cj.23
Master Poster
- Joined
- Dec 17, 2006
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OK, following on from some comments in another thread, I am getting interested in how beliefs work. I have written a little on this before, a couple of years ago. On that occasion I was involved in a discussion on the "meme theory", which seemed to fail to me in it's basic analogy of beliefs as a virus. Here is the model I played with...
Obviously, assuming we are not solipsists, we have two basic things - External Reality and the Person experiencing that reality. The "compression" model suggests we create "mental shortcuts" or handy pieces of "mental code", that is beliefs, based upon on our experience which allow us to deal efficiently with reality. So beliefs are in fact a sort of mental map imposed on the universe, a shorthand for understanding how things work. That in itself is interesting - because obviously if you follow this model then the utility of a model is actually what matters, not its relationship to "external reality". So I suspect Dennett might argue about religion? It's provides survival/pay offs as a model, while being inherently "untrue"? The thing is that our brains are not wired for ultimate truth - they are wired for evolutionary adaptive advantage, through the process of selection.
That however immediately runs in to problems. While we might like HP Lovecraft conclude that the Universe is utterly indifferent to us, and indeed almost hostile in that indifference, and hold a somewhat nihilistic worldview (which HPL did not, seeking solace in "human level" beliefs), and assume therefore that people construct religious beliefs as a utility, many religious beliefs strike me as quite dysfunctional/survival negating at individual level. Therefore we have to shift up to kin selection (Hamilton's Rule?) but I fail to see why individual belief structures would arise at kin level. Phenotypes? Yet we have much evidence of altruism and religious structures operating at a much higher level than kin (gene) grouping -indeed many make claims about the whole of humanity - so we now have group selection? That belief structures can pass beyond ethnic and kin identity groups strikes me as quite obvious - we can have say "American Mythologies" which tie together many of the citizens of the USA, regardless of genetic diversity? Let's take a classic British line "Dulce et Decorum est, pro patria mori" - loosely, "it is right and proper to die for your country". That belief took hold in the form of jingoistic patriotism - yet wherein lies the survival value? Something odd is going on here.
I suppose if beliefs are "short cuts", or programs if you like, there is no need for them to be logically compatible with each other. That makes perfect sense - two radically opposed beliefs may both be useful in different contexts. Belief A and Belief B may be contradictory, but give a greater adaptive advantage than possion of Beliefs C & D which are mutually compatible. So we back to Athon's question about how confirmation bias arose - the answer may be simply "because it is useful, as a compressed rule for interaction with nature."
However, beliefs can and do change, as the fact we have so many converts from one belief system to another demonstrates. We all change our beliefs?
Now to return to my point I made in the other thread - Just as I see that the evidence of our senses is not actually unconditioned, but that the data has a reflexive relationship with the model (belief system) held, and that theists interpret the data reflexively, so I guess atheists interpret likewise in line with their own existing personal models. I see no reason to exclude any belief system from this filtration/interpretation process.
There is nothing new here at all - replace "sense data" with "thing in itself" or "noumena" and we are immediately in familiar territory, Kant's Critique of Pure Reason. Where I would differ from Kant is I do not think that means we have to stop and call limits to reason. Our minds are capable of studying mind, including their own, so we begin by questioning every single assumption and dogma and belief we hold, and trying to understand if each is actually demonstrably true, and then by trying to falsify it and holding the conflicting position to see if that makes sense - decoding our own "mental shortcuts". This tends to render one severely uncompetitive i suspect, and quite possibly useless, but questioning every assumption has always seemed a good place to begin to me.
So what I think occurs with beliefs is that they do represent a series of "shortcuts", often expressed in language - and that those beliefs are based in evidence, but that the evidence is read through the filter of the belief system. If so, then when we "join" a recognizable belief system, we learn to interpret our experiences in the light of that system, creating a reflexive feedback loop. I think this applies to atheist members of the forum just as much as theists - the language and conceptual framework differs, but we all interpret our experience in line with beliefs, and those beliefs are then strengthened by the confirmation we are receiving.
Occasionally, the belief system breaks down through inherent contradiction, though probably not often - only when two radically opposed beliefs come to play on the same issue. Occasionally, we read or are exposed to ideas which allow us to look at the world through a different belief system, and then make a sudden shift in our viewpoint, and re-read the evidence creating new shortcuts.
I have no idea if any of this makes any coherent sense, but I thought I'd post my vague thoughts and ask opinions!
Anyone?
cj x
Obviously, assuming we are not solipsists, we have two basic things - External Reality and the Person experiencing that reality. The "compression" model suggests we create "mental shortcuts" or handy pieces of "mental code", that is beliefs, based upon on our experience which allow us to deal efficiently with reality. So beliefs are in fact a sort of mental map imposed on the universe, a shorthand for understanding how things work. That in itself is interesting - because obviously if you follow this model then the utility of a model is actually what matters, not its relationship to "external reality". So I suspect Dennett might argue about religion? It's provides survival/pay offs as a model, while being inherently "untrue"? The thing is that our brains are not wired for ultimate truth - they are wired for evolutionary adaptive advantage, through the process of selection.
That however immediately runs in to problems. While we might like HP Lovecraft conclude that the Universe is utterly indifferent to us, and indeed almost hostile in that indifference, and hold a somewhat nihilistic worldview (which HPL did not, seeking solace in "human level" beliefs), and assume therefore that people construct religious beliefs as a utility, many religious beliefs strike me as quite dysfunctional/survival negating at individual level. Therefore we have to shift up to kin selection (Hamilton's Rule?) but I fail to see why individual belief structures would arise at kin level. Phenotypes? Yet we have much evidence of altruism and religious structures operating at a much higher level than kin (gene) grouping -indeed many make claims about the whole of humanity - so we now have group selection? That belief structures can pass beyond ethnic and kin identity groups strikes me as quite obvious - we can have say "American Mythologies" which tie together many of the citizens of the USA, regardless of genetic diversity? Let's take a classic British line "Dulce et Decorum est, pro patria mori" - loosely, "it is right and proper to die for your country". That belief took hold in the form of jingoistic patriotism - yet wherein lies the survival value? Something odd is going on here.
I suppose if beliefs are "short cuts", or programs if you like, there is no need for them to be logically compatible with each other. That makes perfect sense - two radically opposed beliefs may both be useful in different contexts. Belief A and Belief B may be contradictory, but give a greater adaptive advantage than possion of Beliefs C & D which are mutually compatible. So we back to Athon's question about how confirmation bias arose - the answer may be simply "because it is useful, as a compressed rule for interaction with nature."
However, beliefs can and do change, as the fact we have so many converts from one belief system to another demonstrates. We all change our beliefs?
Now to return to my point I made in the other thread - Just as I see that the evidence of our senses is not actually unconditioned, but that the data has a reflexive relationship with the model (belief system) held, and that theists interpret the data reflexively, so I guess atheists interpret likewise in line with their own existing personal models. I see no reason to exclude any belief system from this filtration/interpretation process.
There is nothing new here at all - replace "sense data" with "thing in itself" or "noumena" and we are immediately in familiar territory, Kant's Critique of Pure Reason. Where I would differ from Kant is I do not think that means we have to stop and call limits to reason. Our minds are capable of studying mind, including their own, so we begin by questioning every single assumption and dogma and belief we hold, and trying to understand if each is actually demonstrably true, and then by trying to falsify it and holding the conflicting position to see if that makes sense - decoding our own "mental shortcuts". This tends to render one severely uncompetitive i suspect, and quite possibly useless, but questioning every assumption has always seemed a good place to begin to me.
So what I think occurs with beliefs is that they do represent a series of "shortcuts", often expressed in language - and that those beliefs are based in evidence, but that the evidence is read through the filter of the belief system. If so, then when we "join" a recognizable belief system, we learn to interpret our experiences in the light of that system, creating a reflexive feedback loop. I think this applies to atheist members of the forum just as much as theists - the language and conceptual framework differs, but we all interpret our experience in line with beliefs, and those beliefs are then strengthened by the confirmation we are receiving.
Occasionally, the belief system breaks down through inherent contradiction, though probably not often - only when two radically opposed beliefs come to play on the same issue. Occasionally, we read or are exposed to ideas which allow us to look at the world through a different belief system, and then make a sudden shift in our viewpoint, and re-read the evidence creating new shortcuts.
I have no idea if any of this makes any coherent sense, but I thought I'd post my vague thoughts and ask opinions!
Anyone?
cj x