Can people choose to change their beliefs, or do beliefs choose people — Scarecow
No. That will kill you.For example, let's say that I received a cancer diagnosis. If denial helps me process, then, is it still irrational for me to go into denial — Scarecow
Do you think that denial can be helpful? — Scarecow
Can people choose to change their beliefs — Scarecow
If you cannot choose your beliefs, then is it rational to believe anything, even if that belief is irrational? — Scarecow
Is it rational to hold an incorrect belief that helps you cope with pain and suffering? — Scarecow
Is it rational to hold an incorrect belief that helps you cope with pain and suffering? — Scarecow
Most philosophers seem to agree that we can't directly control our beliefs, only indirectly, so the answer is no. — Lionino
You can't change a belief when new evidence is presented? For example, I'm driving to work, thinking my house is fine. My neighbor calls me and tells me it's on fire. I now have a new belief that my house is not fine. I didn't change my belief in that case? What happened then? — RogueAI
Your neighbor changed your belief. — wonderer1
My neighbor only changes my belief if I choose to believe he's on the level. — RogueAI
You can, it is just not voluntary. The proof of that is that you can't will into believing the Sun is smaller than the moon, you can lie to yourself, but you won't believe it. — Lionino
I'd think it would be much more realistic to say, "My neighbor only changes my belief if my intuitions about my neighbor are such that I trust him in this circumstance." However, those intuitions were themselves likely caused (to some extent) to be as they are by your neighbor.
I think your talk about choosing to believe isn't a realistic description of how such things happen. — wonderer1
If we can't voluntarily choose whether a piece of evidence is good or not, how can we be sure we're updating our hypotheses correctly? — RogueAI
I said we don't voluntarily believe, not that we don't judge evidence. — Lionino
Case 2:
Is it rational to hold an incorrect belief that helps you cope with pain and suffering?
For example, let's say that I received a cancer diagnosis. If denial helps me process, then, is it still irrational for me to go into denial? — Scarecow
"Voluntarily choose" makes it sound arbitrary. Rather, some people aim to have their rational facilities set up so that they HAVE to accept genuinely good evidence. Changing their beliefs in the face of strong evidence becomes less of a choice and more of a mental compulsion - this evidence is so good that I MUST update my views, I'm not just Willy nilly choosing it
I don't believe the stuff I believe because I want to, I believe it because the combination of my life experiences and reasoning capacity make those beliefs the natural consequence. — flannel jesus
If it was a choice, was there a conscious choice to make that choice? — flannel jesus
Right, but not a choice to make that choice. So... you made a choice to do some thing, but you didn't make a choice to choose to do that thing. The choice just kinda... happened to you? — flannel jesus
I'm not sure what the "cult" thing is about. In any case, if you're not choosing your choice to change beliefs, then it's like that change just happened — flannel jesus
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