I sure think it is. It is producing more interest in terrorism. It is scaring both China and Russia. If those countries intervened as much as the US does and did worldwide they would be painted as radically aggressive imperialist nations. Their domestic policies are horrendous, but the US is aggressive and passive aggressive (with bases close to borders, etc.) in ways that are destablizing and which would not be accepted if it was China and Russia.Is that even a bad thing? — jamalrob
1) I think it is a preference to choose to lose freedom. It's not my preference, though in smaller ways and certain situations we all allow others to control us. The doctor's office. In a terrorist attack. In the military. In a corporation as an employee. So there is a wide spectrum and small to larger compromises. But even in those more radical versions where one ends up like a slave: in certain but not all cults, as an illegal immigrant working in sweatshop type conditions (and often living on the work premises), we are talking about people making choices based on values. So working from their values (and goals) they may be perfectly rational, but doing something neither you or I would want to do - and perhaps also you and are are lucky enough not to think the latter scenario is actually better than freer options that do not provide food for our families because we are better off. 2) I choose non-rationality rationally all the time. There are all sorts of decisions I make where I do not analyze in the ways generally associated with reason and logic. Now perhaps my implicit knowledge has been arrived at through some unconscious rationality, but I have to black box that. These can be decisions that have to be made quickly. They can be decisions where a vast array of factors are present and my gut reactions have been good (or in any case better than thinking it out verbally). There's a reason we evolved a mixed set of methods to arrive at decisions. Then there is the whole gut decisions on issues I simply cannot reason about, right now anyway. Is this a simulation and does that make a difference and other apriori type stuff. There's a vast array of social stuff that I use intuition for, though I often reflect later and this may or may not hone my intuition. Now this all may be a tangent, but honestly I think people are often reluctant to acknowledge how mixed their epistemologies are. How mixed the ways they arrive at decisions are. Irrational is pejorative, so I use non-rational for those processes that are not linear verbal thinking with the goal of being logical, parismonious etc.Is it rational to choose irrationality intentionally? — David Mo
Can you consciously choose slavery? — David Mo
I think the problem is not with 'justification' but with 'true' in jtb. First off it ends up implying knowledge is immaculate which it need not be, however scary this is. We can (and do) categorize things as knowledge even if they may turn out to be false. Certainly scientists, at least officially, do this and are proud to counterpose this to religious people who they consider not open to revision. But secondly I think JTB is misleading because it is as if there are two criteria, when really there is just one 'justification.' Now if one wants to argue that something can be justified but false, well, if we know that about belief X it is no longer well justified. (and of course that falsification might, in the long run, be revised, but that's another story). And notice I slipped in the word 'well'. Justification includes a matter of degree. Some kind of adverb is involved and people differ on both the degree and the criteria hidden in those adverbs. Different degrees of rigor. Different criteria that lead to something being considered justified. And then in the context of other research/knowledge that might undermine the best little deductions or study results. (at least for now). I say, take out the 'true'. Best justified gets to stand. But then I add in that it does not make sense to only have beliefs that are rationally justified, certainly not consciously, but that's another kettle of propositions.IOW, under a critical rationalist conception of knowledge, there is no Gettier problem at all, because justification in such a paradigm doesn't mean what Gettier assumes it does. — Pfhorrest
I don't know how one knows one is willing to revise a belief. Or, perhaps better put, I think people's self-evaluations on such an issue are radically biased.We shouldn't just believe stuff without being willing revise that belief (except stuff like logic which we have to believe on pain of chaos). — Isaac
Oh, but it does. You are confusing 'a placebo' with a sugar pill. A placebo is an act including something like a sugar pill. The patient is told they are getting a medicine for their illness and they get a pill. That is a placebo. You drop a sugar pill in their drink and don't say you did it and that it's a medicine...that is not a placebo.This seems like an oxymoron for the simple reason that a placebo doesn't cure anything, that's why it's a placebo. — TheMadFool
I'll just quote myself then....By the way, I fail to see how the notion of placebos is relevant to my theory. — TheMadFool
Perhaps I should have added that Art Therapy affects the emotions, I thought you were working on that assumption in the OP. If a ritual so simple as a placebo can affect change, the extremely complicated and generally longer term rituals of art therapy can certainly heal emotional problems and likely more. Now beyond that I think that one can learn through analogical processes and that much of what we are less conscious of functions in processes that are like metaphors. So, I am not saying that it is a direct parallel to a placebo, but rather saying, hell, if a placebo can be effective then art therapy, which is much more directly attuned to the individual and is vastly more nuanced and also gives the patient/client room to express feelings seems even more likely to be effective.To me it is obvious that anything that affects our emotions can have positive or negative (or both) kinds of effects on our health. — Coben
No, I think I was pretty clear that the body with my sister's brain I would never have sex with.So, it's just a matter of time before you start having sex with both your sister and your wife then? — TheMadFool
Hm. I never meant or said that. 1) I made a distinction about the REASONS one would be reluctant (and in one case unwilling) to have sex. It is not the same kind of reluctance. In one my attraction would likely still be there for the body of my wife, but since I know (have an idea) it would be my sister experiencing sex with me, I don't want that to happen. In the other case I am seeing my sister's body, so even though it is my wife, I have lived all my life with this as a taboo, being attracted to that body is a taboo (this all seems very familiar to me, but I'll write it again.) One of these two, for me could change. I could over time deal with my wife's essence being in a body that was my sisters. I would NEVER get over knowing that inside what before was my wife's body there is my sister experiencing through it. I would never have sex with that body. 2) I also raised the issue that our minds are not just our brains. And I mean even if you are a complete physicalist, it does not makes sense to just ignore the neuronal complexes in the heart and gut, and also to ignore the endocrine system. These radically affect personality and sense of self.You speak of emotional aspects which I'll take to mean, all things considered, just the process of, as people say, getting used to the the cards that were dealt to you. That's all I could gather from your post. — TheMadFool
Yes, the right brain should be in charge, aided by the left brain not controlled and run by it. Here's a great read on that....To me, that little incident kind of sums up we, um, philosophy giants. Articulate, rational, clueless. — Hippyhead
I think if there is only my mind, it would make a difference to me. And I think it makes a difference to him.But I'll read your proof when you get to it for him.No, but you can prove it's moot, that it makes no essential difference. — Olivier5
Though you are just asserting this here.Another way to solve the equation is to realize that indeed we do live in a simulation of sorts, but not the kind where one is all alone in an absurd universe: we ALL (you, darkneos and me) live in our mental landscapes, constructed from sensory inputs translated into qualia. The color red, or the music of your favorite band doesn't actually exist 'out there', it's a view of the mind. What seems to exist are air presure waves and quanta of light and stuff. And yet we can all enjoy music and share meaningfully about it; we can all enjoy a sunset and call the attention of others to its splending colors. So this simulation that our brain does based on sensory data is a pretty good one, as far as simulations go. It's both effective, beautiful, and most probably universal (by which I mean your qualia for red is by and large the same as my qualia for red — Olivier5
just like to introduce a third category - the non-rational. This would encompass the irrational, but since that is generally a pejorative term, I want a neutral term that would then also include neutral and positive choices and conclusions that are not arrived at rationally. IOW not arrived at through some logical, verbal process. Evolution seems to have selected for creatures (us I mean) who use a number of processes to arrive at choices and conclusions. 1) I can't see a way to avoid this, given how incredibly time consuming (and then also circular) it would be to arrive at everything using reason. 2) I think people can actually be quite good at non-rational processes. 3) Rational processes are dependent on non-rational processes. We are always deciding things like 'I have checked my reasoning enough' and 'I have a feeling I should check X again' and all sorts of time prioritization, focus prioritization, sense of the semantic scope of terms, interpretations of metaphors without analysis and more through non-reasoning 'feelings' 'intuition' 'gut senses' 'nagging doubts' 'sense of completenesses' and much more. We are mixed bags cognitively.I think that we try to believe that we are rational but most of us are following the prompts of our subjective wishes, which are often far from rational. If anything, we try to justify our subjective intentions in a rational way as a means of self justification. — Jack Cummins
I think this is true. At a very general level, I think it is increasing lonliness. Social media have enhance the ability to be falsely social. At least in person one's tone of voice, facial expression, posture all reveal things we might want to hide. In social media we have control and are encouraged to put a false front out. Children who use the internet are less good at reading faces - iow they are worse at empathy. This doesn't mean they no longer mean well, but they lack social mammal skills. Often teenagers are afraid of phones, even, let alone direct contact in person. Their social lives are more mediated (literally) and controlled. The internet is allowed for vastly more contact, but the kind of contact is impoverished and these trends are taking place in professional and private areas with adults. We are being atomed and distanced, while being fooled that we are in contact with others.One thing that the internet has brought amongst us is loneliness. — Konkai
Though any criticism using anthropomorphism should lead us to wonder if there is any situation where positing such traits, even when describing 'us', isn't also a fallacy. IOW in the face of determinism and all the possible philosophical assaults on the sense of theire being an 'I' and persistant self and choice, etc.Yes, but that's just anthropomorphism. — Kenosha Kid
From a genetic standpoint, the rapist benefits iff there are viable offspring iff the victim benefits too. — Pfhorrest
Alltruisitic behavior can benefit the speciies, the clan, the tribe - which means that genes in the group continue, and since other people in your group will also take care of you, your genes benefit. S, genes in your body, genes that are the same as yours or close in other bodies, and your species all benefit. Social mammals were all doing extremely well until one social mammal - us - got out of hand and started killing most of the others that they were not raising for food.Extending Dawkins' metaphor, an altruistic gene would be a gene that sacrificed itself for the sake of another gene. Such a gene could then not be passed down to future generations. It makes no sense, so apparently the attraction to the idea is emotive, not scientific. — Kenosha Kid
I guess I consider most forms of optimism as tempermental. Not that they don't have belief-support also. My beliefs are, at least, in the main optimistic, but my temperment is pessimistic and most people, especially my wife would consider me a pessimist (actually I think she would say 'a catastrophic thinker.'Claim: Most atheistic (non-religious/spiritual) forms of optimism rely on the collective knowledge and wisdom of humans going back to the dawn of time as some sort of mission statement. — schopenhauer1
So then perhaps irrelevant to you, but not to physicists and basketball coaches. Or those deeply interested in those subjects.Because at least one, and perhaps the most comprehensive, established definition of it, which is a study of the nature of being. I personally see no reason to study something, that is: indulge in a concerted effort to acquire knowledge of, the result of which makes no difference to me. Somehow, I just can’t get excited about studying the fundamental nature of a basketball. And studying the fundamental nature of elementary particles may very well lead to a better toaster oven, but the particle remains as it ever was. — Mww
Sure, but you likely take an ontological stance on 'things that happen in dreams' that is different from some people in other cultures and even some in your culture. And then you may also take ontological stands on universals or certain reified (in some people's opinions) abstractions. And others might find ontological models important in a number of fields. Even most philosophical topics will be affected by the ontologies of the discussion partners.The key is contained in it: that a thing has a nature is given, it is given because it exists, it exists because it is represented in me as a phenomenon. Which would be the case no matter the fundamental nature of its being, the stipulation obvious that beings of different nature merely manifest as different phenomena. Simply put, I have no need of the true nature of “canine” to cognize “wolf”, because it is I that determines both, those concepts, and which objects may eventually be subsumed under them. — Mww
Great, it had seemed part of a line going back to you saying ontology is irrelevant.Absolutely; was never contested. — Mww
How is ontology irrelevant? To what is it irrelevant? Is it due to not producing irrefutable truths? If so why does it seem useful to have ontological assertions in science? Perhaps useful and irrelevant are not overlapping? It might only require, for me, a rephrasing of the above paragraph.So....no, ontology is irrelevant; that a thing has an actual nature is given, even without the possibility of ever knowing the irrefutable truth of what it is. Granting the validity of an ontological domain does not at the same time grant apodeitic knowledge of it, and the human cognitive system in fact prohibits it.
(Prohibits iff the human system is representational, which would seem to be the case) — Mww
I am not sure where 'apodeitic certain' is coming from. I know some people believe in that kind of knowledge and some regarding ontological issues. Which one could argue is a bit like what you say here.Agreed; no one should doubt the reality of an ontological domain. That which is susceptible to doubt, is apodeitic certain knowledge with respect to its content, which necessarily includes the fundamental nature of its constituent objects. You know....their fundamental ontological predicates. — Mww
My sense is that both what your ideas are and what scientists ideas areThis is correct, which simply means I do have ideas about what things are, because to say I don’t know something about things is self-contradictory. I do not make the mistake of granting objects the ability to tell me what they are, but rather, I tell them what they are, henceforth depending on future experience to show me otherwise. — Mww
I don't get the scare quotes, how would you know, given what you've said, is going on in the external word. Those people would be part of the ding an sich. And also what they are doing is. And then even 'is' is utterly empty. I can understand a skeptical position not being convinced. I don't get on what ground you make assertions about things and people that are not you.a good thing to remember when when people doing "ontology" claim that they're doing ontology. — tim wood
Do you mean every philosopher is an idealist, in the philosophical sene?Yes, but the question inquires after what I am not, not what I might be. Any rational agency demonstrating a faculty for discursive understanding is an idealist. — Mww
You really think you can have a language including categories of things (like judgments) without already having some kind of ontology? I can't see how that works. I don't see how you can decide how you can have knowledge of things, if you have no idea what things are. Since any epistemology is going to be designed to work GIVEN the way things are and how subjects relate to them and then what subjects are. There are chicken and egg aspects to this, and both likely came into being together and influenced each other.But it isn’t; one cannot assume anything without thinking something antecedent to it, and one cannot conclude anything that isn’t a judgement about something antecedent to it. Both thought and judgement are members of the epistemological domain, insofar as knowledge is its end. — Mww
If by 'from post-modern academics' you mean they consider he ding an sich the unknowable aspect ofthe external object, I am not sure why we need to assume they are right. But even that formulation has problems, since it posits external objects with aspects that are unknowable and then, ti would seem, other aspects that are knowable.The only reason for there to even be an ontological domain at all, is, initially, because the discursive understanding requires external objects to which its conceptions relate despite the impossibility of knowing the fundamental nature of such objects, and, more importantly, from post-modern academics, the invalid representation of the ding an sich as the unknowable aspect of any external object. — Mww
Ontological proposition: Jupiter is. Going beyond that is going beyond ontology in terms of what "ontology" says. — tim wood
I am not sure if we are talking past each or not. Let me go back a step.If ontology is knowledge of being, as the word says, functioning as so many other -ology words function, then, it would seem to me, all you can affirm is that something is. — tim wood
Could you be specific here with an example?Several ways to go here. This one seems best: can you provide an example of an ontological conclusion? Beyond the obvious one of course: which I am thinking is the only possible one, namely that the thing considered is. — tim wood
But we have at least two parts to the overall philosophical project of ontology, on our preliminary understanding of it: first, say what there is, what exists, what the stuff is reality is made out of, secondly, say what the most general features and relations of these things are.