That would make Mike Pence President and Nancy Pelosi Vice President. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
As far as I know the laws of logic, the rules of syllogisms, an introduction in deduction and induction are not taught in primary school, and because of this I think a lot of people don't know how to reason or use logic well. — Josh Alfred
My question for you is: can we be certain that the laws of logic are valid? — Towers
Have philosophers of the past and present something to say about it? — FranckFriends
Since I became vegan, many people have told me, "You think you're better than everybody else, sitting on your high horse." — chatterbears
The thing is, everybody has values in which they deem as higher than another person's values — chatterbears
I bet most of the people in this forum could confidently state that they are morally superior to a child rapist. — chatterbears
If so, then it wouldn't be surprising for a vegan to feel morally superior to a non-vegan. — chatterbears
I am not comparing child rape to non-vegans, but I was trying to illustrate that we all make some value judgment on another person's actions. — chatterbears
."You think you're better than everybody else, sitting on your high horse." — chatterbears
And we have an internal model of one's self, in which we feel morally superior to that person. I'd say I am also morally superior to a husband who cheats and/or beats his wife. — chatterbears
"You think you're better than everybody else, sitting on your high horse." — chatterbears
You're only addressing the role of intuition vis a vis empirical matters, so since I already more or less agree, I can't find much to respond to. — Janus
I'm getting a little frustrated here. Nowhere did I say intuition was an end. You seem to read into my argument a lot. So do you consider reasoning a beginning, an end, or what? — Noble Dust
Again, "inspired or magical" is a pretty uncharitable response here, simply based on the tone. — Noble Dust
Do you really think that that's why I'm placing importance on intuition? — Noble Dust
Do you think that's why Janus is making an argument in regards to intuition? — Noble Dust
You seem to have a charicature in your mind, probably based on those days in which you placed importance on intuition, of what people who place value on intuition are like. And furthermore, a feeling of "inspiration" (not sure what "magical" means) is natural when the intuition is used. I openly take that feeling for what it is and listen to it; I don't disparage it. — Noble Dust
Ugh...again, where did I say intuition is a conclusion? What does that even mean? It doesn't even make grammatical sense. — Noble Dust
Intuition deals with the immanently personal; sample size isn't important. You're using the rules of the game of reason to try to eliminate intuition (which doesn't play by reason's rules in the first place), from whatever game it is you're playing here — Noble Dust
Essentially, intuition can never have a place in that game if the rules of intuition aren't allowed into the ring. — Noble Dust
If intuition has to play by reason's rules, then intuition is indeed worthless, which is basically what you're trying to set up here. But again, that's an uncharitable charicature of what intuition is, and it reveals your own lack of intuition. — Noble Dust
I never tried to argue that intuition should be used "alone", or that it was better; I've already stressed that. Or, if something I said led you to believe that I think that about intuition, then I didn't word it right. The whole point I was making is that both intuition and reason are valuable. I'm making that argument because you don't seem to consider intuition valuable — Noble Dust
I said your interpretation of intuition as "forcing an answer" was uncharitable, because it's inaccurate. Maybe uncharitable isn't the right word; it was just an inaccurate interpretation of what I mean by intuition; it seems like you haven't given much consideration to what I'm saying intuition is, and what it's function is within the larger scheme of thinking. Or maybe I just haven't given a good enough picture of what I think about that. — Noble Dust
I'm more interested in Charles Ives than Carl Sagan, so maybe that's where we have an issue here? Indeed, music, especially the music of someone like Ives, is pretty much the supreme fusion of reason and intuition — Noble Dust
Yes, well my only problem is that you seem to think that the fact there might be appropriate logics in love, the arts, ethics, philosophy and religion has any bearing on what I have been arguing. Perhaps you could choose some of my actual statements and show how it would be relevant. — Janus
Prior to the advent of an explicitly understood scientific method, intuition indeed reigned (you only have to look at Aristotle's physics or Chinese medicine) — Janus
In the domains of religion and the arts, intuition still reigns. People's understanding of poems, paintings, music, mystical writings and religious allegories is still mostly an intuitive process. — Janus
What do you think theology consists in, for example? There is plenty of logic in that discipline. — Janus
How would you know that one thing is entailed by another if not be intuition? — Janus
I just want to point out that I have not claimed that intuition is necessarily a good guide when it comes to empirical, scientific or even everyday knowledge. I think your definition and understanding of intuition is too narrowly focussed. — Janus
When it comes to matters that fall outside the everyday, empirical or scientific, apart from the fact that logical consistency and coherency are obviously also often important, personal feeling, intuition and experience become paramount. Think of love, the arts, ethics, philosophy and religion in this connection. — Janus
... intuition, on the other hand, has the benefit of knowing the conclusion without taking exhaustive steps that need to be perfect; Intuition has the potential to avoid the mistakes in reasoning which lead to badly reasoned conclusions. — Noble Dust
You misunderstand intuition if you think it means forcing an answer. That's a pretty uncharitable interpretation of what I've been trying to express. — Noble Dust
Is there (in your notion) some sort of (metaphysical) the truth that is intrinsic to the universe or our experience of the universe?
— Mayor of Simpleton
My intuition says "yes"; my reason says "???" — Noble Dust
Intuition yields a different kind of knowledge (knowledge by feeling, by familiarity) than rational, empirical knowledge. — Janus
Why is this good or wise? Because reason doesn't know what intuition means. But intuition means what reason doesn't know. And neither is "better" than the other. — Noble Dust
I like that definition, although I can tell it’s slanted towards your feelings about intuition. — Noble Dust
I'm just bored by the concept of cognitive bias because everyone has it. So it's important to get to the point where we recognize that we have it, but from there, there's no reason to put it on a pedestal or use it as an intellectual weapon. When we do that, we undermine intuition; you have an intuition about wisdom; so do I. It's a fantasy to imagine that you or I or anyone is abstractly analyzing human thought from a neutral vantage point at which cognitive bias doesn't exist. — Noble Dust
What is intuition, then? — Noble Dust
I'm just bored by the concept of cognitive bias because everyone has it. — Noble Dust
So it's important to get to the point where we recognize that we have it, but from there, there's no reason to put it on a pedestal or use it as an intellectual weapon. — Noble Dust
When we do that, we undermine intuition; you have an intuition about wisdom; so do I. — Noble Dust
It's a fantasy to imagine that you or I or anyone is abstractly analyzing human thought from a neutral vantage point at which cognitive bias doesn't exist. — Noble Dust
May I ask about your take on the Humean saying that reason is (instrumental) or a "slave" to the passions/emotions/desire?
On the other end I have the thought about Buddhist realizing ''nirvana'' as a state of mind similar to which the mind is no longer constrained by desire/emotions/the passions.
Does that sound correct to you? — Posty McPostface
In another thread, you talked about cognitive dissonance. If we were really or 'truly' reasonable, then cognitive dissonances would never arise. Just using that as an example to make the point clear.
Also, I would suggest that emotions have not cornered the market on irrational behaviour in the same manner that applications of pure logical can be irrational in terms of tendency toward a cognitive bias.
— Mayor of Simpleton
Again, if we were 'truly rational' being then cognitive bias or dissonance would never occur.
We basically react on the basis of either logic or emotion or a combination of both to any given state of affairs coupled with predicating factors leading the way... whether we are aware of these predicating factors or not, but nonetheless we simply react.
— Mayor of Simpleton
So, you're going one step further or (backwards, if you prefer) and talking about needs, wants, and instinctual desires, is that correct? Perhaps, the unconscious is at play here, in some unknown manner to us all to psychologize the issue. — Posty McPostface
Comfort seems to be the key word here. Comfort is a attitude or emotion elicited from some state of affairs. That state of affairs seems driven by urges, needs, want's, which all are emotionally driven, in my mind. — Posty McPostface
I cannot ever remember making an emotional driven decision about my shoes.
— Mayor of Simpleton
Well, when you pick a pair of shoes at the store, then your decision to pick some pair of shoes is highly emotionally driven. Don't you think so? — Posty McPostface
Philosophy seems obsessed with reason. — Posty McPostface
One can run around in circles talking about it, much like the person without emotion cannot decide which pair of shoes to pick, for hours, until someone intervenes or commands a choice. — Posty McPostface
Emotions seem to make decisions possible, as to what is preferable or desireable. — Posty McPostface
People aren't either fully rational or completely irrational. — Posty McPostface
... we seem to all be animals in some sense just reacting to situations or states of affairs. — Posty McPostface
So cognitive bias must ultimately lead to something true, right? — Noble Dust
If it's such an intense issue, then it surely avails itself of something which is real, as opposed to the unreality of the cognitive bias that lead to the thing that was untrue. — Noble Dust
How does this relate to the ordinary understanding of what free will is? — tinman917
I'm young and hairless, so let me try. — Noble Dust
Cancer destroying what? — Noble Dust
Idealism opposing what? — Noble Dust
To what end? — Noble Dust
You must be a fan of Hegel then. Because that dialects in a nutshell. Heh. — Posty McPostface
You're true colors come out! You're no-one, and yet, you're oh so crucial to the existence of this forum.
Per the debate at hand about wisdom, fuck off.
Per the existence of this forum itself, thank you.
Now, what do you think about wisdom? Give me something new. — Noble Dust
But, but... Plato and them religious types that all copied his argument! How does one address the authoritarians? — Posty McPostface
I get it, I get it, it's impossible to offend you. You're an incredible castle all your own. You're clearly a relic from "the old PF days". I lay my dues before you and bow.
But you don't want that, do you? The minute I offer that to you, you'll "meow", and come up with a clever response. I respect that. I don't understand it's use, but I respect it...I guess.
But, the minute I offer that bow, you'll laugh it off.
Wait, do we have any philosophical disagreement? I can't tell; I got so rapped up in this whole wonderful game. — Noble Dust