I have noticed a turn towards more of this kind of ad hom also, and I think good practice would be to label it, also a third party. If we see someone ad homming in this way, even if they are doing it to a poster we disagree with or has their own basket of fallacies, we should label it out and demand they make a case, critique a position, support their own position. — Coben
By characterizing a rational position, as an emotional position, the defender is trying to dismiss it without actually having to deal with it. — JerseyFlight
A devastating choice either way, but I would choose emotion. I'd rather be a rather poor primate than someone with no emotions. To no longer love my wife, nature, my kids. To no longer care about myself, kindness, connecting to others. To not have motivation for anything even to reason. To be a think, a calculator and one with no reason even to calculate since I have no motivations anymore. No goals that I care about.]This is an exclusive OR disjunction meaning only one must be selected to the exclusion of the other. I bet most if not all people will choose reason over emotion any day but that's just my opinion of course. — TheMadFool
A devastating choice either way, but I would choose emotion. I'd rather be a rather poor primate than someone with no emotions. To no longer love my wife, nature, my kids. To no longer care about myself, kindness, connecting to others. To not have motivation for anything even to reason. To be a think, a calculator and one with no reason even to calculate since I have no motivations anymore. No goals that I care about. — Coben
Emotions and reasoning are not neatly separated in the brain. Further you need non-rational - as opposed to irrational - processes when reasoning. Intuition and feelings of correctness, completion, having checked carefully enough, feelings that something is missing
surround and support the process of reasoning. Reasoning in human brains is not like programming. Small bits of feelings are present throughout the process and necessary for that process.
A person without emotions is severely handicapped as a thinker. — Coben
Most of the time I feel the same way but which would you rather have around you when a tiger or lion makes its way toward your family? Cold logic or warm love? — TheMadFool
I disagree, though I also know that what you say here can be right. Anger for example can inform reason that there is a problem with someone. In a crisis situation, someone attacks your child, it is a motivator that revs the body up to defend the child. In a workplace situation where the boss treats you unfairly it can be a signal to a distracted mind that there is a problem and then also a motivator to assert yourself/deal with the problem. Of course one can come up with situations where emotions are problematic, but one can do this for reasoned conclusions. How connected are the emotions to what is happening? How well do we use these facets of ourselves? How connected are we between reason and emotion or are these functions too separate from each other as if we have two modes of dealing with situations? (when in fact we don't)In my humble opinion the two emotions that matter the most are sorrow and joy - both, I'm led to believe, are causes of woolly thinking. Other emotions like jealousy, anger, hate, love, etc. are usually stumbling blocks insofar as clear and logical thinking is concerned. — TheMadFool
For example, your reaction to this. Pride in one's work can be excellent for the creation of anything from a vaccine to a great work of art. It is an emotional assessment and most highly skilled people will have pride. Of course there is problematic pride, but in your response it is as if these emotions are necessarily metaphorically the equivalent of a car crash. Disgust is something we evolved to protect us from, for example, disease and also to enforce social norms. It creates societal cohesion. Obviously if one differs with others about what is disgusting (and what is moral) one can consider their disgust wrong. But likely we accept our own. It is part of being a culture/group. Jealousy is, just on my gut (emotional:razz: ) reaction, the trickiest. Now as I hone in more with my analytical mind I still think it is the most likely to be problematic, however it is a natural byproduct of the strong feelings of attraction/love we feel for certain people. In a philosophy forum, I can't really see it being helpful.Do I love some reasonable arguments! But it's funny, emotions many times provide so much more information about the world. Pride, jealousy, disgust; these have steered humanity since its beginning. The problem is that, to obtain information from emotions, we need to open different channels, those more fit to noise and sights rather than words and meanings.
— dussias
Steered?! You might want to rethink that. Does a drunk driver steer himself at 100 mph into a tree? — TheMadFool
I agree. Here we are typing responses. We are not blurting something out when someone walks up to us on the stress telling us what they think. Here whatever we write, whether driven by huge emotional reactions or more calm ones, is a conscious choice. I don't think one can argue that one flinched and produced a post or an adrenalin surge caused one to post here. Some posts of course trigger huge emotions, but one you get down to the really rather fine tuned actions of typing and generally sitting really quite still, you are not in a fight or flight state. You are responsible for your choices and you have time to focus on the assertions and arguments in the post you are reacting to. Someone runs into my bedroom as I am waking up and tells me there is no free will or there is no persistant self really has to accept the fact that I may focus on them, their emotions, their attitude and no give a good critique of their argument. I might even hit them, even if I agreed with their position.Does fault imply decision or consciousness, then?
— dussias
It doesn't matter. It matters for psychological reasons of explanation, but not for the present context. The present context seeks to uphold the integrity of intellectual standards above and beyond the regress (manipulation) of emotional states. — JerseyFlight
For example, your reaction to this. Pride in one's work can be excellent for the creation of anything from a vaccine to a great work of art. It is an emotional assessment and most highly skilled people will have pride. Of course there is problematic pride, but in your response it is as if these emotions are necessarily metaphorically the equivalent of a car crash. Disgust is something we evolved to protect us from, for example, disease and also to enforce social norms. It creates societal cohesion. Obviously if one differs with others about what is disgusting (and what is moral) one can consider their disgust wrong. But likely we accept our own. It is part of being a culture/group. Jealousy is, just on my gut (emotional:razz: ) reaction, the trickiest. Now as I hone in more with my analytical mind I still think it is the most likely to be problematic, however it is a natural byproduct of the strong feelings of attraction/love we feel for certain people. In a philosophy forum, I can't really see it being helpful — Coben
I guess I'd first wish you'd respond to points I made. It's now as if they never happened and a new set of extremely complicated ideas are raised by what I think is an unclear binary chaos/order now added on top of an already complicated, but I don't think analogous, emotion/reason dyad.The progress of society if one could call it that has been one from chaos in prehistoric times to order in modern times. This transformation of society has been mirrored by a shift in emphasis from emotions to reason. Am I correct? — TheMadFool
In the present context the fault lies with the person who is trying to evade criticism (the burden of proof) through the medium of emotion. — JerseyFlight
I think the moderators just need to be aware of the fact that philosophy offends people because it refutes their positivity, and not seek to ban people merely because other people are getting emotional and offended. That is not a good enough reason. A skilled debater doesn't need to call people names, he can dislodge his opponent from the basis of his own premises. But this is enough, people get super emotional when this happens. They just can't believe it, and so they do the first thing that comes natural, try to demonize the person who is refuting them, to cast them in a negative light, as a villain, as a fiend, as a fanatic. Anything to sustain their denial and sense of identity which is attached to their belief. — JerseyFlight
Personally this risk element is what I find attractive about this forum. It makes me cautious about what I post, and sharpens my thoughts. And, as others have mentioned, being subjected to this risk, can result in surprisingly good new ideas. I feel it is extremely poor form however, and well out of order, to try to ban somebody because your personal philosophy cannot reasonably stand up to theirs. That would be school yard bullying, in my opinion, not philosophy. — Pop
feel it is extremely poor form however, and well out of order, to try to ban somebody because your personal philosophy cannot reasonably stand up to theirs. That would be school yard bullying, in my opinion, not philosophy. — Pop
Just a few months ago the common theme was to question the validity of reason being a method for obtaining truth. It seemed to me that there was an "infiltration" of reason-deniers whose aim was to discredit reason itself in favor of subjective, emotional interpretations of evidence for our origins and relationship with the world. "Subjective truths" is a commonly used oxymoronic phrase around here.By characterizing a rational position, as an emotional position, the defender is trying to dismiss it without actually having to deal with it. — JerseyFlight
Religion and politics and ethics are philosophical domains rife with emotion. Most of the problems in these domains stem from confusing their subjective "truths" with objective ones. — Harry Hindu
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