Nah. We study linguistics and the meaning and role of idioms.We are confused. — TheMadFool
Nah. We study linguistics and the [u[meaning[/u] and role of idioms. — baker
we are confused — javi2541997
wisdom is useless — Tom Storm
Wise sayings are always appliedafter the event. If a cooperative venture succeeds its a case of many hands, and if it fails, too many cooks. These things are not a guide to life, but a classification system. Confusion arises from taking cliches as advice, because the nature of cliches is that there is one applicable to every situation. That's why they are wise sayings; they encapsulate the wisdom of hindsight, and the main lesson of history is 'you never know.' — unenlightened
Can we achieve some kind of harmonious unification of contradictions, assuming they are contradictions in the first place? — TheMadFool
Why should it be that, in one instance, too many cooks spoil the broth, and in another, many hands make light work? You might want to dig a little deeper. — TheMadFool
hat they contradict each other is still an unresolved problem. — TheMadFool
You really don't need to dig very far at all. — unenlightened
I don't see how this is a problem — Tom Storm
This is what the study of folk psychology addresses:That out of the way, my aim is to find out how to make sense of these frank contradictions. Is there some context in which we could reconcile these opposing recommendations? — TheMadFool
No I don't see the problem. — Tom Storm
He who hesitates is lost i.e. one must act quickly. Haste makes waste i.e. one mustn't act quickly — TheMadFool
This is what the study of folk psychology addresses:
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/folkpsych-theory/ — baker
I think they are similar to the way language allows one to sometimes say "I'm wearing brown shoes", and other times to say "I'm wearing black shoes". Ie. it's not the case that one is objectively true and the other false, but that in a particular context, one is true and the other is not.No I don't see the problem. They are both true or both false. These are not logical absolutes, they are folk sayings applied to individual situations. — Tom Storm
Can you do both at the same time? — TheMadFool
You chose the maxim that describes best the situation as you see it. The wisdom part is knowing which one applies. — Tom Storm
It seems to lack the, how shall I put it, oomph factor I'm looking for. — TheMadFool
I've spent my life looking for the oomph factor. Let us know if you find it. — Tom Storm
I hear you. I have seen people try to apply the foundations of reason to folk wisdom before and it can't work. I guess where you were coming from may have been the principle of non-contradiction - a thing isn't what it isn't. It that's so (and it is) - why would there be contradictions in folk wisdom? Answer - because, unlike logic, folk wisdom consists of sayings which are not tautologies or absolutes. They are situational recommendations. — Tom Storm
I was hoping for more from you but that's just me I guess. I get what you're saying - every situation has its own unique features that preclude any attempts at generalization - and I'm with you on that score. Nevertheless, isn't it rather mysterious that the laws of nature which are, scientists claim, universal in scope should give rise to a world in which no laws seem to cover all cases? Going by your responses, you seem interested enough in this topic and so, I would like to submit a request to you and it's to find, if you're up to the task, some rationale why a solid bedrock of universal laws (the so-called laws of nature) should give rise to a world (the world where sayings are meaningful) in which there are no such laws (each saying is applicable in different situations and no saying covers every situation) at all? — TheMadFool
Now, if I maybe so bold, your task is to provide an explanation similar to the one I did for heavier-than-air flight i.e. try and come up with how the "apparent" disharmony of mutually contradictory sayings is an illusion and that there's actually an underlying harmony. — TheMadFool
One of the problems is the use of the word laws. This kind of smuggles in a lawmaker — Tom Storm
The answer is the Tao — Tom Storm
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