Reality therapy - from what I've gleaned since posty's post -focuses on getting *needs* met. — csalisbury
If we talk about needs as involving fantasy (the fantasy of having our needs met) then there is an unreality involved. — csalisbury
If we talk about needs as involving fantasy (the fantasy of having our needs met) then there is an unreality involved. But then you could even call oncology work unreal in the sense that cancer sufferers have a fantasy of not having cancer. — csalisbury
Reality therapy - from what I've gleaned since posty's post -focuses on getting *needs* met. The idea being that meeting needs takes place in the *world* - reality. — csalisbury
I deny the reality of needs in order to emphasise the importance of fantasy, imagination, the unreal. — unenlightened
No, fantasies can be shared. — unenlightened
... needs aren't fantasies, puh-leeze. — Posty McPostface
X needs A, when X does not have A. — unenlightened
One does not say, while eating a sandwich, "I need a sandwich to eat." One's need is for something that is not there, except in the mind - which is called a fantasy. — unenlightened
A man dying in the desert out of dehydration has a legitimate need for water, not a fantasy. — Posty McPostface
Again, solipsism.Of course it's legitimate, if he doesn't get water he will die. But there is no water in the desert, so he dies. The water that he needs is a fantasy - there is no water. — unenlightened
Again, solipsism. — Posty McPostface
No really, you can go and look at his bones, he needed water but there was no water; he died. — unenlightened
So, then he had an actual need, then that was never realized? I don't see how you can frame this issue then as a fantasy. — Posty McPostface
Or, and do consider it, we could say that we can manage to function without a car. The car has no fantasy, it merely functions or does not function, just as the desert has no fantasy and no needs of its own. — unenlightened
I need me to live, therefore I need me to have water. Do you see how this is a different sort of thing? — unenlightened
Externally, I don't need water, I can perfectly well die just as a car can run out of petrol and simply stop running. — unenlightened
There are necessary (needed) conditions for life but life is not necessary for anything things are necessary to life. — unenlightened
What is needed for anything is a matter of fact, of limiting conditions. — unenlightened
If I identify my needs apart from wants, I think that's a better way of treating life, and knowing the limits of what is attainable or not instead of living in some fantasy world of some sort. — Posty McPostface
Perhaps you would be happier if I was talking about 'possible worlds' and 'modal logic'. Possible worlds are unreal worlds. — unenlightened
That's interesting, I haven't come across him before. — unenlightened
But the exposition on wiki is a bit of a dog's breakfast. — unenlightened
It's fun though that you can come up with a psychology at the drop of a hat with a few posited psychic entities, and a couple of broad principles. And then start a school to implement them. — unenlightened
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