Michael Schmitz

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Michael Schmitz

Michael Schmitz

@Modemichael

Philosopher of mind, language and society. FWF-project "What is in a question?" at CEU. Tweets about philosophy, science, politics and their intersections.

Vienna, Austria Tham gia Kasım 2013
953 Đang theo dõi1.5K Người theo dõi
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Michael Schmitz
Michael Schmitz@Modemichael·
(1) Reductive non-materialism on the mind-body problem (2) Illocutionary force is representational (3) The 'Frege point' is BS (3) There is knowledge – practical knowledge – expressible through imperatives (4) Computationalism anthropomorphizes the brain
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It is simply criminal that world leaders are so desperate to see Israel fail that they're betting against regime change in Iran. Israel is giving the world a golden opportunity to build a free Iran after the Islamic Republic, and they just don't want to touch it.
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Maarten Boudry
Maarten Boudry@mboudry·
Why defend the academic freedom of @nathancofnas but not @HarrygPettit? Simple: Harry Pettit has openly glorified terrorist attacks, praised those who orchestrated it, and expressed his wish to "finish" the work of said terrorists (the 7 Oct massacre). If some far-right academic had celebrated the terrorist attack of Anders Breivik, dismissal would also be justified.
Maarten Boudry tweet mediaMaarten Boudry tweet media
Maarten Boudry@mboudry

A few years ago I recorded an episode of my podcast Forbidden Territory for @UGent (in Dutch) about the heritability of IQ. We also touched on the third rail of racial differences. Why? Because I believe academics should be free to investigate even the most “dangerous ideas.” My guest, Han van der Maas (a renowned IQ researcher at the University of Amsterdam), explained that individual IQ differences are highly heritable, but that he does not believe in differences between racial groups. His statistical and methodological arguments (e.g. Simpson paradox) convinced me at the time. Still, he hedged his bets: it remains possible that future evidence might show racial differences. And researchers should be free to investigate that hypothesis. Forty-five colleagues from my former philosophy department apparently think otherwise. They are urging the rector to fire @nathancofnas because he claims that the IQ gap between racial groups (such as whites and blacks in the US — differences that are themselves not disputed) may have partly genetic causes, rather than purely social ones like marginalization or discrimination. They label this “pseudoscience and racism.” I understand why many people are shocked by Cofnas’s claims. But this clearly falls within the scope of academic freedom. For years, the psychoanalysis of Jacques Lacan was taught and researched at my department — a complete pseudoscience. Dozens of theses and PhDs were written about it, all scientifically worthless. No one batted an eye. Unlike my colleagues, I published several papers explaining why (Lacanian) psychoanalysis is pseudoscientific (drive.google.com/file/d/0B_K-qt…). Yet I never demanded that my colleagues be fired. None of the signatories have any peer-reviewed publications on IQ or genetics. I have a letter recommending Cofnas' work on IQ from the editor-in-chief of the prestigious journal Intelligence. Even if the hypothesis of racial IQ differences could be shown to belong to the realm of pseudoscience, that still would not justify dismissal. If @UGent caves in to this demand, it will be another blow to academic freedom at my alma mater — following the new rector’s illiberal statements suggesting that researchers questioning the safety of vaccines or the Gaza “genocide” are “crossing a line that must not be crossed.” Such calls for dismissal from people without any expertise are also strategically unwise, as they only fuel “red-pilling.” When academics appear determined to suppress a dangerous idea at all costs, people understandably get suspicious: "What are they trying to hide?" And so trust in academia erodes further. youtube.com/watch?v=YHhbWm…

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Michael Schmitz
Michael Schmitz@Modemichael·
@JoshuaLWatson But it is also true that, as someone once said, most famous philosophers came to a point in their careers where they had to choose between credibility and consistency, and most chose consistency.
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Josh Watson
Josh Watson@JoshuaLWatson·
i sometimes see people argue for the consistency of two views by noting that some famous philosopher held both, saying, "believing this doesn't mean you can't also believe that, since [insert famous philosopher] believed both." but famous philosophers can also be inconsistent
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Sabine Döring
Sabine Döring@sabinedoering·
Nun ist es offiziell: Ich werde das nächste Buch am @EuckenInstitut sowie am #FRIAS an der @UniFreiburg schreiben. Wo auch könnte man besser zu Liberalismus und Gemeinwohl forschen und diskutieren?
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Michael Schmitz
Michael Schmitz@Modemichael·
@Karl_Lauterbach Faszinierend, dass man daraus den Schluss ziehen kann, keine AKWs zu bauen statt den, dass man an dieser Paralyse etwas ändern muss.
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Michael Schmitz
Michael Schmitz@Modemichael·
@yudapearl @filipbuekens @GadSaad I don‘t think we should use „philosopher“ as a honorific. Judith Butler is one, just a bad one and the worst kind of bad ones, namely a very influential bad one.
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Michael Schmitz
Michael Schmitz@Modemichael·
@bindelj They might get their minds blown if they ever actually went to Iran and saw that pretty much everybody is using Waze there - or was at least in 2018 when I visited Tehran.
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Julie Bindel
Julie Bindel@bindelj·
My Uber driver, a religious Muslim for what it’s worth, was telling me that a load of (my words coming, paraphrased) blue-fringed idiots got nasty and aggressive when they saw he was using the Waze app, because they said it was scumbag Zionist. An app. For getting around London, people.
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Michael Schmitz
Michael Schmitz@Modemichael·
@KirstenThommes @schnellenbachj Gibt es dazu Vergleichsdaten? Könnte es sein, dass in der Regierung zu sein besänftigt und einen automatisch mehr in die Mitte rücken lässt?
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Kirsten Thommes
Kirsten Thommes@KirstenThommes·
In Forschung und Lehre wird über die affektive Polarisierung unter Parteianhänger berichtet. Erstaunlich, wer sich da nichts nimmt. Quelle ist der Berliner Polarisierungsmonitor.
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Michael Schmitz
Michael Schmitz@Modemichael·
@victorckumar Yeah, but in science it means that people work together on experiments to decide between competing theories, so how is that supposed to carry over to philosophy? No experiments and not enough agreement on methodology to get a very good analogue, it seems to me.
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Victor Kumar
Victor Kumar@victorckumar·
@Modemichael It's good to do this, but it just feels like papers going back and forth, not real collaboration
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Samantha Smith
Samantha Smith@SamanthaTaghoy·
The Iranian women’s national football team refused to sing the anthem of the Islamic Regime. Tonight. At the opening match of the Asian Cup. In front of the entire world. So, to all liberal Western women: Watch and learn. THIS is what real feminism looks like.
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Felix Dachsel
Felix Dachsel@xileffff·
Feiernden Menschen im Iran, die von ihrem Schlächter befreit wurden, das Völkerrecht vorzuhalten, ist auf eine sehr europäische Art dekadent.
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florence ⏹️
florence ⏹️@morallawwithin·
I get to teach a small class on expressivism next semester, yay
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Michael Schmitz
Michael Schmitz@Modemichael·
@BachmannRudi There may be some like that in the US, but in Germany pretty much all journalists are like that. Do you really want to deny that the US press is much more critical of their government than the German press?
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Michael Schmitz
Michael Schmitz@Modemichael·
It‘s indeed a scandal. These passages in Heidegger are quite convincing. On the other hand, sources I respect (including this other guy from Berkeley, Searle) tell me that at the end of the day, Heidegger is still an idealist. What do people think about that? (I haven’t read enough Heidegger to have an opinion on this. Setting aside occasional insightful remarks like this, I always found him to be rather pompous and humorless.)
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Philippe-Antoine Hoyeck
Philippe-Antoine Hoyeck@PAHoyeck·
“Kant said that it was a scandal that no one had successfully proved the existence of the external world. Heidegger says, in Being and Time, that it’s a scandal that people are trying to prove the existence of the external world!" —Hubert Dreyfus, Great Philosophers (1987)
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Michael Schmitz
Michael Schmitz@Modemichael·
@PAHoyeck But of course there is consciousness of hammering, there are motor experiences of moving it and so on. He rightly wants to leave behind intellectualism by turning our attention to hammering (etc.), but keeps an intellectualist notion of consciousness as reflective thought.
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Philippe-Antoine Hoyeck
Philippe-Antoine Hoyeck@PAHoyeck·
"When Heidegger actually looked at the way human beings are related to the world, he found that it wasn't as subjects related to objects at all, that awareness and consciousness didn't play any role." —Hubert Dreyfus on Heidegger's Being and Time
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Michael Schmitz
Michael Schmitz@Modemichael·
Yes, I think it only sort of makes sense to adopt it out of desperation, if one wants to hold on to both physicalism and realism about consciousness and thinks that epiphenomenalism is the only way to do that. But if one thinks that, I can see sort of see why giving up either physicalism or realism may seem worse.
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Andy Masley
Andy Masley@AndyMasley·
Epiphenomenalism seems like the very worst option in philosophy of mind, because it preserves the absolute worst of dualism and physicalism. Qualia aren't physical, but we have no epistemic access to them at all. Every debate about qualia hasn't been caused at all by either participant having qualia, but they're also there separate from the physical world. I meet a lot of people smarter than me who entertain epiphenomenalism and I have yet to hear an argument for how I could even even consider it in the first place.
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Michael Schmitz
Michael Schmitz@Modemichael·
@totalreporter Meine Theorie: Die globale Selfie-Industrie hat schon lange die allermeisten Veranstaltungen auf der Erde übernommen.
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Frédéric Schwilden
Frédéric Schwilden@totalreporter·
Meine Theorie: Die Münchner Sicherheitskonferenz, das Weltwirtschaftsforum in Davos und die UN-Klimakonferenz sind in Wahrheit Veranstaltungen der globalen Selfie-Industrie.
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Michael Schmitz
Michael Schmitz@Modemichael·
Consciousness is not the only thing that is of value, but the only thing that values.
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