For those that have seen beyond it, normality is simply a set of shared conventions and beliefs, a familiar milieu within which we can all pursue our limited aims. And nothing wrong with it, as far as it goes. Normality beats schizophrenia and alienation any day. We do not want to fall short of normality.
But normality can also be surpassed. As far as the self-realised are concerned, our 'normality' is very similar to what us 'normal' people understand as the reality of psychopaths and schizophrenics. However, self-realised individuals are generally compassionate and kind, and they generally won't cast aspersions on normal people or look down on us in any way. Rather, they will, as they have throughout history, gently, persistently, unfailingly, ceaselessly, remind us 'Normal People' that many of the things we take for granted, are empty, unreal, phantasmagorical. They will attempt to help us, in exactly the same way that we attempt to help those among us who need guidance.
And so we all move along, through the bell curve of normality.
The Christian in you dies hard, eh? — Wayfarer
perhaps it's easier for the bungled and botched to 'surpass normality'. — Banno
The alternative isn’t Neitszche’s ‘Uber-mensch’ but a return to philosophical spirituality. — Wayfarer
The alternative isn’t Neitszche’s ‘Uber-mensch’ but a return to philosophical spirituality.
— Wayfarer
Nice words. The devil is in the detail, the myth that will accompany the spirituality, the lie-to-children.
See the Phaedo thread. Fooloso4 perhaps has something along these lines in mind in his account there.
It seems to me that the Ubermensch is in the ascendence. — Banno
The child is innocence and forgetting, a new beginning, a game, a self-rolling wheel, a first movement, a sacred Yes.” (Zarathustra, Three Metamorphoses of the Spirit).
There is also the issue of cognitive economy and other issues of practical economy.So, perhaps it is similar to the case when we state, “Onions taste awful,” that the syntax is configured in such a way to be making a general statement when in actuality, we are making a particular subjective statement.
— Cartesian trigger-puppets
/.../
But I do think that as our language evolved it was heavily influenced by the absolute and objective sense of moral values (and to a lesser extent an egoistic sense of aesthetic values) imposed by religious authority and thus retains a theocentric syntactic structure of the vast majority of time that our language's has undergone it's development. It is reflective of a time when divine command was the objective truth and fact of moral value. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Except that the relevance of this observation depends on one's position in the hierarchy. A patient's perception of their therapist's behavior is irrelevant, because the patient has no actual power in the situation. Similar to the way a student's perception of their teacher's behavior is irrelevant, or the employee's of their employer.It's highly useful. The issue is how do we identify moral behaviour in doctors (or anyone)? We only have one way: their actions. The fact that you may not see them at work is irrelevant to the point. The point is ethical behaviour is demonstrated you can't discover it by what someone says publicly or writes about it. In the case of doctors and mental health professionals - given that they work openly with patients every day - it is actually very easy to see what kind of person they are. — Tom Storm
Now who's pessimistic?Yet only psychologists/psychiatrists have the legal right to interfere with the lives of others. There's a clear power imbalance.
— baker
This is factually wrong.
Philosophy as one massive argumentum ad absurdum?Philosophy is self-serving nonsense - as Witti showed. It is easy to mythologise the philosopher king, to suppose that the philosopher has something worthwhile to add to the discussion. Mostly this is a mistake. — Banno
Only the elite have the time for philosophy.Philosophy as elitism.
— Banno
yells the mob. — Wayfarer
And such principles are validated against ethical systems, not against predictive empirical hypotheses. — Wayfarer
Presumably you understand the difference between a lie and a truth...? — Banno
Only in the laboratory of life - but who will be the judge? — Wayfarer
And how does one verify or falsify an ethical system? Is there a way to show that utilitarianism is false or that the categorical imperative is true? — Michael
A claim such as "2 + 2 = 5" can be shown to be false by counting; a claim such as "a cat is on the mat" can be shown to be true by looking at the mat. But a claim such as "we ought not kill"? I don't even know what to do with that. — Michael
If the goal is to not be killed, then having the rule "we ought not to kill" makes sense. It follows from instrumental reason. — Echarmion
Isn't this also true for the scientific method? We know it's true because it works. It cannot be checked against anything other than its utility. — Echarmion
And how does the "laboratory of life" show an ethical system to be true or false? What is the criteria by which we measure the truth of an ethical system? It's not a question of who will be the judge but a question of how it is to be judged. — Michael
I don't understand the difference between "we ought not kill" being true and it being false, and so I don't understand what it means for it to be either true or false. — Michael
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