trees_please
Bluelighter
He contributed much to the field of gobbledygook indeed.
youre a jackass. watts is the man
He contributed much to the field of gobbledygook indeed.
Okay so now it's twice you've mocked me mentioning rand, w/o offering up anything intelligible in opposition. From a mod, in their own forum, that's pretty damn weak if ya ask me
/doubt you woulda had anything useful to say on the matter anyways, prolly just the same crap ppl say about rand when they never actually evaluated objectivism themselves ;]
[Alan Watts] contributed much to the field of gobbledygook indeed.
I'm glad to fascinate then! (?) And no I'm not an economist by trade tho it was what i majored.Mocking Ayn Rand does not, in my estimation, amount to disparaging her Kool-Aid imbibing legions. Though I suppose they're pretty amusing in their own right. Are you a political economist? A social scientist, perhaps? If you were, you'd be a fascinating outlier - few people who take such things seriously would characterize themselves as 'Randians' or 'Objectivists,' especially not these days, you know, what with all the laissez-faire economic crises, &c.
well, if you wanna be technical, she prolly lifted the most from aristotle, so yeah...way more than a century lol. But, about those ideas- some of the most completely fundamental, or maybe I should say the most fundamental, ideas of objectivism are:If you'd like to seriously discuss the relative merit of Rand's 'ideas,' I'd be more than happy to take you up; but I qualify the word 'ideas' with scare quotes for more reasons than one. Not only did Rand lack the creative faculty to muster a single new idea of her own - the ideas she mined from her (far superior) right-wing forebears were foolish and, in most cases, were outdated by about a century or more.
c'mon play nice PA. You can show where she's wrong, or her basic premises flawed, and leave that^ shit out of it. Otherwise there's really no point to a "philosophers of today" thread in the 1st (or to your participating in it).One need not read very much of Rand's actual work to get her gist. I've read plenty of Smith and Ricardo and Nozick and Mill and Rothbard (well, admittedly very little of Rothbard) for my taste, thank you very much. I don't require the additional stimulus of a cheap simulacrum and glorified recycler/popularizer of the ideals of other, more eloquent and incisive specialists, working in the fields to which she pretended a shred of knowledge. In short, I simply do not have the time to spare reading a >1000-page screed by a crank with an ego every time someone invokes their name, nor do I feel any especial need, really, to pay said crank any more attention than a technicolor lol.
Rand was a welfare queen lived off the american state her whole life under her maiden name (benefits fraud) while telling poor people to starve.
Rand was against democracy. She didn't believe a housewife should be allowed a vote in matters above her station like presidential elections.
From every page of her books you hear the shrill cry "to the gas chambers go".
Rands maths was simple: rich = good angelic beautiful while poor = evil pig person with squinty eyes.
She was not a philosopher as she could not tolerate different ideas. Rather Rand was a cult leader a female reverend jim jones.
In conclusion, Rand was a foul piece of shit who wouldn't give a dying child a sip of water.
What is it that is unique about 'these days' that you feel was unconsidered in her works? Like, what about right now is unique and changes perception of her, in your opinion?
well, if you wanna be technical, she prolly lifted the most from aristotle, so yeah...way more than a century lol. But, about those ideas- some of the most completely fundamental, or maybe I should say the most fundamental, ideas of objectivism are:
- joy/happiness is hte purpose of being
- the only 'right' and proper contact amongst men is consensual, and
- teh supremacy of reason
Why do you think those basic tenets flawed? The way rand approached philosophy was from those principles, I'm interested a more specific reply (if not about objectivist ideology, then at least about which parts you find wrong and why)
(also I find it incredulous that you consider those things "dated", although perhaps you didn't mean the core principles)
c'mon play nice PA. You can show where she's wrong, or her basic premises flawed, and leave that^ shit out of it. Otherwise there's really no point to a "philosophers of today" thread in the 1st (or to your participating in it).
PS: BMX your accusations display your randian like intolerance of reality in you not being able to accept that other people have genuinely different views to yourself. My original comment was off the top of my head, with no research or googling or copy pasting whatsoever, just from my general knowledge reaction to the aweful THING that was Rand. You of course cannot accept this as you are a randian acolyte and as such have no grasp on reality morality decency or simple common sense.
So that's your original thought? I guess Whittaker Chambers must've used a time machine to plagiarize from you then...comrade kane said:From every page of her books you hear the shrill cry "to the gas chambers go".
whittaker chambers said:
No, I honestly hold a lot of objectivist principles in very high regard, and I'm sure you know that. You are correct, subtlety is not something i am very good at.Are you joking? Trolling, perhaps (though I perceive that subtlety is not your style)? Or are you just too rich and dumb to take a sober assessment of the world's condition after a single century's experimentation with global capitalism?
Global standards of living are still increasing rapidly. You can throw around all the loaded terms like "poverty"(god don't start me on how abused that term is), "ecological devastation" and generally cry that the sky is falling, but the truth is standard of living, life expectancy, etc are *increasing* still (and quite rapidly, at that).Pa said:Does "the worst economic recession since the Great Depression" ring any bells? "Ecological devastation?" Inter- and intranational military conflict on an unparalleled scale? A resurgence of chauvinism and fundamentalism in the world's most (supposedly) 'civilized' nations? Over one billion living below the poverty line? A couple billion more living thereabouts? Everyone always scrambling to make ends meet, always worrying, always in competition for bread - for things (like food, for instance) that humans make more of in a day than the entire world (including those parts currently plagued by famine) could consume in weeks, and that is wasted, or fed to cattle in industrial superfarms, for no better reason or guiding principle than that of ever-increasing profit and personal advancement (toward what, may I ask?), a.k.a. greed? And all of this madness because of the manner in which humans have chosen to organize their societies. So yes indeed, to answer your question, I think right now is a perfect time to put Rand's notions of Justice and Prosperity to the rhetorical test.
No, because i'm already aware that those are NOT the basis of his philosophy (and, if they were, it's kind of irrelevant because his final "formulation" of his ideals very clearly DID NOT keep in harmony w/ the principles. Absurd comparison.)Would my telling you that Adolf Hitler espoused similar precepts do anything other than win me further distaste? I just can't keep a straight face while reading this stuff.
Okay, they're "lame". I find them to be concepts that should properly define inter-personal contact/relation (ie "society" or civilization). You can think they're lame all you want, but that's not really a refutation is it?Well, as far as 'first principles' go, they're pretty lame and passe, if only because they're so nebulous in their generality.
Wasn't particularly well-received at any time? Well, with ideas that challenge some of hte most basic principles of the status quo, i hardly feel "well-received" is the proper barometer.1) Ayn Rand is not alive, nor was her work particularly well-received at any time, save for her little mini-cult consisting of Alan Greenspan and stupid teenagers, so I think her status as a 'Philosopher of Today' (the thread's topic, last I checked) is debatable at best. 2)
PA, *this* thread could not be more appropriate for this. Ayn Rand is easily the most controversial philosopher of the past century.Like I said, I'm more than happy to shoot the shit with you about whatever crank suits your intellectual fancy - but this thread is not the place for it. Either UTFSE to find a thread on Objectivism and make a post there, to which I will likely reply; or make a new thread addressing the philosophical merit/relevance of Ayn Rand. Within the scope of this thread, I've said all that I wanted to say on this topic, and then some.
watts is the man
You're significantly lacking in intellectual capacity. Watts posits a large body of deepitys and incoherent nonsense.
Every human being who is able to look at his own hands with full of wonder that there is something and not nothing.Are there any notable philosophers of our time?
Why do you assume philosophy makes progress?If so, who and what have they contributed to the world of philosophy?
“Philosophy begins in wonder. And, at the end, when philosophic thought has done its best, the wonder remains.” (A.N. Whitehead)
Global standards of living are still increasing rapidly. You can throw around all the loaded terms like "poverty"(god don't start me on how abused that term is), "ecological devastation" and generally cry that the sky is falling, but the truth is standard of living, life expectancy, etc are *increasing* still (and quite rapidly, at that).
Now, if you want to argue that things should be spread more fairly, fine, but pretending mankind isn't progressing along quite rapidly is disingenuous.
No, because i'm already aware that those are NOT the basis of his philosophy (and, if they were, it's kind of irrelevant because his final "formulation" of his ideals very clearly DID NOT keep in harmony w/ the principles. Absurd comparison.)
ad-hom's, plagiarism, and other intellectually bankrupt approaches earn my distaste.
Okay, they're "lame". I find them to be concepts that should properly define inter-personal contact/relation (ie "society" or civilization). You can think they're lame all you want, but that's not really a refutation is it?
[and those are the foundational principles, so yes they are inherently broad; that's not to say they weren't developed extremely thoroughly, but I imagine you knew that]
Wasn't particularly well-received at any time? Well, with ideas that challenge some of hte most basic principles of the status quo, i hardly feel "well-received" is the proper barometer.
I could continue adding stuff, though I'm sure you will just take an item or two and say "that is meaningless". The point is that she was relevant during her time, contrary to what a lot of her current-day detractors try to assert.
Was she "popular"? Was she 'liked'? I don't see how those are relevant to the merit of her ideas.
PA, *this* thread could not be more appropriate for this. Ayn Rand is easily the most controversial philosopher of the past century.
/how you have a modstick in P&S is beyond me..not just because you seldom compose yourself in a manner befitting a mod, but to assert this topic isn't relevant to the thread is absurd.