↪fishfry Exactly - and that's part of what of is so flagrant about this. The replication crisis is The Big Topic in psychological circles -& has been for a pretty long while at this point! It's not just that the approach is bad for the reasons in the OP - it's that those doing it can't plead ignorance. Everyone (in these circles) knows there is a crisis of replication - yet they're, many of them, still hacking the system for flashy results. — csalisbury
In my field, the phrase people openly use when talking about their data is “how can we spin this”? I am not making this up, I’ve had a conversation a few weeks ago at a conference with a poster presenter who used the words, “if we want to, we can spin the result like this”. It’s part of the discourse and it is understood that there is a storytelling(“spin”) aspect to it and nobody objects to this. Editors have more than once asked us to rewrite our paper so that our post-hoc findings can be re-cast as an a priori prediction; there is no sense that there’s anything wrong with that.
People who tell this kind of storytelling dominate the field, they dominate the funding and the job scene. If as a young student you are trying to do the right thing, you will not publish in top journals because your “story” is too ambiguous and tentative. People in these fields have no hesitation in making the strongest possible claim and then going beyond that. They publish in top journals, get the jobs and the research money. The honest student can’t compete. Once you have hundreds of articles to your name, it’s a winner take all situation. Fiske, in her interview yesterday, mentioned that she has some 300+ published articles; that’s the kind of number that gives you money when you want it, and where you want it, for whatever comedic project you come up with. So it is imperative that people are shocked into stopping this.
Or is this like Reddits philosophy subs where you only discuss academic philosophies and cant give a "up to standard" comment unless it refrences or explains existing philosophies that basically recycles information in some wierd elitist mentality. — Tiberiusmoon
You can't get away with irreproducible results in physics, but you can in sociology. — fishfry
Which is exactly the reappearance of the stress of the past in the present as "inappropriate reactions" — unenlightened
But did you misunderstand me? All I meant was that when we talk about the effects of trauma, we are talking about past trauma, not present trauma. — unenlightened
Isn't there something violent in this whole schema of needs and tactics, and the rest? Who talks about people in terms of needs and tactics, like this? The R D Laing of Knots, the Eric Berne of Games People Play, the Gregory Bateson of Many Books, the Alan Watts of Many Lectures. — csalisbury
But then that's not the trauma we're talking about is it? — unenlightened
Well the theory, if I understand aright, is that you might need someone to to be subservient,{I'm not sure about that} but you cannot be so specifically dependent on my subservience. Choosing me is a tactic to fulfil the more general need. — unenlightened
The example Marshall gives is Mcdonalds. One needs food; one does not need a Big Mac; that's a tactic, {though they want you to think it's a need}. And anger is a tactic I employ to keep me away from Big Macs. — unenlightened
Unmeetable needs never get met - by definition - and that I think indicates that they are not needs. — unenlightened
But give it a go, you might like it. — unenlightened
But how can needs be wrong? — unenlightened
We are taught that retribution is redemptive? — unenlightened
How can they be unmeetable? — unenlightened
I'm sooo glad someone else 'gets it'. For me, it's like -of course, I already knew all this, but I couldn't quite bring it together so that it worked. — unenlightened
I don't really mind our pseudoscientific members and their writing. It's fun for me to feel all superior. On the other hand, allowing bad science a place to speak is not this forum's job. It's here to provide bad philosophy a place to speak. They come here because they get smacked down and banned on science forums. You actually have to know something real to write there. — T Clark
Well the promise of political psychology is more complex than that. What the OP and the book in question is describing here is a trait-based framework where personal traits such as "authoritarian" or "cooperation" or "openness to change" or "cosmopolitanism", "introversion-extroversion", "agreeableness", "curiosity" and a potpourri of other traits (and in the case of the book in question, narcissism) can explain or predict a person's political orientation, attitudes, or policy preferences. This is bunk. — Maw
KCA? Knowledge Commercialisation Australasia? — Banno
I actually think we agree here (though I'm still shaky on the meaning/usage of 'pace.' I'd long taken it to mean 'contra, with respect' but have since seen it used in different ways elsewhere, so I may misunderstand you.) — csalisbury
Where else? By thinking and questioning, and by dialogue with others. It's not only reading, after all.
Otherwise I don't think I fully understood your argument here.
I do agree it's philosophical to ask about philosophy. No doubt about it. — Xtrix
Figured it's worth pointing out on the Forum sometimes. Let's not get caught up in abstract thought at the expense of everything else. — Xtrix
This has veered way off the OP. Which was for people to discuss what they think there is. — Manuel
Yes, I think that's true - in that it's missing from a neurological account. But that would be a matter of translation wouldn't it? — Isaac
The question the folk psychologist should be asking of the neuroscientist in that context is more like "but what does that mean for me?".
The accusation would be "You've not translated that", rather than "you've not accounted for something".
Sometimes in other forums, philosophy of mind sections are literally only about neuroscience. It should then be called brain philosophy, which is fine. But so far as I can see, current brain science says very, very, very little about the mind. Which is strange, admittedly. Still, if we "reduce" mind to brain, we lose out on almost everything. — Manuel
What would an answer to that request be like? I mean how would you know you've had such an answer. I could say - your occipital cortex starts a chain of neural firings which, on average, lead to reports consitent with what we describe as 'seeing a tree'. Why isn't that an answer, what's missing? — Isaac
What's frustrating is when despite the enormous progress in physics, specifically in the quantum domain, we learn almost nothing about manifest reality. It's better than nothing though. — Manuel
This is an ontological judgement and, as such, it's already working within a defined ontological framework. — T Clark
Not to be all meta and all. That's the problem with, one of the problems with, ontology. Where do you stand?
Yeah, I'd like to avoid commitment ontologies actually. What I think there is may change as I learn new things or change. — Manuel
To be clear, I think Foucault is fine and Deleuze is quite creative, though I still think that some of the observations made by Sokal and Bricmont merit a reply. Deleuze is instrumental, for example, in the novels of Michael Cisco, who is totally unique and mind expanding. But I can't extend being charitable to Derrida or Lacan. I know others will strongly disagree, but it's just not for me. — Manuel
I'm assuming The Ontology of Tuber Roots was discussed by some Deleuzian? :lol: One has to keep one's eye's open for the Paris Postmodernists, they come up with the fanciest of ideas. — Manuel
It does. I'm far from confident in what I'm saying, I'm just trying things out. So let me pose to you the following question, given that all of this depends on the "starting point", what would you leave out in your system? As an example that could frame the conversation, how would you deal with fictitious entities like Frodo or Santa Claus? — Manuel
I get the point, that "impossibility of experimental science" doesn't make sense. But would the things discussed in such titles eventually lead to mental entities, concepts or what? Taken as titles, only one word in the title speaks of entities "tuber roots", as I understand them. — Manuel
That's fair. But would a framework of yours try to do away with certain postulates, or would you try to keep as many things as possible? — Manuel
Well, we can speak of God, but he needn't exist: he'd be a fictitious entity for an atheist and the Supreme Being for a believer. Thus we could retain God in a manifest ontology, i.e. at least a mental construction. — Manuel
Your answer is true, on a person by person basis. My initial reaction would be that of being careful not to do away with things, unless we can show such things to be of no use, which is admittedly a very broad goal. It would be nice to reach some agreement on this area, but it's extremely difficult, given how different we all are. — Manuel
But that's my approximation. So, on to the easy question: what is there? — Manuel
It's possible your recent comment has been deleted — David Pearce
Strange... I wonder what problem they had with it. — Olivier5
So far, it seems to me Damasio gives primacy to the body, whilst Spinoza's parallelism doesn't. — Eugen
For instance, men are mistaken in thinking themselves free; their opinion is made up of consciousness of their own actions, and ignorance of the causes by which they are conditioned. Their idea of freedom, therefore, is simply their ignorance of any cause for their actions. As for their saying that human actions depend on the will, this is a mere phrase without any idea to correspond thereto. What the will is, and how it moves the body, they none of them know; those who boast of such knowledge, and feign dwellings and habitations for the soul, are wont to provoke either laughter or disgust. So, again, when we look at the sun, we imagine that it is distant from us about two hundred feet; this error does not lie solely in this fancy, but in the fact that, while we thus imagine, we do not know the sun's true distance or the cause of the fancy. For although we afterwards learn, that the sun is distant from us more than six hundred of the earth's diameters, we none the less shall fancy it to be near; for we do not imagine the sun as near us, because we are ignorant of its true distance, but because the modification of our body involves the essence of the sun, in so far as our said body is affected thereby. — Spinoza, Ethics, Part II, Prop XXXV, Note
For me it is simple. In order to take Spinoza seriously, he has to offer: 1. a logical and coherent explanation for how it is possible that from a God without qualia and will to reach qualia and will; 2. a coherent explanation for how it is possible for something complex (man) to be conscious and something less complex not to possess consciousness, then I can take these metaphysics seriously. — Eugen
The belief that the law must conform to an "assumed standard" of some kind, and isn't the law if it does not, ignores the law; it doesn't explain it. It leads to a fundamental ignorance of the nature of the law and its operation. — Ciceronianus the White
Is Eugen a bot? — 180 Proof
So indeed my questions aren't the best, but I'm making progress. — Eugen
Do those complex individual parts contain consciousness? — Eugen
Then we can say that consciousness is in fact the result of a complex interaction of minds — Eugen
One kind of extended body, however, is significantly more complex than any others in its composition and in its dispositions to act and be acted upon. That complexity is reflected in its corresponding idea. The body in question is the human body; and its corresponding idea is the human mind or soul. The human mind, then, like any other idea, is simply one particular mode of God’s attribute, thought. Whatever happens in the body is reflected or expressed in the mind. In this way, the mind perceives, more or less obscurely, what is taking place in its body. And through its body’s interactions with other bodies, the mind is aware of what is happening in the physical world around it. But the human mind no more interacts with its body than any mode of thought interacts with a mode of extension.
One of the pressing questions in seventeenth-century philosophy, and perhaps the most celebrated legacy of Descartes’s dualism, is the problem of how two radically different substances such as mind and body enter into a union in a human being and cause effects in each other. How can the extended body causally engage the unextended mind, which is incapable of contact or motion, and “move” it, that is, cause mental effects such as pains, sensations and perceptions? And how can an immaterial thing like a mind or soul, which does not have motion, put a body (the human body) into motion? Spinoza, in effect, denies that the human being is a union of two substances. The human mind and the human body are two different expressions—under thought and under extension—of one and the same thing: the person. And because there is no causal interaction between the mind and the body, the so-called mind-body problem does not, technically speaking, arise. — SEP, article on Baruch Spinoza
, taken individually, are not conscious. In a word, complexity makes the difference between a stone and a man. So there is a threshold between unconscious and consciousness determined by pure complexity.