So you tell me, you tell TimeLine, you tell fdrake that we ought not to talk about the pathological anxiety, because that's a complicated phenomenon, we ought to talk about the normal one, and I'm the liar? Yeah right... — Agustino
There are no benefits to monkey-mind - what makes you think there are? Why do you think people work so hard to get rid of it? — Agustino
Put down the crack pipe. I honestly have no clue what you're smoking now, but it must be potent. So according to your silly logic, highly functioning human beings like Steve Jobs, Admiral Stockdale, Marcus Aurelius, Seneca, Miyamoto Musashi, and so on aren't really highly functioning because they have taken control over the monkey mind. What nonsense. You should read some more. — Agustino
You should read some more. — Agustino
While her voice is essentially trapped in this social network, her anxiety is evidence of this inner voice calling out to her that she still does not know or understand how to use
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It was only when I got harassed and then had the car accident that the anxiety surfaced because my identification started changing; it became the impetus to recognise this 'voice' within me that something is wrong. — TimeLine
Where did I say anxiety should be restricted to a pathological condition? I recall multiple times in this thread when I told you the opposite.I do not object to discussing pathological anxiety, I object to restricting "anxiety" to being a pathological condition. — Metaphysician Undercover
It may be the illness itself, not a symptom of it. I have always had borderline high-blood pressure of no identifiable cause - the doctors ran all possible tests. Do I have an illness according to you that is different from the high-blood pressure itself?And, like things such as body temperature, and blood pressure, etc., we might determine a normal range of anxiety. But also like things such as body temperature and blood pressure, I believe that when anxiety goes out of the normal range, it is a symptom of an illness, it is not an illness itself. — Metaphysician Undercover
What makes you think those who control the monkey-mind don't get things done, and do so faster, with greater ease, and with higher spirits than you?As I said, we as the monkey-minded, do things, we get things done, and this is very satisfying, extremely enjoyable. — Metaphysician Undercover
Sure - I didn't say don't be active. I said don't be active just for the sake of tiring yourself out so that you can rest.And then there is the wide ranging, and extremely important fact, that being active is the only way that we can serves others. — Metaphysician Undercover
It's not that they have never done it, since we're flawed human beings, all of us have failings. But yes, those people did make it a priority to avoid rumination and obsession. Preoccupation on the other hand is usually a good thing. Rumination and obsession are most often negative (though in some very limited amounts they could be seen as indifferent or even good).Do you think that these people have never ruminated, been preoccupied, or obsessed? — Metaphysician Undercover
I think for the most part rumination and obsession are symptoms of illness (or illnesses themselves), yes. This article talks about the benefits of breaking free of rumination, which is clearly treated as a disorder:These are the symptoms of anxiety, which you seem to associate with the monkey mind. And you think that these are symptoms of illness? — Metaphysician Undercover
I said you ought to do both, not just rely on the one.That's contradictory,coming from the one who keeps telling me to do philosophy from experience rather than from what I have read. — Metaphysician Undercover
Where did I say anxiety should be restricted to a pathological condition? I recall multiple times in this thread when I told you the opposite. — Agustino
It's true that we can sometimes call the feeling one has before having to go on stage for a musical performance as "anxiety", and it involves a fluttery feeling in the chest and stomach, and heightened focus. But that's not what I mean by anxiety when I talk about anxiety the medical condition. — Agustino
Where's your evidence that ruminative behaviour and obsessions are productive, healthy, high-functioning or good?! That seems to be only YOUR idea, not the idea of scientists, doctors, and researchers. Really, your lack of knowledge in this area seems to me to be appalling. — Agustino
Have you read the article I linked? What are your remarks about it?My OED defines ruminate as "meditate, ponder". And you insist that meditation is so good, and rumination is so bad. How do you spin "rumination" such that it is suddenly something bad? — Metaphysician Undercover
tl;dr2: exercise: derive why a person continues to suffer from a persistent delusion they are a robot using only existential hermeneutics of the general experiential character of humans. No one will freakin' be able to do this. — fdrake
Then it is not at all a negative thing.My OED defines ruminate as "meditate, ponder" — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, seems quite unlikely.Are you so sure we are not robots, and that it is a delusion? Or am I pathological in even asking? — unenlightened
I'm not interested in debating whether we're all robots in some unspecified sense — fdrake
People feel they have different amounts of control over the intrusive thoughts or delusional fantasies — fdrake
I think you might do well to recognize that this "inner voice" is not a voice within you, it is you. Otherwise you're like Agustino, seeing a need to suppress it. That is authenticity, the voice that comes from within you. the most trustworthy source. It is necessary to recognize this in order that there is a whole you, unified. We, as members of society are urged to suppress the inner voice, to parrot the others, what Plato called the mob. But the mob is a false unity, an inauthentic sameness of individuals, created by those who desire similar pleasures. You will not understand unity until you grasp the authentic unity, yourself. Then only you can tell yourself what you really want, and sometimes this is not easy to determine. — Metaphysician Undercover
Hmm when that happens to me, I just give in to it and accept it. It takes some time though to move from state of panic to state of acceptance. Then usually I wake up.That certainly is exactly what I mean; ever had those dreams where you need to move or get out of somewhere, but you physically just cannot go and try all you can, your body will not move? — TimeLine
Okay, so then how would you differentiate between the kind of rumination expressed in the article, and the kind of rumination you're talking about? Should a different word be used for each? And what is the difference between each? — Agustino
How would you describe the case of a person (it happened to me when I suffered of anxiety/OCD) who spends 2 hours trying to remember if he has closed the door to the house when he left, and questioning every detail of his memory, while he has other work to do at the same time, and therefore doesn't get on with that work? — Agustino
That certainly is exactly what I mean; ever had those dreams where you need to move or get out of somewhere, but you physically just cannot go and try all you can, your body will not move? Or, say you are afraid in this dream and want to scream but there is no sound to the scream? — TimeLine
I do not agree with the suppression of this voice, but really to simply transcend the noise that makes it hard to hear what it is attempting to convey. Like a muscle that requires exercise, we need to build a new language as an autonomous agent, similar to synaptic pruning where we begin to selectively discard what is unnecessary and keep what is necessary. — TimeLine
No one here does.I don't claim to be a doctor on this matter. — Metaphysician Undercover
Interesting.You, not I, seem to think that there is a clear distinction between anxiety of the healthy type, and anxiety of the ill type, so perhaps you should offer your expert opinion. — Metaphysician Undercover
Well, let's take a condition where rumination is one of the primary symptoms. What would you say about the case of a man who, for example, thinks that there is some government conspiracy against him and continuously ruminates on that? It's something called paranoid delusions, thinking that someone is out there to harm or hurt you, and often people ruminate on such issues to no avail, since these problems cannot be solved.I would say though, that if one consistently ruminated on some problem, and failed to ever resolve that problem, the person's failure to recognize one's own inability to solve the problem, might be a problem itself. — Metaphysician Undercover
Personally, I would say it depends on why you're ruminating, what's your goal? If you are like the person with paranoid delusions, then ruminating on the subject of your delusions is definitely a bad idea - the issue cannot be solved.The more you ruminate, the better you get at it. — Metaphysician Undercover
I agree with you somewhat, however, the point is that you can never be 100% certain that the so-called problem cannot be resolved. And you never know if what you're trying to do is really impossible - maybe you've missed something, etc. So the mentally ill person will generally find refuge in this - not being able to be certain. Not to mention that if a problem is very very big - let's say that their survival depends on it - even if it is just a teeny tiny bit short of impossible to succeed in it, it is still worth trying to solve it! So as you can see, for these two reasons, the approach you suggest is problematic when it comes to pathological types of anxiety and rumination. Now you claim that there is no clear distinction between the healthy type, and the unhealthy type - so does this mean that the unhealthy type can switch over to the healthy type, and how would this happen?If you are driven toward attempting to resolve problems which cannot be resolved, and you cannot recognize your own inability to solve that problem, that is an issue. It is a case of trying to do the impossible, setting yourself up for failure. And the more time you spend trying to do it, the bigger the disappointment when the reality hits you. — Metaphysician Undercover
Well, let's take a condition where rumination is one of the primary symptoms. What would you say about the case of a man who, for example, thinks that there is some government conspiracy against him and continuously ruminates on that? It's something called paranoid delusions, thinking that someone is out there to harm or hurt you, and often people ruminate on such issues to no avail, since these problems cannot be solved. — Agustino
It seems to be a problem with thought itself, with the very nature of possibility. — Agustino
So since according to you, there is no difference between the healthy type and the ill type of rumination (or anxiety, they are somewhat associated), how would such a man go about extricating himself from such habits of thought? It is the nature of possibility, that no matter how much evidence to the contrary you get for something, you could always interpret it as actually confirming evidence! The less pathological cases of this, we refer to them as "being in denial". — Agustino
So it seems that it is the nature of thought itself that such a person does not have means, through thought alone, of extricating himself from that condition. — Agustino
I agree with you somewhat, however, the point is that you can never be 100% certain that the so-called problem cannot be resolved. And you never know if what you're trying to do is really impossible - maybe you've missed something, etc. So the mentally ill person will generally find refuge in this - not being able to be certain. Not to mention that if a problem is very very big - let's say that their survival depends on it - even if it is just a teeny tiny bit short of impossible to succeed in it, it is still worth trying to solve it! So as you can see, for these two reasons, the approach you suggest is problematic when it comes to pathological types of anxiety and rumination — Agustino
Now you claim that there is no clear distinction between the healthy type, and the unhealthy type - so does this mean that the unhealthy type can switch over to the healthy type, and how would this happen? — Agustino
Why is the illness different than just the thinking there is a conspiracy against him? I would say the illness is the thinking itself. That has certainly been my experience with anxiety - there is nothing behind the thinking that causes it as it were.I think that such a person has an illness which makes him feel like there is a conspiracy against him. The rumination itself is not the problem, it is what he is prone to be ruminating on, that is the problem. — Metaphysician Undercover
These conditions are self-perpetuating habits of thought if you prevent the thinking, you prevent and many times improve the problem. For example, meditation allowed me to become detached from the anxious thoughts. They didn't disappear at first, but I went around no longer caring that I had them. Over time they slowly decreased in intensity, and then disappeared (for the most part, I still get a pathological kind of anxiety if I am super stressed).Preventing him from thinking (ruminating) may address the symptom, but it doesn't address the problem. — Metaphysician Undercover
There is a very very big problem with what you're saying here. You assume anxiety is like having the flu, and that's NOT the same thing, not even close. The flu is caused by something that is clearly biological - namely a virus, which we can find and identify in people who have the flu. There are no such things in the case of anxiety.Right, the man is ill. The man cannot cure his own illness "through thought alone". Would you expect to cure a flu by thinking about it? — Metaphysician Undercover
The thinking itself is the illness, and quite possibly contributes to the persistence of the illness.I don't see the "problematic" you refer to. The healthy person has a healthy attitude toward what to think about, and what not to think about. The attitude does not come from the thinking itself, it comes from elsewhere. So the thinking itself is not the problem. — Metaphysician Undercover
I brought it up because I spoke to a schizophrenic recently who had that delusion and it troubled him greatly. More generally, I brought that up to say that the way different people have function-impeding anxiety differs a lot. — fdrake
Why is the illness different than just the thinking there is a conspiracy against him? I would say the illness is the thinking itself. That has certainly been my experience with anxiety - there is nothing behind the thinking that causes it as it were. — Agustino
There is a very very big problem with what you're saying here. You assume anxiety is like having the flu, and that's NOT the same thing, not even close. — Agustino
The flu is caused by something that is clearly biological - namely a virus, which we can find and identify in people who have the flu. There are no such things in the case of anxiety. — Agustino
That is why CBT - which is basically curing your anxiety by thought - is one of the most successful methods. — Agustino
So I don't see why you find "curing pathological anxiety through thought alone" so hard to get your mind around. It seems to me that you just don't have solutions to the problems I raised earlier. — Agustino
The thinking itself is the illness, and quite possibly contributes to the persistence of the illness. — Agustino
Sure, please make an effort to read what I write charitably, trying to understand what I am actually telling you. My statements are made in a certain context, I do not understand why you take them to be blanket statements about thinking in general.We all think, thinking is not an illness. What is "behind the thinking that causes it" is the person's interests. We all have interests, and we all think. — Metaphysician Undercover
Again, you're reading uncharitably. Obviously I was referring to the unhealthy type of anxiety. Do I really need to specify that, can't you make an effort to understand based on the context what I'm telling you?No I don't assume anxiety is like having the flu. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is false. Of course everyone has anxiety, I can cite you multiple statements from me in this very thread saying that anxiety itself cannot be eliminated and is a normal part of life.You just can't seem to grasp the concept that normal, highly functioning human beings have anxiety. You want to insist that having anxiety is not normal, that it's an illness. — Metaphysician Undercover
Right, and guess what, the relevant part of the biology can be changed since the brain has neuroplasticity.I think it is clearly false to say that there are no biological causes of anxiety. The human body is a very complicated biochemical system. Adrenaline for instance is known to be associated with anxiety, as a cause. And, there are many other chemicals which are known to influence anxiety. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, it is the activity of thinking in a certain way :-} - not through thought, right...CBT is not curing anxiety with thought, it is activity. It is a therapy of coordination between thought and behaviour. — Metaphysician Undercover
What else is the activity that you mentioned above if not thought?If CBT is your evidence of curing pathological anxiety with thought alone, then you haven't got a case. As I said in the last post, I haven't seen these "problems" with my position, which you keep alluding to, yet. I think you're imagining things. — Metaphysician Undercover
In the context of unhealthy anxiety, sure! What's wrong with something being self-perpetuating? Have you ever heard of positive feedback loops?Wow, thinking is an illness which contributes to the persistence of itself. Now I've heard everything. — Metaphysician Undercover
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