we must get to the place — JerseyFlight
the only thing that matters to philosophy is the nature and quality of criticism. — JerseyFlight
Anger attempts to hide vulnerability. Whenever one gets angry at the words of another, one should ask themselves why those words are making them feel vulnerable. — Tzeentch
When approached as such, emotion can lead to great personal insights, so I don't see why it cannot have a place on this forum. — Tzeentch
However, framing it against a different backdrop will help in bringing out which of the two is the one who wears the pants in this relationship. Which would you prefer? Reason OR Emotion?
Do I love some reasonable arguments! But it's funny, emotions many times provide so much more information about the world. Pride, jealousy, disgust; these have steered humanity since its beginning. The problem is that, to obtain information from emotions, we need to open different channels, those more fit to noise and sights rather than words and meanings. — dussias
By characterizing a rational position, as an emotional position, the defender is trying to dismiss it without actually having to deal with it. — JerseyFlight
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Ah! Well, if we're talking about control and consciousness then I'd agree that not all instances have had someone steering the wheel. Makes me think about Hitler and Gandhi, though. — dussias
(By no means I'm saying that only emotions have been in control of the wheel, I'm just commenting that they have had their chance)
However, a hypnotist is trained to perceive the world as 90% irrational and 10% rational. What do you think of this?
However, I strongly believe that who's at fault is not the emotional one! It's whoever lets itself take aim at emotions, rather than rationale. — dussias
In the present context the fault lies with the person who is trying — JerseyFlight
Does fault imply decision or consciousness, then? — dussias
Apply scientific rigor to the discussion, then.Uphold the integrity of intellectual standards above and beyond the regress (manipulation) of emotional states. — JerseyFlight
The unspoken claim is that "the objector's criticisms are false because they are based on emotion." But the most extraordinary thing is that those who are leveling this characterization are actually the ones making use of an emotional argument (or at the very least, a formal fallacy). — JerseyFlight
This is difficult, as only a philosophical zombie could argue unemotionally, but they wouldn't argue or do anything for that matter, as they would have no emotional impetus to do so. — Pop
One can be emotional, what one cannot do, is use that emotion as an argument against (or to evade) a valid criticism. — JerseyFlight
but you can see the difficulty? — Pop
The difficulty, as I see it, is in separating emotion from reason. — Pop
The difficulty, as I see it, is in separating emotion from reason.
— @Pop
Good topic, but different from the one here. — JerseyFlight
A highly emotional state will illicit a highly emotional response. Not that it is a justified response, but it is a typically human response. — Pop
Yes, I agree with you. Further, this "affect regulation" capacity and origin has been studied at length by psychology. Super important area of knowledge. — JerseyFlight
other then instituting some rules of engagement or such. — Pop
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