To get things started I’ll state my most controversial views.

  1. I think J.K. Rowling is alright. And that by definition I’m what some would call a “TERF”.

I think there are fundamental differences between men and women, and how one feels doesn’t really change that. Personality traits and mental illness do not change biology.

  1. I’m an atheist. I’m not convinced of any deities, but that’d be pretty cool to find out if there were any, or any deep answer to the universe for that matter.

  2. Climate change is a real and present danger, But there’s fuck all I can do about it from an individual standpoint right now.

  3. Aliens seem like a very real possibility with all the seemingly credible sources lately but I’m not convinced. My best guess is that it’s an intentional thing to mess with other countries.

  4. I’m nearly a free speech absolutist. I think one should not be afraid to voice their views. And that censorship only hurts human progress.

  5. The main controversy surrounding this instance, lolis. I don’t care what people beat it to as long as no one is being harmed. Drawings don’t have emotions, bodies, or rights.

  • CyanParsnips@burggit.moe
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    1 year ago

    I’m saying there’s an objective standard of what’s beneficial to one’s continued existence, and an important factor is balance with quality of life.

    Could you expand on this? I’m not sure what you mean.

    • livixPmfOQRj@burggit.moeOPM
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      1 year ago

      To put away the confusion. Do we both agree that there is a generally common state of well being that is considered healthy? That health is not entirely subjective and that there are common variables for human well being? I.e. putting your hand in lava is not beneficial?

      • CyanParsnips@burggit.moe
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        1 year ago

        Depends on if that includes mental health - how is mental health judged? Depending on who you ask it could be happiness, success, ability to give joy to those around you, spiritual fulfillment, inner peace. Some are mutually exclusive, plus thoughts, emotions, and experiences all raise some while lowering others in a mix depending on the instance.

        Physical health pretty linear with some clear ways to quantify it though. So physical health yes, mental health no.

          • CyanParsnips@burggit.moe
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            1 year ago

            I gave it some more thought and I’m changing my answer to yes to both physical and mental. Mental for the reasons above, physical - well, while there’s a pretty universal idea of what being healthy physically means, the scale between that and physically unhealthy isn’t as linear is it first seemed to me. Is it healthier to lose your thumb or your index finger? Is being deaf healthier than being blind?

            So, yes.