That they are schizophrenic is your opinion (and most everyone else's). Not the schizophrenic's. And yet it would not be commendable for him to push on absolutely convinced of what he sees. Even if to him, that is what is concordant with reality. — khaled
If I believe A and you believe B, that is because I see A as concordant with reality and you see B as concordant with reality. If one of us is wrong, and we only change our minds when we believe that the opposite view is concordant with reality, neither of us will change our view. — khaled
But if we had a method for unfailingly knowing what is concordant with reality and what isn't, ... — khaled
If we don't have such a method, then we must decide for ourselves what is concordant and what isn't, ... — khaled
Everyone will think they're doing it and it's those damn *insert group of different belief here* that are the problem! — khaled
Other views can help by scrutinizing one's ideas, or open up new avenues of thought, but my own judgement should take precedence. Correspondingly, I don't expect nor want people to adopt my views. If the schizophrenic believes they will be happy amidst their "perception of reality", let them. — Tzeentch
Don't these things only matter if one is concerned with convincing others? — Tzeentch
I don't see those as a problem. (At least not one that concerns my practice of philosophy)
If individuals wish to remain ignorant, let them. What concern is that of mine? — Tzeentch
I have come to see that every 'opinion' and 'drive' I have in life is due to an underlying feeling of 'anger'/'annoyance' brought about by the unavoidable confliction existence brings with it. We are 'roused' to respond and such arousal is 'anger'/'annoyance' after fear slips into the recesses. — I like sushi
Why don't we recognise this most of the time? It can be subtle. — I like sushi
the analogous empirical checks have proven negative. — Kenosha Kid
You seem to be rejecting pathology as the differentiator as you're sticking with generalising from a sample of 1 above by treating I and We interchangeably. — Kenosha Kid
The question is extremely simple, and I feel you're evading it with verbosity. If you're sticking with that generalisation in spite of the evidence, how do you account for the evidence to the contrary? — Kenosha Kid
? 'We' don't recognise it all the time. 'I' (you) recognise it, but 'We' don't, because it's subtle. If not that, what? — Kenosha Kid
I doubt you will hold this view if the Schizophrenic believes you to be the leader of the operation to assassinate them however. — khaled
Yes. Which I'm sure you occasionally try to do, like on AN threads. — khaled
That's really the only problem I have with your view. We're interconnected, ... — khaled
My minimal conclusion here is that being completely rational beings would make us stagnated and unable to move forward or backwards. The rational mind without an irrational nature is utterly useless. — I like sushi
If you don't agree you might get somewhere if you outline why rather than simply stating 'I disagree'. — I like sushi
When I create a thread here, it's principally to survey critique. I'm inviting difference of opinion, the benefits of which are: 1) if my thinking is crap, friends here will demonstrate that, saving me from wasting more time on it; 2) if it's solid, I can demonstrate that to myself by defending it (like a thesis defense); 3) if it's kind of there but flawed, discussion will help develop the bits that need developing.
I don't think ideas are really the source of anger, except horrible ideas. I think it's generally the mode of discourse that enrages: hypocrisy, bullshitting, etc. If you're enraged by people not agreeing with you, however strong their counterargument, that seems like a personal problem to me.
I started a thread here ages ago that a couple of good people destroyed in no time at all. I thought that was great. It was clearly an incorrect thesis and I'm glad it didn't take 15 pages to realise that. — Kenosha Kid
So what is your anger telling you about the kind of exchanges that happen here on TPF? — Olivier5
Are you just angry at a mere disagreement, eg like a believer faced with incredulity? You seem to be saying so in your OP, but surely you must know that philosophy, like politics or religion, is a domain where disagreements are always a plenty, and where disagreement is to be expected, not agreement. — Olivier5
So why are you angry, really? — Olivier5
Do you mean that if I ask your opinion about TPF, you would express it only if you get annoyed or angry? :smile:When we express an opinion or argument it is because we are annoyed/angry with something that causes us distress. — I like sushi
Maybe I am one in a million with whom it takes more then passive serenity to get anywhere with any meaning. — I like sushi
I doubt it I am that abnormal though :D — I like sushi
I am talking about 'anger'/'annoyance' which is not the same as 'being angry'.
I furthered my proposition by stating that 'fear' is the core and that 'anger'/'annoyance' is how we deal with fear in a 'progressive' manner (as in productive rather than curly up in a ball and dying). Something akin to cognitive flight or fight; as an analogy. — I like sushi
don't really see how 'love' or 'desire' is a natural response to 'fear'. I want you to argue the point in more depth if you can as I am sure there is weight to it.
If you're using 'love' then I think it would help to outline how this works in the initial stages where fear has a grip of us. — I like sushi
None of this would mean slavery would be made illegal. It would just start to become an ineffective farming strategy. — khaled
That would be the outcome if people never got angry at slavery and went to war over it.
But you still have an opinion about it! :smile: Also you cared enough to tell me your opinion about my comment! :smile: (I must not expect to get more after this! :smile:)I don't care enough about TPF to express a serious opinion about it — I like sushi
There's a huge distance between being "serene" (which is something very difficult to achieve anyway) and being annoyed, angry and in distress, that you are talking about at the start of your topic.they are anything but curiously serene about practically any thought they've ever had about anything — I like sushi
I would have to go back and re-read a lot of old discussions, but it seems like you have presented the "tension" argument before. You seem to suppose that a relaxed resting state is abnormal and that we generate tension to enliven ourselves and our social scene. Conflict, intense emotion, tension, etc. make us feel better. — Bitter Crank
War is the father of all and king of all; and some he shows as gods, others as men, some he makes slaves, others free. — Heraclitus
We must know that war is common to all and strife is justice, and that all things come into being through strife necessarily. — Heraclitus
It could be anger, or it could be disgust, revulsion, righteous indignation, strategizing, or just plain disagreement. — baker
Fear is a negative tropism, while desire is positive one. — Olivier5
But you still have an opinion about it! — Alkis Piskas
There's a huge distance between being "serene" (which is something very difficult to achieve anyway) and being annoyed, angry and in distress, that you are talking about at the start of your topic. — Alkis Piskas
A fear is in place to avoid harm/hurt/death. A desire is not necessarily about avoiding harm/hurt/death — I like sushi
Indeed, a desire is rather an attraction for pleasure, confort or happiness. — Olivier5
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.