jools posted:actually china has the highest population of atheists of any country in the world. check and mate.
they identify as atheists sure but scratch that surface a bit and underneath it's an entire world of ancestral spirits and buddhist guardian angels and magic potions. i, on the other hand, am guided only by right reason.
jools posted:sure but at least there its belief instilled by acceptable sources, like your parents or Ancient Texts or old men or whatever. here in the glorious west however theres been some 20% or something increase in belief in the paranormal because the history channel realised it could make more skrilla from showing ancient aliens than history
*nods approvingly*
getfiscal posted:if india was a people's republic then they would have put a kibosh on the whole dump-the-body-in-the-ganges thing decades ago. look at china, a country free of superstitions.
Superstitious are probably unavoidable, but they can also be directed? Like what jiols mentioned, or also like former socialist countries where old people feel weird about charging a stranded stranger to help fix their car. These aren't rational processes
Crow posted:getfiscal posted:if india was a people's republic then they would have put a kibosh on the whole dump-the-body-in-the-ganges thing decades ago. look at china, a country free of superstitions.
Superstitious are probably unavoidable, but they can also be directed? Like what jiols mentioned, or also like former socialist countries where old people feel weird about charging a stranded stranger to help fix their car. These aren't rational processes
Yknow crow. one of Plato's ideas about how to run the perfect society is that the public needs elaborate mythology and superstition to keep them behaving correctly.
swampman posted:Crow posted:getfiscal posted:if india was a people's republic then they would have put a kibosh on the whole dump-the-body-in-the-ganges thing decades ago. look at china, a country free of superstitions.
Superstitious are probably unavoidable, but they can also be directed? Like what jiols mentioned, or also like former socialist countries where old people feel weird about charging a stranded stranger to help fix their car. These aren't rational processes
Yknow crow. one of Plato's ideas about how to run the perfect society is that the public needs elaborate mythology and superstition to keep them behaving correctly.
Yeah and its pretty clear religion is true. Just WHAT is goin on here, a sane man would wonder, or a sane woman
swampman posted:Crow posted:getfiscal posted:if india was a people's republic then they would have put a kibosh on the whole dump-the-body-in-the-ganges thing decades ago. look at china, a country free of superstitions.
Superstitious are probably unavoidable, but they can also be directed? Like what jiols mentioned, or also like former socialist countries where old people feel weird about charging a stranded stranger to help fix their car. These aren't rational processes
Yknow crow. one of Plato's ideas about how to run the perfect society is that the public needs elaborate mythology and superstition to keep them behaving correctly.
Two more thoughts:
1) Pobody's nerfect.
2) Another reason to praise the achievements of the North Korean people
The_Schliski posted:If Plato were born today he'd be an Objectivist idiot scumlord most likely.
Yes, he was very smart. But I question the parental wisdom of letting your newborn read Rand novels. Would 1 day old Plato be mature enough for the rape scenes, for instance.
swampman posted:Yes, he is the prime Statist philosopher. But OTOH. There is real doubt in the text whether they are being serious or just tricking their little fuck objects into endorsing weird and bad opinions. Because you dont get much opinions out of Socrates because of his.. method. Just one of many examples "When A Troll Goes Wrong"
Plato: The Ancient George Carlin
Meursault posted:LEt the bodies hit the river
vishnu-metal
tpaine posted:on the other hand, why would evolution result in the most sweat-vulnerable people acccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccc
i like to think this is a clever reference to movin' out by billy joel that i don't understand
getfiscal posted:badiou came out with a "hypertranslation" of plato's republic, which is titled "plato's republic"... it was just translated and it hit bookstores RECENTLY. so buy it or steal it off the tubes.
so idk if you can tell much from the first few pages, but i took a quick glance and it doesn't look like it's much improved from other translations. it might be better in french and maybe the english translation degraded his efforts? but it just looks like... plato's republic
apparently he removes references to greek culture etc. great
drwhat posted:getfiscal posted:badiou came out with a "hypertranslation" of plato's republic, which is titled "plato's republic"... it was just translated and it hit bookstores RECENTLY. so buy it or steal it off the tubes.
so idk if you can tell much from the first few pages, but i took a quick glance and it doesn't look like it's much improved from other translations. it might be better in french and maybe the english translation degraded his efforts? but it just looks like... plato's republic
apparently he removes references to greek culture etc. great
drwhat posted:well to be clear, it's not the same as other translations. it's made more modern colloquial. "a kid ran up", "this guy", "can you even still have sex with your wife". but i don't think that makes it better somehow
You have not experienced Plato until you've read him in the original Klingon.
Tell me truly then, dost thou even lift bro?
getfiscal posted:then i shall wait to read it from a library.
waiyt to read dostoevskys Demons from the library too :/