-
41 votes
-
9/11 attacks in realtime (dashboard) 7:46am-12:00pm
23 votes -
The last of the Zoroastrians. A funeral, a family, and a journey into a disappearing religion. (2020)
17 votes -
National Museum of Denmark is handing over an iconic cloak belonging to an indigenous group in Brazil at a ceremony being attended by President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva
14 votes -
Review: South Africa's Brave New World, by R.W. Johnson
6 votes -
Traditionally in the Swedish church the bride and groom walk down the aisle together – but the patriarchal handover is catching on, and now Lutherans want to stop it
24 votes -
Rates of violence in Viking Age Norway and Denmark were long believed to be comparable. A team of researchers now challenges that assumption.
9 votes -
How would you go about teaching (or learning) critical thinking?
I’m interested in everyday applications like noticing bias in commercial media as well as word-of-mouth and social media. Are there any principles or methods you know of that you’d consider...
I’m interested in everyday applications like noticing bias in commercial media as well as word-of-mouth and social media. Are there any principles or methods you know of that you’d consider especially important?
I’m also interested in any recommendations for online training.
Edit: Wow! Since there are some great suggestions in the comments, I'd like to summarise them here:- Primary sources and secondary sources (fefellama)
- Engagement (BeanBurrito)
- Under The Influence by Terry O'Reilly [podcast] (chocobean)
- Influence, marketing, motivation, bias, dark patterns, corruption, phrasing and choice of words (chocobean)
- Multiple sources. Verbalise your thought process / question yourself (hobofarmer)
- Advanced Placement English. Ethos, pathos, logos (Wisix)
- Learning how to hold and study concepts without internalizing them. Not becoming emotionally dependent on “being right”. (bet)
- Flaws in perception and processing. The Scout Mindset by Julia Galef: "the motivation to see things as they are, not as you wish they were" (Landhund)
- Fact checking, exercises such as mock trials (chizcurl)
- Not assuming that critical thinking transfers across domains (daywalker)
- Falsifiability, scientific psychology, psychological bias, cognition / emotion / behaviour (daywalker)
- 'Very Short Introductions' series by Oxford Press (daywalker)
- Many ways to conceptualise "critical thinking". Appreciating the humanity of other people. (mieum)
- Self reflection and acknowledgement of diversity (mieum)
- The Unpersuadables: Adventures with the Enemies of Science [book] (gaywallet)
- Being Wrong: Adventures on the Margin of Error [book] (boxer_dogs_dance)
- Be curious and ask questions (Markpelly)
- Empathy facilitates understanding and tempers reactivity (Aerrol)
- Nobel disease or Nobelitis (saturnV)
35 votes -
Did Rome know about Scandinavia and the Vikings?
7 votes -
The Circassian genocide, Russian Empire's systematic mass murder, ethnic cleansing and expulsion of 95–97% of the Circassians, resulting in 1 to 1.5 million deaths during the Russo-Circassian War
26 votes -
How the rise of the camera launched a fight to protect Gilded Age Americans’ privacy
13 votes -
Archaeology student unearths seven spectacular Viking-era curled silver arm rings north of Denmark's second-largest city Aarhus
9 votes -
Why do people believe true things?
19 votes -
Unusual medieval crimes
18 votes -
Stonehenge megalith came from Scotland, not Wales, ‘jaw-dropping’ study finds
24 votes -
Weird Weapons: Caged Buckler - Sword trapper
12 votes -
How the KKK scammed its members for cash
28 votes -
The ghosts of the Green Sahara
7 votes -
In 1982 Canada Post assigned Santa the postcode "H0H 0H0"
16 votes -
Has there ever been a time before where so much social change was occuring in quick succession of each other?
I am not really someone who is well-versed in history, I never paid attention in high school, I couldn't wait to GTFO. I know what I know based solely on podcasts/debates/lectures I find on...
I am not really someone who is well-versed in history, I never paid attention in high school, I couldn't wait to GTFO. I know what I know based solely on podcasts/debates/lectures I find on YouTube and what Hollywood brings to my attention.
from my own knowledge, periods of social change (at least in North America):
- the civil rights movement
- women's suffrage movement
- civil war (given it was fought to a great deal to end slavery)
when it comes to social changes in history that is not based in North America, I know of only the broad strokes and none of the specifics, like I know the arrival of the printing press lead to a great deal of struggle in the same way that the arrival of social media has created a struggle, just the balance of power has changed.
I also know that France went through a French Revolution that played a big part of its current political landscape and its secular status quo.
However, something I have found interesting is that within the span of <10 years, we are experiencing a reckoning on several different fronts:
- MeToo movement have rise to a long-needed discussion of sexual harassment and just a general gender reckoning in other ways too
- the murder of George Floyd and subsequent protests gave rise to a global awareness that race-related issues
- the Hamas attack on Israel has certainly pushed the discussion of Israel-Palestine to the forefront. Before the attack, I could not tell you the difference between Erdoğan and Netanyahu. That's obviously no longer the case.
But it makes me wonder if this is unprecedented in human history that so many different issues of social change are being pushed to the forefront in very quick succession of each other or this is a repeat, that it's common for a civilization that experiences one changing in the social norm, to start experiencing other social changes cause they are always in the mindset or something?
10 votes -
“Authentic” is dead. And so is “is dead.”
22 votes -
The Last Idealist - 7/28/24 - Upside down and all around
3 votes -
Against the proliferation of sofa ownership and use
22 votes -
Study: Language affects how quickly we perceive shades of colour
15 votes -
Was early modern writing paper expensive?
8 votes -
Extraordinary Roman marble floor discovered in ancient sunken city
14 votes -
Divers have discovered a 19th-century shipwreck off the Swedish coast loaded to the brim with champagne
12 votes -
The critical window of shadow libraries
16 votes -
The Last Idealist - a philosophical newsletter sort of thing
9 votes -
Portuguese ship with treasure found in Namibian desert
25 votes -
Inside Ziklag, the secret organization of wealthy Christians trying to sway the US election and change the country
22 votes -
Rio de Janeiro’s ‘narco-pentecostal’ gangs accused of ordering Catholic churches to close
11 votes -
Ernest Shackleton: Famed explorer's Endurance ship gets extra protection
8 votes -
The Philosophy of Liberty – On Liberalism
9 votes -
Explore Robert Falcon Scott and Ernest Shackleton's famous Antarctic ship with new "Digital Twin"
7 votes -
What considerations are considered most persuasive in moving moral skeptics to moral objectivism?
I've found error theory, emotivism, etc. quite compelling, but I noticed that most philosophers are moral realists, though PhilPapers doesn't ask specifically about moral objectivism. As a...
I've found error theory, emotivism, etc. quite compelling, but I noticed that most philosophers are moral realists, though PhilPapers doesn't ask specifically about moral objectivism. As a non-philosopher, I feel that there may be considerations that I haven't come across. The SEP entry seems a bit lacking to me considering it's just a supplement to the entry on moral anti-realism, and there doesn't seem to be an IEP entry specifically focused on moral objectivism, just a tiny section in the entry on moral realism.
17 votes -
Debunking the myth of Hollywood's "fake" transatlantic accent
35 votes -
Uncovered: 428-year-old secret dossier reveals Elizabeth I’s network of spies
37 votes -
12,000-year-old Aboriginal sticks may be evidence of the oldest known culturally transmitted ritual in the world
16 votes -
110 new languages are coming to Google Translate
15 votes -
Has anyone stopped caring about politics?
I don't follow politics anymore. I wasn't always like this. I used to be a good liberal; I went to demonstrations, paid close attention to every SCOTUS decision, kept up with everything that went...
I don't follow politics anymore.
I wasn't always like this. I used to be a good liberal; I went to demonstrations, paid close attention to every SCOTUS decision, kept up with everything that went to shit during the first Trump presidency, etc. I wrote my representative about things that still needed to be undone. I would feel anxious regarding the state of the future. I followed the day-to-day of the Mueller investigation. I joined a small group that read political theory and philosophy. I'd try eagerly to defend my values to friends, family, and coworkers. I wanted to do my part to make this world a better place!
I learned about historical materialism, and this tracked with me in a way liberal idealism never did. The US isn't this pinnacle, this culmination of moral progress humanity achieved, but like every society that came before it a small ruling class that exploits a larger group. Liberal democracy itself is a product of changing material conditions. And like every other exploited class before me, I held to the ideology of my society (liberalism) and I believed my exploitation was just. I used to dismiss this framing as hippie nonsense, but it turns out this is a bedrock for much current sociology. Slowly, this plus Trump plus COVID broke me from trying to reason with conservatives or care about changing minds.
I don't know what the solution to anything is. I doubt that materialism is true, though I still think the framing is useful. I still vote, but as a basic bit of harm reduction. I no longer feel invested in seeing the US succeed as a bastion of liberal democracy. I have no pride in liberal accomplishments and feel no surprise in reactionary successes. I don't care that Trump was indicted. I wasn't shocked that Roe was overturn. I can't do anything about the Chevron decision. I would've lost it a few years ago, but today I just don't care. That's probably what conservatives want, and I don't care about that either.
Instead of following politics or reading theory, I read whatever philosophy I want. Instead of keeping up with debates, I focus on my hobbies and hanging out with friends. My apathy isn't due to being unaffected by modern politics, it very much is, but I've accepted my lot in life, the way I assume everyone of every society preceding mine has done. I feel liberated from a struggle I rarely if ever got to be a participant in. And, you know what, I'm accomplishing just about as much as I was before. I didn't realize it, but I've been checked out for a long time now, and I wonder if others feel the same.
73 votes -
Fossil of Neanderthal child with Down’s syndrome hints at early humans’ compassion
39 votes -
Why are we here? On the philosophical possibilities of “cosmic purpose”.
8 votes -
An American bought a $4 vase. Turns out, it's a lost ancient Maya treasure.
26 votes -
A new exhibition opening at Denmark's National Museum is exploring the history and legacy of a mysterious female Viking sorceress known as the Völva
15 votes -
Why did Muslim-majority Tajikistan ban the hijab?
18 votes -
More than 550 hajj pilgrims die in Mecca as temperatures exceed 50C
44 votes -
How babies and young children learn to understand language
8 votes -
The Ten Commandments must be displayed in all public Louisiana classrooms under requirement signed into law
68 votes -
Did you know the LDS (aka Mormons) used to have Socialists among their leaders?
6 votes