Introspection is a type of reflection, which is a type of problem-solving, not a type of knowledge. — Galuchat
Why not depend on both?
Seems to me they are different types of problem-solving tools.
Introspection examines mental events.
Reason creates and/or develops arguments. — Galuchat
Mental faculties don't have credibility, people do. — Galuchat
Now that makes sense to me. We could possibly divide all knowledge into two - internal (self) and external (physical world). Introspection is an inquiry into the former. — TheMadFool
Whether we view the weather physically or virtually - both are simulations, who relate to the same derivation of possible weather.
The tempo of physically observed and virtual weather is the same. Which is to say they are principally and/or functionally the same.
But the rhythm of the two, which is to say the composition, does not align. This makes them practically different. — Shamshir
I'm curious why you would consider an objective truth a hindrance - as the title sets an objective tempo?
All answers would thus follow to be principally objective, yet practically subjective and I think it would be hard to be mislead by one due to their layered functions.
If there is no objective truth to the query, then any posited quality would be worthless - methinks. — Shamshir
Anyway, I don't understand this non-rational stuff you're talking about.
The way I make sense of non-rational is that it doesn't involve thinking of any kind at all, not even irrational thinking. — TheMadFool
But is introspection a kind of knowledge at all, or if it be a kind of knowledge is it a valid one? I don't think that I'd agree that introspection is a kind of knowledge, but rather is way of thinking. We look into ourselves, and try and identify -- make into words -- different parts of our mind. This is the belief that is based on a gut feeling. This is the belief that is based on an observation. The terms "gut feeling" and "observation" are products of a way of thinking about our beliefs and classifying them -- the introspective way. — Moliere
Knowing things like intelligence, ambition, laziness, focus, emotion and the list goes on without introspection might be just an exercise in theory, I don't believe you can really know them without introspection. Rationality, on the other hand, does not only not always yield results and it can lead one astray. — Judaka
I think introspection should be a large component of any philosopher's understanding of the world. Philosophers who fail to utilise their understanding of themselves and others and rely on rationality instead fail and end up in their own little world. — Judaka
I don't understand because rationality is mandatory and not an option you can deny. I read somewhere that to be irrational is to fail or, worse, die a premature death — TheMadFool
In other words introspection has to be done rationally. Otherwise you'd be schizophrenic, right? — TheMadFool
I understand because you read Lao Tzu and the Tao Te Ching is, in my humble opinion, a different type of philosophy. It's replete with what are normally considered fatal errors in philosophy - vagueness, paradoxes, etc. — TheMadFool
You probably mean that you think for yourself and use external material/sources simply as a good place to start an investigation. That's wonderful but how do you deal with frustration? I mean some philosophical ideas are notoriously difficult. Wouldn't it be illogical to go into the wilderness without a guide/friend who knows the trails? — TheMadFool
I honestly respect a philosophical view built from within and on ones own than the regurgitation of historical philosophy if I had to choose, although a mix of both is ideal. — DingoJones
So overall I think introspection is valuable, but I am skeptical that "rationality" and introspection can really be two separate categories when armchair philosophizing. When building a bridge, yeah of course they are different, but when pondering philosophical questions, that becomes much less clear. — rlclauer
I do not think there is a relationship between knowledge being important and engineering as an occupation. I think engineering has financial incentives, but knowledge is acquired through many different occupations, none of them being superior to the other, as can be seen in the raging debates between philosophers and physicists. — rlclauer
A simulation is an objective reality - its subjectivity relies on its relativity to our own.
Is it misleading or are we mismatching - tempo or rhythm? — Shamshir
If there is no objective truth, is there subjective truth? — Shamshir
Let's call the place Master Minds, with capital letter M's, so that Hanover will think he is in a classy place. We can then all be M&M's. :cool: — Sir2u
The Worthless Pseudo-Intellectual Nerousis Waste Of Time Trivial Folly Inconclusive Incoherent Play Dumb Charade Pathetic Morons I Hate You All Die Mother Fuckers Forum. — S
Hmmm.. I distinctly remember having to reinsert an extra space after I completed the sentence and asked about a double space no longer being necessary and was told that was an outdated idea. Now having said that: there is absolutely a setting on your margins that will increase the length of characters and spaces contained within a specified field to meet the perimeters. Word wrap is a common one that is used that I believe performs a similar but KISS application. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
The rise in acceptance among Christians is quite amazing, even within the last few decades. — NOS4A2

There are in contemporary philosophy debates over deflationary character of metaphysic. It has two main cores: that metaphysic questions are trivial, and answers are obvious, and that metaphysic questions are verbal, they are about use of words, not about facts. — Eiwar
PS___If my comments are off-topic and irrelevant, I will apologize for hijacking your thread. — Gnomon
I am constantly testing my personal beliefs and feelings against those of other people -- as in this thread -- to see if they know something I don't. — Gnomon
What do you mean by "anti-Islamic" content? I don't understand this - Islam, as a "belief"-based state has every right to be criticized as any. That it shields itself from criticisms behind labeling others as "anti-Islamic" or "Islamophobic" is a part of the fascist nature of "belief"-based states such as Islam. — A Gnostic Agnostic
Remember that one can be Gnostic to any religion. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I find "believe is not a virtue, as one can "know", via conscience, who, what, where, why, when, how and if *not* to "believe", and this is necessarily superior to "belief". — A Gnostic Agnostic
I did not provide reasoning for a "lack of belief" anywhere - that "belief" is not a virtue does not mean lack of a belief. I understand "belief" has a utility, but the point is it is not a virtue. That "belief" itself is "believed" to be a virtue is a problem. One can have a belief, but when it is made into a virtue it becomes problematic as there is a state superior to "believing", which is "knowing". This includes knowing what not to believe, which requires conscience (ie. self-inquiry). — A Gnostic Agnostic
I find "belief" to be the agency required by what is referred to as "satan" to confuse people into "believing" such: whatever "good" actually is, is really evil, and whatever "evil" is, is actually good - like an inversion. I find "belief" therefor to be like chains that enslave people to something that is not actually real and, as it happens, the reality is actually the opposite. How potent can a god be if it requires "belief"? Is it not the goal of "satan" to make people "believe" that satan is god? In what possible scenario would "belief" be a virtue if so? To indulge in the very thing satan needs to confuse? This is why I do not grant for a moment that "belief" is any kind of virtue. — A Gnostic Agnostic
You are smart enough to know that indeed this is a rant, but I would suggest another question, what is behind your rant? — 3017amen
You might like the Tao Te Ching better. Or the traditional split: Daoism in the sheets, Confucianism in the streets. — StreetlightX
If you don't think metaphysics is a "useful" concept, — Gnomon
My original comment was simply an attempt to point-out that the visceral feeling of knowing is equivalent to Faith --- what's true for you, may not be true for me. Faith is based on a fractional understanding of reality. Only by sharing and comparing our personal beliefs can we get a feeling for truth and knowledge in a more general sense. — Gnomon
The best current book for the lay reader is Nick Lane's The Vital Question. — StreetlightX
What think you of this? — Banno
Thus ironically, we have no general goal or purpose, but each day is a sort of bad faith in output expectations due to our initial conditions of survival, boredom, and comfort. This requires social organization to shape us to value the daily outputs we create. This becomes a de facto goal. It is an odd squashing of a general purposelessness into detailed output. Faux mini-goals masks the general purposelessness. What happens when it is stark individual purposelessness? Angst, uneasiness, disorientation. Back to the outputs we go. — schopenhauer1
we do not know what they would look like — Bitter Crank
Chasing the dream of absolute Truth is not practical for materialistic purposes. — Gnomon
I like that you put evolve in quotes there, because abiogenisis is not evolution. For evolution you need reproduction, and then you get a self-perpetuating proces. Molecules don't reproduce, — ChatteringMonkey
3.5 billion years ago, which is actually pretty fast after the earth became somewhat suited for life. Then it took a very long time to evolve multi cellular life. — ChatteringMonkey
"If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough." — rlclauer
Don't you keep yourself logged in? How dare you log out! — Baden
That's true, but has any subjective worldview come close to absolute Truth? We can either strive to get closer to objective truth, or give-up that dream of mutual understanding, and just retreat into our little isolated cells of solipsism. It's the realization that an insular worldview leads to misunderstanding and mutual distrust that drives us to seek the holy grail of unbiased objectivity. — Gnomon
I suppose that the conclusion of every sound logical argument flows is a reasonable deduction from the truth of its premises. However, does every argument need to follow a or some logical form for the conclusion to be reasonably deduced? If so, in the example above, what is the logical form that this argument takes. — MichaelJYoo
This paradox arises out of the ill-defined nature of borders and nations. Are there other things we can apply it to? It might be helpful in rigorously defining concepts. — Paralogism
Alright so in your last comment "you" is not me, but "one" is that right? — Judaka
I've been clear I don't think you've done anything that would require any action from the moderators. — T Clark
In my opinion, the function of Philosophy, as opposed to Religion, is to find some objective worldview that all reasonable people can agree on. — Gnomon
Rational philosophy will never reach absolute Truth (God's values), but by canceling-out conflicting human values, we may get closer to a general truth that we can all live with. — Gnomon
I'm still here so I can't have disobeyed the rules too badly. The forum is not mine, I cannot say what it is but what it is to me is still intact. It doesn't matter to me whether people want or don't want me to be here. — Judaka
The word "responsibilties" holds a certain importance to me, so when a forum that I barely visit and consider entirely dispensible has rules that I haven't even read, I am unhappy about saying I have a responsibility to abide those rules. There are consequences for not abiding by them, that's what I'd prefer to say. — Judaka
Yes, it's my choice to be hostile, I do not need validation from anyone but myself. I have the capacity to be unkind. When I believe it is right to be unkind then it is right. I know that no matter what I believed there'll be people who disagree, it was never an option to act in accordance with all the responsibilities people think I have. — Judaka
