What is the difference between the two arguments — Meta
What is empirical in Cern is dogmatic here in my room. What is empirical for a saint is dogmatic here. — Meta
We can say that the river has a beginning and the river has an end, but the only boundary between these two is the river itself. — Metaphysician Undercover
However, this bit about suggesting that 'I' or 'we' speak (for) the collective mind seems to be headed in the direction of setting the collective mind outside the boundaries of the individual's knowledge capability. — creativesoul
Seems to me that from a methodological naturalist bent, the 'primitive' people, particularly those in smaller groups, have much more to lose on a personal level by virtue of another member of the group suffering. Co-dependence between trustworthy people is not a bad thing. I would strongly assert that it is utterly imperative to the survival of such groups and thus quite possibly everyone in it. — creativesoul
My resistance is simple defence. That person, unenlightened, attacked the creative function of all individual human minds, claiming the mind is a "responsive sensitivity". It was then insinuated that as an individual person, I am not real, I am an hallucination. It is not a selfishness which I express, because defence is concerned with the motives of the attacker, not the self which is being defended.
— Metaphysician Undercover
What if there was no attack? Then what? — creativesoul
He is quick, thinking in clear images;
I am slow, thinking in broken images.
He becomes dull, trusting to his clear images;
I become sharp, mistrusting my broken images,
Trusting his images, he assumes their relevance;
Mistrusting my images, I question their relevance.
Assuming their relevance, he assumes the fact,
Questioning their relevance, I question the fact.
When the fact fails him, he questions his senses;
When the fact fails me, I approve my senses.
He continues quick and dull in his clear images;
I continue slow and sharp in my broken images.
He in a new confusion of his understanding;
I in a new understanding of my confusion. — Robert Graves
That said, the portion of my earlier reply was meant to elaborate upon the zeitgeist portion of yours. The bit about how a society gets to fascism from socialism. It's been called 'hive mentality' by some. Not everyone is capable of thinking for themselves... — creativesoul
I want to attempt to ascertain, determine, and/or set out what exactly an individual adopts from the collective, particularly with regard to self-worth, self-value, self-awareness, etc. It seems to me that that would be a good method for working towards your aim, as well as perhaps helping to explain some of the reasons why that particular style of therapy is and/or would be so effective/affective.
If that worldview is shared by an overwhelming majority, then we have common goals powerfully packed by the multitude. That's key, on my view. Common goals. Common beliefs. Common ethics/morality. A community of people working together for what's in the best interest of the community. In the case you're examining it's the community writ large. I am my brothers keeper. Genuine vested interested in the group. Teamwork. What's good for you is good for me. The measure of the categorical imperative. Etc.
Interesting how that notion of teamwork, and all for one, is used by and in large in American society, shamefully in many(perhaps most) instances. — creativesoul
Your voice is external to me, but it is external to you as well. Your thoughts are internal to you, but they are also internal to me as well — Metaphysician Undercover
From here.The discovery of the platypus by Europeans resulted in a major re-think about the classification of vertebrates and our understanding of the evolution of mammals. The story of the investigation of the platypus reveals a lot about the processes of science. Rivalries, competition and collaboration occurred between groups and across countries. Prior conceptions and understandings were challenged, and some workers were slow to accept the new contradictory evidence.
I'll listen, but as I said, unless I can determine your motivation in telling me this, I cannot trust you. I perceive a huge difference between internal and external. So you telling me that this is a deep mistake is apprehended by me with great suspicion, I have no idea what you are up to. And so I will ignore your plea, as an unreasonable external voice, asking me to join it in who knows what kind of adventure. That is, until you demonstrate your motivation, what kind of adventure are you taking me on? I suggest you proceed in making your point, then perhaps I can judge your motivation. — Metaphysician Undercover
So you're telling me that I should listen to the reason of others rather than my own reasoning. — Metaphysician Undercover
why shouldn't I tune out those other voices altogether, and trust only my internal voice, the one true voice which I know never has the motivation to deceive me? — Metaphysician Undercover
How is it that I have this very strong unity within myself, which society does not have? This unity which makes up society is deficient compared to the unity which makes up myself, because it will allow different parts with competing ideas to attack each other, but my mind will always use reason to work out such problems without resorting to the destruction of myself. If I were to fall to this level, then clearly I would be ill, but that supposed unity of society is always at this level. Why would I accept this unity of society as a higher unity than the unity of myself? — Metaphysician Undercover
By the way, I really don't see the relationship between seeing oneself as an individual, and the desire to organize conflict. I see organized conflict as the product of things like nationalism, in which individuals see their group, "us" as being opposed to the thoughts and expressions of another group, "them". Organized conflict is not the result of personal differences. — Metaphysician Undercover
Mind is responsive sensitivity, and the fundamental unit is the relationship, not the organism. — unenlightened
Isn't this a lie though? We experience ourselves as individuals, with our own individual thoughts, with freedom to think what we want in secret, fundamentally, and much more so than we experience ourselves as a part of a "group mind". — Metaphysician Undercover
I've learned to accept the gap, and make efforts to understand others. But this doesn't let the others into my mind, it just allows me to maintain relationships. — Metaphysician Undercover
Truth and trust underwrite every bit of this, and the role that they play in thought/belief and language is imperative to understanding the efficacy of talk, and how many become distraught and/or mentally ill.
I want to say quite a bit more, particularly regarding the importance that honesty has in all of this. The way that it has been framed heretofore bears witness to an inadequate criterion for what counts as honesty and/or being honest. It is inextricably entwined with trust and truth within one's worldview, without exception. Here, it is appropriate for me to remove the hat of unapologetic criticism and don the pen of a much more considerate and therefore approachable public assistant. That seems to be the intended spirit underwriting the thread. — creativesoul
That's the sort of trance I prefer to get into with my interlocutors. — Cabbage Farmer
Because we are primates, and that's the way primates act. — Baden
Right, but when you're say the President, you can't really expect that your employee is going to report you - you pretty much control the power structure she could report you to, or at least you have greater leverage over it than she does. Even in the student-teacher case, a student can't really report the teacher to the Principal, because the teacher has greater leverage and authority with the Principal than the student - things could potentially turn out badly for the student that way. — Agustino
You tell me. You're the one arguing that there's something improper about power imbalances in relationships. — Michael
Sure, but how can it be stopped? The problem is that I think this kind of social interaction cannot be stopped. When I was in school in 12th grade I had a female teacher who slapped my butt playfully on the hallway when she passed by me and then smiled. What can you do when such a thing happens? Clearly nothing, because the other person has authority - all you can do is try to avoid them, and extricate yourself from situations where they can use that power in ways that you can control even less.
I've been in many situations where there were imbalances of power, and there really can't be done anything to stop them. — Agustino
I wouldn't require that a philosophy department hire every sort of charlatan before I counted it "inclusive". But I think it's irresponsible for philosophy departments to neglect engagement with the populace, even by way of the discourse of charlatans. — Cabbage Farmer
It's presumptuous to assume that a relationship is abusing or harassment just because one person has more power than another. — Michael
Any ‘abuse’ came in the aftermath, when I was made a scapegoat in order to protect his powerful position. — Monica
To date, 16% say too strict and 16% say not strict enough. If these numbers cancel each other out that means moderation is 100% just about right. — praxis
My first ever essay in politics a long time ago was a D- covered in red ink aggressively scribbled by my lecturer. I got A's and B's ever since. — TimeLine
Why don't you come out of your safe anonymity as a moderator and criticize my empirical objections with your authoritative arguments? — Hachem
I would prefer a very good diagnosis, and not mere prejudice. — Hachem
As a former moderator though I recognise how hard it is to manage tone towards someone you deeply disagree with and believe actually leads to suffering in the world. — Benkei
Yikes! I take back my words :P — SophistiCat
