practical themes in motivating us to conceptualise problems by their fixable components — Judaka
Fixable factors represent things like habits, routine, thought patterns, attitudes, methodology, education and any category typically characterisable as actionable. — Judaka
(my emphasis)In the universe the difficult things are done as if they are easy.
In the universe great acts are made up of small deeds.
The sage does not attempt anything very big,
And thus achieves greatness.
Easy promises make for little trust.
Taking things lightly results in great difficulty.
Because the sage always confronts difficulties,
He never experiences them. — Lao Tzu
Rarely will ever anyone say, "Yes, I worked hard, but I had the right connections & genetics, and that's what really mattered", or anything along those lines. — Judaka
Because the sage always confronts difficulties,
He never experiences them. — Lao Tzu
In seeking to fix the mind, one necessarily creates a division in the mind between the mind that needs fixing and the mind that is going to fix it. — unenlightened
Habits are formed by the mind, and in order to change one's habit, one has to change one's mind. How does the mind change the mind, without first changing its mind? — unenlightened
How does the mind change the mind, without first changing its mind? On the other hand, it is very easy to change one's mind if one has a mind to, but the trick is to be single minded, and then one has no problem. — unenlightened
Wanting to avoid the health risks of smoking and wanting to smoke are logically consistent with each other, within the mind. The contradiction is in the incompatibility of these two desires in the real world. One isn't split between wanting to avoid the health risks of smoking and wanting to smoke, one wants both, they just can't have both. — Judaka
In cases like this, it is simply unthinkable for anyone to have seriously attempted something like quitting smoking, and never once resented their contradictory desire to do the very thing that they're trying to quit. The very thing that thwarts their efforts every time, what possibility is there that anyone wouldn't at some point wish it would disappear? — Judaka
If it's so simple, is everyone who fails just weak-willed and a fool? How can failure deserve anything but derision when the solution is something a 6-year-old could come up with? — Judaka
How does confronting a difficulty allow you not to experience it? — Tom Storm
It is that simple. — unenlightened
So long as becoming single-minded isn't something that can be attempted and failed, and you're allowed to only say it occurred after you see the result, then it isn't a real method. — Judaka
Such a conflict can be resolved instantly by seeing the whole of it from the inside, which means by fully, consciously, being both sides of the conflict. If I am the conflict, I no longer experience the conflict. As long as I am being one side of the conflict, I experience the other side of the conflict as the problem. — unenlightened
(how would one become both sides of a conflict? — Tom Storm
Trying to be whole is like trying to relax, it has the opposite effect — unenlightened
Do you have the patience to wait
Till your mud settles and the water is clear?
Can you remain unmoving
Till the right action arises by itself? — Lao Tzu again
That for those who maximise fixable components in their conceptualisations, anyone's circumstances are always thought of as drastically improvable, and nothing ever inspires any change in that assessment. — Judaka
Factors beyond one's ability to control can be enormously influential, even if it's unpalatable for people to hear. — Judaka
At other times, I'm not sure. I generally lean towards problems being systemic and difficult to fix, and I find the explanations given for maximising fixable factors unconvincing. — Judaka
A society grows great when old men plant trees in whose shade they shall never sit. — Greek Proverb
Regarding emphasizing either the fixable or the unfixable, if we are concerned with motivation then the fixable emphasis will be optimal, whereas if we are concerned with adequacy then the unfixable emphasis will be optimal. If someone needs to be motivated to act, then they should focus on the fixable because this will bolster the sense that their actions will not be in vain. — Leontiskos
I see individualism as a large part of the problem here, because it tends to overemphasize personal responsibility. I still prefer individualism to a strong collectivism, but it has its dangers. — Leontiskos
In this case rather than looking at problems as fixable and unfixable, we should look at them as short-term fixable and long-term fixable. — Leontiskos
Those who believe in quietly contributing to long-term solutions with patience will also tend to view their own long-term problems with patience, rather than despair. — Leontiskos
It goes against the spirit of the trial and error process, setbacks in a context of a fixable problem should be responded to by promoting a positive outlook and perseverance. Such a move of switching to emphasising unfixable factors would draw a lot of criticism for many different reasons. Is that something you can also foresee, and do you agree it's a problem for your proposal? — Judaka
If the inadequacy is produced by an emphasis on the fixable factors, and one perceives a problem as fixable, then switching to blame unfixable factors upon recognising their feelings of inadequacy will be damned. — Judaka
Perhaps we can agree that it does manifest differently within individualist vs collectivist societies though... — Judaka
Natural human biases seem sufficient to me to explain why we're largely focused on fixable factors. Unfixable factors also tend to be highly complex, requiring a sophisticated understanding, while fixable factors are generally simple, and one naturally has familiarity with the relevant concepts. — Judaka
Both individualistic and collectivist cultures will involve comparing people to each other and focusing on personal outcomes. I wonder whether such a philosophical approach can ever represent the average person's mentality, though I feel that yours is a healthier approach than many of the others. — Judaka
Sorry if my OP was unclear, but I had been talking about an individual's capability in influencing personal outcomes, not societal-level outcomes. — Judaka
I had thought the last part of your previous comment strange but I failed to make the connection that we were talking about different things. — Judaka
No worries. There was an ambiguity that I didn't quite understand, but I wrote my posts in such a way that they would apply both to personal outcomes and to a wider scope. — Leontiskos
Applying one's energies to what is attainable is not biased, it is rational and realistic. I tried to give a reason to focus on the unfixable, namely adequacy. What would be your reason for focusing on the unfixable? If you think we focus too much on the fixable, then what reason do you offer for why we should focus on the unfixable instead? — Leontiskos
If an overemphasis on fixability produces feelings of frustration, incompetence, impotence, inadequacy, and despair, then this remedy is to the point. — Leontiskos
The contexts are so different that I would read the same words differently based on whether I thought the context was personal outcomes, societal-level outcomes or both. — Judaka
Looking for that which is attainable is itself a bias, and this topic requires us to choose between competing narratives, that can't be separated simply into right and wrong. — Judaka
A focus on actionable factors wouldn't cause feelings of inadequacy within the appropriate context of "doing", only emphasising the importance of these factors would do that. — Judaka
While there's nothing wrong with a bias on what is attainable within the context of action, there is something wrong with it within the context of conceptualisation. To think of fixable factors as being largely determinate of outcomes due to one's biases or as a conscious choice is what creates feelings of inadequacy and many of the other issues I described in the OP. — Judaka
Looking for that which is attainable is itself a bias... — Judaka
I have a lot of criticism towards the conceptualisation that maximises fixability, and if I had to choose, I'd prefer something far more ambiguous. — Judaka
We'd admit that we don't know how possible it is for someone to accomplish their personal goals and that one should just seek to improve as they can. — Judaka
I think the issues you're talking about are more closely related to nihilism than individualism. But I won't say too much about it... — Judaka
My words are often intended to be applicable to multiple different contexts or layers, but this is not apparent to someone who is not familiar with me. — Leontiskos
This is a worthwhile distinction, but in your defense an exclusive or near-exclusive focus on actionable factors will automatically emphasize the importance of these factors. That is how I was reading the OP’s language of ‘focus’, and I think it is an important issue to consider. — Leontiskos
Returning to this recurring claim, I would say that it is a bias for the speculative scientist but not for the psychologist. Biases are not absolute. They are relative to one's end. — Leontiskos
My suggestion is that the contraries which need to be balanced are a focus on improvement and a focus on adequacy — Leontiskos
If I am aware that another is referring to a broad range of contexts, I can try to avoid making assumptions, but that will make everything said more generic, and less meaningful, so if I think I can interpret what's said through the lens of a context, then I will. — Judaka
However, we can't treat these two contexts you've set up, of the speculative scientist and the psychologist as being entirely separate, especially in terms of conceptualising the issue. — Judaka
I'm not saying there is no nuance possible to avoid or lessen the above, but since striking a balance on fixability is the topic we're discussing, I'd want you to explicitly outline how you'd approach the issue. Do you agree that we can't just do whatever we want within a self-help context, and not expect it to spill over into other contexts? And do you agree how we conceptualise within the context of self-help will influence the impact of this spillover? — Judaka
If the source of the problem is systemic, and Bill isn't at fault, then why are his outcomes completely within his control? If believing that fixing one's inability to manage their money properly would produce such a substantial change, then isn't that issue largely responsible for creating the problem in the first place? Even if it wasn't, an adult should've known better, and Bill's failure to fix this problem up until now would make him responsible for it. — Judaka
I'd also argue that a psychologist - or oneself, shouldn't just focus on what's actionable. Psychology has a lot to do with the impact of thinking about and conceptualising problems. While it's not good to tell someone everything is unfixable and there's nothing they can do to improve their situation. It is important to emphasise the importance of factors outside of one's control to relieve stress, improve self-image, help build realistic expectations and so on. — Judaka
I can understand what you're trying to say, and while I do have some other ends I'm concerned with, I am happy to focus on these two outcomes and agree they are important. Fixability is just a factor that influences them, and we don't actually care about fixability beyond its role in influencing other factors, I agree with that. — Judaka
If you think it can be construed as a single issue, then what would that issue be? — Leontiskos
A psychological counselor shouldn't need to always offer reminders that they are a psychologist and not a social scientist, especially in a world with so many specialized disciplines. — Leontiskos
As I understand it, a balance must always be struck between two or more things. — Leontiskos
I disagree with all three sentences here. — Leontiskos
I don't believe that having the ability to fix a problem implies that one is responsible for creating the problem in the first place — Leontiskos
That's right, but this would be leveraging a focus on non-actionable factors as an actionable intervention. — Leontiskos
At the end of the day it may be that that monstrous question of "the truth" is unavoidable — Leontiskos
If you think it can be construed as a single issue, then what would that issue be? — Leontiskos
I think that conceptualisation of the issue itself should acknowledge a broad array of factors influencing the outcomes, without providing a conclusion. — Judaka
Though, I hadn't intended psychologists to be the focus of my critique, as getting help from a psychologist is well, not representative of self-help, since it entails outside, professional help. — Judaka
Do you have a mechanism for knowing when fixable factors can be considered less important than previously thought? How many times does a person need to fail, or in what manner, that we could conclude the problem wasn't with the particular method, but in the assessment of fixability? — Judaka
I conceive of the status quo of self-help as emphasising fixable factors, so, to me, striking a balance would be accomplished by promising less from fixable factors and making a greater effort to acknowledge unfixable factors. Especially the former, self-help should aim to improve personal outcomes, not relentlessly promise to be the difference between failure and success. — Judaka
That's outside my comfort zone because I imagine psychologists do acknowledge unfixable factors, likely more than almost anyone else... — Judaka
If Bill improves his spending habits and has an improvement in results, what is that he would be fixing? His literal spending habits, right? — Judaka
Disagreeing with the statements is fine, but are you claiming that as statements, these sentences would be unreasonable? — Judaka
It's not about whether it's true that "Bill should've known better", it's about whether it's true that many will think it, and we already know the answer. — Judaka
If you agree that others would conclude that way and that emphasising unfixable factors is a solution to counter this, then is there something else that you'd argue could fulfil that role instead? — Judaka
We can ask people to be kind for kindness' sake, but when pairing free will + emphasising fixable factors, there is little reason not to blame people for their outcomes, right? — Judaka
I am asking what that single issue is supposed to be. Again, I am concerned that there is more than one issue at stake, and that multiple issues are being conflated. — Leontiskos
If we want to talk about self-help, then I assume we want to talk about the strongest form of self-help, lest we strawman the notion of self-help. — Leontiskos
f all conceivable and available interventions have failed, then there is justification for the claim that the problem is unfixable tout court. — Leontiskos
Sorry, I should have been more explicit about the error. That Bill fixed his spending habits does not imply that he is responsible for creating the problem in the first place. The problem may be due to bad parenting, for example. — Leontiskos
This is the question of whether we ought to combat false societal beliefs with education and argument, or with societal conditioning. — Leontiskos
Fair enough. I had imagined when writing this thread, an impersonalised, generic approach to self-help, distinctly different from the personalised advice a psychologist would offer. An explanation of an issue that impacts millions of people, such as the obesity epidemic, in terms of fixable factors, would talk about what is within an individual's ability to control. Their choices, actions, habits, decisions and so on. It would understand the obesity epidemic as being a product of bad choices and solvable by smart choices. — Judaka
The distinction between improvement and solving a problem is an important one. If self-help limited itself to simply improving personal outcomes, rather than identifying the determinative factors as fixable ones. If it didn't promise to solve problems, but just improve outcomes. Then it could focus on fixable factors without emphasising their importance beyond what is compatible with acknowledging the importance of unfixable factors. — Judaka
It's also a question of when the self-help conceptualisation is to be applied. If every time someone brings up an issue or a personal outcome, it automatically established a context of self-help, then this will have a social conditioning effect. When can a person talk about a personal outcome outside of the context of self-help? Is that even possible? — Judaka
I appreciate your questions though, I'm not sure if I had a thorough answer to them before thinking about it. I am starting to see some nuances, like... — Judaka
I didn't actually realise that the personal vs impersonal distinction mattered when I wrote the OP... — Judaka
Exhausting all conceivable and available solutions seems impossible to me. — Judaka
What's special about bad parenting, that one couldn't argue any nature or nurture influence couldn't be used to resolve a person of responsibility for anything they did? — Judaka
If the cause has been a problem that was within Bill's power to fix, even if it wasn't of his making, that can often be enough to put the blame on him. — Judaka
Can his habits even be differentiated from him, that we could blame them without involving him at all? Well, I'm not sure how much these questions matter to the overall discussion, you can be the judge, but I don't understand your thinking here. — Judaka
I'm not sure it's a false belief, it's an interpretation, there is no real right or wrong here. Whether it's better to blame Bill or not for his spending habits... I feel overwhelmed here. This question goes far beyond the scope of the topic. Our answer would have ramifications across a diverse range of contexts. — Judaka
My OP contends that by emphasising fixable factors, we're necessarily going to put the blame on people for their problems. I still believe that is true, but are you disagreeing with that? Is your solution to rethink the way blame and responsibility function on a conceptual level? — Judaka
Okay, that's helpful. So we are engaged in something like epidemiology? That makes sense. As I was thinking about it I concluded that a very crucial aspect of this discussion is philosophical anthropology, which we could pragmatically define as the study of what humans beings are and what humans beings are capable of. I think it is the various different forms of philosophical anthropology that different interlocutors bring to the table which produce such divergent views on these issues. — Leontiskos
I only recently realized that the thing you are contrasting with 'fixable' is 'improvable', and that is a more subtle distinction. — Leontiskos
Okay, good. I am glad that the conversation is bearing some fruit. I am now beginning to see a lot of nuances pop up as well, especially with the improve vs. fix distinction. — Leontiskos
It's an interesting distinction. — Leontiskos
We could tighten this up a bit if we qualified the claim to be, "Incurable at this point in history." — Leontiskos
I agree that it "can often be enough," but this is different from the claim that he is necessarily culpable. This is important because if we do not have sufficient knowledge then we are not justified in drawing the conclusion that Bill is at fault. If we do have that knowledge then of course we can draw the conclusion. — Leontiskos
Unjust blame occurs because there is an overemphasis on fixable factors, or because unfixable factors are being mistaken for fixable factors (which amounts to the same thing). — Leontiskos
(To be clear, I am not claiming, nor do I suspect, that you yourself have these faulty ideas. I tend to think that we are talking past one another on that topic.) — Leontiskos
I had meant to contrast improving personal outcomes, from drastically improving or solving them. — Judaka
What I mean by "unfixable factors" is that any solution would fall outside of what can reasonably be construed as self-help. — Judaka
By impersonal, I meant, advice produced for mass consumption, or non-personalised. "How to Improve At X - for anyone" vs "How to improve at X - personal plan for Bill". — Judaka
I have contended that there is no mechanism for knowing our limitations for influencing our personal outcomes. No matter what is done, there will always be something else that can be done. Do you disagree with this? — Judaka
We will always assume improvement is possible... — Judaka
I believe certain conceptualisations of free will are a primary source of the issue, I imagine that you would agree. — Judaka
If a person is in control of their personal outcomes, then they should take responsibility for them, and they should take the blame for them. I view this as a logical connection, it seems you don't agree. — Judaka
As I said previously, the "truth" is not a feasible option... — Judaka
Although it was earlier on in this discussion, where you undoubtedly had a different understanding of what we were talking about, you said the self-help context should exclude unfixable factors. Do you stand by that? — Judaka
Is it accurate to say that you think we should be able to proceed as normal, and just educate people to get rid of their irrational interpretations? — Judaka
This is the question of whether we ought to combat false societal beliefs with education and argument, or with societal conditioning. I imagine that both are necessary, but I prefer the former. — Leontiskos
But where are you going with this? If I agreed, where would you take us? I assume you are going to say that unfixability is unfalsifiable, and that optimists who focus on the fixable can never be deterred because we can never prove that something is unfixable. — Leontiskos
I think this is probably where we disagree. I would say that even if truth is only something that we approximate, it is still crucially important. — Leontiskos
In my example of the person who had a cocaine addiction from infancy there is neither blame nor responsibility. — Leontiskos
I still think my disease example serves as an analogy. — Leontiskos
I stand by that. Both are necessary but I would give greater weight to education. The same would apply in general to the way that we address problematic phenomena in a society. Both would usually be necessary. — Leontiskos
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