The same feeling of guilt gives rise to two different responses: hiding the guilt or acknowledging it. These differences are due to different circumstances and additional feelings: fear of punishment, sense of moral responsibility, the link with the victim, etc. But the original feeling is the same: guilt for having damaged someone. I don't see why you think these are two different feelings.The inclination to walk away and hide from this, and the inclination to face the person with apology and repentance, involve completely different feelings which are derived from the very same event. — Metaphysician Undercover
It requires a further judgement of conscience to produce guilt from shame. Guilt involves the recognition that the cause of shame, hiding the deprived situation, or hiding from the deprived situation, recoiling into one's own presumed innocence, or naivety, is itself something wrong, a pretense. — Metaphysician Undercover
f shame is, as you say, involved with external observation, this itself, is a reconsideration of the event, and that's an inconsistency in your description.. — Metaphysician Undercover
The same feeling of guilt gives rise to two different responses: hiding the guilt or acknowledging it. — David Mo
If there is guilt without shame and shame without guilt, it is necessary to reach a conclusion: they are different feelings. — David Mo
Why? The situation that causes shame can be effective immediately, like a reflex, without thoughtful consideration. Where is your problem? — David Mo
Where did I say that?To say that the person has conflicting feelings, and that's what "guilt" is, to have conflicted feelings, does not describe a feeling of guilt. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's not true. I've already given you an example.As I said, there is no guilt without shame. — Metaphysician Undercover
Can you answer to my objection? I doubt it.A criminal may feel guilty but not ashamed if he despises the society that reproaches him for his crime. See Jean Valjean in Hugo's Les miserables. — David Mo
The primary judgement by the conscience is that there is a specific type of deprived, unpleasant, uncomfortable situation, and this is shame. — Metaphysician Undercover
A secondary judgement assigns blame for the deprived situation and this is the designation of guilt. — Metaphysician Undercover
...regardless of the act... — Metaphysician Undercover
but are you guys disputing the meaning of words, the nature of psyche, ethics, or something else? — unenlightened
Honestly, I don't know. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm discussing facts. — David Mo
In guilt there is implied a victim. In shame there is not a victim. Examples: regret to have raped a woman. Disgust to myself for being a coward. Don't you see the difference, unelightened? — David Mo
I believe you, but I'm discussing facts. That shame and guilt are two different emotions. That guilt is not a consequence of shame and that the time sequence does not intervene at all in the definition of both. (By de way, these are facts commonly accepted in psychology). — David Mo
I don't understand the question. Please be clearer.Do they not speak for themselves? — unenlightened
These are not facts. This is a distinction you are making that has some merit in terms of clarity and convenience, — unenlightened
In ordinary language, art or mythology, guilt and shame are sometimes intertwined. This is due to their proximity as moral emotions and because they have some of their characteristics in common: both are based on a concept of what should and should not be done (that's why they are moral) and both involve self-esteem (that's why they are also called emotions of the Self). In the case of the Bible the confusion is easier because it is the product of a society in which tribal pressure and morality are confused. This refers to the problem of the existence of societies dominated by the sense of shame-honour and guilt societies. Traditional Jewish culture would be among the first.Why have they done that do you think? — unenlightened
You confuse the guilty verdict in a court of law with the guilty feeling of the guilty. We're talking about the former. They are very different thingsHave you ever been on a jury? That's why it's impossible that guilt is a feeling, or emotion, a judgement of guilt involves many distinct feelings and emotions. — Metaphysician Undercover
You confuse two things: the urge to hide the malicious act and the feeling of having committed a truly malicious act. You can try to hide the act without any feeling of guilt because of fear of punishment. They are two different things. This fear and feeling of guilt are not the same.there are two distinct urges (types of feelings) which follow from one's own judgement of personal guilt, one urge is to deny the guilt and hide responsibility, the other is the urge to face responsibility and make restitution. — Metaphysician Undercover
In the case of the Bible the confusion is easier because it is the product of a society in which tribal pressure and morality are confused. This refers to the problem of the existence of societies dominated by the sense of shame-honour and guilt societies — David Mo
Of course. It is a fact that guilt is a feeling that affects many people, who judge that what they have done is wrong. The fact is the burden of guilt. Value is how the guilty judges the fact. I don't judge if he is wrong in his belief. I am not a priest nor a moralist. I analyze the causes of his discomfort (fact). I am a psychologist.you are aware of the fact/value distinction? — unenlightened
This is due to their proximity as moral emotions and because they have some of their characteristics in common: both are based on a concept of what should and should not be done (that's why they are moral) and both involve self-esteem (that's why they are also called emotions of the Self). — David Mo
I am not a priest or a moralist. I analyze the causes of your discomfort (fact). I am a psychologist. — David Mo
When we talk about moral emotions in psychology and philosophy, we understand that they are those that affect my relationship with others. In addition to guilt and shame, this often includes pride, moral outrage and so on. Defining what is moral is complicated, but this definition is operative and serves to understand us in this field.How can an emotion be moral or non moral, what even is it for something to be moral? — unenlightened
When we talk about moral emotions in psychology and philosophy, we understand that they are those that affect my relationship with others. — David Mo
In the case of the Bible the confusion is easier because it is the product of a society in which tribal pressure and morality are confused. — David Mo
You are so full of arrogant shit my head has just exploded and unfortunately I will be unable to engage further. — unenlightened
You confuse two things: the urge to hide the malicious act and the feeling of having committed a truly malicious act. — David Mo
You can try to hide the act without any feeling of guilt because of fear of punishment. — David Mo
Guilt is the feeling of being responsible for a wrong committed on someone. — David Mo
You confuse the guilty verdict in a court of law with the guilty feeling of the guilty. — David Mo
Do you want restrict to this biblical example? — David Mo
What does Judas Iscariot feel in the Bible? He feels guilty about giving up Jesus. Yes or no?
Matt 27, 3-5. — David Mo
When we talk about moral emotions in psychology and philosophy, we understand that they are those that affect my relationship with others. In addition to guilt and shame, this often includes pride, moral outrage and so on. Defining what is moral is complicated, but this definition is operative and serves to understand us in this field. — David Mo
I've said, in this thread, that "shame" involves a judgement that the situation is less than ideal, deprived. So I've made the same mistake which I've criticized David Mo for here, placing the judgement as inherent within the emotion. Therefore we ought to describe shame simply as the uncomfortable feeling, and associate the judgement that the uncomfortable feeling is derived from the apprehension of a deprived situation, with conscience. — Metaphysician Undercover
The contradiction is only in your head. It is not true that guilty is a judgement and not a feeling. The criminal that hide his crime just because he fears to be punished has no feeling of culpability, although he knows he has done something wrong. This is a very common fact between mafiosi and pathological killers. This contradict your claim that guilt is only a judgement.Do you not see how you contradict yourself? The person here has "the feeling of having committed a truly malicious act", and wants to hide that act because of fear of punishment. So you say that the person does not feel guilt. — Metaphysician Undercover
There was something wrong with me. I just don’t remember being such a monster. I don’t feel evil. — Kendall Francois, serial killer
This is the absurd conclusion. In fact, the argument invalidates any kind of emotion. They all involve cognitive processes. Fear, for example, also involves an assessment of the situation. I judge that I have done wrong, I judge that there is something dangerous in the situation, I judge that this is outrageous. Then there are no emotions. Neither fear, nor indignation, nor guilt, nor shame, nor love, etc. are emotions, according to your argument. An absurdity.I think every emotion is a judgement. — unenlightened
Therefore we throw away your internal feeling of guilt, and we replace this with internal feelings which are derived from perceived relations with others, feelings which are independent from such judgements of wrong or right. — Metaphysician Undercover
The emotion provides motivation to make the judgement, but isn't itself a judgement. — Metaphysician Undercover
So whatever type of judgement this is, which causes the occurrence of embarrassment, it is not a conscious judgement, and that makes it awkward to even call it a judgement. — Metaphysician Undercover
I cannot apprehend my emotions as judgements. — Metaphysician Undercover
Reason is and ought to be the slave of passion. — Hume
Suppose I start feeling embarrassed. This feeling wells up inside me, but the feeling itself doesn't really give me any information about the situation, — Metaphysician Undercover
The contradiction is only in your head. It is not true that guilty is a judgement and not a feeling. The criminal that hide his crime just because he fears to be punished has no feeling of culpability, although he knows he has done something wrong. This is a very common fact between mafiosi and pathological killers. This contradict your claim that guilt is only a judgement. — David Mo
No agreement is possible. All so-called moral feelings involve relationships with others and a certain sense of right and wrong. Indignation, pride, resentment, guilt, shame, etc. are different because their cause is different: the evil that I have committed, the ideal of the 'I' that I have violated, the evil that has been infringed upon another person, the harm that has been done to me, the act that others approve of, etc. Consequently they are associated with different ideas and also have different effects. — David Mo
Therefore, moral emotions are mental complexes that cannot be broken down, except analytically. — David Mo
You could escape your contradictions by eliminating the term judgement. An unconscious judgment is not a judgment strictly speaking. It would be more correct to say that there is an evaluation or perception of the situation. — David Mo
Yes, I can sympathise. judgement is commonly considered the province of the thinker, the rational faculty. But while rationality can make the measurement, and decide which dick is bigger, it cannot decide whether bigger or smaller is better, one has to have a feeling about it. — unenlightened
Which is to say that reason can tell you what's what and what's not, but only passion can make you care, and so only passion can make you act. — unenlightened
Nor should it. It is a response to the situation; the character of the emotion directs the action which in the case of a 'negative' emotion is to change the situation in some appropriate way, eg to cover one's nakedness. Without the judgement that nakedness in this situation is 'bad', the cover-up makes no sense and would not happen. Reason alone is incapable of making such a judgement. — unenlightened
if someone did not recognize one's own actions as culpable, — Metaphysician Undercover
I have not made this distinction. One can rationally judge (or make a proposition, what is the same) about what is good or bad. But there is also the feeling that what I am doing is wrong, which may happen in a direct or non-reflective way, as you yourself will later acknowledge. But this is not a judgment about right or wrong, but about my action.You are distinguishing judgement, as the measurement of does x qualify as good or bad, from the knowledge of what constitutes good and bad. — Metaphysician Undercover
I have not spoken of " starting ", but of a type of emotion that concerns the ideal of the Self. It is shame.This distinction does not make any sense to me. All feelings start with "I". — Metaphysician Undercover
When did I say such a thing? The conciousness of something does not need to be reflexive. Although it often is. I'm aware that I'm being watched, without having to reflect on it.This demonstrates your continued refusal to address "conscience" — Metaphysician Undercover
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