What about reasonable? — Pantagruel
If thinking is strategic — Pantagruel
This is how I, tentatively, see it - The discussion of anything can be rational, logical; but premises are not necessarily rational. I'd go further and say premises are generally not rational, which isn't to say they are irrational. Most of our thinking is not rational. We grasp most things without tracing our knowledge back to a source. Rationality comes into play when we have to go back and justify what we've proposed.
One way I think of reason as different from rationality, although I'm not sure it is legitimate, is in terms of broader values. Rationality is a hammer. Reason takes into account issues beyond the bare facts, e.g. clarity, civility, contemplation, cooperation. Again, that's my idiosyncratic way of looking at it. — T Clark
Also, I don't think thinking is strategic. I'm not even sure what that means. Certainly a lot of our thinking is not goal oriented. — T Clark
I was continuing my inter-evaluation with ethics (which I think is another top-level descriptor). — Pantagruel
Also, I don't think thinking is strategic. I'm not even sure what that means. Certainly a lot of our thinking is not goal oriented.
— T Clark
I was thinking of a criminal. Who can have high situational-awareness and make complex plans. But is that sufficient to rationality? — Pantagruel
By "top level descriptor" do you mean a category at the same level as reason or rationality? Or what? — T Clark
If thinking is strategic, is it therefore also rational? — Pantagruel
Is it possible to be a criminal, and also rational, in the strictest sense of the word? — Pantagruel
What about reasonable? — Pantagruel
Yes.Is ethics rational? — Pantagruel
Or is it just rational to be ethical? — Pantagruel
I thought about starting a thread to discuss the difference between rationality and reason. They seem different to me, but they are considered synonyms. — T Clark
Yes, trying to capture some kind of paradigm descriptor of thought in its purest or ideal form. I believe there are elements of logic, ethics, awareness, rationality. Reason. — Pantagruel
the derived word 'reasonable' is not synonymous with 'rational'. — Vera Mont
you can't have thought without Intuition, emotion, imagination, visualization, memory. — T Clark
People have a lot invested in what is considered reasonable or rational and what is not. — T Clark
I think that ambiguity is the reason I never took on the task of clarifying the distinction. There's just too much room for pointless disagreement descending into "sez you." People have a lot invested in what is considered reasonable or rational and what is not. — T Clark
The premises or belief from which the thought begins may be entirely false (religious tenet, cultural assumption) and the information may be incorrect (optical illusion, misuse of language, inaccurate measurement, deliberate lie) and therefore the conclusion derived from them entirely wrong, disastrously wrong, as long as they are internally consistent, the thought is rational. — Vera Mont
I suppose... But don't they in just about every kind of opinion and belief? Avoiding all of those subjects doesn't leave much to discuss. The weather, traffic, our children and our dreams... — Vera Mont
I think that ambiguity is the reason I never took on the task of clarifying the distinction. There's just too much room for pointless disagreement descending into "sez you." People have a lot invested in what is considered reasonable or rational and what is not.
— T Clark
I think the terrain can be mapped. — Pantagruel
scientistic and hermeutic approaches to understanding and intentionality — Pantagruel
Sure, the premises may be wrong, but they also may just be non-rational. — T Clark
There are some topics I avoid because I don't think the discussion will go anywhere useful. — T Clark
Can you briefly summarize these. That may be an unreasonable, although not irrational, request. — T Clark
I'm only surprised no one has yet used the phrase "instrumental rationality," which could be defined something like, the rational selection of a course of action to achieve a given goal -- the kicker being that this means any goal, however arbitrary. Sometimes "reasonableness" is contrasted specifically with instrumental rationality in submitting to judgment also the worthwhileness of the goal and the acceptability of the means of achieving it, so a broader decision-making process. — Srap Tasmaner
Thus, a maximally rational person is someone whose reason reliably tells them about the reasons that there are, and who correspondingly acts and believes as reason bids them act and believe. — Bartricks
No human being is purely one type or another, can make all their decisions according the same mode of thought, and everything they do decide is situation-dependent. So, all decisions are likely to be some mixture of rational, ethical, instinctive, emotional and coerced. — Vera Mont
That makes no difference to the kind of thinking that is applied to a problem. The whole chain of reasoning may be invalidated at the end by one irrational premise or one false datum along the way, but the process itself is either rational or irrational. — Vera Mont
I do gain something, even from some of the futile, circular ones. — Vera Mont
Sometimes "reasonableness" is contrasted specifically with instrumental rationality in submitting to judgment also the worthwhileness of the goal and the acceptability of the means of achieving it, so a broader decision-making process. — Srap Tasmaner
Reason takes into account issues beyond the bare facts, e.g. clarity, civility, contemplation, cooperation. — T Clark
If thinking is strategic, is it therefore also rational? Is it possible to be a criminal, and also rational, in the strictest sense of the word? What about reasonable? — Pantagruel
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