All of that is what we start with - the inheritance we are lumbered with. — Ludwig V
Well, we're not born tabula rasa, but neither were we born with indoctrination, presuppositions, etc.
Since computer/Internet/AI analogies are all the rage, we could say we were born with an operating system. Within the constraints of brain morphology and the physics of neurology, it's self-assembling and self-coding, which we haven't achieved with digital tech yet. We could take a step nearer it by having two apps which rewrite each other based on what the other app just rewrote in them -- or make two AIs talk to each other and see what they come up with. But human beings actually rewire their own brains based on what they experience
and what they make of the experiences. To some degree, experience (in the broadest sense, to include environmental exposure) impacts gene expression, if not gene mutation. So far as we currently know, this is an almost exclusively deterministic process, but nothing structural in the human make up (not that we know) prevents conscious interventions that could impact gene expression.
Short story, human psychology is the process of using a biological apparatus designed not only to change and adapt to external experience, but also to internal experience, even consciously-driven/directed internal experience (e.g., meditation, psychedelics etc.) We are self-changing biological engines by design. We don't seem to have an "Undo" key, though. It's more of an "Do-over-better" key. We literally process past experience and change our own makeup (within broad constraints) to handle future experience differently.
So, we're able to do examine the substrate elements that people who subscribe to "belief" build their beliefs atop -- which begs the question: Then why are believers so resistant to that examination? People like to talk about the human characteristic of resistance to change, as if it's innate to human nature. Pshaw. Up to a certain age, children show no signs of that but precisely the opposite. Until what I call the "My dad's stronger!" age when they develop identity attachments, they literally have no beliefs. They'll argue with each other about things -- but not because they "believe" them, because believing necessarily implies the possibility of disbelieving. They do neither, just like small fry who don't know what water is can't "believe" they're swimming in it. What kids know is, for them,
all there is, so "It
IS bigger!" isn't even the kind of thing that could be "believed" in the first place.
So, no -- change resistance isn't a structural, immutable characteristic of nature. Something induced it as we grew up. And it's just a symptom. Believers display resistance to the
examination of their biases, presuppositions, indoctrination, attachments, etc. before the prospect of changing their beliefs even comes up -- not because they think examination would force them to change their beliefs,
but merely because it has the potential to put them in a position where they might have to change them. They're not just resistant to changing, they're resistant to
looking. So, in this way, children are smarter than they are. (Which is one reason why Jesus recommended we become like children, I'm sure.) [<-- So what's the difference between that and saying, "I believe" ?
:grin: For me, they are not synonymous.)
Do you mean that the suspicion of "once for all" is wisdom. I wouldn't argue with that. — Ludwig V
No, "once and for all" isn't suspicious in my view. It used to be, but I've resolved my suspicions. "Once and for all" is a fantasy, a Holy Grail, a delusion that arises from psychosis (when taken generically, not as defined currently in notorious psychiatric fashion as a quantum instead of an analog affair, i.e., a
spectrum). A little hysteria that makes us misinterpret an obviously friendly gesture is still hysteria, for example. It still caused a minute break from reality. The motivation for hoping and searching for "once and for all" is contrary to every obvious aspect of existence because existence is continually changing, and we don't have a fucking clue to what extent it's capable of changing or even if there are any limits at all. I like to tell people that "absolute truth" isn't just impossible, it's incoherent, because it's not truth if it doesn't inform us about reality, and there is nothing immutable about reality other than that it's mutable. If everything absolutely stopped changing so that the truth about it were absolute, there would be no way to know if anything still existed for there to be a truth about. The truth is always changing, as far as we can tell. Ideas like "once and for all" actually have
nothing to do with truth. They are vain attempts to resolve
psychological dissonance by people who cannot bear the vagaries of mutability. I call them "codependents".
I'm not sure it's a presumption. If one understands when a belief is invalid, then it follows that one understands when a belief is valid, don't you think? That's true even if one has never encountered a valid belief. I would say that that approach hopes, even expects, that there will be some true beliefs to be found. Proving that there are none is very hard, since you would have to examine every possible belief and discard them all. That's an endless task. As for your "what if", it is not a great worry - you'll never know for sure. — Ludwig V
I think you missed my point, partly my fault because of how I worded it. Saying, "If one understands when a belief is invalid, then it follows..." demonstrates presumption that there is a belief, whether valid or invalid. You can't determine anything at all about something unless it's there. So, "If one understands when a belief is invalid, then it follows..."
presumes the existence of a belief
which is coherent enough that evaluating its validity would, in turn, be coherent. If believing itself is incoherent, then all beliefs are the result of that incoherency. (I wonder, maybe the it would have been better to use "incoherent" instead of "irrational" in the OP?)
That is the presumption I meant.
Presumptions may be found to be true or false. Good arguments are a different matter. — Ludwig V
Yes, but you need to consider the
chronicity and timing here -- something that philosophers, in general, have been deplorably negligent in, given their obsession with freeze-framing the truth. At the point that it's a presumption, it
cannot have been found true or false, because once it's found one way or the other, it's no longer a presumption. Problems arising from pretending that presumptions are self-evident or treating them like conclusions when no work was done to arrive at the conclusion can't be redeemed by "but maybe later we'll find out it's true or false".
That sounds very reasonable. However, the proof of any method is, in the end, the results it produces. — Ludwig V
Of course, which is the only reason I'd have adopted it and stuck with it so far. Works great!
:blush:
I don't think that's bizarre at all. It's horses for courses. Philosophy, Science and everyday life are different environments and our different ways of making sense in each environment are, on the whole, pragmatically successful - mostly. — Ludwig V
That's simply not the case. Everyday life is primary. All of our fields of study are at best (when not compromised or fabricated)
secondary processing efforts totally dependent on primary experience for their validity, meaning, and significance. The everyday life of a scientist in the lab or in the real-life "field" or at the telescope is the basis for all the science they generate. So, science is
not something that's non-anecdotal like people pretend it is. We have merely exempted the primary experience of a person trained in processes and equipment, then recorded in lab notes, as something "more than" mere (pfft) subjective experience. It might be of a higher quality/caliber than the "everyday life" lived by untrained people,
with respect to training/lack of training, but it is in no way different in kind with respect to subjectivity.
All that to say, no: everyday life is primary experience in specific real environments, but academic fields (whether done inside or outside academic institutions) are not just the same kind of things. Being secondary processing, they do not belong to the real-world environments that the data they process was obtained from. They aren't the same kind of thing, so it makes no sense to say they are "different environments" as if they were ontologically and epistemically similar.
What's more, the real world is not compartmentalized. We compartmentalized our processing of it. That doesn't mean our compartmentalization necessarily or best reflects reality, and it certainly doesn't impose itself on reality in any material way. Academic categories (or any other abstract compartmentalization) have no bearing on reality. They are just reflections (at best) which do not divide, shape, or alter phenomena—only perception. Their only impact is through human mediaries that impose them on a naturally integrated world.
Besides, I wasn't making a philosophical statement there, I was making a historical one. The divisions between our fields have study have, in fact, caused plenty of problems that only recently we've taken steps towards rectifying. One example is "interdisciplinary studies". Well, we wouldn't have needed to reintegrate them if we hadn't compartmentalized them in the first place.
I was actually talking about the
cognitive compartmentalization effected by all this. Except as a self-defense against horrific trauma, cognitive compartmentalization is always detrimental. A great example is how we presume violence on the part of government is
ipso auctore virtuous, but violence on the part of non-governmental parties -- even if it's exactly the same actions in far less severe and detrimental degrees -- is considered "criminal". A Madoff is regarded as far less vile than the neighborhood racketeer.
I want to say thank you for this discussion, I'm enjoying it -- but especially, I appreciate your openness and honesty and effort to understand what I'm saying as opposed to what I usually get: reactions against whatever spooks were triggered in people's heads by what I said. It's really cool. Refreshing.