Comment: The definitions allow the classification of all possible conditions of the mind as either being mental illness or being mental strength. — Agustino
First of all, I have never thought about it that way. I dislike this kind of quibbling though because it doesn't get us anything of practical value. We can talk about this day and night - none of us will become any better because of it. What I meant as opposite is this: mental illness is incapacity - mental strength is capacity - NOT lack of incapacity .... I wrote the opposite merely because I didn't want to write the same sentence again using capacity instead of incapacity.MU is trying to allude to the contradiction in you definitions. If mental strength is defined in opposition to mental illness-- an absence of incapacity-- it cannot be the response to present mental illness. In this case, it's impossible for someone to have mental strength and also a mental illness.
This is why "mental strength" has no apparent practical definition. In the terms of you definitions, it is not a response to mental illness, some action taken to deal with a present mental illness, but a description of being in a state without mental illness. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Okay, so what's the practical significance of this? How does that help any of us? Do you become a better person because you know that? Does your neighbour? Do I?This, however, amounts to an absence of standard in judging the presence of mental illness. In any case, we are relying on a ethic defined in-itself, rather than the presence of a mind.
In this respect, "mental illness" is revealed to be more rhetorical than anything else. It's a form a naturalistic fallacy. Instead of being honest about what at stake, a thought, behaviour or action which ought not exist, we equate what's wrong with the existence of body and thought. In terms of the individual, it's sort of a denial of responsibility. Rather than describe actions or states which ought not be (e.g. lack of motivation, despair, etc., etc.-- depression), someone is just said to be "mental ill." It's nothing more than an image used to position where someone goes in an order-- e.g. the sorts of people who ought to be, the sorts of people who nee treatment or medication, etc.,etc. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Well they have been wronged by that bad guy. But the fault isn't with that guy - that guy is a bad guy. It's their judgement that's the fault - they didn't judge him correctly. If they had judged him correctly from the beginning, they would never have been harmed. So their failure is merely the opportunity to begin again, as Henry Ford said, this time more intelligently. — Agustino
You're not really quibbling with ideas, you're quibbling with their formulations. But their formulations are ultimately quite irrelevant to their applicability, or to their value as ideas. — Agustino
What I meant as opposite is this: mental illness is incapacity - mental strength is capacity - NOT lack of incapacity .... I wrote the opposite merely because I didn't want to write the same sentence again using capacity instead of incapacity. — Agustino
What I meant as opposite is this: mental illness is incapacity - mental strength is capacity - NOT lack of incapacity —
Definition of Mental Strength: The exact opposite of mental illness. — Agustino
Even the word "strength" depends on what we value abstractly, in any case it might be seen as an ability to endure certain immediate circumstances to achieve a goal on a longer term. — Gooseone
We should try to make them understand.should we blame ourselves in failing to make others see how learning actually works, should we make the utmost of the opportunity to deceive others while using their lack of awareness or should we concede failure ourselves because we don't comply with a majority? — Gooseone
Yes I have read Plato, but I'm not interested in quibbling over notions - especially when you take words such as capacity, which I use in common parlance, and give them the technical meanings they have in some philosophies. So tell me how your understanding of capacity (which you take from Plato et al) helps you achieve or not achieve mental strength, or else I'm not interested in criticism which puts nothing better in its place. Then if you tell me that, I can see if there are problems with it - problems which will appear on a practical, not theoretical level, and I can let you know what I think.Pure capacity means nothing. The same capacity which is the capacity for good is also the capacity for evil. Have you read Plato? The same capacity which is the capacity for mental strength is also the capacity for mental weakness. Capacity without the qualification, capacity for "X", is meaningless. And so your definition of mental strength is also meaningless. — Metaphysician Undercover
Okay, replace the image then. Do something useful, don't just point fingers. We have to discuss by comparing notions. You just criticise. That's not very effective, because ultimately people choose between alternatives - nobody chooses criticism. So what's the alternative?I think that very failure of the image of "mental illness" vs "mental strength" is the point. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Yes I said that in the OP as short form - as I said, instead of repeating the sentence and changing capacity with incapacity, I just wrote that.Which is not what you said in the OP. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Who talked of scapegoating? The point was what works and what doesn't work, there's no scapegoating here. People are not punished for acting a certain way by anyone - rather their actions themselves will be punishments or rewards, depending on whether they work or not.and then punishing people for whom it doesn't work. It means we don't scapegoat people for failing to get better by our preferred method (and it will mean we don't deny them the opportunity to get better by some other means we happen to despise). — TheWillowOfDarkness
Nowhere do you outline such behaviours, nor the means of changing them.A person who goes it on their own actually describes behaviours which ought to be changed, rather than considering a nebulous notion of "mental illness" which requires some yet to be understood solution. I think there may be something of a practical effect here.
If one knows behaviours they ought to change, they can direct themselves towards achieving that. Well, some people can at least. It certainly gives more to go on than saying: "I'm mentally ill and need to be fixed." — TheWillowOfDarkness
Who talked of scapegoating? The point was what works and what doesn't work, there's no scapegoating here. — Agustino
Yes I said that in the OP as short form - as I said, instead of repeating the sentence and changing capacity with incapacity, I just wrote that. — Agustino
Okay, go ahead, do it. Let's see it. I will judge it, once I see it. So far it's all criticism what you're doing - nothing original. Stop sitting on the sidelines and get down in the ring. This thread is for everyone to contribute however they want, and however they see fit in the process of generating ideas and brainstorming. If you dislike the definitions, good! Do something about it, propose something different.If something is wrong, why not just describe that and tackle it head on? What does saying that one is "mentally ill," as opposed just describing behaviours actually add to the picture? — TheWillowOfDarkness
So tell me how your understanding of capacity (which you take from Plato et al) helps you achieve or not achieve mental strength, or else I'm not interested in criticism which puts nothing better in its place. — Agustino
No this thread isn't for me to defend any kind of idea. I made that clear in the opening post. This thread is for brainstorming, by everyone. I'm happy you're unhappy with my definitions - so go ahead and reframe them. Propose a different framework. Do whatever you think has to be done. Explore the subject. You don't need me to explore the subject. You can do that yourself. — Agustino
How can we reconcile this with the proposed concepts of mental strength and mental illness? — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes BUT - take the cockroach. It is a species of insect that has evolved very little, if at all, in the past 300 million years. It is very adaptable, and not fragile to modifications in its environment - it can thrive pretty much regardless of environment. If you expose it to the same radiation level as Hiroshima for 30 days, 10% of its population survives. If there are no males around, the females can reproduce by themselves. They become immune to poisons and chemicals very rapidly. And so forth. Now, here's a creature whose survival is pretty much environment independent (I say pretty much because obviously there would be some extremely severe environments they wouldn't be able to survive in).One cannot say much about it in advance, and what is fit in one ecology may be unfit for another. — unenlightened
But you see that's the thing. Norman Normal is as Taleb would say fragile. The environment changes, and he's gone. The deviant on the other hand, so long as he assures some degree of survival in the current environment, but stands to gain SIGNIFICANTLY from random changes in the environment is positioned at the right place, while Norman Normal is making a fatal mistake and is in fact sitting on a booby trap.For Norman Normal, anything that deviates from current accepted practice is incomprehensible, and therefore probably insane - mad sad or bad. But Norman turns out to be mistaken if the deviance becomes accepted and society changes. At which point the madman retrospectively becomes the leader and hero. Just as the successful mutation becomes the new species, whereas the unsuccessful becomes the new disease. — unenlightened
... take the cockroach. It is a species of insect that has evolved very little, if at all, in the past 300 million years. It is very adaptable, and not fragile to modifications in its environment - — Agustino
But you see that's the thing. Norman Normal is as Taleb would say fragile. — Agustino
I don't think so. Jesus died, like Socrates, on purpose. Some things are worth dying for, because when you die for them you make a point. And regardless, we're all going to die someday, might as well die for a great cause. But notice that their death didn't come from weakness or lack of worldly success - they were successful, that's precisely why they [the authorities] wanted to kill them. And they stood upright, and refused to yield and obey the authorities, and preferred death, rather than bowing down and giving up on their values. If they had bowed down, they would have already lost everything they were fighting for anyway. Death was a pragmatic solution, I would have chosen death in their situation too.And with Jesus in mind, I suggest that sanity is fragile in that worldly sense; — unenlightened
Indeed - but this only tells us that the sane man was also mentally strong, and sufficiently dangerous to the established order that there really was no other way to get rid of him - he can't be bought, can't be threatened, can't be guided, can't be manipulated, can't be stopped in any other way. His crucifixion is precisely the crowning of his Earthly as well as spiritual success. The fact he holds onto dignity and refuses to give up on the good just to live one more day - that's spiritual strength. And the fact that others resort even to killing him - that's a sign of his worldly success.I had thought you would see immediately that a sane man can get crucified. — unenlightened
I will answer, but before I do, I'm curious just what you would understand by "fail in the world"? What images would this bring to your mind?What exactly does it mean to "fail in the world"? — John
His crucifixion is precisely the crowning of his Earthly as well as spiritual success. — Agustino
He who wants something from another has to accept the conditions on which they'll be given no? :P But the reason why I want you to go first is because I don't understand what you don't understand. "Fail in the world" is a common phrase I think. So what does that make you think about?You first, dude. — John
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