After watching how people in the street would immediately tense up, after being asked a simple question of 'what is a woman?' and tried to give a 'politically correct' answer, you are getting a feeling that they very well know the answer, yet are scared sh*tless of saying it or, probably, even thinking it.
In my opinion such internal blocking of engaging with certain thoughts is a very bad idea, as it noticeably hinders one's ability to think clearly.
What do you think? — M777
Pointless to you perhaps but that in no way makes my point pointless, just inconvenient for your point. — universeness
Right on Janus. We are not dealing here with certitudes. We are dealing with numerous instances of carelas speach and badass, ambigous words and expressions. — Ken Edwards
It's good exercise but not a lot of meat on those bones.
Others find it filling. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Ah. So all this is just to day that sometimes folk say "I feel certain..." as equivalent to "I believe...", and this is distinct from "I am certain...".
Why didn't you say? — Banno
If you could be wrong, then you are not certain. — Banno
This definition or rule is fine - it's the beginning and end of your argument. — ZzzoneiroCosm
I can be certain 2+2=4.
I can feel certain the sun will rise in the morning. — ZzzoneiroCosm
I admit to not having been able to make sense of it. He hasn't made a case for what the difference consists in. Hence my counterexample:
I can feel certain 2+2=4.
I can be certain the sun will rise in the morning — Banno
Seems to make no difference. — Banno
I'll leave that to Janus. I can see an a-priori-a-posteriori-esque tact surfacing. Or a (likely idiosyncratic) codification of degrees of certainty. All of it seems fine to me, but not my cup of tea. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Yes, you're wrong. Here's how:
I am certain the sun will rise in the morning. But I could be wrong. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Similarly, from Janus' contention that we must be certain of our beliefs and yet we can acknowledge that our beliefs might be wrong, we can conclude that Janus has gone astray somewhere. — Banno
So we agree that (1) is consistent, (2) is contradictory. — Banno
It is not possible to believe something without feeling certain about it. — Janus
This has been shown to be wrong. With it your position collapses. — Banno
Here:
I believe the keys are in the car, but I might be wrong
I am certain that the keys are in the car, but I might be wrong.
Do we agree that there is a problem with the second sentence, but not with the first? — Banno
Since these are stochastic and unstable, it's perfectly possible to hold contradictory beliefs (propensities to act as if two contradictory states of affairs were the case). In fact, it's quite a normal state. — Isaac
Here it is again: There is a common distinction made between being certain of something and believing it. Your account denies this distinction.
You are not very good at this stuff. — Banno
Are there degrees of certainty? Cuz it seems that would solve the problem. Colloquially: mostly sure, 90-99% sure, 100% sure....
Or is certainty always 100%? — ZzzoneiroCosm
If you were a competent user of English you might believe the keys to be in the car while not being certain of it. Your terminology leads to the confusion in the OP. — Banno
Simply that things, like the location of keys, can be accepted and entertained without feeling sure about them. We can also feel certain about the location of keys. Further, we can have irrational beliefs about the location of keys. — praxis
Rubbish. It's common to treat things as true, even though we might be wrong. — Banno
You seem to think that what one believe is true, one believes is necessarily true. That's wrong. — Banno
To believe something is to hold that it is true.
To be certain of something is to hold that it could not be false — Banno
One may believe and yet still think one might be wrong. — Banno
Hey, folks, it is possible for one to believe something and yet not be certain of it. — Banno
There is a difference between being certain and simply believing. — Banno
I have thousands of beliefs. Most of them are intuitional but unfortunately
I can not express any of them to you because this correspondence is purely verbal.
I am interested in your knowing or perhaps feeling that I can't change certain beliefs. Perhaps I can. Try me out. Could you please phrase one or two of them for me to tackle?
Thank you in advance. — Ken Edwards
As I pointed out in my previous post, there are instances in our actual lives where we have discovered that what we thought we knew was wrong. So it seems to me that there is no knowledge involved, only beliefs. — Harry Hindu
We fail when we believe too much, for then we believe things that are not true. We fail when we believe too little, for then we may miss what may be important.
There is a place of balance between credulity and skepticism. — Banno
We fail when we believe too much, for then we believe things that are not true. We fail when we believe too little, for then we may miss what may be important.
There is a place of balance between credulity and skepticism. — Banno
There is the more nuanced observation that the capital of France is 'F,' personal interpretation can always offer a different perspective. — universeness
Too vague. What do you mean, "actual lives"? There are many that seem to spend much of their "actual lives" on these forums expressing doubt in "radical" ways. — Harry Hindu
— Janus
I don't see how this is any different than the way I explained the differences between belief and knowledge. When others disagree with your view does that not instill doubt in your views? — Harry Hindu
Best explanation for what if not for what is real or else what is really the case? — javra
What is the difference between you knowing something and the way something seems to you?
What is the difference between the way things seem to you and you having a delusion or hallucination?
What terms can we use to refer to the way things seem to you and the way things are? Belief and Reality.
What is the difference between belief and knowledge? Belief is when you only have an observation OR reason to support a particular view. Knowledge is when you have both observation AND reason to support a particular view. — Harry Hindu
“Most plausible” to me signifies “most likely to be real or conformant to reality”; to deem X most plausible is hence to provisionally accept X’s reality, thereby constituting a belief. — javra
Our inaction speaks to our despair. We face an existential threat the likes of which humanity has never experienced, and we avert our gaze. What is this, if not despair? — hypericin
The magical thinking we require is, "we can succeed, if only we give it absolutely everything". — hypericin
I think you are splitting hairs. Do you believe the words you typed above are correct? — universeness
Do you disagree with these definitions, and, if you do disagree, what do you instead recommend? — javra
Indeed, but only after already having a belief system intact. Suspending one's judgment is a metacognitive endeavor. Metacognition is existentially dependent upon pre-existing belief. — creativesoul
"Anything that is not known but seems reasonable can be accepted and entertained provisionally for pragmatic reasons;" is what it means to believe anything. All you've done is show that you can't escape believing anything. — Harry Hindu
Sure. Belief, in and of itself, would also apply to "justified true belief", which is the commonly accepted definition of descriptive knowledge. Which in turn would make belief and indispensable aspect of, at the very least, descriptive knowledge. — javra
If it's not knowledge, such a frame of mind would result in at least two alternatives being tentatively entertained: at minimum, that of X being and that of X not being. How can acting out on any alternative not entail some type of belief that the alternative one acts out on is at least likely true? — javra
Janus you just said: "Anything that is not known but seems reasonable can be accepted and entertained provisionally for pragmatic reasons; no believing needed."
That statement is fundamental and sums up and modifies this entire conversation. — Ken Edwards
The ones mentioned in the op are precisely the kind of changes we need to make things less bad. — hypericin
The thing is, we are already at the despair. And so we don't try, out of fear of disappointment. Far far easier to simply suppress the awareness, after all, there is still time...
If magical thinking is ever needed, it is needed now. — hypericin
Whereas, the non-feasibility of renewable energy is a problem as real and objective as it gets. — hypericin
Aristotle's understanding of tragedy is quite insightful. Nietzsche misread Aristotle's notion of pity as a Christian concept. — Jackson
I think you are correct. Though, I do not think Nietzsche discusses Aristotle. — Jackson
Yes, and he provided such a stellar example of that. — Wayfarer
But power exhausts itself in what it takes power over and is replaced by a new trajectory of will to power.A given Will to power cannot be separated from the value system that it posits, and that is serially overcome by a wholly different value system ad infinitum( eternal return of the same). This is different from a ‘growth’ oriented notion of empowerment and optimal potential. — Joshs
The underlying idea? That the bungled and the botched are to be the objects of derision? That's not a sentiment that deserves sympathy. — Banno
Sola dosis facit venenum. — Agent Smith
Congratulations. You are the first person to post this Latin phrase. — Bitter Crank
Well, yes, indeed, that is what I have been arguing: we grew out of it. If it is the "iconic passage from Zarathustra", so much the worse for Nietzsche's fatuous fatidic alter-ego. — Banno
Apes are no longer merely objects for amusement, except amongst the ill-informed or childish. — Banno
