Your model does not permit an effective agent, it only defends a powerless one. — Valentinus
And if you didn't try to get better, then could you really say that you intended to get better? — Harry Hindu
That sounds more like an unconscious intention verses a willpower. I still don't understand how an intention can be undirected since it seems by definition to always be directed toward the completion of a goal. — aporiap
Your model precludes helping yourself.
Unless the condition changes without your help, your model is part of the problem. — Valentinus
You are the only one who can introduce new habits. — Valentinus
I think in the depression example the person has decided or intended to get better [decide or intend are synonymous] but has not put his decision into action because he lacks the willpower or has low capacity to direct his behavior toward his goals -- his ruminative and self-sabotaging habits are too ingrained for him to overcome at the moment.Yes, but, again taking the example of "depression". I have the intent to get better but it is undirected, otherwise, people would be able to simply will themselves out of that state of mind, which is quite rare. Hence, what do you think about this "undirected" aspect of intent? It seems more like, as you mentioned, and an unconscious thing that is in the background and never entirely realized unless some goal is accomplished unknowingly.
I did not say that depression is just a habit. It is very much a combination of factors, many of them beyond one's direct control. I don't know anything about "spontaneous remission"
I do think the "thought loop" does involve habits and it is one of the doors open to something new. — Valentinus
[decide or intend are synonymous] — aporiap
So the intention is still 'directed' toward the goal of getting better, but is not put into action — aporiap
I'd say yes. The minimum you need for an intention is a decision to complete a goal. What else do you feel you'd need in order for an intention?Are they?
I'd say willpower.Then, what is the deciding factor in getting better?
Hmm, so I'm unsure what you are linking the directedness of an intention to. I am linking it to the goal of the intention - 'get out of the bottle' in the fly case, 'get better' in the human case. In that sense all intentions are directed. It doesn't matter the course of action or the way in which the goal is realized, only that a person or animal has decided - consciously or unconsciously- to complete a goal.The intent is still undirected. One doesn't know how the fly gets out of the bottle it is stuck in. Is it a matter of trial and error to try different methods of getting better or is the outcome of this undirected intentionality, manifest in trial and error, spontaneous? This would make "intent" somewhat synonymous with "willpower". But, the two aren't the same.
What else do you feel you'd need in order for an intention? — aporiap
OK, I understand. But, what is so difficult in the case of "depression", that people get stuck in it? Why is it so self-reinforcing? — Wallows
Hmm, I think the way you make sense of willpower is different than me. I don't think, for example, willpower or motivation is directed at a goal. You can get up 'feeling motivated', for example. In that case the motivation can be described as 'feeling driven' or 'excited/energetic'- like you are determined to get 'things' done - anything that comes in front of you not necessarily one thing in particular. Willpower, like I said before, seems like a 'capacity' or a general ability to control urges and manage actions - instead of eating a delicious pizza, deciding not to eat it.. instead of angrily lashing out at someone, showing restraint. It doesn't seem linked to a goal whereas intentions are always linked to a specific goal.. I can't think of someone saying to themself, without context or specific goal, 'I have intention'.. where as it makes sense for a person to say 'I have a lot of willpower' or 'I am/feel motivated'I'm not quite sure; but, there is a distinction I want to draw out between willpower and intentionality. Intentionality stands above willpower in that motivation and willpower is directed at some goal. But, here I go on about "depression". When the way out of the bottle is unknown to the fly, then willpower seems like the only thing that intent can resort to. So, yeah, willpower, willpower, willpower.
I mentioned earlier that our intent to get better is a result of the experience of pain. We don't experience the intent to get better when we feel good - only when we feel bad. Intent could simply be a mental/neurological response to some stimuli.This seems to introduce a paradox. When is an intent realized or conceived and when it is not? Does this reduce the issue to what is an intent? Hence, we're perpetually stuck in never knowing what we really want? — Wallows
Intent could simply be a mental/neurological response to some stimuli. — Harry Hindu
I think it can but it isn't necessary. Eg. you can have a family forcibly take you to a therapist every week and do the CBT homework in a case where you don't have the will to do it yourself. This can, over time, lead to a habit of going there. The willpower, which is needed most in the beginning when you need to effectively force yourself out of a habit of self-seclusion and negative self-talk, is not needed as much once it's become a habit to go to the therapist and work on the exercises.So, can willpower bring oneself out of depression? What's your take on that issue?
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