rules and discipline. - rule and discipline.
- Japanese do not follow the rules.
- observe discipline
- No discipline to follow the rules.
- What is discipline?
- air
- the general will
- Even General Will 2.0 wrote [The general will is similar to the sense of reading the air.
- The âgeneral willâ advocated by French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau refers to a collective will that goes beyond individual interests and considers the well-being of society as a whole. In Hiroki Azumaâs âGeneral Will 2.0,â this âgeneral willâ is said to be similar to a sense of reading the air; in other words, it reflects the values and consciousness that we all unconsciously share.
Broad listening is AI-like induction. - broad listening is AI-like induction. - Itâs not like âinduction.â - If itâs âAI-like induction,â well, I guess so. - Induction is a method of reasoning that derives general laws and principles from individual, specific cases. For example, observing the sun rise repeatedly and drawing the conclusion that âthe sun rises every dayâ is inductive reasoning. - If an AI derives a general law or principle that is not necessarily correct from a few âindividual specific cases,â âinductionâ
What is discipline?
- A person who touches the body of the opposite sex at work is fired.
- It generates an ethic that says you shouldnât do that kind of behavior.
- violence creates discipline
- One person does act X and is beaten by a competent person, another person sees this and thinks that it is unethical to do act X. This creates ethics.
- Mackieâs Theory of Error
- This idea refers to the process by which ethics is formed through observed outcomes and social experiences, and is considered a concept similar to âsocial learningâ or âconsequentialismâ in ethics.
- First, the process by which others judge an action to be unethical based on observed conduct is an example of ethical judgment learned from experience. This relates to the Social Learning Theory, which states that people form their own ethical standards by watching the actions of others and their consequences. This theory is based on Banduraâs (Albert Bandura) âmodelingâ or âobservational learning.â We see that behavior is rewarded or punished, and we decide whether it is good or bad ethically.
- It is also associated with a form of Consequentialism (Consequentialism). Consequentialism judges whether an action is ethically good or bad based on the consequences of the action. Typical examples include John Stuart Mill.âs utilitarianism (Utilitarianism), in which the criterion for judgment is whether the consequences of an action result in happiness or unhappiness for people.
- The formation of such ethics is based on personal observation and experience, a concept in which social impact and consequences are important.
- Mackie (J.G. Mackie, John Leslie Mackie) is best known for his âError Theoryâ in the field of ethics. He took the position that all ethical claims are âfalse,â and argued that people believe moral facts because of false assumptions and social conditioning.
- Specifically, McKee denied that moral claims are objectively correct and argued that morality has no objective foundation. His âerror theoryâ holds that what we think is morally right is actually shaped by social customs and personal beliefs, not objective truth.
- Thus, the situation you described of âseeing others perform act X and judging it to be unethicalâ is also viewed by McKeeâs theory as another matter of whether it is objectively correct, although people feel that way based on their social experiences and observations. In other words, McKeeâs position is that moral judgments are a kind of âillusionâ and have no actual objective basis.
- In this sense, it can be said that McKee takes a critical position on the process by which ethical judgments are formed by looking at the actions of others, in that it is âsocially constructedâ and not an objective fact.
Dismissed by getting flamed on Twitter.
- It is collective decision-making of the people.
- Is this democracy?
- Even Naomi Traudenâs âuncleâs assortmentâ comment has come under fireâŠCramped internet space âburns no matter what you say,â expert says. 359550
- It is the employer who is invoking violence in regards to this termination.
- Flames on social networking sites are not direct violence.
- Pythagorean switch
- Hacks of violent devices
- Hacking Violent Devices through Victim Role-Playing
- It is the employer who is invoking violence in regards to this termination.
- The benefits of conducting such a firestorm in the language of a virtual enemy country
- LLM and the battle for public opinion
- Shrink the freedom of those around you to defend themselves.
- Cosmic War.
- The Political Cost of War
- No one dies
- dragon drone
- hell
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