Objectivity means always proceeding on the assumption that things can be solved.
It doesn't mean that you already know how to solve it.
I don't know how many times I have to repeat that. — Pfhorrest
What does that even mean?
Things are either true or false.
Orthogonal to that, they're either known or unknown.
So they can be known true, known false, true but unknown, or false but unknown.
Whether you know it or not has no bearing on whether it's true or false. — Pfhorrest
But lets say that there are a number of ways to describe, what would those be? — Pussycat
dont think we can describe anything accurately, but even if we did, we would be talking about a correct/right description, and not a correct/right answer or evaluation. What does a right answer even mean or look like, in terms of love like you ask, anyway??? — Pussycat
That we haven’t invented a scale to measure it by doesn’t mean that there’s no particular amount that you love it. — Pfhorrest
This is the problem. “Unknown” isn’t an alternative to “true” and “false”. Something can be true but not known. Unknown isn’t UNKNOWABLE or NO-TRUTH-VALUE. — Pfhorrest
There are objective answers to questions about those things. Where have I ever said otherwise? — Pfhorrest
Asking why you have all those mental states is a psychological mental question. I don’t know the full psychological answer to them, especially because each answer would involve particulars about your life that I don’t know — Pfhorrest
But that doesn’t mean the answers to them aren’t objective, i.e. there is one correct answer that everyone should give to the questions about you, even if the answers about themselves are different, even if they don’t know the answers about you, etc. — Pfhorrest
Not at all. I am 72 inches tall. That is an objective fact about me. It being an objective fact about me doesn’t mean that everybody is and always has been 72 inches tall. It just means that anyone who says I am a different height is wrong . — Pfhorrest
Objectivists means that whether an opinion is right or wrong doesn’t depend on who you ask. It absolutely can and must depend on who or what (and what time and place etc) you’re asking about — Pfhorrest
And that would be an objective fact that you love i e cream just that much, just as it’s an objective fact that I am just this tall. — Pfhorrest
would not call something that is only temporarily unanswered “unanswerable”, just unanswered. We can never know for sure if an unanswered question will ever be answered until it is, but my principle says to always proceed on the assumption that some day it can be. — Pfhorrest
The domain of philosophy isn’t “the unknown” or “the mysterious”. — Pfhorrest
I'm not sure (and I'm not sure if you're sure) whether you're talking about the fact that you have those states of mind, or a moral evaluation of the contents of those states of mind.
In either case, yes there is an objective right or wrong evaluation of them, that may or may not be practical to figure out, or in practice accessible to anyone but yourself. — Pfhorrest
It is a correct opinion that you love ice cream (assuming you actually do). Whether you love it or not is an objective fact. — Pfhorrest
Just because I don't know the answer doesn't mean there isn't one. That's the whole point of the principle this thread is about: never assume there is no answer, just because you don't know it yet. — Pfhorrest
an objective one, in that any claim about it is either right or wrong, — Pfhorrest
don’t know what some of those are, but the ones I do understand I would say are perfectly compatible with my principles here. — Pfhorrest
can’t understand this question. — Pfhorrest
that would be a complex psychological question, and you’d have to ask an expert on that exactly how, but it would involve some kind of empirical observation like all scientific questions do. — Pfhorrest
objectively true that I’m conscious. I suspect like kaarl you’re conflating epistemology with ontology. Just because you don’t know for sure what’s going on in my mind doesn’t mean there’s no truth about it. — Pfhorrest
Because I expect it's not to most theists, who are not theists because they were convinced by faulty metaphysical arguments that there must exist some boring piece of metaphysical machinery to enable the existence of the ordinary universe, — Pfhorrest
“I don’t know” is always an acceptable response, but “we can never know” never is. — Pfhorrest
In that case, every statement that something is your favorite flavor of ice cream is objectively false. — Pfhorrest
As much as you seem keen to extend these archetypes to masculine-feminine concepts in general, Mars and Venus isn’t about physical attraction or chemistry. It’s about communication. So your persistence with this line of questioning doesn’t make sense. If your aim is to discuss masculine-feminine archetypes or gender identities in general, be honest enough to say so. — Possibility
I don’t think I’ve ever been accused of being too analytical before! I’m pretty sure I’ve been clear about my distrust of binary systems, so I’m still unsure what you’re arguing against. What do you refer to as ‘success’ in this context? The phenomenon of ‘human chemistry’ can’t be determined by dating sites, not matter what criterion is provided. It refers to qualitative sensory relations that occur in person - which includes, but is not limited to, aesthetics. But I fail to see how this disputes what I have said. — Possibility
How do we ‘cope’ with failure? By recognizing it as an opportunity to learn? By shutting down and avoiding future interactions? By devaluing or attacking the apparent ‘cause’ of our failure? It’s not simple when it’s about interpersonal relationships. Active rather than avoidant coping strategies are recommended, which brings us back to the scientific method... — Possibility
It is persons are subjects of experience that they are designated 'beings'. And I maintain, beings are not 'objects' except for a metaphorical sense ('she became an object of obsession to him'.)
But designating 'beings' as 'conscious objects' is a disservice to both language and philosophy. — Wayfarer
Now I’m confused. If you believe that men and women generally want the same things, then why reify the archetypes? I keep suspecting that you’re using ‘Mars’ and ‘Venus’ as a smokescreen for a binary gender identification. I don’t understand why you’re so caught up on this pop psychology from the 90s, written by a ‘relationship counsellor’ with a correspondence course in psychology. — Possibility
but learning how to access it himself by interacting with those who can demonstrate a right brain capacity and articulate their inner experiences — Possibility
Mars is attracted to Venus and Venus to Mars because they’re different from each other. That’s all. — Possibility
More than that - one must take personal responsibility for their prediction errors. — Possibility
I’m not sure why you would label this approach deterministic. How does what I’ve written contradict what you’ve stated here? — Possibility
I believe that I do know myself, or at least that I am getting better at it, I just don't know how philosophy would categorize that. — Kaarlo Tuomi
nature/nurture is not a mutually exclusive dichotomy, — Possibility
Why Venus desires Mars is irrelevant - as archetypes they only typify a simplified pattern in human experience, rather than reality. Human beings both desire and fear the challenges that differences in their environment offer the system’s capacity to integrate information and evolve - not just through their offspring, but through their own experiential Being and a relational Becoming that transcends the self. We become all that we could possibly be only by relating to what we are not, and striving to integrate the difference. — Possibility
Complete: having all the necessary and appropriate parts; entire, full; having run its course, finished.
Show me someone who considers themselves ‘complete’, and I’ll show you someone who is no longer willing to learn from experience. They interact only with their own conceptual systems, mistaking them for reality - effectively living in their own world. — Possibility
No, the differences between what men want and what women want overlap and intertwine to the point that there is so little mutually exclusive wants and needs they barely rate a mention. It is only when we construct a typical pattern of wants and needs that any dichotomous structure emerges. — Possibility
If we predict that a woman wants to be hit on, but in acting on that prediction encounter a negative response, does the fault lie with the woman or her response, or is the error in our prediction or the details of our action? — Possibility
If we can employ the scientific method to the prediction-interaction process instead, accepting error and uncertainty as an opportunity to learn and refine our predictions, then perhaps we can become all that we could possibly be. — Possibility
I couldn't even tell you where I fit much less anyone else. — Kaarlo Tuomi
I tend to the view that we are each entitled to our own opinion but that opinions are not either right or wrong, they are just opinions — Kaarlo Tuomi
they then go into a stage of calm and tranquility, a sense of freedom from the anxiety that they had from not being able to answer the question. — Have some tea
My general philosophy could be most succinctly summed up as the rejection of both unquestionable answers (answers that are not to be questioned), and unanswerable questions (questions that cannot — Kaarlo Tuomi
In other words, I hold that there is such a thing as a correct opinion, in a sense beyond mere subjective agreement. — Kaarlo Tuomi
"I don't know" would have to be rejected as unanswerable. whereas to me, admitting that there are limits to what we can know is a large part of what philosophy is for, and questions that cannot be answered distinctly are often the most interesting. — Kaarlo Tuomi
I’m aware of what Maslow says about self-actualisation - my own view is constructionist, so I don’t agree that we were born with an essential ‘self’ of definitive goals, wants and needs waiting to be discovered, nor that we start out as a tabula rasa. Being is the ongoing interaction of a self-conscious organism with their environment - we achieve self-actualisation when we can recognise our most effective path of interaction, but it’s not a permanent state. Becoming doesn’t end at self-actualisation - it is the process that maintains self-actualisation in relation to the unfolding universe. — Possibility
Life is complete when we die; the ‘self’ is complete when it ceases to be informed by reality. — Possibility
They’re not supposed to unite, they’re supposed to become increasingly irrelevant in a successful union between two human beings, — Possibility
There are differences, sure, but no ‘gaps’ between the wants and needs of men and women except what is created by this dichotomous structure. — Possibility
not talking about giving ourselves permission to pursue wants and needs as it suits us - don’t go interpreting it that way. The ‘denial’ I’m referring to is in reference to ignorance, isolation and exclusion, not denying wants and needs. — Possibility
never said it ‘completes the Mars in Mars’ - that’s you trying to satisfy your own theories again. — Possibility
I’m not talking about ‘completion’ as such - that’s often what we’d like it to be, because it would mean an end to suffering. — Possibility
you’re asking why a self-actualising person would seek a partner, it’s because they are open to an ongoing relationship with someone whose difference and change is a continual source of attraction - challenging them to continue increasing awareness, connection and collaboration. — Possibility
No physical connection necessary, and nothing to do with marriage. — Possibility
A relationship can then become similar to a ‘dance of opposites’, as the person in denial appears hellbent on possessing, controlling or fighting that aspect in their partner, sometimes in destructive ways. Alternatively, the relationship may be complementary, enabling them to eventually recognise and embrace their own sexual identity. If that is all they were attracted to in their partner, though, then the relationship may grow apart, losing significance, as they no longer need to relate to a sexuality that exists outside of themselves in order to feel complete.
A lasting relationship recognises both difference and change as continual sources of attraction and wisdom. — Possibility
Looks fade, people change. — Possibility
from an awareness that the relational potential between men and women transcends physical connection, property transactions and procreative capacity. — Possibility
What we also deny in ourselves, we seek in our relationships with others. — Possibility
But we are not opposites, and we shouldn’t be expected to ‘complete’ each other in the sense that our wants and needs are fixed into certain categories so that when we ‘have’ the right partner we can feel whole. This way of thinking ignores the capacity we have to learn from each other and integrate these differences in ourselves. — Possibility
What attracts me to the male form aesthetically has changed over the years, according to the perceived value/potential of my self and my interactions. — Possibility
for what we want, I think we all want to interact with the world in a way that ultimately increases our ability to minimise suffering, given that we’re going to interact with the world anyway. Whether we identify ourselves or others as particularly ‘feminine’ or ‘masculine’ has a much smaller impact on this than you seem to think. — Possibility
It is that science cannot explain consciousness, therefore dualism. — Kenosha Kid
think truth must be objective, this is what is true for everybody. If something is true for you and not everybody else it wouldn’t be a fact and the truth of it would literally just be in a few people’s heads maybe. The world is bigger than your head we reason, so the truth of the world must be objective. — Maya
aware of your accusation, but I didn’t dichotomise agency - that was you. ‘Material agency’ is a term used in reference to historical and cultural objects, not people. In that sense, material ‘agency’ is a misnomer — Possibility
Men and women are NOT opposites. — Possibility
Your preference for women you categorise as ‘feminine’ is conceptual. — Possibility
There are certain differences and aesthetics that have the potential to attract my attention and effort, but to say that I’m attracted to ‘masculine’ men would seem to dichotomise my own identity as ‘feminine’, and imply that those men I’m not attracted to are somehow ‘less masculine’ in some objective sense, when it’s only that I categorise them as such. — Possibility
There’s a tendency in American culture to polarise: freedom vs governance, black vs white, red vs blue, masculine vs feminine, dominance vs submission, etc. American culture identifies itself in a defensive position against a worldview, even if they deign to acknowledge an element of it as necessary (a la yin-yang). The yin-yang symbol can be mistaken as a call to surround and control this opposing element, and to ‘rescue’ those of our own trapped on the ‘other side’. As a result, the subtle subversiveness of ‘fifty shades of grey’ has been almost completely overlooked. — Possibility
Men and women are alike in some ways and different in others, but there is no defensive position to be constructed that protects your identity as ‘masculine’. — Possibility
We not only want different things, what we want changes with our experience of the world — Possibility
think there’s a difference between creative catharsis and ‘just emoting’ - it’s in how we direct our interactions. By ‘just emoting’ I’m referring to a failure to make any conscious choice in how we act out, particularly in who bears the brunt of our emotional outburst and why. — Possibility
But I am mostly a left brain thinker. So, the PM writings that I've seen just make no sense to me. Maybe I need "Queer Eye for the Straight Philosopher". :joke: — Gnomon
Royal and Imperial political & religious systems tend to adopt an autocratic stance of “my way or the highway”. Whereas, In more democratic and egalitarian systems, the marketplace of ideas will determine truths and values. — Gnomon
. It is at least highly intriguing that the only place where conditions approach those of the early (Big Bang) universe are the interiors of black holes, and maybe even moreso the fact that a time-reversed black hole (i.e. a white hole) looks eerily similar to the Big Bang itself. — Enai De A Lukal