Moderator: Only_Humean
d63 wrote:
That said, you need to send me a link to something to help me better understand how you are using Dasien. Heidegger was never one of my strong points.
iambiguous wrote:There are times I clearly agree. Ambiguity is what makes human freedom such a...rich experience? But also, at times, it can precipitate some truly wrenching ordeals.
If there was no ambiguity, human freedom would revolve basically around choosing to do or not to do the right thing. Simple. Either/or. Only here the Good would replace God in a world of mere mortals.
But the suffering that is inflicted on so many because we are unable to resolve conflicting moral narratives makes me yearn at times for a world in which the philosopher kings might prevail.
But then there are terrible realities of living in a world where one or another such "authoritarian" mentality has in fact prevailed.
The world of the dreaded [and the dreadful] "isms".
d63 wrote: First of all, I would say our embrace of angst (and its freedom) is a result of our embrace of the nihilistic perspective and the skeptical expression of it, or the sense that no matter where we are or what we’re thinking, we’re never on as solid ground as we would like to think. And one of the reasons we do so is that it acts as a kind of antidote to the authoritarian. As long as there is no solid ground for any assertion, there can be no solid ground for any absolute they might base their rule on. But if we think about it, we might recognize that while angst and the nihilistic perspective does act as an anti-dote, it may also be these things upon which the authoritarian is empowered by offering a pseudo-absolute that the angst-weary can latch on to.
d63 wrote:But we, as freedom loving guys, can’t have that. Therefore, we might abandon our present position, take the route of Mo, and seek out a universal system that would work under any circumstance. Only, it couldn’t just be universal. It has to be a perfect universal system in that it would be a truth that must be like a fact in being beyond interpretation (much like Kant was attempting).
iambiguous wrote:
Claiming that morality can be rooted in objective truths or translated universally into duties and obligations is [to me] closely related to what Wilhelm Reich construed as [psychologically] the authoritarian personality. Reich then rooted this [largely] in sexual repression.
But that, I suppose, is a discussion for another day.
d63 wrote:James L Walker wrote:Those in power create a scripted reality of morality, ethics, and values in order to control the lives of others.
They are the authors and while they like to pretend to be divinely inspired or cling onto a objectivity that they claim to understand with the ability to interpret they create these valued scripts out of pure selfishness in order to control the lives of others.
See how simple it is?
Yeah, Joker.... or I mean James, but maybe the reason they are able to get away with this is because there are no solid foundations under any moral or ethical assertion we can make. Perhaps it is uncertainty and ambiguity that allow those who would abuse it to impose certainty and absolutism upon the situation.
d63 wrote:It's like I've always said: it's not the hypocrite you have to watch out for; it's the one that is perfectly consistent with themselves that worries me.
James L Walker wrote:
Nicely put. It actually is that uncertainty and ambiguity that allows them some level of bullshit to work with when it concerns imposing bullshit moral certainty or absolutism upon situations of others.
Very clever and crafty bullshitted fictional scripts they are written, authored, or tailored by equally bullshit individuals with the powerful means to impose them. Think of it as bullshit imposed on others by bullshit individuals.
When you are going to create a fictional script pretending that is certain and unquestionably absolutle a large level of bullshit is needed if your going to bullshit others into doing your bullshit bidding.
iambiguous wrote:d63 wrote:It's like I've always said: it's not the hypocrite you have to watch out for; it's the one that is perfectly consistent with themselves that worries me.
Oh, indeed!
And the killing fields are filled with the folks who got in their way.
d63 wrote:James L Walker wrote:
Nicely put. It actually is that uncertainty and ambiguity that allows them some level of bullshit to work with when it concerns imposing bullshit moral certainty or absolutism upon situations of others.
Very clever and crafty bullshitted fictional scripts they are written, authored, or tailored by equally bullshit individuals with the powerful means to impose them. Think of it as bullshit imposed on others by bullshit individuals.
When you are going to create a fictional script pretending that is certain and unquestionably absolutle a large level of bullshit is needed if your going to bullshit others into doing your bullshit bidding.
Yes, you pretty much articulated what I meant when I pointed out that the authoritarian feeds on angst. It always offers itself as a solution.
Also, this may well offer an answer to the question that bothered thinkers like Marcuse and Deluez and Guatarri: why it is that some people seem to seek out their own oppression, will submit to it as they had chosen it themselves. Or as Marcuse put it (and think you will especially appreciate this):
The strange thing isn't that people steal when they're hungry or strike when they feel exploited; it's that they're not doing it on regular basis.
It may be that the simple answer is that they do out of intense repulsion to angst.
iambiguous wrote:The irony being that philosophical nihilism is, indeed, pointing out just how intellectually shallow and impoverished American "conventional society" is. We [those of us who are American citizens] all know the stats on illiteracy; we all know the dilapidated state of public education; we all cringe when American citizens can't name their Governor, Congressperson or the Presidential candidates; we all laugh when Leno stops folks at random on the street and notes how they can't differientiate Vladimir Putin from Saddam Hussein...or think the Bill of Rights is in the Bible. Ha!Ha!Ha! Our own appalling ignorance reduced to entertainment on Late Night TV.
So, where does that manifestation of cultural nihilism come from---folks like me?

Only_Humean wrote:If there are no cultural values worth elevating, you can't criticise Hollywood for its profit motive or American culture for valorising ignorance. It's just culture. It seems to me that you're claiming cultural nihilism as a front for cultural snobbery, which is a different thing entirely.
phyllo wrote:So:
Making money is bad.
Script writers are all stupid hacks.
'The system' produces garbage.
No stereotypes here.
iambiguous wrote:Only_Humean wrote:If there are no cultural values worth elevating, you can't criticise Hollywood for its profit motive or American culture for valorising ignorance. It's just culture. It seems to me that you're claiming cultural nihilism as a front for cultural snobbery, which is a different thing entirely.
I'm just making the distinction between Hibb's rendition of nihilism [rooted in the collapse of Enlightened thnking brought on by the Nihilists!] and the "lifestyle" mentality rooted in pop culture, rampant consumerism and a celebration of the Warholean pursuit of our 15 minutes of fame. I'm channeling Network here.
But lots and lots and lots of folks share my opinion about the relationship between Hollywood films and...intellectual depth?

There is a mix of abilities distributed on a bell curve - most writers are mediocre. Most people are mediocre. That's how mediocrity is defined.Intellectually challenged script writers
People went to see public executions long before nihilism was 'invented'. Maybe people are fascinated by violence. Maybe some animalistic hormones are still flowing through our veins.Cady was a rapist, a murderer, a cold blooded thug. He is the product of an amoral cultural nihilism that turns pathology and violence and dehumanization into....entertainment.
The producers and the actors and the screen writers and all the other folks responsible for putting the film together were paid a lot of money so that it would make others a lot of money when it was "a hit" at the box office.
Making money really seems to bother philosophers.Nothing, after all, is beyond the limits of "traditional morality" if someone can make a buck on it.
phyllo wrote:Hollywood movie studios are in the business of producing entertainment. They do not produce 'historical' archives or 'educational' films or 'philosophical' theses. Sometime times these are produced in the course of making entertainment. The product reflects the interests and therefore the culture of the times.
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