What I'm wondering here, is how does compartmentalization occur, also? — Posty McPostface
Does one build the compartments or does one merely fail to build the generalised coherence? — apokrisis
The tougher thing would be to be completely systematic in your thinking - to assimilate everything to a thought-through universal structure. — apokrisis
So it is not that people have to construct a lack of coherent connections. They just get away with not having to live life according to a generally coherent philosophical position. — apokrisis
So, you think it's a matter of performative utility to resort to compartmentalizations of concepts or things? — Posty McPostface
Was your OP describing someone who had systematically compartmentalised their rationalisations so as to avoid the logical inconsistencies involved? That would take a lot of prior work. — apokrisis
Or did they camp on the edge of a pleasant stream and wake the next morning to find it had become a swamping flood? — apokrisis
Folk who don't like their inconsistencies being fingered just tend to check out because they were never trying to defend some larger coherent territory anyway. Being comfortable is the first priority. — apokrisis
His beliefs are simply at odds with the majority of people, and hence his mind is compartmentalized in such a way that it shows when talking about slavery or races. — Posty McPostface
Surely his beliefs are those of the majority with whom he mixes? That's why compartmentalisation hasn't been much needed as a psychic defence. — apokrisis
It could be bias. — Posty McPostface
hat racist guy is just stupid, by choice (he's blinded himself to the truth). — BrianW
His inability to answer the question proves he doesn't have that compartment. — BrianW
If he truly believed (instead of just wishing) that white people were superior to black people (or other races) then it would have been somewhat convincing towards a case of compartmentalisation. — BrianW
I see compartments as constructs with deep-rooted ties of logic (reasonable associations, but according to the person's capacity to reason) and meaning extracted from experience; every compartment with its history of experiences attached to it, whether real (actual) or fabricated (delusional). — BrianW
Also, from my perspective, it is not compartmentalisation if the 'compartments' do not relate to each other logically. — BrianW
If the person, when focused in one compartment, is not (or cannot be) aware of the others, consciously to some degree, then, it's insanity (an impairment of the mind). — BrianW
For me, compartmentalisation is, 'when in rome do as the romans do'. It is a distinctive language for each person, occasion or circumstance; not something a serial killer would have to prevent him from coming to terms with his depravity. Even the latter is a kind of compartmentalisation, but it's a coping mechanism born from reaction or response to an impairment (disease) of the mind (as a way to preserve decency, normalcy, right-perspective, etc). It implies an innate awareness of the presence of the disease. — BrianW
The truth of what exactly? That he's a bigoted racist? — Posty McPostface
Compartment of what? — Posty McPostface
What is that disease? — Posty McPostface
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