It wouldn't. One has to make one's silence heard, in order to distinguish one's silence from one's absence.Why then is there this trend to say "no comment" when silence would've achieved the same thing? — TheMadFool
Take, for example, Christians and their professed belief in the Ten Commandments, or their professed belief in "love thy neighbor". How would you go about measuring, assessing any of that, based on their words and actions?I am assuming that, empirically and socially, the actions of a person that are directed by a genuine belief must be measurably different from those of a person promulgating a false belief. Presumably things like long-term consistency, cogency of presentation, tendency to evoke comprehension in others. I am assuming that "the truth will out" in some sense, or more precisely, "the false will out," and reveal its own falsity. It is an hypothesis.
If you are dissimulating, you are intentionally mis-communicating. If you are practicing authenticity, then the possibility of understanding is greatest. That would have significance for coordinated group planning and action, for example. — Pantagruel
Where???But it's not socially unacceptable to be attracted to someone of a different race. — Metaphysician Undercover
Eh? Who are those "many"?Many though, would argue that it is morally unacceptable to be attracted to someone solely by their visual appearance.
Which would make sense in a monoculture, but not in most modern culturally and racially diverse societies.Morality involves adapting your personal taste, desires, inclinations, and attractions, to socially accepted standards. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't see how this works in practice.Personally, I assume there are manifestations of genuine belief that distinguish it from fake belief. That's what the bit you quoted suggests. Authenticity, credibility, efficacy, communicability, comprehensibility. — Pantagruel
This is interesting! Can you say more about it?As for the nexus between god and morality, all I can say is morality necessarily had to precede god for it didn't we wouldn't have gotten to the point where we gave the matter of god any serious thought. — TheMadFool
People who grew up with the PWE probably also have a deeply ingrained contempt for idleness and failure. So I don't think they are likely to engage in thoughts of idleness or the justification of it.Very good insights here. Do people who believe in the Protestant Work Ethic, really sustain this thinking throughout their work life? At no point does the good Protestant worker go, "God I really don't care today to do this"? — schopenhauer1
The idea that work should be "fulfilling" seems to be rather new, a relatively modern invention.Also can one be in what is considered really "necessary" line of industry (a doctor for example) and still find it to be unfulfilling to do the work?
That's a good one! As far as the religious component goes, I'm not so sure. This:Is the Prot. Work Ethic just a way to get certain people to not think about the existence itself?
I don't believe this, not at all, at least not as far as the ordinary, illiterate masses are concerned. For the ordinary person, religion/religiosity is an externally imposed chore, a ritual, a keeping up of appearances, not something they would actually take to heart or with the help of which they would make sense of the world.In the good old days, religion provided an anodyne for this discomfort. It provided meaning for people's lives. — Bitter Crank
It is also true that we cannot not do something. One way or another, as long as one lives, one will do something, even if it means rocking back and forth in a chair.Zapffe observed that all humans have the ability to access the truth that we don't need to do anything at all, that we know our existential dilemma.. — schopenhauer1
Sure, it can be a useful heuristic, provided one has internalized it early enough in life.isn't the PWE just another trope to get people to limit their thoughts. to anchor them so that they don't run into an existential meltdown?
Well, it suffices to be a barren young married woman or an aging spinster, and one is thrown into the matter at the deep end.True.. but how can this topic be elevated from these practical reasons to be seen as actually a political choice? By having the child, you are promoting the fact that someone else needs to experience life, and that they should engage with the soci-economic-cultural superstructure. This idea though seems so remote to certain mindsets. Why do you suppose some people cannot think in these more abstract terms? I guess socio-economic status and environment have a lot to do with it. If one isn't exposed to philosophical thinking, one doesn't engage with it naturally.. — schopenhauer1
The Early Buddhists would probably reply to this that human life is a "mixed bag".What interests me too is molding this social mindset in becoming a compliant worker for an entity. We can't but NOT do this if we need to survive as we humans do (by social effort), yet just as the OP states, here we are KNOWING and EVALUATING dislike for this effort WHILE we do it. What an insane world. Have you ever read Peter Zapffe? He talks about how we have an "over abundance of consciousness" that provides us more evaluative reflective capacities than is needed for an animal to survive. This meta-evaluation gives us that much more to grapple with. We don't just "do". We don't just go from garbage can to garbage can looking for food, and finding shade under a tree like a racoon. We KNOW we are doing something and can say, "Ah shit, not this X task again...". Why!?
(This is also in reply to several other questions and points by you:)Yes, it is the forgetting that is the mystery here. What does one do once it is exposed? I am advocating for communities of catharsis, of commiseration.. What does it mean for the superstructure itself? Of work? Of needing to survive? Of still having to live life knowing these ideas? — schopenhauer1
It's something I've been wondering about for a while. I think philosophy is a kind of la-la land, advocating for principles of reasoning that usually just don't work IRL with real people. In general, people don't give a rat's ass about "critical thinking". The argument from power is the strongest one.What if this is the mistake, thinking that ad populum/ad baculum is "just political"?
— baker
Can you explain? I just mean that people think because the majority thinks it, it must be the right course of action. The political consequence is that the YAYs win out by default by voting with their procreation.
But how can we know what a person truly believes?Exactly. There is a correspondence between the quality of belief and the quality of the presentation (enactment) of the belief. — Pantagruel
That's too bad.That could useful if I were talking about how hardship is overcome but I'm not. — Tom Storm
We can, but this doesn't already mean we do or that we will.The fact is, we as humans can evaluate something as negative while we are doing those things. — schopenhauer1
No, it's more complex than that.Rather, I am framing the usual view of life as a political view, not just a life choice or a preference or a lifestyle choice. To have children is to squarely believe life to be worth continuing and expanding, and perpetuating. — schopenhauer1
The procreationist sympathizer probably feels otherwise, feels that the antinatalist is forcing on them their view.If politics is about how to get large groups of people to do things, if we compare the antinatalist to the procreationist sympathizer, the antinatalist does not force anything on anyone, the procreationist sympathizer does. — schopenhauer1
Because it's a big project that requires the cooperation of many many people.If you like the whole "project" of the socio-cultural-economic enterprise of human existence, why must then others be pressed into this?
What if this is the mistake, thinking that ad populum/ad baculum is "just political"?Ad populum doesn't mean anything here to me as justification just that might makes right. Again, that is just political then. — schopenhauer1
So there is this character Truman who is living on a set of a tv show -- except that he's the only one who doesn't know it, he thinks he's living in the real world. Millions of people are watching this show. Then, he begins to discover that something isn't quite right, like when a reflector falls from the sky, or people keep moving in predictable patterns. And he pursues this, he wants to figure out what's gong on. And the tv viewers are cheering him on, rooting for him, they are thoroughly enthusiastic. Then he escapes the set. The tv audiences go crazy, they are sooooo happy for him. Go Truman! Then their elation wanes, in a matter of minutes. And then they forget about him. Completely. Switch to another channel. A character they have followed for years, and they forget about him in seconds, and move on to other things.Have you seen The Truman Show?
— baker
Yes, but what is the tie in? — schopenhauer1
And I'm thinking that your doing the above, "showing it bare for what it is, and expose the harmful political assumptions of perpetuating this package" would go over like Truman's discovery of the real world and departing the fictional one: your deconstruction of group-think, your showing it bare for what it is, your exposing of harmful political assumptions of perpetuating that package would likely be met at first with elation, enthusiasm, that "Yes! This is the truth!" -- and then forgotten about it.I want to understand the origins of this group-think, deconstruct it, show it bare for what it is, and expose the harmful political assumptions of perpetuating this package. — schopenhauer1
Most certainly not. You keep missing my point.Baker, I'm assuming you're jesting, right? — Tom Storm
Indeed, which is where your mistake is.Jeez, Baker - the point I made has nothing to do about chronology. — Tom Storm
Frankl didn't go into the camp unprepared. He didn't invent logotherapy from scratch while he was in the camp.was born in the experiences of the concentration camp.
Yes, such is its intention, but I'm pointing out its major shortcoming: it "works" only for people who already believe it.It's used in so many ways and has some application in helping people recover from substance use and anxiety.
But you're not designing a system. You don't get to. Nor do you want to.Yes, within the context of any system, it is up to the individual to save themselves, but if you were designing a system, — synthesis
So? They should just work diligently, duh.you want to avoid giving power to groups because that means individuals are going to be screwed...BIG time.
These are the people I'm interested in. How did they make it in life?Although the older atheists I have known got there despite being disowned and shunned by their working class communities and families. — Tom Storm
Sure. My point is, it's backwards, which makes it useless. It can be useful only if one learns it before one falls on hard times.Err... what order? I was simply saying that Logotherapy was developed with this in mind. I was not trying to classify it in any context other than the obvious. — Tom Storm
And I'm pretty sure that most of them were not thrown in at the deep end, but instead didn't have many hardships when growing up, or their parents taught them resilience, or both.But I think it would be safe to bet that of the many millions of atheists who have lived, millions of them have done just this. — Tom Storm
And then what? You think the world will change?I want to understand the origins of this group-think, deconstruct it, show it bare for what it is, and expose the harmful political assumptions of perpetuating this package. — schopenhauer1
Really? And you have empirical data to back this up?Millions of people have done this with no problems. — Tom Storm
No, that's not the right chronological order.Therapist Dr Victor Frankl devised Logotherapy as a consequence of his time in a concentration camp (he wanted to understand why some people survived and others did not) and his ideas are far more relevant that what we can offer. — Tom Storm
Logotherapy is based on an existential analysis[6] focusing on Kierkegaard's will to meaning as opposed to Alfred Adler's Nietzschean doctrine of will to power or Freud's will to pleasure. Rather than power or pleasure, logotherapy is founded upon the belief that striving to find meaning in life is the primary, most powerful motivating and driving force in humans.[2] A short introduction to this system is given in Frankl's most famous book, Man's Search for Meaning, in which he outlines how his theories helped him to survive his Holocaust experience and how that experience further developed and reinforced his theories.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logotherapy
"Casting pearls before swine" -- that's a way to keep up the appearance of one's worthiness and the worthiness of one's ideas. Because if (some) other people are demoted to swine, then one's ideas, however lowly they might be, instantly look more elevated, pearly ...What is casting pearls before swine but being suspiciously thirsty? — norm
Why should that be a problem?? To you?? You advocate that everyone should save themselves, and if they can't, that's their fucking problem. There you go! The big fish eat the little fish, that's how the big fish survive.That's the problem. It's only the elite in corporations and government saving themselves. How about everybody else? — synthesis
You're not saying anything. Other than perhaps airing your own despondency and justifying/rationalizing the status quo.In life, you do the best you can, help others where you can, and then you die. It's just the way it is. — synthesis
People don't necessarily proselytize to "prove the strength of their faith".A person comfortable in their spirituality (as opposed to their religion) does not need to proselytize or harangue others to prove the strength of their faith. — Tom Storm
Why??I think the hallmark fo a secure faith is the lack of proselytizing. — Tom Storm
More like a saloon, at least at times. :pthis forum is an approximation to a Salon — Banno
Elitism doesn't necessarily have to do with wealth and worldly power.In any case, I don't think you're entirely correct about these being somehow more elitist traditions. The Cathars were beggars and rejected material wealth. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Eh? What on earth makes you think this pandemic and its reverberations are over??One year into the pandemic, it's safe to say that science & technology have saved us. — TaySan
Because — khaled
I think of some concepts parallel to solipsism: epistemic egoism, epistemic narcissism, epistemic authoritarianism.And why can't a solipsist be a realist? after all, the thought that the external world has independent existence is just a thought, and solipsists accept the existence of thoughts.
— sime
I just don't know what to say... — Banno
But you clearly do have that desire, when you talk about minimizing the government and the corporations.I can't (nor do I desire to) control anybody else. — synthesis
Oh, you put it like this, making it about (not) controling others.The only solution I have is for my own life. I can't (nor do I desire to) control anybody else. — synthesis
