JoeEllison
Cuddly Like a Koala Bear
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2007
- Messages
- 7,270
Really? Illusion is better than truth? Sorry, no. Truth can be more "exalting" than any fantasy, and has the benefit of being true.
Let me please chose another kind of relationship, if you don't mind. Namely the one between a male-nurse and a comatose female patient. Her name is Uma. The male-nurse feels in love with her and, hence, nurses her devotedly. His utilitarian mindset tells him that he should maximize happiness always. He happens to chose his happiness, why not? So, he screws her every afternoon. This produces no harm, quite the contrary, he spends even more time nursing her, indulgent body scrubs in particular.
He then decides to spread more happiness still. His old friend hit rock bottom, because his girlfriend left him. Bitch. Well, the good male-nurse, in an attempt to minimize suffering in the world, offers him Uma's wicked body for a good **** from time to time. Not for free, of course, I mean, that would be a waste of goodwill, wouldn't it? The male-nurse has to look for his own happiness as well, after all!
Uma is still fine, cleanly and creamly, she's a delight! Everybody's happy!
So, why would that be incompliant with the ideas of humanism, equal rights and so, etc...?
And what did Uma do after she woke up?![]()
You said this: For me this is the essence of the OP. We seem to need to have "big ideals" and they are independent of objective truth as often put forward on this board as the highest, indeed the only worthwhile pursuit. It may be I am mischaracterising Blauregen but this is what I understood him to be saying. If it is what he is saying then I agree. We cannot escape the need for such ideals: pretending that we can approach the world purely through objective truth limits us in serious ways.
You implied that some skeptics are "pretending we can approach the world purely through objective means"
Articulett said:What the heck is a "moral truth"--?
... and that some skeptics "dissect poems" and ruin their meaning...
You called "freedom of research" an illusion. It's more an "idea"l than an illusion. It seems you called it an illusion so you could call illusions something worth striving for.... but that doesn't make it an "illusion". It might be elusive... but not an illusion. Why would you call it that? To me, it sounds like a semantics game. But feel free to clarify.
You said you are bothered by reductionism and that blauregen is bothered by it too... and I know he is bothered by something... but you never quote these people that you are bothered by... so I can't tell if it's real or in your head. I understand the responses people give to you... but not your responses or blauregen. You seem to want to be understood, without giving understanding from my limited perspective.
You are mad at me, but I can't even tell what it's based on.
The more I try to figure out if it's based on actual words that we can all read and interpret... or a person's own extrapolation of the words, the madder people get.
Reality determines what is true-- not what people believe.
So I'm left to assume it's the latter. I never get quotes that show these skeptics who are too reductionistic and nihilistic and approach the world sole through objective truths...
Articulett said:There's facts-- they exist outside the human mind... they are the same no matter what you believe... 2+2=4... that's a fact... science is the only tool we have for understanding such facts... it works. Opinions, feelings, beliefs, desires, hopes, conjecture, myths, mottos, etc. are NOT facts. If you need a human mind for it to be true... it isn't a fact.
I can't tell what I'm supposed to fix about me or if I'm one of these people, because it's always vague... this vague view of these strident skeptics... but I'm reading the same words... and I don't see it the same way at all.
I don't want to believe that people are seeing things that aren't there
but my attempts at getting clarification are met with attacks on me.
When I am asked to clarify, I am more than eager to make sure I'm understood. Why wouldn't someone else do the same? Why wouldn't they clarify what they really meant unless the person zeroed in on what they really meant and they didn't want to admit it?
I don't deny that some people prefer beliefs nor do I care what you believe or don't believe. I want to know if the statement about these skeptics are true... based on anything real... or just a "feeling" or whatever.
I want to know if there really is something good about illusions or being deluded...
if I should be cowed into silence or speak up or what.
but the talk is so nebulous... 10,000 illusions beat 1 truth? To whom?
I'd rather be ignorant than deluded.
I'd rather not know something than believe a lie.
But ideals are NOT illusions. Why would you confuse those two?
Is it to pretend that some skeptics don't have ideals?
Are you really confused over the difference? Is is it to put the lies of religion on par with ideals of humans?
It ends up sounding to me like you are talking about something that is more true in your head or in some stereotype... I can't see it or understand it.
Instead of quoting or clarifying, people get mad or hear intent in me that isn't there. So I just assume that they don't have clarity themselves--that it's just an opinion, but they want it to be fact. And they'd rather be irked with me then to see if the opinion is based on actual words that people used and wrote or a biased interpretatin.
There's all kinds of rude people here.... but all that is opinion... what I want to know is if the OP means anything.
If it's just one of those airy platitudes that has personal meaning... or if there is anything to it.
I am beginning to suspect it's one of those memes designed to keep the faithful faithful... keep the apologists propping up faith... and keeping the stereotypes of the nihilistic unfeeling uninspired atheist alive. Is it? Or is there anything other than semantics there?
Are there a bunch of skeptics here who don't have "ideals" or don't have the depth of "believers in general". Does anything of value come from illusions... other than comforting feelings?
Yes. Let me give you one quote.
That is indeed the question. It is nothing to do with religion per se but it seems to me that this is a perfectly usual phrase which most people understand. And it is a very interesting topic, IMO. You have argued that there is no truth apart from scientific truth. Ordinary language shows us you are wrong. You accuse other people of playing semantic games but it seems to me that you are the one doing so. In english the phrase "moral truth" is perfectly comprehensible. What is it you have trouble with ?
No I am certainly not saying this bit at all. I am saying that for me dissecting poems ruins them. I am a sceptic. so I suppose that you can read it the way you did. But it is a stretch
What do you mean it is a stretch... You apparently likened skepticism to dissecting poems didn't you? I don't dissect poems or even feelings... I just don't attribute them to "illusions" or mystical things I can't understand.
It is an illusion in the terms of the opening post. I prefer the word ideal, because I think that more closely reflects what I took Blauregen to mean. But I do not much care what you call it so long as we can agree what we are talking about. The idea of "freedom of research" is comparable to the idea of "all men are created equal". It is not a fact. It is an inspiring aim. My point is that we all seem to need inspiring and unattainable ideals. I do not see that sceptics are different from any other group in this respect. And for what it is worth I think those "vision things" are essential to us. Again it seems to me that you are the one playing semantic games since the meaning of the word "illusion" in this thread has been explored and you choose to ignore that. Once again you seem to be doing that which annoys you in others: ignoring or twisting what is said in order to hold on to your belief.
Not so. Illusions are not ideals. You are the one playing fast and loose with definitions pretending that everyone understands what you mean. And ideal may be better than a truth... depends on the goal, right? But the quote is about illusions. Ideals are not illusions. I don't see how you interchange the two words except to suit your conclusion that the opinion about illusions being better than truths is valid. You can believe that... but calling illusions ideals doesn't support the claim or give anyone else reason to believe that illusions that exalt are better than truths. It sounds like you are trying to make meaning out of something that isn't particularly deep and insightful by stretching the words.
The quote in the OP is an opinion... it's not a truth... it's not an illusion... words do have meanings and it helps to be on the same page with those meanings if your goal is to have other people understand you. If you share the opinion of the OP quote because you consider illusions and ideals the same thing or consider that there is such a thing as a "moral truth", then that is something worth trying to understand... is that what you are saying. Is that the point you are making. Who else understands what a "moral truth" is? Who else thinks ideals are the same as illusions for the purposes of the OP? Who else thinks illusions that exalt are better than truths? And why?
My frustration derives from the fact that you do not seem to read what is there but rather what you believe to be there. This is something you often accuse of others of but you seem to be a major practitioner of the art. I suspect you have been keeping bad company and it has rubbed off.
But when I ask for clarification... or try to parrot back what you are saying... or ask you to boil it down... you get mad... or you give quotes that don't support your claim. You you my quote about not understanding what a "moral truth" is as evidence that I think we can approach the world sole through objective means. I approach the word through all sorts of means. I approach truth through objective means. I approach morals through objective means, feelings, cultural influence, and a well honed sense of empathy that is growing. But I don't confuse the two. I quoted you exactly... I didn't read what wasn't there. Others seem to hear what I'm hearing. How do you know you are conveying what you intended to convey? Why don't you see that your example doesn't support your claim about approaching the world sole through objective means. We aren't talking about "approaching the world" are we... ? Just the quote in the OP. I'm not purposefully stupid or ignorant. So maybe, just maybe, others are not following your meaning as well as you think you are conveying it.
More later, because I must go.
It seems you have much looser definitions of words like "truth" and "illusions" than I do.
Depending on what you mean here, I may agree with you - the idea that all of the answers about life can come from science is, obviously, ridiculous.If I understand Blauregen correctly, he is disturbed by a perceived reductionism which sometimes seems to be evident on this board. This is something I have also seen and it bothers me too.
To go on with what you say here, I'd like to see more of those kinds of discussions here. Less attacking the idiocy we see in the world, more exalting the beauty. But the latter certainly happens, and is a large part of what drew me to this community.In answer, many have pointed to the fact that here we are discussing only a part of our thinking and that in other areas we still pursue the "exaltation" we may find in poetry or fiction or even in politics or philosophy. And of course some here have elevated the wonder of science and the natural world as also inspiring: which it surely is.
Again, I can agree with that, with an addendum - there is an experience of beauty and wonder when seeing a rainbow that exists separate from the understanding of what it is. On the other hand, there is a second experience of wonder that can come from that understanding.It seems that most people do seek some form of "exaltation". The feeling I get from seeing the rainbow is different from, and unaffected by, any ability to predict where it will appear. ( I can't predict that, btw, but I could perhaps learn to do so).
Sure.The resonance some poems have for me is killed by studying them: not enhanced. That may only be true for me but it is true for me. This kind of "exaltation" is part of the joy of life and I think without it we are the poorer.
And I agree that those can be very valuable. But what I think is valuable about them is the parts of them that are true. Moreover, I think that the false parts can either be overlooked, or are dangerous.Blauregen draws a distinction between this personal kind of exaltation and the kind of inspiration we take from cultural/ social/ political movements which have led to major shifts in our values at various time: dreams and illusions as he characterises them.
Sure, I think that religion though can be a good example of the problems with using falsehood to "exalt us". What is valuably inspirational about religion is true - even if it is an abstract truth derived from a false story. What's dangerous about it is the falsehood treated as literal truth.It is quite interesting to me that the thread has again turned to discussing the abrahamic religions or even religion in general. This is a very familiar topic insofar as I have seen this board, and the same points are made again and again. Yet the relevance of this to the OP is a little obscure to me. Religion was mentioned as an example of the wider question: I did not take it as the theme. Perhaps I am wrong. For me the content of the OP was about the nature of such experiences and about their value for us as human beings.
It is an illusion if you mean that it isn't perfectly true, or true all of the time. On the other hand it's more true of science than it could be. I don't think that holding up an ideal and knowing that it isn't perfectly practiced is a bad thing, or that it constitutes believing in a falsehood.Many times I have seen it argued that science cannot address the moral and ethical implications of its discoveries, nor be held responsible for the use made of them. One implication of this is often held to be that scientific freedom must be given a very high value, and that the cost of restricting research in certain areas is loss of valuable knowledge: what we do with that knowledge is not relevant in advance of the discovery. (Tom Lehrer's song about Werner von Braun comes to mind). I broadly agree with this view, though of course it is an illusion, since science is funded, and decisions are taken about what to fund.
If there were no truth in it at all - either in it's practicality or usefulness - then it would be a reason to discard it.What is interesting is that it is an illusion of the type Blauregen is raising. An ideal, if you like. Freedom of research is not a scientific principle: it is quite an inspiring illusion. That it is untrue is not a reason to discard it as an ideal.
For me this is the essence of the OP. We seem to need to have "big ideals" and they are independent of objective truth as often put forward on this board as the highest, indeed the only worthwhile pursuit. It may be I am mischaracterising Blauregen but this is what I understood him to be saying. If it is what he is saying then I agree. We cannot escape the need for such ideals: pretending that we can approach the world purely through objective truth limits us in serious ways.
So, why would that be incompliant with the ideas of humanism, equal rights and so, etc...?
After she wakes up and finds out what has been happening I don't think that the happiness equation would look quite so neat. Consider her relatives and friends. Consider the rest of the staff of the hospital. The operative word here is maximising.Let me please chose another kind of relationship, if you don't mind. Namely the one between a male-nurse and a comatose female patient. Her name is Uma. The male-nurse feels in love with her and, hence, nurses her devotedly. His utilitarian mindset tells him that he should maximize happiness always. He happens to chose his happiness, why not? So, he screws her every afternoon. This produces no harm, quite the contrary, he spends even more time nursing her, indulgent body scrubs in particular.
He then decides to spread more happiness still. His old friend hit rock bottom, because his girlfriend left him. Bitch. Well, the good male-nurse, in an attempt to minimize suffering in the world, offers him Uma's wicked body for a good **** from time to time. Not for free, obviously, that goes without saying. The good male-nurse has to look for his own happiness as well, after all.
Uma is still fine, cleanly and creamly, she's a delight! Everybody's happy!
So, why would that be incompliant with the ideas of humanism, equal rights and so, etc...?
And what did Uma do after she woke up?![]()
I have trouble with the phrase too. Is the word "truth" meaningful in the absence of some method of establishing truth or falsity?In english the phrase "moral truth" is perfectly comprehensible. What is it you have trouble with ?
It would only be a valid criticism if you could name an ethical system that couldn't be so manipulated.rocketdodger, wouldn't that be a criticism against Utilitarianism, if it can be so manipulated?
....What is your opinion?
Deontological ethics, revolving entirely around duty rather than emotional feelings or end goals, can't be twisted so arbitrarily.It would only be a valid criticism if you could name an ethical system that couldn't be so manipulated.
Our male-nurse is making sure Uma does not wake up during gymnastics by soporifcing her. She will never find out what happened. You know, the good chap always has happiness on his mind, and how to increase it.After she wakes up and finds out what has been happening I don't think that the happiness equation would look quite so neat. Consider her relatives and friends. Consider the rest of the staff of the hospital. The operative word here is maximising.
As a moral agent he is certainly confident that he's acting according to the doctrines of his ethics. He has no reason to think differently. This is all you can ever expect from a moral agent.The male nurse is not maximising happiness, he is particularising happiness.
Because it doesn't mean truth. Morals are collective human opinions about the best way to live amongst other humans. That is not truth... that is collective opinions.
Are people really that unclear on the difference? This is no such thing as a "moral truth".
There are ideals. There are morals; there are values. It seems that theism seems to make people unable to discriminate a fact-- an axiom-- an objective truth-- from everything else-- feelings, opinions, beliefs, ideals, myths, preferences. Those all require an "according to whom". Moral according to whom? Wrong according to whom? Immoral in what way? And it doesn't need god or supernatural elements to answer those questions.
What I have trouble with is this idea that words can mean whatever you want them to mean.
Moral truth is meaningless.
Morals are a subjective collective set of ideals. They don't exist absent human understanding and definition of them. They evolve with factual knowledge.
What do you mean it is a stretch... You apparently likened skepticism to dissecting poems didn't you?
I don't dissect poems or even feelings... I just don't attribute them to "illusions" or mystical things I can't understand.
Not so. Illusions are not ideals.
You are the one playing fast and loose with definitions pretending that everyone understands what you mean.
And ideal may be better than a truth... depends on the goal, right?
But the quote is about illusions. Ideals are not illusions. I don't see how you interchange the two words except to suit your conclusion that the opinion about illusions being better than truths is valid.
You can believe that... but calling illusions ideals doesn't support the claim or give anyone else reason to believe that illusions that exalt are better than truths.
It sounds like you are trying to make meaning out of something that isn't particularly deep and insightful by stretching the words.
The quote in the OP is an opinion... it's not a truth... it's not an illusion... words do have meanings and it helps to be on the same page with those meanings if your goal is to have other people understand you.
If you share the opinion of the OP quote because you consider illusions and ideals the same thing or consider that there is such a thing as a "moral truth", then that is something worth trying to understand... is that what you are saying. Is that the point you are making. Who else understands what a "moral truth" is? Who else thinks ideals are the same as illusions for the purposes of the OP? Who else thinks illusions that exalt are better than truths? And why?
But when I ask for clarification... or try to parrot back what you are saying... or ask you to boil it down... you get mad... or you give quotes that don't support your claim.
You you my quote about not understanding what a "moral truth" is as evidence that I think we can approach the world sole through objective means.
I approach the word through all sorts of means.
I approach truth through objective means. I approach morals through objective means, feelings, cultural influence, and a well honed sense of empathy that is growing. But I don't confuse the two. I quoted you exactly... I didn't read what wasn't there.
Others seem to hear what I'm hearing. How do you know you are conveying what you intended to convey?
Why don't you see that your example doesn't support your claim about approaching the world sole through objective means.
We aren't talking about "approaching the world" are we... ? Just the quote in the OP. I'm not purposefully stupid or ignorant. So maybe, just maybe, others are not following your meaning as well as you think you are conveying it.
And this would bother your male nurse - how?The Formulation Rule of Kantianism:
1. Act only from moral rules that you can at the same time obey will be the universal moral rule.
2. Act so that you always treat others as an end, and never as a means to an end.
On the contrary, it would result in a world containing only people strong and clever enough to defend themselves successfully. It would systematically ensure that the weaker and/or stupider elements of society were weeded out, so again, as long as you were willing for people that got annoyed by you to attempt to kill you, this rule could easily be universalised.Simply put, the test is that one must universalize the maxim (imagine that all people acted in this way) and then see if it would still be possible to perform the maxim in the world. For instance, holding the maxim kill anyone who annoys you and applying it universally would result in a world which would soon be devoid of people and without anyone left to kill. Thus holding this maxim is irrational as it ends up being impossible to hold it.
We can save time by sticking the corpse in the same hole that I have just dug for Kantianism.(*) Man! Consequentialism put to rest in only one sentence!
Do you think the only way she would find out would be if she woke up mid-crime?Our male-nurse is making sure Uma does not wake up during gymnastics by soporifcing her. She will never find out what happened. You know, the good chap always has happiness on his mind, and how to increase it.
Except, that is, for the extravagant measures he must undertake to keep his apparently innocent and well-intentioned actions secretAs a moral agent he is certainly confident that he's acting according to the doctrines of his ethics. He has no reason to think differently.
You wouldn't expect your moral agent to spend, maybe, five or ten minutes thinking about his actions?This is all you can ever expect from a moral agent.
His moral system simply demands the simple piece of reasoning that in order to ensure that no unhappiness results from his actions he must ensure that nobody ever finds out about it.He might be wrong, here and there, that's human. So, that's not his fault. It might be a failure of his fricking ethics which simply demands the impossible from him.
But she has not consciousness while comatose, hence no will. And you, the moral agent, are in love with her and assume that she would also love you if she were conscious. But in general, you should not define a consequence, you should observe it. Otherwise, you may act however you like, by conveniently defining away any harm.Simple - Uma is harmed by this.
I define such harm as having something done to a person that said person doesn't want done.
Anyway, why is the above wrong under your ethical system?
My opinion is that evolutionists are living in the illusion of the happy accidents theory.
So we should start there.
I unpack my Kant from #112:
Act so that you always treat others as an end, and never as a means to an end.
I must not, never, treat her as a means to satisfy my libido.