a profound crisis is inevitable at the point when prosperity and comfort will finally become boring
So people who suffer under violent regimes aren't dissatisfied?
I think it's pretty obvious that people in such places do feel thoughts of dissatisfaction though. Hence you have feminist movements in Islamic countries, self-immolation in the Arab Spring, refugees fleeing in masses to come to European countries, etc. It seem to me that people can acknowledge their dissatisfaction just fine.
Whose empty comfort? Whom does "our" refer to? Because while I agree that you and I experience comfort in relation to women in Islamic countries, I'd say that their resistance is due more to their discomfort than our comfort.
He says Islam offered him the promise of purpose and structure, providing strict rules and moral clarity in a world where the prevailing liberalism favored shades of gray over black and white.
Michael became Younnes, Arabic for dove.
He saw his new religion as a step up from Christianity: “I can compare it with buying a computer. If you know there’s a Windows 10, you’re not going to go with Windows XP … It’s an upgrade.”
Depression has become the leading cause of ill health and disability across the world, now affecting more than 300 million people globally, the World Health Organization said Thursday.
The worldwide depression rates increased 18 percent between 2005 and 2015, according to the WHO.
So, protesting the DAP, or going to the Women's March, or the March for Science (happening later this month), aren't in response to actual problems, but because we actually don't have anything to complain about. Sounds about right.
Wow. You're incredible. Not only did you just admit that poor response toward an issue negates the importance of an issue (not a logical conclusion at all, which you should know), but you also somehow managed to completely miss the point about a march for science. Do you really think it's about the endangerment of the scientific method? Are you being serious?
I don't see how science is in danger. I do know that certain government funding sources are threatened. Government funding =/= the thing itself
Pipeline spills being negated by the absence of pipelines is equivalent to killing people to prevent them from dying of any number of illnesses. Calling the DAP protests a poor response is an understatement.
This is all, still, beside the point. These movements are stabs at finding a purpose in fleeting events, in misidentified solutions to potentially inescapable trade-offs if not outright non-problems (obviously if your job is threatened by government fundings cuts or changes, these are certainly personal problems even if not systemic threats to the field). The secular/christian west lacks meaning and purpose, and ideologies (including other religions) offer Hope and Change, even (and maybe especially) if it comes with a bloody cost. There's a reason why women voluntarily don hijabs. There's a reason why people will vote in populist demagogues. There's a reason why people will blow themselves up or self-immolate, and it isn't ultimately material comfort, which is all the West has left to offer at this point.
If science is in danger, it is because it offers no meaning or purpose. Science is a tool, not an end. The West has confused this.
The thing itself? Dak, come on. There is no science "in itself." Science is a social practice and can have various sources of funding. Privately-funded science is fine, but it needs to be supplemented with scientific research not inhibited by corporate interests. Stop deluding yourself by promoting this ridiculous "Trump's not all that bad" political stance.
I disagree. You're generalizing based on selected examples, and you're attributing non-value to situations that you already are biased against. I'm not going to claim that I have no skin in the game, but you're really being obtuse here.
This is bullshit. Science isn't in danger because it offers no meaning or purpose, it's in danger because it's producing results that particular political parties don't like. You have to fucking see that.
It could be an understatement. They could be the most disproportionate responses of all time. That doesn't diminish the issue of environmental jeopardy. You're acting like it's a non-issue now because of the way it's been treated by protesters.
I don't know what bias you're referring to. I don't just read theoretical pieces and run off into deontological voids, as I think should be rather evident - in fact I think I'm relatively beyond practical. Theory and data/statistics should be be ever synthesized and engage in reciprocation.
There is no danger to science because of results. You're thinking of an example of one deletion of data in one aspect of science, which may or may not even matter. Even if it does, the information has no direct path to change or results. The arctic data informs no particular course of action. Assuming it showed radical warming or cooling, this means nothing in and of itself (however, there is a religion surrounding the pseudo-transcendence of climate stability). In contrast, science with very clear application moves ever more rapidly forward, in both the private and publicly funded sectors. Space X is reusing rockets, DARPA in collaboration with John Hopkins etc are allowing people with no limbs to move and feel again, and IBM presses forward with Deep Learning.
You're speaking on this issue like the religious person you accused CIG of being. The earth lives on regardless of where the oil on it is.
Practicality has its own bias. Maybe you can't see that because you're practical.
I admit my bias. You run from yours.
Thank goodness science is still producing results! I guess we can afford to cut its funding a little.
You're not understanding my point.
I'm commenting on the logic of your statement, in which you implied that an issue can become a non-issue because of the way it's handled. That's an illogical and entirely fallacious position. That's what I'm saying.
Do I think there are environmental concerns worth protesting over? Absolutely. Do I believe that Gaia is dying? I don't think I've ever said that. The ecosystem is more complex than "Mother Earth."