You are claiming that people cannot care about the environment or social inequality and that they can only care about being perceived as a good person? — praxis
He believes those concepts to be the ultimate truth and is very
combative against anybody questioning their validity. — stoicHoneyBadger
A person is able to generate his own concepts and build a coherent world view out of them. — stoicHoneyBadger
A person not only has his own unique world view, but is able to communicate it to others, creating his own schools of thought. — stoicHoneyBadger
I don't think this always happens. Or perhaps you are more charitable about the term 'school of thought'. Most people's beliefs systems probably end up being variations of the views of their parents/culture/peer group.
My bigger question is, how is this model useful? — Tom Storm
Whether those are his concepts or he is enslaved by someone's else concepts. — stoicHoneyBadger
It's still not clear to me what problem this is addressing or how it helps. — Tom Storm
Hmmm. How does this make any substantive difference? — Tom Storm
It sounds like you have a kind of model of human development that privileges a hierarchical outlook about people's conceptual frameworks. — Tom Storm
creating his own schools of thought. — stoicHoneyBadger
I think the difference between a genuine care and virtue signaling is that a person can critically evaluate his believes, actions and their consequences. — stoicHoneyBadger
I would say being an authentic thinker is a higher evolutionary stage. — stoicHoneyBadger
Evolutionary? How so? — Tom Storm
understanding that you still need oil — stoicHoneyBadger
Whether those are his concepts or he is enslaved by someone's else concepts. Meaning whether he is just a pawn in someone else's game or is he at least trying to be his genuine self and develop a world view that help him live a more fulfilled life. — stoicHoneyBadger
By becoming more Human than Animal. Growing your spirit reduces the animal inside us. Tames it.
Still most of our beliefs are more based in our animal nature than our spiritual one. — dimosthenis9
Are you suggesting that what separates human animals from other animals is a 'higher nature' founded in some kind of spirituality? — Tom Storm
I can't accept seeing people as "just animals". We are more than that. — dimosthenis9
Do animals have the human mental ability? Our fantasy, our critical thinking, our speech etc. And all that "Spiritual world" that our mind creates isn't what separate us from animals? — dimosthenis9
Sophisticated does not mean 'better'. I'm not sure what more we can make of this other than describing the attributes. — Tom Storm
I'm not sure what more we can make of this other than describing the attributes. — Tom Storm
Your hierarchy of self-actualisation looks to make Donald Trump the most evolved dude on the planet then. Or any other autocrat and cult leader.
Is personal authenticity actually the highest good? Or do we need something else to measure the apex human by? — apokrisis
We could also agree on population reduction. — praxis
The thing is how far is someone willing to go that road of self development as you say. It is a damn hard constant inner fight with yourself, so we have to be lenient with people that don't dare to give that fight. I can understand that, though I find it wrong.
Personally I would be really happy if most people worldwide could reach to Stage 3 but unfortunately it's still Stage 2 in reality. — dimosthenis9
WTF? Funny how those willing to reduce the population never want to start with themselves. — stoicHoneyBadger
Seriously though, social engineering is an extremely complex topic and, as history shows us, those who reduce it to oversimplified concepts always do way more harm than good. — stoicHoneyBadger
I haven’t had children, by choice, if that pleases your sense of consistency. — praxis
The point was really to express unconventional ideas to see how you would respond to them. It seems you dislike the maverick and prefer the herd. — praxis
I think you may be confusing the ends with the means. One can care about the ends of a clean environment and social inequality but not agree with the means by which some groups try to achieve those ends.You are claiming that people cannot care about the environment or social inequality and that they can only care about being perceived as a good person? — praxis
I agree that most people are at this level and never climb out of it. Thinking for yourself is difficult, especially when you don't want to take the time to educate yourself on certain topics or issues. You simply adopt the position of the group you find yourself in and you compartmentalize those concepts from other concepts that you hold that you end up holding contradictory concepts because being part of a group is more important than being consistent for these types of individuals. They naturally gravitate towards the collective mindset.Stage 1.
A person seems to be owned by one or more concepts. He is unable to critically evaluate the concepts animating him or appraise them in a broader context. He believes those concepts to be the ultimate truth and is very combative against anybody questioning their validity.
Usually such concepts fulfill one's need to be perceived by the society as a “good person”.
For example, “a good person has to fight climate change” or “a good person has to support BLM”. — stoicHoneyBadger
I find 2 and 3 part of the same stage - at least for me in my development. I went through this stage in my late teens-early twenties when, as a young Christian, I began to question my beliefs primarily as a result of my observations of other "Christians" in how they didn't behave as if an all-knowing, all-seeing god existed and was going to ultimately judge them for their actions. I lost faith in my religion so I began exploring other religions and turned to explore those fields of science that my religion had told me was the "devil's work" like evolution by natural selection.Stage 2.
A person is no longer owned by random concepts, but chooses a concept to serve more or less deliberately out of what is offered by his culture.
Stage 3.
A person already starts understanding the relativity of concepts and is actively exploring different world views. He mentally dissects existing concepts, tries to rearrange some parts, etc.
For example, “what if we take a Stoic world view and spice it with Yogic exercises?” — stoicHoneyBadger
I didn't reach this stage until much later in life - like nearly 20 years later - after I had time to digest all of this new information and integrate it into a more general worldview. It seems to me that 5 comes with 4 as you need to be able to articulate it to yourself and understand it to be able to communicate it to others. Communicating vs proving it to others are two different things as well. It's essentially three stages for me. 1) Living in the bubble you find yourself born into. 2) realizing that you are in a bubble and attempt to break out of that bubble. 3) emerging from the bubble.Stage 4. A person is able to generate his own concepts and build a coherent world view out of them. Cultural norms are no longer relevant to him. He himself has the authority to determine what is good or bad, regardless of other people.
Stage 5.
A person not only has his own unique world view, but is able to communicate it to others, creating his own schools of thought. — stoicHoneyBadger
He himself has the authority to determine what is good or bad, regardless of other people. — stoicHoneyBadger
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