That was enlightening.
However, I detect some limiting value judgements.
I’m not sure if your attitude is based on a need to harm other people, or if you really don’t understand. In both cases, what brought you to it was not totally your own. You were exposed to chauvinism in a way that led you to adopt a crappy attitude, or you were taught things a certain way (which is tbf how we are all taught to some degree, though it is wrong). You internalized this, thought about it, said something gross, and people reacted negatively. This is all objective, but only some of it is verifiable.
This is a limiting perspective.
Attitudes toward nudity are culturally specific.
It’s likely not as taboo or shameful in cultures where nudity is mundane.
The taboos & rules we follow in our culture don’t need to be that way, and we know that.
We know we don’t need to see things the way we do: our arbitrary value judgements are a matter of perspective.
Hopefully you’ll reconsider and be able to do better. Human development is objective, but it is not inevitable. This is the difference between your deterministic and vulgar attitude and reality.
It’s not necessarily vulgar.
We can take their materialism to an extreme and map all that mental, subjective experience to physical neural states beyond our precise comprehension & merely acknowledge that correspondence exists.
That neurochemistry includes some degree of randomness, as do some physical phenomena, so this physical-only view of reality isn’t completely deterministic.
It resolves to the same effect as your model of understanding reality, which abstracts away that physical detail into practical concepts more conducive to the way we think.
Anyhow, I think it was a good point that society doesn’t need this backward shame & judgement around nudity or whatever activity goes on in people’s heads.
However, society does, and it’s not about to evolve without serious effort.
Taking someone’s picture and turning it into a deepfake nude and then sharing those picturea, such as the OP, is bad because it violates their consent. Social attitudes toward nakedness aren’t material in this instance. I personally don’t care about public nakedness, except where hygiene is involved. Of all the social norms I’d overthrow, that one is pretty low on the list, its impractical.
Concerning determinism, I was mostly responding to this
the things of interest in the world are those that are “conserved quantities”, like if a hypothetical variable jumps around randomly, it’s not a good data source because it’s volatile and random
To me the phrase “not a good data source” indicates a preconception of rationalism, the assumption that the world is essentially logical, therefore we can intuit anything about the world with pure thought. Because events proceed logically, then events can be understood by evaluating their place as link in a logical “chain.” I don’t dispute this outright, but personally I can’t stand prefiguration. I think it is alienating from actual reality because instead of engaging with reality, and the people in it, we engage with reality through this logical chain. Everything has to fit, else it is illogical.
This is one of the most insidious logical errors that people make. The way to account for contradictions in logic is to apply the logic of contradiction, change and relation: dialectics. But most of the time even this is unnecessary and can also be used to alienate the subject. In either case its impractical to interact with a logical method, the method is only there to help us determine material reality so we can interact with material reality directly.
I think it’s okay to be like a soft determinist, someone who understands that what happened before effects what happens next. But its easier to do historical materialism by just centering the perspectives and reactions of people, than it is to try and conceive as historical events like links in a logical chain, which often happens with history as history usually ends up justifying the will of whoever is in charge. The best historians, even when they have ideological biases, are able to disseminate messy facts independent of anyone’s narrative
We can take their materialism to an extreme and map all that mental, subjective experience to physical neural states beyond our precise comprehension & merely acknowledge that correspondence exists. That neurochemistry includes some degree of randomness, as do some physical phenomena, so this physical-only view of reality isn’t completely deterministic.
Can you elaborate on this? I don’t quite understand what you’re saying.
I was being a little rough on the poster because I didn’t realize they were being provocative, so certain terms I used, like vulgar, have a negative connotation, but what I meant was it was a kind of orthodox materialism that inhibits change, that is oppressive rather than liberating.
Taking someone’s picture and turning it into a deepfake nude and then sharing those picturea, such as the OP, is bad because it violates their consent.
If society didn’t have taboos & shame around nudity, then nobody would mind or care.
I recall a few years ago at work they’d share an online greeting card with an animation of our bosses’ heads plastered on elves performing awkward dances.
No one asked our bosses for consent, they got the email, too.
This wasn’t considered a grave violation.
Just because something’s a grave violation to you in your culture doesn’t make it that in every (possible) culture.
Contrary to your claim, social attitudes are relevant, because they’re the basis of your evaluation.
Can you elaborate on this?
Nature underlies everything or we can model it that way.
You made a point about how thought connects to material action & that social constructs & institutions exist by conventions (realizing shared thought into social-rule driven physical expression).
Thought can be materialized as emergent phenomena of underlying material state.
Shared thought could likewise be materialized as an equivalence class of those material states across physical entities.
In that sense, thought is material phenomena that connects to material phenomena/action, so we’re back to materialism.
In this approach to materialism, all those concepts people carry & social rules can be regarded as physical processes that include their thinking.
We’d be able to observe regularity in these physical processes to identify significant rules they follow.
We might be able to observe evaluation processes to infer judgement & determine which thoughts segments of the population prioritize over others to determine observable outcomes.
In this roundabout way, we recover the social rules people follow & the principles/thoughts in their heads that manifest them.
We’d also understand how the observed people would respond to our input in their society.
We’d be able to account for all the complexity of society like you already do, but with all this extra layer of materialism underneath.
(Like what you’re doing, but with extra steps!)
I’m not claiming this is a great approach, just coherent.
There is no objective basis for your argument, society does have taboos against making pornography out of someone’s image without their consent. As a thought experiment you could generate some interesting discussions. But as rhetoric this is just silly and unconvincing. My whole argument is about centering human reflection and action as an objective basis for social analysis, so i reject finding a categorical similarity between a real event with real consequences and a hypothetical situation based on fantasy. The whole practice of testing logical consistency of real situations against a hypothetical situation is exactly what I was dismissing in my last comment.
Being able to do thought experiments is useful as an education tool, it is a powerful reflective process to help us develop a deeper understanding. But using it as a rhetorical device has exactly the opposite effect.
If people started taking facial pictures of you and your loved ones and started creating porn out of it, telling you that they pleasure themselves to pictures of your mother or whatever, that would be an extreme violation of your and your moms personal autonomy, regardless of whether you hypothetically didn’t care or liked it or whatever. This is another hypothetical situation but it is one with more categorical similarity to the OP than yours. You wouldn’t say, oh its too bad society has backwards views on nudity.
But to me, basing my argument on such a hypothetical would be wrong headed. I can use it to illustrate a point, but neither hypothetical is based in objective reality. Its just people who share an objective reality arguing about hypothetical differences.
I’m not interested in hypothetical change, and no one who wants to achieve positive improvements in the lives of others should concern themselves with hypothetical situations, unless we are engaging in a pedagogy where hypotheticals can act as generative themes to stimulate reflection on real conditions. But a hypothetical isnt real, and it risks becoming mindless rationalizing, like people engage in when thy have have done, or intend to do harm, but rationalize away anything (such as how our actions affect other people) that conflicts with what we want.
It is rhetoric, not material analysis, that is often used to influence specific conclusions or types of consciousness. The way you present the argument is not the kind of consciousness I would want to develop in others, I would prefer to deal with the facts, especially where it concerns the use of certain tools to create harmful images of another person. That harm is objective, and based in our social reality, and can’t be disappeared by a wishing certain social norms which partially shape the harm being done, didn’t exist. I don’t think its too difficult to acknowledge that you don’t know what kind of society would exist if it didn’t have these social norms, and if humans had a “more enlightened” attitude toward nudity, that we wouldnt be able to identify the harmful intent behind creating and distributing degrading pornographic images of another person.
I’m not going to engage with any more idealism around these circumstances, unless I find it interesting or relevant, which I won’t if it is deployed as rhetoric.
Thanks for walking me through your logic in the second half of your post. I thought that’s what you were saying. I think those “extra steps” are a bit alienating, though it is sort of interesting as an exercise to think about.
That was enlightening. However, I detect some limiting value judgements.
This is a limiting perspective. Attitudes toward nudity are culturally specific. It’s likely not as taboo or shameful in cultures where nudity is mundane.
The taboos & rules we follow in our culture don’t need to be that way, and we know that. We know we don’t need to see things the way we do: our arbitrary value judgements are a matter of perspective.
It’s not necessarily vulgar. We can take their materialism to an extreme and map all that mental, subjective experience to physical neural states beyond our precise comprehension & merely acknowledge that correspondence exists. That neurochemistry includes some degree of randomness, as do some physical phenomena, so this physical-only view of reality isn’t completely deterministic.
It resolves to the same effect as your model of understanding reality, which abstracts away that physical detail into practical concepts more conducive to the way we think.
Anyhow, I think it was a good point that society doesn’t need this backward shame & judgement around nudity or whatever activity goes on in people’s heads. However, society does, and it’s not about to evolve without serious effort.
Taking someone’s picture and turning it into a deepfake nude and then sharing those picturea, such as the OP, is bad because it violates their consent. Social attitudes toward nakedness aren’t material in this instance. I personally don’t care about public nakedness, except where hygiene is involved. Of all the social norms I’d overthrow, that one is pretty low on the list, its impractical.
Concerning determinism, I was mostly responding to this
To me the phrase “not a good data source” indicates a preconception of rationalism, the assumption that the world is essentially logical, therefore we can intuit anything about the world with pure thought. Because events proceed logically, then events can be understood by evaluating their place as link in a logical “chain.” I don’t dispute this outright, but personally I can’t stand prefiguration. I think it is alienating from actual reality because instead of engaging with reality, and the people in it, we engage with reality through this logical chain. Everything has to fit, else it is illogical.
This is one of the most insidious logical errors that people make. The way to account for contradictions in logic is to apply the logic of contradiction, change and relation: dialectics. But most of the time even this is unnecessary and can also be used to alienate the subject. In either case its impractical to interact with a logical method, the method is only there to help us determine material reality so we can interact with material reality directly.
I think it’s okay to be like a soft determinist, someone who understands that what happened before effects what happens next. But its easier to do historical materialism by just centering the perspectives and reactions of people, than it is to try and conceive as historical events like links in a logical chain, which often happens with history as history usually ends up justifying the will of whoever is in charge. The best historians, even when they have ideological biases, are able to disseminate messy facts independent of anyone’s narrative
Can you elaborate on this? I don’t quite understand what you’re saying.
I was being a little rough on the poster because I didn’t realize they were being provocative, so certain terms I used, like vulgar, have a negative connotation, but what I meant was it was a kind of orthodox materialism that inhibits change, that is oppressive rather than liberating.
If society didn’t have taboos & shame around nudity, then nobody would mind or care. I recall a few years ago at work they’d share an online greeting card with an animation of our bosses’ heads plastered on elves performing awkward dances. No one asked our bosses for consent, they got the email, too. This wasn’t considered a grave violation.
Just because something’s a grave violation to you in your culture doesn’t make it that in every (possible) culture. Contrary to your claim, social attitudes are relevant, because they’re the basis of your evaluation.
Nature underlies everything or we can model it that way. You made a point about how thought connects to material action & that social constructs & institutions exist by conventions (realizing shared thought into social-rule driven physical expression). Thought can be materialized as emergent phenomena of underlying material state. Shared thought could likewise be materialized as an equivalence class of those material states across physical entities. In that sense, thought is material phenomena that connects to material phenomena/action, so we’re back to materialism.
In this approach to materialism, all those concepts people carry & social rules can be regarded as physical processes that include their thinking. We’d be able to observe regularity in these physical processes to identify significant rules they follow. We might be able to observe evaluation processes to infer judgement & determine which thoughts segments of the population prioritize over others to determine observable outcomes. In this roundabout way, we recover the social rules people follow & the principles/thoughts in their heads that manifest them. We’d also understand how the observed people would respond to our input in their society.
We’d be able to account for all the complexity of society like you already do, but with all this extra layer of materialism underneath. (Like what you’re doing, but with extra steps!) I’m not claiming this is a great approach, just coherent.
There is no objective basis for your argument, society does have taboos against making pornography out of someone’s image without their consent. As a thought experiment you could generate some interesting discussions. But as rhetoric this is just silly and unconvincing. My whole argument is about centering human reflection and action as an objective basis for social analysis, so i reject finding a categorical similarity between a real event with real consequences and a hypothetical situation based on fantasy. The whole practice of testing logical consistency of real situations against a hypothetical situation is exactly what I was dismissing in my last comment.
Being able to do thought experiments is useful as an education tool, it is a powerful reflective process to help us develop a deeper understanding. But using it as a rhetorical device has exactly the opposite effect.
If people started taking facial pictures of you and your loved ones and started creating porn out of it, telling you that they pleasure themselves to pictures of your mother or whatever, that would be an extreme violation of your and your moms personal autonomy, regardless of whether you hypothetically didn’t care or liked it or whatever. This is another hypothetical situation but it is one with more categorical similarity to the OP than yours. You wouldn’t say, oh its too bad society has backwards views on nudity.
But to me, basing my argument on such a hypothetical would be wrong headed. I can use it to illustrate a point, but neither hypothetical is based in objective reality. Its just people who share an objective reality arguing about hypothetical differences.
I’m not interested in hypothetical change, and no one who wants to achieve positive improvements in the lives of others should concern themselves with hypothetical situations, unless we are engaging in a pedagogy where hypotheticals can act as generative themes to stimulate reflection on real conditions. But a hypothetical isnt real, and it risks becoming mindless rationalizing, like people engage in when thy have have done, or intend to do harm, but rationalize away anything (such as how our actions affect other people) that conflicts with what we want.
It is rhetoric, not material analysis, that is often used to influence specific conclusions or types of consciousness. The way you present the argument is not the kind of consciousness I would want to develop in others, I would prefer to deal with the facts, especially where it concerns the use of certain tools to create harmful images of another person. That harm is objective, and based in our social reality, and can’t be disappeared by a wishing certain social norms which partially shape the harm being done, didn’t exist. I don’t think its too difficult to acknowledge that you don’t know what kind of society would exist if it didn’t have these social norms, and if humans had a “more enlightened” attitude toward nudity, that we wouldnt be able to identify the harmful intent behind creating and distributing degrading pornographic images of another person.
I’m not going to engage with any more idealism around these circumstances, unless I find it interesting or relevant, which I won’t if it is deployed as rhetoric.
Thanks for walking me through your logic in the second half of your post. I thought that’s what you were saying. I think those “extra steps” are a bit alienating, though it is sort of interesting as an exercise to think about.