Should we not try to avoid contradictions in law? Aren't parity and justice and general equality before the law to be desired over the short-term efficiency of judging a law only by its theoretical, although perhaps beneficial, outcome - at least some of the time? — ToothyMaw
I suppose my amendment to the OP is that no belief exists in a vacuum; rational thought requires a prioritization of logic to have better compatibility among beliefs or elements, especially when dealing with an applied logic, such as in law. The selection of the efficient, ostensibly desired outcome by mere selection of which factors give said outcome could have implications elsewhere that are antithetical to retaining overall structural coherence of such a system of beliefs or laws or whatever. — ToothyMaw
What determines if beliefs are true or not true? Are true beliefs just the beliefs that don't change when one has a perspective they want to change due to a lack of usefulness? Or are they more robust opinions that strictly reflect reality? — ToothyMaw
The difficulty of integrating something that is largely incompatible with one's beliefs into their worldview doesn't really address the point that for any given belief there must be some similar logic and reasoning with one's held beliefs to integrate said beliefs into their worldview in a coherent way, even if to do so is a matter of making small, deliberate changes that do not presuppose general reasonableness. — ToothyMaw
I've noticed that I seem to be using two different meanings of the word "logic". I am designating goals as being logical, and also using the more scientific definition of logic that just means a system or set of principles underlying the arrangements of elements (or beliefs or factors that contribute to belief). — ToothyMaw
My point is that even the successful, less logical outcome must contain some logic to be of use given there are some basic logical prerequisites stipulated by a permeating logic. — ToothyMaw
I think that any given perspective or goal derived at least partially from a permeating logic must agree with some aspects of the permeating logic and also must not contradict it. This means that the ends are indeed a logical perspective or goal, even if that isn't what makes it good, per se. But do we not want to preserve the rules designated by logic, among other things, that guide our forming of perspectives by providing a logic or logical framework? — ToothyMaw
What you write about is detachment, a means of circumventing the misapplication, or overapplication, of logic and reason. I am starting to agree with you that yes, this is a useful way of looking at things some of the time. — ToothyMaw
So long as I get to be the evil, big brain mastermind that ultimately spells his own doom with his unchecked hubris. — ToothyMaw
Thus, I think logic and reasoning are inherently valuable because robustness of opinion is the greatest measure of whether or not some perspective is valuable for accomplishing a goal insofar as it represents the realization of a plausible world that we would want to live in - which I think is the greatest goal for any perspective. — ToothyMaw
Do you think the rules of chess, by which moves are a function of, are based on a logic that makes it a desirable, deeply satisfying game to play? I do. I see the realization of personal goals as being no different; goals must possess some logic to be of value in a world that largely acts sensibly on a human scale. People want there to be rules, they just differ on which rules are correct, and rightly act in accordance with said rules when possible - much of the time. — ToothyMaw
Something kind of interesting but somewhat off-topic: I think reason plays the long game; if you have a game in which the rules change, the goal becomes to both further the game (so long as it is useful to do so) and to develop new heuristics via experience and reasoning. What you outline, while conceptually efficient, doesn't favor this augmentation of perspectives, but rather provides a schematic for understanding the processes by which people should form perspectives. So, it seems of limited usefulness outside of evaluating the worth of an individual's opinions. — ToothyMaw
The connection between the assertion that selecting factors to reach conclusions and the idea that all that matters are the outcomes of such conclusions doesn't really follow, I think. — ToothyMaw
Reason is not a choice, but rather a necessity, for forming opinions with useful outcomes. — ToothyMaw
I would say that reasoning is imperative as a means of extending one's useful conclusions — ToothyMaw
If this were the case, then no belief would have any more value than another unless its value was consensually agreed upon by all, and there would be no way of resolving many significant disagreements. — ToothyMaw
I don't know how this translates into logic being necessary for an opinion to be good, but logic is an absolute necessity for us to have any means of sorting reality in cases less trivial than leaving for work late because one is a dunce. — ToothyMaw
I'm ok with this as long as you're not equating what I'm calling "intuition" with what you call experiencing stimulus emotionally. — T Clark
In my understanding, intuition is a reflection of a model of the world I carry around in my head created by a combination of experience and built-in mental structures — T Clark
When I come across something new, I can compare it with my existing understanding of how the world works to see how it fits. All this usually happens before or at the same time the process enters my conscious awareness. I know from past conversations that many people don't experience it that way. — T Clark
I don't know if you are talking about intuition when you say "make choices without thinking about them." If so, I disagree. Intuition is thinking; useful, valuable, effective thinking: just not rational thinking. — T Clark
I agree with this, although I tend to describe it differently. I need valid information, i.e. knowledge, in order to make decisions. Knowledge has to be justified. Most importantly, that justification must take into account the uncertainty of the information and the consequences of being wrong. What you call "realism" is not a yes/no approach. — T Clark
What is the process used to sequester these factors if not some form of reasoning? — ToothyMaw
I find it difficult to believe that reasoning ceases to matter, or becomes less important, the moment you exclude some factor from consideration. — ToothyMaw
So basically, everyone should believe anything they want so long as it makes them happy because we use arbitrary processes of sequestration to express ourselves. That seems to be what I'm reading here. — ToothyMaw
Are the logic and truthfulness of a belief not important pros or cons, or perhaps even the most important depending upon what we are talking about? And what about morality? — ToothyMaw
Upon reading a few more times: did you actually write this, Judaka? It's like you told ChatGPT to write like a cross between the Joker and someone trying to recruit young men for a domestic terrorist group. — ToothyMaw
Maybe. On the other hand, sometimes facing up to an unpleasant truth now leads to greater future happiness or at least to less future suffering. — T Clark
I think this is similar to how I see things. I take a pragmatic view - all thinking is aimed at action. Truth is just a tool to help us decide what to do next. — T Clark
Net improvements? — Isaac
Are you familiar with the changes that have taken place over the past few hundred years on how philosophers of science have treated the concept of progress? For instance , the change from inductive to deductive understanding of scientific method , and from cumulative-additive to Popperian falsificationist progress. And then there’s the Kuhnian view of scientific progress, which abandons linearity in favor of the idea that to understand better is always to understand differently. — Joshs
I want to correct the view that there is an overarching general progress in history, like a magical power standing over society that we can either abide by, as Pinker wants us to do, or stupidly ignore, as we do when we do war and genocide. — Jamal
And yes, the self-satisfied purveyors of Progress annoy me, because self-congratulation is not in the spirit of the Enlightenment as I see it. It is not self-critical enough. And this is a problem for me particularly because it serves to justify and glorify the system that has raised our productive potential so radically over the past few hundred years. Although the Enlightenment was importantly entwined with capitalism, the internal contradictions in that process bring their own problems, and they are what interest me, as they interested Marx (who did not lament the replacement of the old society with an industrial one). — Jamal
There are many counterexamples. — Jamal
I don’t want to argue now against increased mastery, but can you explain why you think it coincides with moral improvement? — Jamal
Sure, I think of humans like that sometimes. I was really just referring to the suffering of human beings, usually caused by other human beings. War, oppression, and poverty, that kind of thing. That last paragraph in the OP was a rather grand and emotive way of making the point that we shouldn’t reduce those past evils (not that they are consigned to the past) to steps on a ladder to present or future happiness. — Jamal
I don’t think that’s what I’m doing. It’s more an examination of ideology, of the myth of inevitable betterment, which I think is implied in the unthinking description of unhappy conditions as primitive — Jamal
If you have no desire to resolve such disputes, you would not be a good person to associate with. OK. — Mark S
Sure, ethics has grown far beyond cooperation strategies to include answers to broader questions such as “What is good?”, “How should I live?”, and “What are my obligations?” — Mark S
In contrast, the spontaneous feeling of satisfaction and optimism in the cooperative (moral) company of friends and family is a primary source of durable happiness for most people. — Mark S
Contrary to your claim, people do not commonly try to compute the behavior that would be most useful to them when making moral judgments. Rather, people experience motivation to follow the moral norms they grow up with such as those above. — Mark S
There is one point of major corruption for people in power. They can, while others are prevented from doing likewise. Dictators seem to acquire a taste for it, like an addiction. Of course, they were probably inclined that way before they fought their way to the top. — Vera Mont
I didn't claim that. I merely reiterated that it is not power that does the corrupting. Nor is chance, or even games of chance, that cause gambling addiction. — Vera Mont
Yes. And the early childhood environment also has influence on how much self-control a person has. One they're grown, people can be influenced less and also able to change less about their own behaviour, though both continue to be factors. — Vera Mont
A wise electorate would never allow an immature person with poor self-control anywhere near a position of power, because that is the type of personality on whom all corrupting influences will have the most effect. — Vera Mont
The result would be bad laws and unfair enforcement, and in those cases, the law must be challenged in order to be corrected.
This is a process of push and pull, negotiation, ups and down - it's never complete. — Vera Mont
I should think it's both, as the very concept of moral corruption is exclusively human, as are the environments in which it occurs. — Vera Mont
We make rules of behaviour to ensure the welfare of society, but those rules restrain individual freedom to act. But we want both safety and freedom, which causes a constant tension between upholding and breaking the rules; between controlling and challenging the rules. — Vera Mont
I enumerated a few influences. Nature, nurture and environment. Physical health, innate aptitudes, temperament, early childhood instruction, role models and peers, Competition, disparity, the rewards and advantages for wrong action as compared to those for right action in the formative years. — Vera Mont
In fact, every generation of parents prepares its young for the wrong world. — Vera Mont
Would a person who truly was the most intelligent and well versed person find any temptation in this? — Philosophim
All Philosophim said was that power is not what causes the change. — Vera Mont
That's all that the phrase 'moral fiber' stands for: the relative depth of conviction regarding right and wrong actions, and the relative amount of psychological fortitude to overcome a temptation to do what one considers wrong. — Vera Mont
Sure, but now you're stamping foot and judging. What makes another culture's code of right and wrong atrocious in your eyes, if a not a sense of your own moral superiority? — Vera Mont
But you don't see the parallel with...: — Vera Mont
If they remained good, they would use power well; once their character is corrupted and they've gone bad, they misuse power. Action is the result of decision, which is a product of character. — Vera Mont
Yes, that is the very path to corruption and moral decay. It can happen in any station or walk of life, not only in positions of power. A morally compromised servant may steal, if his master is so inattentive that he does not get caught, and can justify it after the fact more easily than a judge who takes bribes. — Vera Mont
It can be an influence, just as access to the source of temptation can be an influence, or the counsel of corrupt companions. I think I've said that being in a position of power provides opportunity (temptation + access) for more wrong-doing than lack of power does. If the same amount of opportunity is presented to an ordinary thief or embezzler, he, too, will escalate his criminal activities, just as an abusive spouse who starts out with verbal gibes, and is not curbed, ends up doing grievous or fatal bodily harm. — Vera Mont
Where have I written anything that suggests the stamping of feet? Describing human behaviors and motivations is not tantamount to condemnation. When I condemn something or someone, there is no room for ambiguity. — Vera Mont