and others make.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Apr 04, 2023 11:15 pm
'intellectual contraption' - a sentence with abstractions or generalities used by someone other than iambiguous. It's a bad thing to write one of these as a non-Iambiguous person.
Same thing. Choose a context and a moral philosophy and note yourself when definitions and deductions revolve more around other definitions and deductions rather than actual behaviors in conflict regarding value judgments.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Apr 04, 2023 11:15 pm
'objectivist' - officially, this means anyone thinking they've got an objective answer to how to live, morally or even practically. In practice, anyone who doesn't join him in the precise despairs he has. Or anyone not adding enough disclaimers when they express their values or opinions (see objectivism above for the related noun)
Over and over and over again, I note what objectivism has [subjectively] come to mean to me: someone convinced they are in sync with their "true self" in sync further with "the right thing to do" morally and politically. Then coming into a venue such as this and arguing as though anyone who does not share their own point of view is simply wrong.
"Precise despairs"?!!
Again, being as "drawn and quartered" as "I" am regarding value judgments can certainly create a glum frame of mind at times. On the other hand, it expands your options considerably because you are not ever and always anchored
to "the right thing to do". Also, politically it is more in sync with moderation, negotiation and compromise...democracy and the rule of laws.
As opposed to those who embrace one or another religion or deontological philosophy or political ideology or a "my way or the highway" -- my way or else -- assessment of nature pertaining to things like race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality and the like.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Apr 04, 2023 11:15 pm
'shameless' - an appeal to seeing someone as objectively bad made by a nihilist moral anti-realist.
Whatever that means. Again, choose a context and we can discuss points that we construe to be shameless. I mostly use it, however, when embodying my "polemicist persona" here.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Apr 04, 2023 11:15 pm
'fractured and fragmented' - annoyed at not getting 100% certainty so he can make a choice. Entails others have the responsibility to lift him up in a very Eric Berne-like game.
That's not the point. Quite the opposite. Being fractured and fragmented revolves not around needing either side of a moral conflagration to be 100% right, but noting how both sides are able to make points that are reasonable...points that the other side can't just make go away. Thus, with issues like abortion, it's not unreasonable to argue that a fetus is a human being with the right to life. And it's not unreasonable to argue that forcing women to give birth would deny them true equality with men who can never become pregnant.
Same with all the other issues. Just go to the Pro/Con website and pick a conflagration. You won't find one where one side is 100% right and the other side 100% wrong. Instead, you'll find that with all of them both sides are able
to make rational arguments.
Then the reality of the sociopaths among us. What is the philosophical argument in a No God world that unequivocally defeats their own "me, myself and I" frame of mind?