Do you want to venture from this topic to the question of what truths liberals have historically been blind to? — frank
It is not a real condition, so I am not sure why it should be treated as such. — Jeremiah
So you didn't mean truth, you meant non-PC.
— praxis
I meant truths. — frank
I perceive a harshness to the Republican party that repels the liberal-minded, but is actually sought out by part of the population. — frank
On the policy issue, it's much more about branding and personality than policy in the US. There is plenty of evidence out there (and plenty of depressing videos) to show that Americans in general know little or nothing about the policy differences between candidates of their own party in the primaries and have only a very basic idea about policy differences among the candidates of different parties in the general (it's not just America either, policy ignorance and focus on personality is a global problem). The fact that Trump had great name recognition and had been on TV, was a businessman, and came across as much more relatable and non-political than most politicians was why he was voted in. His policy platfrom (apart from immigration where he was a bit more specific "Ban Muslims/Build a wall") was always a mess and contradictory. I mean, his policy on healthcare was "we'll get everyone great healthcare" and on the military was "we'll have a great military" and wasn't any clearer than that, and didn't need to be. — Baden
Republicans are the pragmatic, less PC folks who are capable of "handling the truth," as Jack Nicholson's character screams in that movie. — frank
And besides, other than sales and marketing people, who cares about persuading those who don't seek truth anyways? :wink: — Samuel Lacrampe
As you likely know, the inner voice can't actually be shut off. But we can learn to just keep on ignoring it every time it catches our attention. — apokrisis
First they train us to narratise to the point it is an unstoppable habit. Then they tell us off when we let our minds narratise in automatic fashion. — apokrisis
So attention can't be literally shut off. Even if what we are doing can be handled entirely automatically - like driving your car on a familiar journey - your narratising mind is going to want to wander. It will latch on to anything random and ruminate about that.
Even in deepest slow wave sleep your inner voice will be trying to say something meaningful out of blind habit.
So the DMN is rather a neurocognitive artifact. — apokrisis
neurology celebrates the efficient brain that learns to get by as inattentively as possible, — apokrisis
The neurological level need is to be efficient and think as little as possible about life. If you know the right kinds of things to do, just do them without stopping to think and debate. Focusing attention on any skilled action - even climbing the stairs - and you can set up the kind of wrestle between two processes with different basic rates (a fifth of a second vs half a second) that causes you to stumble and misfire. When it comes to action or output, one or other level of processing has to be in charge for the moment. — apokrisis
Humans have narrative consciousness, or language-structured self-consciousness. A good way to direct attention is to speak to ourselves in our heads as if we are addressing a person - our self.
So this is another habit(!) we learn. We construct an integrated tale about who we are, what we are about. There is this whole life story about the reasons we would do this or that which is all part of the learnt apparatus of being a self-regulating member of a human society. — apokrisis
A simple question - what is the neurological basis for the subconscious or unconscious mind? — EnPassant
How do physical neurons divide the psyche in this way? — EnPassant
(It is questions like this that convince me that neurology is not going to explain what the mind is.) — EnPassant
Unfortunately however, diversity often dies in a slow painful death and groupthink takes its place.
— praxis
Why does that happen? — frank
I think we need to get our definitions straight otherwise this will go nowhere. Like I said I'm no expert but I would go with the definition that consciousness is the ability to be aware of the external environment. That ability appears to be produced by parts of the brain. The tree is in the external environment. — Blake Kelson
Religion is a natural part of human experience, since it exercises parts of the brain. It works the frontal lobe; imagination, as well as various spatial or 3-D aspects of the brain. The concept of God merges opposites; left versus right is 2-D, into a neutral third, which is 3-D. Jesus on the cross in the center between two thieves is a 3-D concept. One attempts to merge opposites into a new center that is different from the two. — wellwisher
If you practice a religion, but are not aware you are doing so, due to denial it is a religion, the exercise still has the same unconscious affects. If you practice a religion, with open eyes, without denial, there is less unconsciousness. — wellwisher
The definition of religion that is now in use; religion defined by deities, allows plausible denial, by the left, based on a human tradition. — wellwisher
Manmade global warming is a religion. It is not coincidence that the right is less impacted, since they already have a core religion. They don't need another one. The left is still looking for a core replacement, that is not called a religion, based on the current definition, but which gives the same brain buzz. — wellwisher
The left was left scrambling for a new religion. It found it in Trump mythology, where Trump is the archetypical bad guy. — wellwisher
The atheist religion; based on the broader definition, is similar to a mirror image of Buddhism; opposites. Buddhism is introspective that denies the illusions of the world; cultural and materialism, in favor of developing the inner man and higher human potential. There is science in this; meditation, without the need of deities. The atheists seek a similar goal; human progress, but do so in an extroverted way, connected to materialism, technology, and cultural norms. — wellwisher
The anti-Trump movement would be form of religion, by the broader definition, since it is a type of mythology where the archetypical evil leader takes on the traits of all things bad. It is a type of fairy tale. This is not reality but is a religion without deities. — wellwisher
Hidden versus open religion is why the left is more besides itself, and the right is able to maintain; conserve. — wellwisher
At base level, you express it to be in with the crowd you want to be in with. So, you only put it into practice then to the extent it appears credible to your peers, and believe it to the extent necessary that your actions become credible to yourself. — Baden
I believe we can know our somatic sphere of reality.
— praxis
Yes, in as much as our perceptual capacity can not immerse itself in the direct nature of the world beyond our skulls, this has to be conceded. Even if we are plunged into cold water, our brain only has proprioception, pressure, and temperature receptors to go on. However, this second hand representation of reality seems fairly consistent and reliable. — Bitter Crank
I don’t believe there’s objective meaning or morality.
— praxis
I wouldn't go that far (I'm not a nihilist, I guess). However, we do find it difficult to be objective: — Bitter Crank
Varieties of nihilism argue...
--the denial or lack of belief towards the reputedly meaningful aspects of life
--life is without objective meaning, purpose, or intrinsic value
--there is no inherent morality; accepted moral values are abstractly contrived
--knowledge is not possible, or reality does not actually exist — Bitter Crank
Its not like i can "feel" meaninglessness... — marcolobo8
However your approach makes it clear that you understand people like me, people who feel and are fundamentally rooted in emotion. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Having said that, my son who is in college is in such a high level math class that when he comes home and interacts with the family, he has a hard time converting back to basic math. I realize it sounds absurd but you can see him having to work at turning down his knowledge to entertain such simple math problems. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Your thread, "When You Sold Your Soul To The Devil" -- your OP, Hanover's response, and 1 paragraph of 0-9's quoted text from Oscar Wilde -- reads at the 8th grade level according to the Fry/Ragor readability formula. — Bitter Crank
If you take a materialists point of view there are no values apart from the ones you create. If you don't then this generalization is not about you since the stereotypical leftist is an atheist. — Jacykow
Can you give an example of a belief system that introduces the soul as something without an unquestionable value given to every person? — Jacykow
The whole point of the soul is to elevate people above any materialistic hierarchy.
Religion is there, it's just not recognized as religion. — darthbarracuda
Organized religion existed before but developed into something truly perverse during and after the Enlightenment. — darthbarracuda
You cannot value what you cannot choose - the right values rising in hierarchies and not needlessly resisting the inevitable collapse of any group to a hierarchy. — Jacykow
I may have overdone it a bit but since materialism doesnt really elevate the individual to a god but that is exactly what the individual becomes: the only source of value. — Jacykow
