If guilt and shame are the direct result of mistakes, which you consider unpredictable and unavoidable, are they not similarly unpredictable and unavoidable? I no more want guilt and shame than I do mistakes but somehow my emotions don't give any more a fig for what I want than the vagaries of fate do.Thus, there is no reason to dwell on them/live in guilt or shame due to them. — Benj96
You can know all that is possible for you to make predictions and still make a mistake because there are many forces outside your knowledge that could play a role in your mistake. — TheMadMan
If guilt and shame are the direct result of mistakes, which you consider unpredictable and unavoidable, are they not similarly unpredictable and unavoidable? I no more want guilt and shame than I do mistakes but somehow my emotions don't give any more a fig for what I want than the vagaries of fate do. — Baden
And people will feel regret even if it is a fault-less mistake/error. — TheMadMan
In the math profession one achieves favorable results through a convergent sequence of mistakes — jgill
As for any moral value I'm not sure o know what you mean exactly. Some mistakes are not morally relevant. Others are more so. — Benj96
It may be contradiction of terms but its a reality. Maybe "innocent mistake" would be a better term for what I mean.faultless mistake or error is a contradiction in terms — Ludwig V
Im not sure how one can give a moral judgment to the mistake/error. I think that the moral judgement falls to what could cause the mistake/error i.e negligence, pride, anger etc. — TheMadMan
It may be contradiction of terms but its a reality. Maybe "innocent mistake" would be a better term for what I mean. — TheMadMan
In the math profession one achieves favorable results through a convergent sequence of mistakes — jgill
Converging in what sense? From what I understand is converging on the correct answer by process of elimination (series of errors). I feel this is not just applicable to maths but across the board. Probability underlies most of not all interactions/processes right? — Benj96
Perfection is a distant and cruel god. — jgill
Maybe the shame and guilt come from our expectation of our self.
I don't feel guilt or shame when I fail at something I know I'm not good at.
So it maybe be from our self-image and our identification with it. — TheMadMan
.knowledge, decision, planning, resolve, execution — Antony Nickles
Maybe "innocent mistake" would be a better term for what I mean. — TheMadMan
If a mistake occurs I'm not sure it's "innocent" in the sense that the person caused it.
But the mistake is either caused by "mal-intent" or "despite good intention" . And I think that's the key difference.
If a mistake is caused but the intent was good, then the mistake is in the action/execution. Forgiveable. Perhaps the person requires a bit more careful thinking/reasoning and planning in the future. — Benj96
a failing in any part (knowledge to execution) can lead to an undesired outcome and thus a mistake. — Benj96
For me, whether a mistake is forgivable or not is primarily based on intent. Intent can be good or bad. How you act out intent can also be good or bad. — Benj96
I presume sensory simple mistakes are not the essence of the question. — Alexander Hine
The only course of action is this to acknowledge that they were made, why they were made, and plan/intend to never make the same one again. To learn. — Benj96
So if all of our mistakes are always behind us, in the past, then there's nothing we can do to change them. Thus, there is no reason to dwell on them/live in guilt or shame due to them. — Benj96
I think the Christian idea of confession of sin is probably worth assimilating. — green flag
I think this is the idea behind confession, confess to one's mistakes, be forgiven, and move forward, released from guilt and shame. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think it's connected to what teachers sometimes say: there are no stupid questions. The point is of course that one learns by expressing difficulties and having them addressed and not by concealing one's ignorance or confusion. — green flag
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.