The assumption seems to be that dogma makes for intolerance, but perhaps intolerance is more related to power, and dogma is simply 'certainty'. — unenlightened
Well, yes - if you don't have a definition of "reputable" that's not subjective. — Ludwig V
The assumption seems to be that dogma makes for intolerance, but perhaps intolerance is more related to power, and dogma is simply 'certainty'. — unenlightened
This version is fine. — Ludwig V
While NIST is ultimately a maker of subjective definitions, they are inter-subjective and checked and about as good as you can get for those purposes. That's not the same as me claiming this or that brand of peanut butter is better though; we'd call that obviously subjective. — Moliere
So I'm just going to ask the obvious: Did we actually find a description of dogma that three of us are fine with? — Moliere
I'm sorry, I can't decipher NIST. What does it mean? — Ludwig V
One could claim that one brand of peanut butter is better than another on objective grounds - that it is organic or doesn't use palm oil. Sure, the fact/value distinction would kick in, but the argument about whether those grounds are appropriate is at least not straightforwardly subjective. Whereas making that claim on the ground that "I like it" is quite different; that would be subjective. (But "I like it because it is organic" is different.) — Ludwig V
"Reputable", it seems to me has objective elements, because (in normal use) it would be based on reasonably objective grounds. The question would be about the worth of, for example, relevant social status (relevant professorship or other mark of success).
It looks like it. :grin:
I accept that if we dig in to it, we'll find differences of opinion. — Ludwig V
Surely with dogma, though, there'd have to be a shared other dogma which would allow for a third party to be relevant? — Moliere
But reason speaks differently to different people, and people are motivated by passion before reason so subjectivity has a way of coming back around even as we try our best to adhere to objective reason. — Moliere
Originally I wanted to have a kind of rule for classifying dogma, but this way of looking isn't really like that. It's probably better that way. — Moliere
truth as the only and unquestionable value. — unenlightened
It is important to be aware that every rule can (and mostly likely will, eventually) encounter circumstances in which the appropriate application may be unclear or disputed. — Ludwig V
Hence one has recourse to dogma: "The referee's decision is final." Or the Supreme Court's, or the Central Committee's, or whatever. — unenlightened
We can debate the meaning of any word, but only by not debating the meaning of the words we use to debate it. Thus even a debate on the meaning of dogma requires a dogmatic understanding of 'meaning', 'debate' etc. One might say that dogma is the (perhaps temporary) still, fixed point of the mind. — unenlightened
My thread, my rules; this is what dogma is, and this is my dogma — unenlightened
My thread, my rules; this is what dogma is, and this is my dogma
— unenlightened
:wink: That seems reasonable and I will defer to your judgement. If I don't like it, I can always go away. — Ludwig V
If men are not afraid to die,
It is of no avail to threaten them with death.
If men live in constant fear of dying,
And if breaking the law means that a man will be killed,
Who will dare to break the law?
There is always an official executioner.
If you try to take his place,
It is trying to be like a master carpenter and cutting wood.
If you try to cut wood like a master carpenter,
you will only hurt your hand. — Lao Tzu
If you don't like it, you can appeal to the mods, whose dogma is final, subject to the terms and conditions of the service provider, that are subject to the various laws of the countries involved, subject to anyone giving enough of a damn to set about enforcement. — unenlightened
Why do we want to get rid of it? — Ludwig V
In another part of the jungle, the is/ought distinction shows that theoretical reason is not relevant to the passions. But that doesn’t need to mean that they are irrational. There are reasonable fears and unreasonable fears, reasonable joys (winning the race) and unreasonable joys (preventing an opponent from winning the race – unreasonable because it undermines the point of the practice of racing.) (Actually, “reasonable” is useful also in theoretical contexts, when formal conclusive proof is not available.) — Ludwig V
I'm in full agreement that the passions are not necessarily irrational, though. That's one reason why the distinction is fuzzy in normal use. There are frequent examples which touch on both the objective and the subjective, such as the category of "reasonable emotions" -- which I endorse as a good way of looking at one's emotions under certain circumstances, but in others I'd say it's inappropriate such as what someone feels while watching a play. — Moliere
I think it goes like this : Given fear of death, fear of tigers and poisonous snakes is 'reasonable' in the sense that they are capable of causing death, whereas fear of mice is not. But as Hume famously didn't say, "you can't get an emotion from a fact". Fear of death is not reasonable, merely common. — unenlightened
Reasonable passions are what decent, {ie English} people feel. The Continentals cannot control themselves, and the savages don't even try. — unenlightened
At least this is another motivation for the game of reasons that lives alongside the cooperative motivations. And the subjective, in relation to that motivation, is a position of vulnerability rather than invulnerability. — Moliere
I think reason gets re-expressed and re-interpreted depending upon what we're doing rather than having it act like an arbiter or judge of the reasonable. — Moliere
I think it goes like this : Given fear of death, fear of tigers and poisonous snakes is 'reasonable' in the sense that they are capable of causing death, whereas fear of mice is not. But as Hume famously didn't say, "you can't get an emotion from a fact". Fear of death is not reasonable, merely common. Lay on, Macduff, And damned be him that first cries “Hold! Enough!” — unenlightened
self-control: a peculiar notion which always feels contradictory to me. — Moliere
The flexibility of all this is quite tiresome. Philosophers, at least, regarded the subjective ("introspection") as preferable because they thought it was immune to error - the same reason as their preference for mathematics. Aiming for something objective meant risk to them - something to be avoided at all costs. — Ludwig V
Well, emotions and values are ineradicable (saving certain ideas like Buddhism (nirvana) or Stoicism/Epicureanism (ataraxia)) from human life. We need to understand them whatever their status. Human life is a good place to start to identify what's valuable (and therefore to be desired or avoided, loved or hated, feared or welcomed. Where else would be better?). — Ludwig V
You're right about that. But people do hunger for something decisive. Not knowing makes for anxiety. — Ludwig V
Though have you ever wondered why not knowing makes for anxiety? — Moliere
Kantian dogma might be that set of beliefs which he thought were contrary to reason but which people believed mostly due to this hunger for something decisive where nothing decisive could be said. — Moliere
they can be "tamed" to live a certain way. — Moliere
Don't we have a kind of understanding of emotions and values through our commitments and emotions we carry? Why do we need to understand these things at all? — Moliere
how do people who don't get anxious cope with not knowing? — Ludwig V
Yes and no. By which I mean that, as well as provoking and inspiring us, they sometimes puzzle or frighten us. Though, to be honest, I'm not at all sure what "understanding" means. Certainly, knowing about my hormonal system explains nothing, in the relevant sense. — Ludwig V
Only that it's curious that it does do so, given how there's so much we do not know (and it can even be fun to not know), and a lot of what we do not know doesn't matter to us, and how even after we know the imagination can continue its anxiety spiral regardless of that desire for knowledge being satiated. — Moliere
All off-topic to atheist dogma, but I found the topic interesting to continue. Sorry un. — Moliere
For the modern Humean such stories are thought to be nothing but falsity, but this non-factual understanding is a part of their attraction, I think. — Moliere
And this primary division persists in every feeling and every judgement being positive or negative. — unenlightened
the dis-ease of armchair philosophers rather than rock-climbing philosophers — unenlightened
I don't know which thread is your other thread. — Ludwig V
Isn't there a third possibility? Neither positive nor negative, i.e. irrelevant to me. — Ludwig V
Anxious people will tend to avoid rock-climbing, won't they? — Ludwig V
Anyway, I would suggest that animals are wary, not anxious. I think anxiety is very much verbal in origin.
Birds have to be constantly wary of cats, and other birds, whereas anxiety always seems to arise in a place of safety, the dis-ease of armchair philosophers rather than rock-climbing philosophers. But that story of the difference between animal and human is fleshed out in the other thread in more detail. — unenlightened
Perhaps. I would hope that a rock-climbing philosopher would be at least somewhat fearful. It shouldn't be a surprise if there were few anxious people among them. Anxious people will tend to avoid rock-climbing, won't they? — Ludwig V
Is "meh" a feeling? The feeling of not having a feeling? — unenlightened
I could almost define anxiety as the fear of fear, but I wouldn't defend that if it doesn't fit. — unenlightened
But the verbal dimension compounds this fear through the imagination. — Moliere
The fear is still there, of course, otherwise the thrill wouldn't be there. — Moliere
adrenaline supports both fight and flight. Hence the term "adrenaline junkie". — Ludwig V
Anxiety of death, in particular, seems to me to require verbalization since we never experience death. The bird is wary of being eaten, and the evolutionary story would say this is because animals which are wary tend to reproduce more, but the bird is not anxious about the end of their existence. They cannot hoard to fight off the inevitable impending death. That requires planning. — Moliere
By the way, I'm still thinking about "wary". It's not the same as fear or anxiety, not obviously an emotion or a mood, more like a policy. https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/wary defines it as "having or showing a close attentiveness to avoiding danger or trouble". The lists of synonyms and antonyms is interesting. No emotions or moods occur, yet clearly "fear" and "anxiety" are related. — Ludwig V
Shades of grey, on the border between categories. Partly empirical, partly conceptual. Hence difficult for philosophy. Nonetheless, important for understanding human beings. — Ludwig V
It was all going so well, until the last sentence, and I thought, first of squirrels hoarding their nuts, and then of The ant and the grasshopper. One might suggest that even plants hoard sunlight as sugars and other carbohydrates in seeds or bulbs. In this case the evolution of DNA informed by consistent long term environmental pressures does the 'planning' - " Make hay while the sun shines, and make seed (or bulb, or tuber) when it starts to shine less." Thus the rationale that we make for what plants do because the ones that didn't died out. We understand:- plants just grow and make seed. — unenlightened
I'm content with changing the locution from "wary" to something else — Moliere
Thus the rationale that we make for what plants do because the ones that didn't died out. — unenlightened
I didn't mean to suggest that. On the contrary, I think that "wary" is perfect (as near as one ever gets, anyway). — Ludwig V
I'm sorry. I haven't heard that distinction before. Could you explain, please? — Ludwig V
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