Broadly speaking, I agree. But that doesn't mean you should discourage theoretical discourse!Studying theory "for its own sake" is valuable in the way knitting is valuable, not in the way a soup kitchen is valuable.
That theories of how to improve social relations are instrumental is a virtue (it means they can do it), not a fault.
I'm not trying to disparage anyone by saying that a person who is so socially isolated that they don't have any friends can't make social change. You've got a hermit, he lives in the woods, he never talks to a soul in his life. He wants to change society. I don't think this is very smart, or a very good way to be a hermit. One shouldn't try to repair social relations if they don't have any. It's like campaigning to stop deforestation when you live on a desert island. The theory of change here is basically "prayer".
Only if you're genuinely of the belief that "understanding theory" is akin to worship or self-purification can it even make sense to think that the man who knows nothing of feminism but is kind and understanding to his friends is worthy of denigration, or that our friendless hermit is doing literally anything of value whatsoever.
This is basically an admission that you believe that studying theory has no value.
Also, you didn't address my main point. Can men do feminism in all-male spaces? If not, they can only do feminism in relation to women. That is essentialism.
I mean, if you think your promoting theoretical discourse, that's fine. You still haven't addressed my central points about essentialism.Reread the conversation that prompted this, and tell me that I'm "discouraging theoretical discourse."
Hardly a fair comparison. After you're done knitting you have a utile and hopefully beautiful item, like an awesome scarf or something.Studying theory "for its own sake" is valuable in the way knitting is valuable, not in the way a soup kitchen is valuable.
Theory is much more beautiful than knitting. The term 'utile' is antiquated, appearing mostly in Bentham. I never was a fan of Bentham...Dewey, now there's a good pragmatist. I'm a pragmatic moralist, so I guess I'm more like Emerson I want to say?Hardly a fair comparison. After you're done knitting you have a utile and hopefully beautiful item, like an awesome scarf or something.
In artistic content, Andrew Dice Clay is the arch-patriarchh.
. And it has nothing to do with Andrew Dice Clay.
I just meant that a scarf or a jumper is a useful thing with a practical, as well as aesthetic, value.Theory is much more beautiful than knitting. The term 'utile' is antiquated, appearing mostly in Bentham.
this is like getting mad at a guy because he plays Donald Trump on saturday night liveIn artistic content, Andrew Dice Clay is the arch-patriarch. Why should the fact that he had good relationships with women change my mind about his art?
I never proposed maintaining good relationships. I proposed being a good friend.Lord knows, beiser's strategy of maintaining good relationships with women does nothing to counteract phallocentrism. It's not even clear his strategy counteracts the patriarchy. It seems to me the patriarchy wants men to be gentlemen while preserving oppressive social conditions.
male lesbian come here, we'll hang out in soho and i'll find you a proper cafe with a massive window and we can look at all the women walking by (in a very respectful way), you'll get to see loads of them a herd of wildebeestim not gonna wade into the phylogistocentrism morass here but malelesbian's theory of change reminds me a lot of a set of science textbooks i had in 6th grade. they had been produced during a culture war in maybe the 80s, and so every scientist in the book was a woman. every single one. the only exceptions were a man repairing a telephone pole and a garbage man. i don't think this is some great crime but I do think it's very silly.
anyway, if you ask me, the primary barriers to the flourishing of women are structural, economic and legal. to the extent they're cultural, it's about the culture inside institutions, not whether public access TV is sufficiently yonic. that malelesbian is more worried about a washed up comic than the creeping illegalization of safe abortion is the kind of position that you can only understand when you remember that he professes to have never seen—much less spoken to—a "real, live" woman in his life.
Nah, I think he let on a while back that he's 30 or so.unrelated, is the "I've been a male lesbian since 2006" line about how male_lesbian was born in 2006? it's all making sense now
You could take turns doing Attenborough-style voiceovers!male lesbian come here, we'll hang out in soho and i'll find you a proper cafe with a massive window and we can look at all the women walking by (in a very respectful way), you'll get to see loads of them a herd of wildebeest