So think about your own experience. Have you ever persuaded someone, on say, TPF, to change their worldview? If yes, how did that happen? And if no, then what does this say about the ability to do philosophy as a society, together? What value does reason then have, if we cannot relate to each other to the extent that we can persuade each other? — Agustino
What value does reason then have, if we cannot relate to each other to the extent that we can persuade each other? — Agustino
Well yeah, I have witnessed those too, BUT many of those people were already sort-of persuaded prior to the encounter. They just needed a little push so to speak. But I'm more interested in the possibility of bringing about more radical changes.they were about how I opened their eyes to a different way of looking at some issues. Usually, there were not of the kind "Yeah, I have seen the light, thanks, I'm now wholly changed!" (with one exception). — Mariner
Yeah, I agree with this, I think this is the most useful comment so far. More radical changes require reflection, but, very often, dialogue is too adversarial to encourage genuine reflection. To achieve genuine reflection, one must first calm the passions so to speak. And around contentious topics, this is not easy, because people have emotional reactions to some issues.Persuasion does not happen in a public forum in any case. It happens in the silence of the night, and not only as a result of arguments. We're not that kind of creature (Mr. Spock?), thank God. — Mariner
So think about your own experience. Have you ever persuaded someone, on say, TPF, to change their worldview? If yes, how did that happen? And if no, then what does this say about the ability to do philosophy as a society, together? What value does reason then have, if we cannot relate to each other to the extent that we can persuade each other? — Agustino
Have You Ever Persuaded Someone Holding An Opposite Worldview From You On TPF? — Agustino
I'll just say that some posts from Streetlight have recently got me reading some figures like Connolly differently — John Doe
It's really about who can impose one's will on the other, it's all politics. — Agustino
That's what I was thinking too, and that's what the poll is indicating as well.Short answer, no. — Baden
Okay, sure, but then we're more of an elite environment here. I would be very surprised if anyone here would physically attack someone else based on differences of opinion.I'm not going to physically attack you because you keep shilling for Trump. We both benefit by agreeing to allow free speech but not violence against each other. Of course, it could eventually go that way but personally I couldn't imagine the vast majority of citizens of advanced democracies supporting violence because of political disagreements around the relative centre such as we have. — Baden
So think about your own experience. Have you ever persuaded someone, on say, TPF, to change their worldview? — Agustino
Therefore the holding of illogical beliefs (despite evidence to the contrary) is a 'fear' based reaction, and as such it is an instinctively (as opposed to a logically) driven behavior. — Marcus de Brun
This is wrong. There can be no logic without emotion. Logic without emotion is dead, it doesn't do anything, and cannot decide anything.Emotions represent the expression of instinctual imperative, however 'logic' entails the disciplining of emotion towards the universal goal of instinctual satiety. — Marcus de Brun
This is wrong. There can be no logic without emotion. — Agustino
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