It's quite simple really. Not having a bowel movement when you need to have one is not comfortable. So you experience revulsion towards abstaining, and therefore you go and have your bowel movement. It is an emotion that compels you to do it. Reasoning is based on emotions. Without emotions, you would take no actions whatsoever. So you take a bowel movement because you want to feel good, you don't want to get sepsis or some other form of stomach infection, etc. All those are ultimately anchored in emotions.Please declare what is your emotional relationship with the evacuation of your bowel? — Marcus de Brun
Please declare what is your emotional relationship with the evacuation of your bowel? — 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. — Agustino
Programmed by human beings. We program them based on our emotions, so they do what we want.Computers are entirely logical and yet devoid of emotion, they make lots of decisions every day, upon which we depend. — Marcus de Brun
Do you know the paradox of Buridan's Ass? That's what happens when there is no emotion. — Agustino
If I may... Dr. Freud would say that there is at least an unconscious influence. — 0 thru 9
You know this, you've studied psychology. The average mass of mankind isn't very enlightened, despite living in democracies today. — Agustino
The general public is much more prone to be manipulated to be passive and complacent than aggressive and violent I think. — Baden
Instinctual imperatives for the most part are sub-conscious. However they can be brought to the level of consciousness through endogenous-insight (intelligence), and (or good psychoanalysis) and then be subject to logic and reason. IE independently or with assistance, sub-conscious instinct can be brought to the level of consciousness and subjected to reasoned analysis.
My point is that this process (insight) must occur prior to the possibility of a change in ones opinion or view. When this does not occur it is quite possible that subconscious instinct will direct reason and cause one to cling to irrational or illogical beliefs despite evidence or logic to the contrary. — Marcus de Brun
With the additional comment that (in my opinion) the subconscious can be seen, analyzed, directed, and controlled roughly in the same way a horse can be tamed and ridden successfully. It can be done of course. But there is always a possible wild card in the deck. — 0 thru 9
The general public is much more prone to be manipulated to be passive and complacent than aggressive and violent I think. — Baden
Also agreed!Agreed,
The likelihood of the wild card is dependent (but not entirely so) upon the 'ability' of the trainer and the passions of the horse. — Marcus de Brun
Given that we are possibly in agreement more than disagreement, we must ask is being agreeable more pleasurable than the fire and fury of disagreement? — Marcus de Brun
Consumption particularly by white westerners is an example of an externally influenced or engineered activity.
Most white western consumption in respect of needs beyond the philosophically valid: food warmth sustenance, education etc... are programmed or inculcated into the herd via the psychology of the herd itself and external manipulations of herd psychology vis media and corporate entities.
The consumptive act is an act of great violence and yet the violence, vis the consequence of consumption is not 'owned' by the consumer. Both the consumption, and the avoidance of ownership of the consequence, have been removed from the reality of the consumer by external forces. The violence that is consequenced by consumption is therefore removed by the magic of the contemporary church of capitalism. — Marcus de Brun
my point was a little off topic. — Marcus de Brun
I am always a bit sensitive when capitalism appears to be getting off the hook. — Marcus de Brun
Discussion for the sake of persuasion has always been the least interesting and least significant part of participation in a forum like this. The interest has always instead been looking for other perspectives or other angles from which to evaluate one's own POV. The challenge is in trying to formulate arguments to address the unexpected and the unforseen, to expand and explore implications that one may not have come up with by yourself. Persuasion is just the frorth on the wave that is participation here. — StreetlightX
I care more about getting it right than exploring a dead end. — Sapientia
It's possible to get it right and still not be persuasive you know. — Baden
Mm, I never said anything about 'getting it right' so dunno what you're on about. — StreetlightX
How do you know you're right on ethical, metaphysical or political issues? What is right in that context? Seems to me the best we can hope for is consistency. — Benkei
Even those two issues are debated by people. — Benkei
We understand the concepts and can talk about them due to a shared social environment but consciousness doesn't exist and you don't have a physical body. — Benkei
Yes; or rather, I have been persuaded by other people, who showed me a flaw in my reasoning. But I sure as heck would not have admitted it to them! :shade:Have You Ever Persuaded Someone Holding An Opposite Worldview From You On TPF? — Agustino
And besides, other than sales and marketing people, who cares about persuading those who don't seek truth anyways? :wink: — Samuel Lacrampe
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