Votanic wrote:You are obstinately refusing to connect the dots. If I need to write additional paragraphs just to have you make the smallest leaps of understanding, then this conversation must end.
This is how you cop out of actually defending your position? Weak.
Votanic wrote:For example Panglossian thinking is the belief that we are living in the best of all possible worlds. If you can't see how that relates to what I wrote, I give up.
So I’m not gonna pretend I knew what “Panglossian View” meant before… I’ll admit I had to look it up. That said, according to Google it means…
Panglossian, “extremely optimistic, especially in the face of unrelieved hardship or adversity,” comes from Dr. Pangloss (Panglosse in French), an old, incurably optimistic tutor in Voltaire's philosophical satire Candide.
So it’s this extremely optimistic view IN THE FACE OF UNRELIEVED HARDSHIP OR ADVERSITY.
This wouldn’t be relevant because I don’t face “unrelieved hardship or adversity”. That said, even excluding that part of the definition; you went on to claim that I had this view because I seem to believe…
hegemony equates to morality, and only an aberrent and relatively powerless minority are criminal, evil, wrong (at least if they dare resist).
I mean this is wrong in several ways…
1) I don’t believe the view you claim I have is properly defined as “Panglossian” based on the definitions I’ve read.
2) I never claimed “hegemony equates to morality”.
3) I don’t believe “hegemony equates to morality”.
The powerful can certainly be evil and the weak can certainly be just.
Now, although I believe the statement “hegemony equates to morality” is false; this does NOT mean the opposite is true! I also don’t believe that the weak are always morally correct either.
The powerful can be evil or just; the weak can be evil or just.
Power is NOT the determining factor.
Votanic wrote:Jeffrey Dahmer: From Dahmer's P.O.V. what he was doing was necessary to him at the time. Not your P.O.V., his. He was fighting to preserve his own reality. Yes, ultimately he was overpowered by the hegemonic reality. I trust that the concept of madness being subjective is not totally foreign to you. Did he later repent, I think so... But repentence often occurs in the context of punishment and shaming (include cancel culture here). Most confessions and repentence is coerced in some way, even if the courts don't define it as such. Yes, people can be overpowered to the point that their previous beliefs and identity are erased. I would say that is another way of being murdered, but the powers running society believe it is necessary. This is also why I scoff at the idea of innocent civilians. The privileged can always distance themselves from the dirty work while still benefitting from it the most.
This is just plain and simple nonsense.
Based on this calculus there can be no “evil”. We are all just blind actors fulfilling our destiny and at the whims of our perceived reality. Cockypop.
I understand “madness” is a disease of the mind and that it can affect or impact one’s view of reality.
Just because one’s view of reality is distorted; this does NOT actually change reality.
Reality is reality. Evil is evil.
Does this mean the world is “black and white”… NO. There are gray areas where reasonable people can debate the substance of what is “right or wrong”; what is “murder vs. self-defense”. That said… if we had a sliding scale where we go from white-to-black with gray blending in the middle; at some point the marker is clearly white; and at the other end clearly black.
Let me put in a way YOU can understand. I refuse to live in a reality that’s all gray; with no right or wrong, “my reality” has thus been defined and will forever remain so. (This is kinda a joke, because..P
Also, this whole “hegemonic reality” is bullshit. There is only reality. There is no hegemonic reality, no personal reality… there is just one reality.
Yes… it’s cool to think about perception. I also do believe the mind is powerful and can do things that science doesn’t fully comprehend yet. That said… it doesn’t mean one can live in a different “reality” just because one will’s it so.
Votanic wrote:Do some behaviors lead to greater accumulation of money, power, and human population. Yes indeed (though the exact particulars do change with context). Again this has nothing to do with morality or other types of values, but everything to do with winning. Everthing can be used as a weapon in some context, either by presence or absence.
This is more word salad and unrelated to you actually defending your point.
Votanic wrote:Even most concepts of a god involve an all-powerful entity or force that can create, destroy and set its own agenda. If the Abrahamic god wasn't God, he would be most people's idea of a manipulative, judgemental, power-mad asshole. Hallelujah to that.
Again… interesting but unrelated to the point. I don’t believe in the God of Abraham, though I was brought up Catholic.
Votanic wrote:Did I jump around a bit here? Yes, I'm getting tired of typing. However, if you are open to understanding what I mean to say, I've given your a treasure trove of ideas to ponder.
If not, well maybe somebody else will find this insightful.
You have some interesting thoughts… but ultimately I disagree with your concept of reality. I believe in one reality. I don’t believe that just because one can convince himself that what he is doing (has done) was “justified” it does NOT make the action justified. I believe self-defense is a clearly defined concept. I acknowledge there may be gray areas where reasonable people can disagree… but saying “all murders are self-defense” is still just idiotic IMHO and I though you have tossed out some ideas that are interesting I don’t believe they are relevant and I don’t believe they change anything.
If you have a magic wand and want to show me how your view of reality actually works… I’m game.
Otherwise I will continue to live in the one reality I perceive and will act and judge based on this.
Philosophy is interesting, and I will admit I’m not as well versed in this “subject” as I would like. I actually recently bought (and started) a book on basic philosophy. I could go get the name… it’s not “the dummies guide” to philosophy, but it’s similar. Just a primer. I think Philosophy can lead one to a better understanding of the world and can open one’s mind to different perspectives by reorienting one’s “view”. I have a problem with Philosophy when it ventures into this type of “there is no evil” or “reality is what you make it” type nonsense. At the end of the day there is a world, we live in this world, we live under the physical and chemical “laws” of this universe, and we deal with the other humans on this planet. These are things we must accept in order to move about in this world in an meaningful way.