Not if there is a tiger behind you, then it is perfectly rational. What are you suggesting is evil? It seems that the “it” in your statement is referring to fear, which would mean that you are claiming that fear is evil. Is this what you mean?Fear seems to me to be irrational. If it is conditioned into an individual, then that seems outright evil.
Depends on what you mean by worst. It seems to be quite an effective method, no?The point I am making is that fear is the worst way to instill patriotism, cohesiveness, and camaraderie among a population.
I believe it is much older than that. Irrational fear of the “savages” is partially what justified the genocide of the Native Americans.I believe this phenomenon of fear has been handed down from the Cold War paranoia about total annihilation.
Again, this depends on context.The problem of fear is that it leads to poor decision making.
Depends. What “should” are you suggesting replace what “is?”So, what do you think? When do we step back and propose that a should can be substituted as an is here? Is that possible in this instance?
Not if there is a tiger behind you, then it is perfectly rational. — Pinprick
The problem I see with this line of thinking is that you’re essentially saying that instinct is not needed, which isn’t true. In order to make rational decisions, you must have prior experience of that particular object. — Pinprick
The issue with it governing people’s lives has more to do with people exploiting our innate fear response than fear itself. Wouldn’t you agree? — Pinprick
Or we infer it from other things. Most people don't need to first encounter a tiger to realize it is dangerous. Maybe instinct has some part in that process, but I think parenting and rational inference have a much larger role.
I'd say it's about a 50/50 split. It takes a twisted mind to exploit people's misery to get what they want, but it takes a lazy and ignorant mind to never question its own emotional responses. Shame on the exploiter for exploiting people. Shame on the exploitee for letting themselves be exploited.
It's non-rational. It is a very effective pattern of mobilisation of the body. It is an evolved facet of animals. It is different from rational thought, but not necessarily at all irrational. In fact it would be irrational to remove a pattern that is so necessary and useful to the most complicated species on earth.Fear seems to me to be irrational — Shawn
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