In France and elsewhere, everyday insecurity hurts the poor much more than the rich.

  • AFineWayToDie [he/him]
    ·
    1 year ago

    Public protests and uprisings can play a positive role if they are sustained by an emancipatory vision, such as the 2013-14 Maidan uprising in Ukraine

    How is this the same guy who wrote so much based shit. Does he just have a blind spot when it comes to Russia? Or has he never been as insightful as I thought?

    • Poogona [he/him]
      ·
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      Don't shortchange your own judgement and get stuck looking for the guy who is never wrong. Zizek was great at pointing out the ways that ideology undergirds entertainment, but that doesn't necessarily translate to total political coherence. He was probably so good at recognizing ideology because he deep down knows how susceptible to it he apparently is.

      • AFineWayToDie [he/him]
        ·
        1 year ago

        Thank you. I always say, support ideas and not people. But we can't help but latch on to certain personalities.

    • Mindfury [he/him]
      ·
      1 year ago

      reminder that chomsky-yes-honey is still generally respected for his linguistics work

      (although i'm sure someone here with a bigger brain than mine will be able to criticise that effectively too)

      • ssjmarx [he/him]
        ·
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        AFAIK all of the animal language studies were trying to prove Chomsky wrong, and they all failed. His work isn't totally explanatory but it's the foundation of our current understanding of how language develops.

          • ssjmarx [he/him]
            ·
            1 year ago

            Ape sign language studies mostly, but they've also tried to teach language to birds, dolphins, etc and it never works.

            The old idea of language development is that when you babble as an infant, you occasionally make words, and your parents reward you for it - thus teaching you language. Chomsky argued that language is too complex to be explained by this mechanism, and it was a major debate in language development for a long time. So the way to test this theory is to try to teach simple language via this mechanism to the most intelligent non-humans we have access to.

            The animal studies that looked into this were mostly done with apes and monkeys. You've probably heard of Coco the Gorilla - well she was just one of many that we tried to teach sign language too. Unfortunately, despite the hype and marketing around Coco the results reported by her trainers were never replicated, and a systematic review of all ape language studies (which were done for decades) revealed that basically no ape had ever actually learned sign language - at best they learned a couple of signs and learned to associate those signs with food and attention from their trainers (the same way a dog can learn individual words), at worst they learned basically nothing at all but the trainers (who usually were not fluent in ASL themselves) interpreted random arm movements as valid signs.

      • NoGodsNoMasters [they/them, she/her]
        ·
        1 year ago

        Don't think anyone would unironically say he hasn't done quite a bit for linguistics (except ironically, which I enjoy doing because it's funny), but there's a fair amount of his stuff that is fairly controversial