What do you think it could be? — Harry Hindu
And what makes the brain so special? Neurons? Neurons just transmit. It is a relay center. The Mind permeates the body. — Rich
You can cut off your legs, arms; remove various parts of the body such as the spleen and kidneys; several feet of intestine; you can even gat a machine to do your breathing and pumping blood - all miraculously WITHOUT affecting the functioning of the mind.
If you do ANYTHING to the brain, you change the mind is profound ways. — charleton
"When your brain tries to heal itself, functions that were once held in damaged parts of the brain are then transferred to new, healthy parts of the brain through the process of neuroplasticity. This process is what allows you to regain lost movement, speech function, and other abilities after experiencing a stroke." — Rich
It must be something else. What do you think it could be? — Harry Hindu
There is a sense in which I can agree with this, but I can't see what relevance it has to your questioning of rationality. — Janus
One needs a heart to live and pump blood. It's got bugger all to do with being good, you still need a brain for that too. — charleton
No to both sides. "All you need to do is smile" is, in a word, imbecilic.
I readily agree that rationality is limited, in that it can devise plans, design parts, and lay out elaborate proposals. In itself, rationality tends neither to goodness nor evil. The mainspring of behavior isn't the pre-frontal cortex, it's the limbic system -- the emotions. Wishes, wants, desires, urges, rages, love, hate, hot, cold, and all that are not opposed to rationality, they drive rationality.
Performing 'good' requires as much rationality as performing evil. As Jesus put it, be as subtle as serpents but as gentle as doves. Good ideas badly executed will at least result in waste, fraud, and abuse. To do good well requires rationality.
The flaw in "rational human" isn't that rationality produces evil, it's that alone it doesn't produce much of anything. Again: emotion, not rationality, is the mainspring of behavior.
Well organized hate as opposed to badly organized love, is a cliché--which may be true in some instances, but in general isn't true. International aid programs, social service programs, and all sorts of good works require the same high level organization that wickedness requires. — Bitter Crank
This is obviously false. People rationally do good things and irrationally do bad things all the time. — aletheist
But rationality has questioned God's existence and where does that lead to? A moral vacuum that can't and hasn't been filled since God was put on the stand. — TheMadFool
But rationality has questioned God's existence and where does that lead to? — TheMadFool
First do no harm is a well known maxim of morality, am I right? — TheMadFool
It's a very common metaphor. I don't know why you don't get it. Just see the movies. Villains are always depicted with high IQ. Get the hint? — TheMadFool
there's always a danger in an infallible authority — TheMadFool
everything has pros AND cons — TheMadFool
So, what could this flaw be — TheMadFool
Look at how good and evil are depicted in media and literature. I don't want to use stereotypes of people but I also believe in the wisdom of the masses. Evil is associated with genius and I think this rightly so. One has to be intelligent to be fool/trick people - something that is necessary to be evil. — TheMadFool
On the other hand one doesn't have to think much to be good. One might even have to be a fool to be good - disregard personal safety for instance. — TheMadFool
So, it does look like rationality serves evil better than good. — TheMadFool
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