ENOAH
"Rational" and "irrational" are characterizations of constructions, not constructions themselves. — Millard J Melnyk
It could be true, it could be false, but if I've done nothing to find out which, I can't regard it as truth. — Millard J Melnyk
Exactly. And the "settlement" is a settling of relationship between a reference (the idea in question) to its referent (the reality it stands as the truth about). — Millard J Melnyk
agree that "belief" is commonly used similarly to how you use it here, but I'm convinced that it's sloppy use of the term driven by habit instead of the result of clear understanding of what the idea of "belief" entails. — Millard J Melnyk
Yes, the analogy to the brain as hardware which re-wires itself, so that its programming is based not just on external input, but on internal activity. But to be clear, there rewiring is the real being adapting to the program displacing its factory setting. The factory setting is not tabula rasa. There are drives, sensations, feelings, images. But man, does the programming change things. And we think (because thinking is part of the programing, not the hardware) the real being is the programing, belief being a mechanism in the software that allows us to accept that, or any conclusion the prog4aming dreams up.Check out what I said about lack of belief in children in my latest response to Ludwig V at — Millard J Melnyk
A belief is not the kernel — Millard J Melnyk
To arrive at a belief about those primal senses/experiences -- "about" signals relationship between TWO things, not one, a reference and a referent -- we must do something with them — Millard J Melnyk
Millard J Melnyk
And was this kind of characterization, "characterization" itself, not a construction? — ENOAH
The effort to find out if a thing is true or not already alienates the thing from its truth, — ENOAH
A belief is not the kernel
— Millard J Melnyk
Yes! A belief is only reflecting what "it/its user" dreams up about the kernel. The kernel (the Real) cannot be accessed by belief; it can only be accessed by being [the kernel etc. re any object, including the Real that "I" refers to] — ENOAH
ENOAH
There is no way that the effort to determine the truth P about the thing could alienate P. I think you're trying to say something else. — Millard J Melnyk
The truth doesn't need a shell to protect it, but — Millard J Melnyk
ENOAH
Millard J Melnyk
No matter how simple clear and manifest the dialectic, like the one that nears its end with 1+1=2, to accept 2, is a belief. One believes in the legitimacy of the process, if you prefer. — ENOAH
ENOAH
I wonder if we're using the same term to talk about two different things? — Millard J Melnyk
the parallel between authority and belief isn't coincidental — Millard J Melnyk
In the world of codependence, — Millard J Melnyk
Millard J Melnyk
we ought to recognize that even the truths we arrive at through authority or Reason etc, are finally or first triggered by belief. — ENOAH
But none one born into history lives outside of that world. — ENOAH
United States: High Codependence
External validation loop: Identity, worth, and competence are mediated by institutions—school, work, therapy, media. The adult self is often a performance for systems.
Dependency masked as autonomy: The myth of rugged individualism conceals deep reliance on corporate, romantic, and bureaucratic structures.
Emotional outsourcing: Crisis is often met with consumption (products, services, diagnoses) rather than communal or embodied response.
Zapatistas: Radically Lower Codependence
Deliberate rupture from dependency systems: The Zapatistas explicitly reject state, capitalist, and patriarchal structures that foster dependency. Their autonomy is not abstract—it’s infrastructural (health, education, justice).
Collective maturity: Children and adults participate in assemblies, decision-making, and defense. Responsibility is distributed, not deferred.
No savior myth: Their political grammar rejects external rescue. Liberation is not outsourced—it is enacted, collectively, daily.
Emotional-political integration: Suffering is not privatized or pathologized. It is named, shared, and politicized—without collapsing into victimhood.
⚖️ Relative Guess
Codependence is structurally and ideologically disincentivized in Zapatista communities. Where the U.S. breeds dependency through institutional saturation and ideological contradiction, the Zapatistas cultivate autonomy through material self-governance and collective responsibility. The contrast is not just cultural—it is infrastructural, epistemic, and existential.
ENOAH
It continues as a baseless claim until someone can provide some reason to see it as something more. — Millard J Melnyk
Millard J Melnyk
Yes I recognize that "we", especially philosophy as a discipline, require [a] reason(s) in order to establish a proposition as a truth. — ENOAH
Isn't reason just a cause for belief? — ENOAH
At some point some entity must be the arbiter of when such reason(s) may safely transport the thinker to the settlement called knowledge or truth. — ENOAH
For now, though they are presented as propositions, they are actually questions. — ENOAH
By "no one born into 'history'" I mean that fictional line when Homo Sapiens presumably crossed over from sensing the world by its animal nature, to one governed/dominated/saturated by representational structures. — ENOAH
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