Do we have reasons to satisfy requirements of rationality? In other words, is rationality normative, i.e. to do with reasons? — mrnormal5150
The answer appears to be that rationality is justified with intuition; which is faith based and therefore arguably an irrational decision. — Mr Phil O'Sophy
The problem is, if you rely on rational reasoning to justify rationality, this is offering a circular argument — Mr Phil O'Sophy
Yeah this is the interesting bit. Because that is to put trust in the past as though the present has to conform to what has happened previously. And also what do we consider a significant amount exactly? Where is the line between what is significant enough to justify that trust in something compared to when we shouldn’t? This all seems to suggest a faith based response to rationality. — Mr Phil O'Sophy
Do we have reasons to satisfy requirements of rationality? In other words, is rationality normative, i.e. to do with reasons? — mrnormal5150
Would you say that your response here is fundamentally an appeal to the irrational to justify being rational? I don’t mean that in any derogatory way. I like how you put it. But it appears to be that for something to be ‘appealing’,as you put it, is a response to the emotional experience of something feeling appealing. This isn’t something that is itself reasoned. But rather it comes across as intuitive. — Mr Phil O'Sophy
1. If logic is justified then predictions it makes must come true
2. Predictions it makes are true
Therefore
3. Logic is justified
The fallacy the argument commits, per logic itself, is that of affirming the consequent. — TheMadFool
I agree that it doesn’t mean they aren’t made on the basis of experience, but that can’t be said for every case of intuitive response. Nor does intuition necessarily imply understanding even if it does in some cases, but rather it’s the feeling of having an understanding rather than knowing one has an understanding. — Mr Phil O'Sophy
You still haven’t explained how any of this doesn’t constitute as faith. The definition of faith is: “Complete trust, belief or confidence in someone or something without a proof.” — Mr Phil O'Sophy
When you act on intuition you are not consciously recalling past experiences; or confirming you actually do understand; or making the effort to make sure there are valid and true premises leading to the conclusion. Intuition is to skip the reasoning, forgoe the premises and act based on a conclusion you trust to be the right conclusion without reference to a proof. — Mr Phil O'Sophy
I certainly stand by explanation of intuition as being related to faith based decisions, and don’t think you’ve sufficiently explained why that isn’t the case. — Mr Phil O'Sophy
So you’ve set this up as a disagreement with my claim, but it still appears to agree with what i’ve said so i’m not sure what to make of this comment? — Mr Phil O'Sophy
The answer appears to be that rationality is justified with intuition; which is faith based and therefore arguably an irrational decision. — Mr Phil O'Sophy
I think you've got it backwards, rationality is what we use after we've made a decision in order to justify it. — T Clark
No. I'm asking for a reason to be rational. I'm wondering if people think of rationality as normative. It would be circular if one adopted a reason-loaded conception of rationality, which I'm leaving open-ended.Are you asking for a rational justification for being rational? Isn't that circular?
One that doesn't have to do with reasons. A rather intuitive one is the view that rationality is a property of persons; it supervenes on the mental. If two individuals in different universes are mentally equivalent, then they both have the same degree of rationality. Under the assumption we can be mistaken about reasons, if I mistakenly think a murderer is in my house, truly genuinely believe it, and I do not wish to die, then it is rational for me to try to escape whether or not I actually have a reason to escape. I can lack a reason to act and be rationally permitted to act. It is also rather natural for us to say that I would be irrational if I did not intend to escape given my beliefs and desires, because rationality, according to this conception, is more a matter of consistency between our beliefs, intended goals, etc., and not actual reasons.What other definition of rationality is there apart from having reasons?
Having not consciously reasoned is no different than saying that no reasoning has taken place, but to put trust in ones own ability to get to the right conclusions without making the effort to check if it’s actually the case. This trust in oneself without the proof, is what I am constituting as faith and is why intuitions can sometimes be wrong and that trust one puts in oneself can be misplaced. — Mr Phil O'Sophy
The question "why be rational?", though, is a meta-rational question, no? Is it not asking for reasons to be rational? — darthbarracuda
I think this is a plausible analogy. There are many senses to the word reason. An exhaustive taxonomic breakdown may be too much to ask for, but I think what you point out is relevant to the question. Sometimes we ask for the reason why someone did something, and all we are looking for is what motivated them. Other times we are looking for a justification. When I think of normative reasons, it's the justificatory role that is primary. So in my example of a person (call him Joe) mistakenly believing a murderer was in his house, one could respond that Joe was responding to "reasons", and what we mean by that is Joe was responding to what Derek Parfit called apparent reasons. Still, this would be an example in which rationality is not tied to actual normative, justifying reasons.In the coherence sense, one is rational if one acts according to reasons that, regardless of their reality, cohere with the rest of a person's beliefs and desires.
This has always bothered me, but I can't quite seem to figure out why I find this so bothersome. Do our intuitions demand rationality to be a thick concept that has a non-arbitrary connection with the world? Because my intuitions about that annoyingly oscillate back and forth. I guess I fear that if we make criteria for rationality external to mental processes then the criteria itself becomes arbitrary. How do we come to know which external criteria actually count as genuine requirements of rationality? To avoid that problem, I adopt a more limiting, less thick, conception of rationality, relegating it to consistency amongst beliefs, conative states, etc.The rules are set up, and the agent follows them correctly, but they don't really mean anything.
If morality is aligned with rationality, so that what is rational is also what is moral, then the question "why be moral" is eclipsed by the question "why be rational?"
Consciousness does not drive the mind, it follows along with a notebook and writes things down.
Are you quite clear what you want to argue here and what you don't?
How would you feel about this same argument with the first premise replaced by its converse? Or replaced by a biconditional? The one would be valid, but maybe not what you want to say. The other only "partially" valid. — Srap Tasmaner
Consciousness does not drive the mind, it follows along with a notebook and writes things down. — T Clark
This is a strange conception for me. Do you believe in free will or do you think we’re determined? — Mr Phil O'Sophy
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