FeDeWould-be
FeDeWould-be t1_itq2r0l wrote
Reply to comment by WarrenHarding in The philosophy of Martin Heidegger who argued that the Technological mindset has destroyed our relationship to the world so that Nature is seen as so many resources to exploit. He presents an alternative: a poetic relationship to the world by thelivingphilosophy
It’s about the type of barrier. The legal barrier is a concrete literal barrier which will reward any imagination or alternative usage with punishment. The internal blocks we have where we fail to imagine other uses for things isn’t so much of a literal barrier, it is the result of a process and can easily or eventually be broken out of. Although.. surely these things are intertwined so how useful is it to even separate them ideas-wise, when in the world they come as a package.
FeDeWould-be t1_itpzq4m wrote
Reply to comment by WarrenHarding in The philosophy of Martin Heidegger who argued that the Technological mindset has destroyed our relationship to the world so that Nature is seen as so many resources to exploit. He presents an alternative: a poetic relationship to the world by thelivingphilosophy
So what’s your point, is that good or bad. The public don’t benefit from it is it even relevant?
FeDeWould-be t1_itpzjc6 wrote
Reply to comment by PositiveStrength5694 in The philosophy of Martin Heidegger who argued that the Technological mindset has destroyed our relationship to the world so that Nature is seen as so many resources to exploit. He presents an alternative: a poetic relationship to the world by thelivingphilosophy
I’m probably taking it too literal then, capitalism does what Heidegger was talking about in an incredibly literal way, but deeper than that it is true that we have some shit going on with that also
FeDeWould-be t1_itpxv40 wrote
Reply to comment by PositiveStrength5694 in The philosophy of Martin Heidegger who argued that the Technological mindset has destroyed our relationship to the world so that Nature is seen as so many resources to exploit. He presents an alternative: a poetic relationship to the world by thelivingphilosophy
Well that automatically brings capitalism into the picture if you want to answer any of those questions. The plane is owned by people who only have 1 purpose for owning that plane, if we were to use it for anything else we would be breaking the law
FeDeWould-be t1_isuzb9g wrote
Reply to comment by fpsmoto in "In other words, an important lesson we can draw from Hans Blumenberg’s writings on myth is that the dangerous political myths of our own times as well as those of the past can only be countered by inventing new myths, telling better stories, and writing more convincing histories." by Maxwellsdemon17
Big
FeDeWould-be t1_ivm8u6y wrote
Reply to comment by ADROSIDI in Discovery of bronzes rewrites Italy’s Etruscan-Roman history by VoloNoscere
Some low-paid Roman engraver who was given that job after the previous owners heads were chopped off is looking down saying little do they know