So my conclusion is not “belief”, nor “a belief”—I am convinced. I do not have faith in my judgment; I have faith in you. I have now given you my trust; I treat you as genuine. — Antony Nickles
I would say that judging whether someone is earnest does take “deliberation”. — Antony Nickles
So then what is “trusting your own mind”? If it is “all just movements of [our] mind” then we are left with the fact Benj96 started with: “Everyone can be rash, everyone can be stupid, misinformed or otherwise malpracticing adequate reason.” Which is to say, how can we trust our self? — Antony Nickles
I think he was referencing your position that we may be permitted stupidity if — ENOAH
If I may, I think he was referencing your position that we may be permitted stupidity if. . ., not you personally. — ENOAH
I have no idea what you're talking about at this point. — flannel jesus
I have no idea how any of these words relate, at all, to anything I said — flannel jesus
why are you doing this? — flannel jesus
just start saying rude things to me — flannel jesus
If you believe I was cruel to you first, please show me where — flannel jesus
yes — flannel jesus
If you perceived me saying some post of yours read like a non sequitur to me, the point of me saying that is not rudeness or cruelty but to express that I don't understand how your reply to me makes sense given what I was saying. The correct response to that isn't for you to decide to start being cruel to me, the correct response is to either spell out why your reply does make sense, or to just disengage. — flannel jesus
I really don't know what you're on about anymore. — flannel jesus
What point is there to it, if not to make your thoughts clear? — flannel jesus
here is how you guys see it and here is how each of your views differs. — Benj96
there is no Mind and no Trusting… your mind moves autonomously — ENOAH
Ultimately, can I trust my mind? No, it's lying to you, it's not who you think you are. Yes, you have no choice. You are trusting your mind incessantly. — ENOAH
We may make a “snap judgment”, be unconscious of our reasons ( — Antony Nickles
But the outcome is ours; we are responsible for its failings and reasons — Antony Nickles
Thus “trusting your mind” turns our duty into an intellectual problem, such as: whether the outcomes are right or wrong, real or illusion, rational or emotional, etc. So if we can solve this manufactured problem—e.g., an outcome could be “known” to be right—then it would not be my judgment — Antony Nickles
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