Better the illusions that exalt us ......

Do you think the only way she would find out would be if she woke up mid-crime?
Yes.

Presumably your happiness-maximising nurse must kill his friend to prevent him from ever revealing what went on. He must also kill anybody who walks in on him, or any doctors that might give the woman regular examinations, or anyone who becomes suspicious of the amount of time he and his friend spends with a coma patient behind locked doors, or by the number of people he is killing.
Debatable. First, these are all resolvable technical problems. And let's think about a future society, where a dismission of our proved ethics and laws in favor of your utilitarian ethics took part. This converted human societies into a ruthless cacotopia. There, then, our good male-nurse acted fully legally!
 
I unpack my Kant from #112:

Act so that you always treat others as an end, and never as a means to an end.

So I must not, never, treat her as a means to satisfy my libido. Simple and clear. End of discussion.
So you can never, under any circumstances, satisfy your libido in a way that involves another person?

Simple and clear? End of discussion? Universalising that maxim might very well result in a world with nobody left.

Also, universalising this, you can never in any circumstances go to school, since that would be treating your teachers as a means to an end, rather than and end in themselves? You could never take public transport since that would mean treating the drivers as a means to an end. In fact you could do very little at all.

Incidentally, what does it mean to treat somebody as an end in themselves? Can you give an example of this? I mean since it is so clear and simple and all.

It seems to me that your male nurse can simply say "I am treating her as end in herself". Sexual predators often believe this implicitly. As long as he believes that himself then he is beyond reproach. What else can you expect from a moral agent?
 
"You can't convince a believer of anything; for their belief is not based on evidence, it's based on a deep-seated need to believe."
- Carl Sagan -
 
I see, so for some reason he could ensure that nobody ever found out about it and told her.

Somehow!
Debatable. First, these are all resolvable technical problems.
He could never in any circumstances ensure that she or her family would not find out. No matter how hard he tried.

And as I said, if he realised that great unhappiness resulted unless he resorted to these extraordinary measures to keep his behaviour secret, then it is absurd to say that he is honestly under the impression that he is maximising happiness.
And let's think about a future society, where a dismission of our proved ethics and laws in favor of your utilitarian ethics took part. This converted human societies into a ruthless cacotopia. There, then, our good male-nurse acted fully legally!
Under a system of ethics which enshrines the maximisation of happiness he would be serving hard time in prison. Clear and simple. End of discussion.
 
Indeed, we reveal your problem of incomprehension.
In that case please do tell - how can you live your life without ever, in any circumstances, treating another person as a means to an end?
 
Last edited:
Fiona... you seem to be the only person who accepts that there are "moral truths" and assume that everyone agrees. You've given no definition... and no seems to agree what a moral truth is nor can anyone give an example of a moral truth. You seem to be the only one saying what you are saying. I'm not arguing that my opinions are truth. I'm arguing that morals are whatever a group of humans agrees they are. It is a term describing a human concept. And you have made the claim that I am not understanding people... but I am following everyone except you and blauregen and Hertzy whom no-one is following.

And Illusions are not ideals to me... the truth that exalts us is worth more than a single illusion that exalts us.

And there is nothing about being a skeptic that precludes one from being exalted, poetic, maudlin, deep, and reverent towards the universe.

The OP is an opinion. It's not a moral truth... the statement might be deep to some people and might be BS to others. What illusions is better than what truth... if 10,000 exalting illusions are better than one truth... then name one. And what is it better at exactly. And can we just use the first dictionary definitions of words:

Ideal:
A conception of something in its absolute perfection. One that is regarded as a standard or model of perfection or excellence.

Illusion: A perception that occurs when a sensory stimulus is present but is incorrectly perceived and misinterpreted.

Moral: Arising from conscience or the sense of right and wrong.

Truth: Conformity to fact or actuality

I think the majority is using these definitions that way or agree on their validity. No one has defined moral truths though you pretend that everyone know what this means and I'm being belligerent.

Morever, my beef is with this mischarachterization of Blauregen that you seem to agree with... It's not based on evidence and it's contains an unsavory view of forum members without support for that view. That makes it a "straw man":

The scientific method hardly can provide this. Working on observations, building hypotheses and collecting evidence supportive or contrary to them, is likely the most effective strategy so far to find out about the actual state of affairs, but with the current degree of specialisation it can only provide exaltation for the dedicated researchers in their field.

The skeptics movement, judging from JREF is contrary to the whole idea. More a deconstructor of exaltation than a provider, hellbent to drag dreams down and to denigrate their providers. There are a lot of good points to make for this position too, namely the protection of those, who from the skeptic's view are the innocently deceived.

My point however is that ideology and religion provide this kind of exaltation, this kind of unifying vision,the appeal to what often is called higher values like altruism, forgiveness and the like, very effectively.

Since a frequent notion here is that the world would be better off without religion and ideology, i would like to ask your opinion on this topic.


The first paragraph is incorrect... I am not a dedicated researcher of astronomy... but I am exalted by Carl Sagan's explanations and wonder as well as Neil Degrasse Tyson. It's a false statement. A straw man. Moreover, it pretends the awe comes from the "scientific method"... it comes from understanding the awesomeness of the truth... how we know it's true... and how huge that truth is.

The second paragraph then assumes the truth of the first and continues to attack its own strawman. It's arguing against something that isn't true. The Jref is not bent on deconstructing, but rather on illuminating the truth. No one is forced to join or believe or not believe anything. Skeptics are generally people who are exalted by the truth... they want to be around others who feel that way... they don't want to have to worry about stepping on someone's delusion. They're not out proselytizing. This is a forum for them... for us. And many find this forum exalting much as that might bother believers who imagine that skeptics can't feel whatever feelings they believe they get from god or karma or clearing or synchronicity or magic beans.

The third paragraph specifically mentions religion and then you get huffy when people bring up religion as a source of illusion. We are talking about illusions which exalt... religions appear to be the prime one, right. But then he says other things that exalt... ideologies... well rationalism is an ideology, so is critical thinking, so is humanism, and most skeptics I know are hardly deficient in the qualities like altruism and forgiveness that religions supposedly teach. So again, it's a muddled statement. It pretends that religions (based on illusions) are the same as ideologies (which are based on philosophies and human ideals). It's a poorly worded sentence that implies that illusions help make people have moral qualities. This may be true... but skeptics have those same qualities to the same or greater degrees.

I don't think that anyone says that the world would be better off without religion or ideologies... what many people do say, is that faith is not a means of true or useful knowledge. Moreover, I suspect most skeptics would agree that there really is no such thing as "moral truths". You have a fuzzy way with language, and you assume others are understanding you and you get mad when they don't... but you don't check to see if others are following you.

You have a whole forum here... So what is a moral truth? What is a definition that those who understand the term would agree with? What is an example of a moral truth that everyone who supposedly understands what they are would agree with?

It sounds to me that those who believe there are such things as a moral truth... are using definitions very different than the definitions above... and they don't really agree with each other nor are they really saying anything nor do they agree on what these "truths" are.

You just sound so unclear on the difference between an objective fact... and everything else... anything that requires and "according to" is not a fact. I am astounded to discover peoples' fuzziness in this area. I don't think the communication problem is me. If others were hearing what you are, I think they'd be able to communicate it to me.

But prove me wrong... all those who believe there are moral truths... provide a good definition and tell me you agree and tell me an example of one.

And I didn't know you were using illusions and ideals interchangeably nor did others it appears. In my world these are different things. In the dictionary they are too.
 
Last edited:
I'm not going to address the rest fiona... unless someone can sum you up or tells me you are making sense to them... it just seems way out there to me. You say this thread is about values... as though everyone agrees...and that I derailed the topic to religion even though it's in the OP. You say I am hearing things not there, but you are the one using words in metaphorical ways and insinuating things about me and the motives of others and "reductionist" skeptics who apparently don't understand what "moral truths" are even though supposedly everyone "knows" what they are.

You are the on hearing things that aren't there. You are the one pretending that everyone is on the same page and following you and that I'm derailing or being purposefully obstinate.

I don't think others have a problem with the statement I made:

"Reality determines what is true-- not what people believe
" You act like that is not an understandable quote, yet you claim that everyone knows what "moral truths" are??? Is this true? Let's ask the people here. Is this a statement that you find as ungraspable or meaningless as Fiona does. If so, do you think there is such thing as a "moral truth"-- If so, can you define it and give an example that you think most people would agree to such as those definitions I gave above. I think you may be a wee bit deluded about how you are coming across and how others are perceiving me.

Fiona, I think you're the one on your own track here. I don't think others share your opinion or are following you as clearly as you imagine. We'll see. This is a smart group... maybe my words are unclear and yours are clear... maybe others think that the words illusions and ideals ARE interchangeable and that this is a thread about values and that illusions that exalt are better than truths. But so far... you seem to be the only one saying so. I'm willing to learn. But I can't learn from you because I can't make sense of it any more. The more I try to clarify, the nastier you get. You tell me that everybody knows what "moral truths" are and that my pointing out that it's a meaningless term is a sign of some nefarious intent and demeaning on my part.

And you are the one offended by the word delusion in regards to religion even though the very basic first definition of delusion fits religion to a tee.

A false personal belief that is not subject to reason or contradictory evidence.

It's a skeptics board... I don't feel the need to use euphemism when the majority are perfectly fine with the dictionary words. Moreover, I'm not the one playing semantic games... though you accuse me of such. I'm more than willing to go with whatever definition the majority can agree upon or the first one that comes up on google. Per my dictionary you are the one playing fast and loose with language to spin this idea that something is bad about JREF and skepticism and me that you and other people (who think it's mean to call faith delusional) have somehow risen above...

But to me it's all spin... platitudes of nothing to feel better and more diplomatic and nicer by inferring that others don't have these qualities. To me, it's arrogance disguised as humility. It sounds like "you skeptics should be more like me". But I don't want to be more like the people who mischaracterize me or skeptics in general are. I don't want to be like those who make excuses for religion and hear things that aren't there and define words as convenient for their points in their head game. I think people who are using words as defined by the dictionary would be better at helping me see it another way. I want to be like them. I want to get advice or clarification from those who understand my words and who think the term "moral truth" is a nonsense term like I do. Or who can explain why it's not without having to put me down.
 
Last edited:
Arti,

You are clear and Fiona is clear, but you are speaking different languages.

This isn't earth-shattering. The whole thread is an exercise in C.P. Snow's Two Cultures. If you want to put it into brain language, some folks are extremely analytical (left brain) and stress analysis and the scientific method over all other forms of human endeavor. Others are more intuitive (right brain) and use skepticism (left brain) to rid themselves of bad ideas.

No one is exclusively one or the other, but there are degrees, and some are on one end of a large spectrum, others on the other end with most people somewhere along the range.

I know that you know all of this intellectually, but you are not acting as though you know it in a functional, daily sense. When Pushkin uses a word like "illusion" he does not mean it in its clinical, analytical sense. He was a poet. For him words were inherently ambiguous; poets use the ambiguity of language to create beauty. They speak from their intuitive (right brain) sense to our intuitive understanding; and that is the source of inspiration for virtually everyone.

Neil de-Grasse Tyson spoke, at the end of the first Beyond Belief conference, about how he came to understand and speak to the creative types around him. He was schooled in analytic techniques and so prized analysis over synthesis and creativity until he was forced to "see the other side" in a design class required of everyone at the liberal arts college he attended (though he still majored in physics). After that experience he found that he could cross both cultures, and he began to appreciate more fully the beauty of the cosmos.

Sagan crossed the two cultures, frequently quoting various poets, even writing a novel. Not everyone does, nor does everyone need to -- there's lots of variability out there.

That there is another side to the brain, that intuition and creativity are as much a part of us as analysis is really all that the OP and Fiona are trying to say. I don't hear anyone saying "science is bad" or "religion is good" here; what I do hear is that, for some, scientific reasoning, the scientific method and skepticism, are not enough.

Man does not live by bread alone.

All anyone needs do to counter that is say "Yeah, what else is new?" since we all know that we have two hemispheres.
 
rocketdodger, wouldn't that be a criticism against Utilitarianism, if it can be so manipulated?

I feel quite the opposite, my friend. And let us use objectivism instead because the common interpretation of utilitarianism is rather bleak.

You can thus manipulate any ideology, worldview, etc. -- religions do it all the time, as you know -- but at least objectivism is honest about the fact that it is completely subjective and up to interpretation on an individual level. If nothing else, it is integrity and honesty. You don't have to put loopholes and special pleading everywhere for it to work.

I wouldn't say it is "manipulated," I would say it is "interpreted."
 
My opinion is that evolutionists are living in the illusion of the happy accidents theory.
So we should start there.

How about we start... with all the other threads you have participated in on this forum. You remember, the ones where all of your arguments have systematically destroyed?

I always laugh when people, after having been demolished elsewhere on the forums, post the same utter nonsense in another thread as if they are fooling anyone.

Do you think that simply repeating your misguided and incorrect ideas is enough to make them true? Or do you think that repeating them is enough to convince others of their truth? Not on this forum, sir.
 
Deontological ethics, revolving entirely around duty rather than emotional feelings or end goals, can't be twisted so arbitrarily.

Wrong. See below.

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.

There is nothing irrational about a world devoid of people, so the maxim does not preclude such behavior. As you can see, vagueness of "rationality" leaves much room for twisting.
 
Last edited:
Ferchrissakes,

Three pages over what is one of the most non-controversial things anyone can say?

Pushkin was a poet, dammit. He spoke in poetic language and used, like all poets, the ambiguity of language to speak many points at once.

We all know that analysis is good for analysis and synthesis for synthesis, creativity for creativity. The scientific method and skepticism are tools that use analysis to pare away bad ideas and bad information.

We are not inspired by analysis. We admire it and can enjoy it, but it does not inspire us to great action.

We did not go to the moon because of science. The impetus to go to the moon was political and the plan was delivered in a poetic, inspiring speech. Scientific investigation provided the means to solve the problem of how to get there, it did not provide the impetus.

Let's face it, there are people here, at times, who over-state the role of scientific investigation and confuse materialistic monism for science. That is what the OP derided -- that particular perspective. It's not as big a deal as he made out, though, because mostly that perspective is just an attempt to correct problems that have percolated through our culture.

The easy way to deal with this is simply to admit the truth. We are complex creatures who use science to investigate the truth, but who are inspired through various means, including poetic vision and political instigation; looking at the breath-taking images from Hubble, the beauty of a rainbow the "rising" sun as it peaks over the trees each morning, etc. Skeptic doesn't mean that one is only skeptical. One may also be poetic, inspired, and even maudlin.

Illusion has a variety of meanings, and in the hand of a poet the ambiguity reigns. It needn't mean only the completely false and unreal. A poetic vision of the future is a kind of illusion since it is not yet realized.

Why is this controversial at all?

The OP is controversial because it suggests a false dichotomy between synthesis and analysis -- as if people who choose one can't participate in the other.

This is utter nonsense, as you yourself point out. But, unfortunately, it is quite commonplace among the less educated for people to believe it due to what we see here -- people have convinced them, using rhetoric, that it is true.

Analysis cannot be directed without synthesis, and synthesis cannot be completed without analysis. It is when people think they can partake in one without the other that bad things happen and, to me, the OP suggested that people should choose.
 
.... the worse is our nature.

One wonders if blauregen would support King if he inspired the audience with the phrase "All men are created apricots".

There is a difference I fear you are confusing:

1: Irrational and unfactual words that inspire,
and
2: An irrational speech that is literally believed whilst also being inspiring.

Consider King had said that he had a dream "that one day the sun rises the moment after it sets" to inspire the audience with the notion that a new dawn is always on the horizon.

Now, there would be a problem with the audience actually believing the laws of motion might one day speed up (destroying the solar system in the process) and deeming this message literally true.

There may, however, be the audience who apply these words to their lives as an inspiration for that brighter dawn. It doesn't matter even if they know that it will be literally dark every morning until they die.

It probably would matter if they believed the former paragraph.

The same with "All men are created equal". Who cares if some children are born deformed, without muscle fibre, blind or a vegatable? To be a good Human, we need to convince ourselves that the subjective view of ourselves is worthless in terms of the objective view of our Pale Blue Dot, for example.

It need not be literally true, and it need not be believed to be literally true to send a message and change society.
 
Last edited:
The OP is controversial because it suggests a false dichotomy between synthesis and analysis -- as if people who choose one can't participate in the other.

This is utter nonsense, as you yourself point out. But, unfortunately, it is quite commonplace among the less educated for people to believe it due to what we see here -- people have convinced them, using rhetoric, that it is true.

Analysis cannot be directed without synthesis, and synthesis cannot be completed without analysis. It is when people think they can partake in one without the other that bad things happen and, to me, the OP suggested that people should choose.


I'm afraid that I don't see the false dichotomy in the OP. I see people reading a false dichotomy into it, but there seems to me to be a statement about the scientific method as analysis and the skeptic movement as the poster has experienced it here and then a question about whether or not that is how skeptics see themselves. He may have meant that false dichotomy to be there, I don't know, but it doesn't really read that way to me.

I think he was probably reacting to certain posts on this forum, but certainly not to all of them. I don't remember exacly what Dunstan said, but he pretty much countered the whole thing early on by saying essentially the same thing I am but from a different angle.
 
I'm afraid that I don't see the false dichotomy in the OP. I see people reading a false dichotomy into it, but there seems to me to be a statement about the scientific method as analysis and the skeptic movement as the poster has experienced it here and then a question about whether or not that is how skeptics see themselves. He may have meant that false dichotomy to be there, I don't know, but it doesn't really read that way to me.

"Better this, than that" is a dichotomy, an either/or. And since that's how the OP was phrased, we aren't wrong for responding to it the same.

Fantasy and reality can live together only so long before they conflict. And when they do, one will have to be discarded in favor of the other. I'll choose the hard reality over the fluffy bunny fantasy.
 
"Better this, than that" is a dichotomy, an either/or. And since that's how the OP was phrased, we aren't wrong for responding to it the same.

Fantasy and reality can live together only so long before they conflict. And when they do, one will have to be discarded in favor of the other. I'll choose the hard reality over the fluffy bunny fantasy.

But, again, I think that is reading into the situation. That quote was from a poet and he qualified it immediately in the OP. I still think you guys are making a mountain out of a molehill.

From what I get out of the OP he didn't refer to fluffy bunnies or that sort of conception of the world, but rather to the grand ideas that can move us to action. That doesn't come from the scientific method. It comes from another part of us.

Now, if he had specifically said that science does not include grand ideas that would have been wrong, because we have oodles of examples of them. But he specifically referred to the scientific method and to skepticism.

I still say that all anyone had to do was just say -- no, that is not how we see ourselves since skepticism is just a tool like the scientific method is a tool. We are all humans and we can be just as poetic as the next slob drooling into his pint.
 
Can you find a vision, a driving force, a source of exaltation in the skeptic attitude or the scientific approach, that can appeal to not so sophisticated minds like mine, and would therefore offer a replacement?

You don't think that sounds like a dichotomy, wasp?

Here he is clearly saying that the scientific approach 1) should offer a source of exaltation and 2) if it did, it should be an optional replacement for other sources of exaltation.

And this illustrates my point perfectly -- he is trying to trick people into thinking that science is something it is not, and then on the basis of science failing to provide something it isn't even supposed to, that it is a poor replacement for something it isn't even meant to replace. The end result? People thinking they have to choose non-rational exaltation over the scientific method.

If we sound upset over this seemingly trivial thread, it is because the same thing is happening out there in the real world, and the results are definitely non-benign.
 
Sorry it took me some time to come back to you Roboramma.

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.
On the other hand, I don't know of anyone who suggests that, nor do I see what it has to do with reductionism.

Well, as I have said, I think everyone knows it is ridiculous but sometimes there seem to be posts which skirt perilously close to that view. I think it is, as Ichneumonwasp suggests, that sometimes people overstate the role of science when they are correcting problems they perceive. I do think it is reductionist, but as I have stated many times I think it does not actually represent the views of those posters: indeed usually this can be seen by reading more of their comments.

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.

I think we need both. It is important for groups to identify what draws them together, and insofar as the people who post here are a group it is legitimate to use shorthand and simplification when talking to each other. I think that is not helpful when talking to folk who do not share core perceptions, however, and there are many who post here who do not. I value attempts at addressing the points raised in all their complexity, because I think there are many different points of view even amongst the self-identified sceptics. Some of the people who post here are very good at helping me to see aspects of issues which I have missed or have not seen as relevant. I really value that. And I agree with you that I would like to see more positive discussion of the sceptic position and what it can give us: rather than always concentrating on the negative of others' positions. That sometimes seems rather sterile. The question of inspiration was raised. I think human beings need that and I think that a sceptic/atheist position can provide it as much as any other system of thought. Sometimes I think we do not let that be seen very much and I think that is a pity


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.
This can, of course, be true of "false understanding" - people who believe the rainbow is a sign from god, for instance, can have intense feelings of wonder brought on by that. But the truth, in my opinion, is equally amazing.

Absolutely. I certainly did not mean to say that understanding what it is is not amazing. As you say, I merely wished to identify what Blauregen called the "exaltation" which arises from such phenomena independent of that understanding. That exaltation is there whether one understands it or not.

Sure.
Similarly I can get a sense of awe from reading Kipling, without thinking that Mogli was a real child, or that wolves can, in fact, talk. There can be something truly amazing about fictional worlds, but I can have that amazement without thinking that they are real.

Yes. I do not think literal belief is in question here.

And there are ideas from such worlds - things like honour or compassion, strength or sacrifice - that do have some real existence. I can find those things, for instance, in The Lord of the Rings without thinking that Galdalf really was a living, breathing, wizard.

Yes.

In other words, none of this requires believing in things that aren't true.

I agree. But clearly some do not, since it is being argued that such things as honour etc cannot be "true". This is the fundamental point of disagreement, surely. If you believe them to have a "real existence" (as I do) you are believing in things that are not true, by the definition proposed by some here. That definition is, for me, too narrow, for the reasons you give. That is what I am calling reductionist. To me that is the essence of this debate.


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.

I agree. But again the opposing argument appears to be that there are no parts of such things that are "true"

We have in our culture stories of historical figures that are considered heroic. Yet they were just human beings. The heroism of them - in some cases very real - was certainly tempered by flaws. In our cultural stories we hold those people up as examples, and I think that's valuable, and can be inspired by them, but on the other hand it's also very important to realise that we are all just people - there are no demi-gods among us.
To truly believe such demi-gods (as I call them) exist, people without flaws, leaders who can solve all of our problems, leads to cults of personality. I consider that dangerous. On the other hand, to recognise that great people of the past were great, to hold them up as an example to aspire toward, and yet understand that they had flaws, is I think very valuable.

I would go further. I think that the idea of the hero in our culture is always dangerous and always to be resisted. What I find inspiring is that ordinary people can do extraordinary things and think extraordinary thoughts. But it is the actions or the ideas which are important. From time to time a biography is produced which brings out the flaws in some celebrity. It happened with Philip Larkin, for example.There usually follows a debate about whether character flaws of a major kind should affect our attitude to the work. How could they? Is it possible to believe that there are people who are great in every aspect of their lives? Does racism or sexism or a proclivity to pull the wings off flies render a great poem worthless? It is infantile. I think the solution is to take what is good or inspiring and separate it from the producer. I do not aspire to be like a "great" person: but I can aspire to some of their ideas and ideals and that is what counts

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.
That's why I say that it's better to whittle away the falsehoods, or at least to recognise them as such - as metaphors for instance.

Again I agree. But again there are those who deny that anything about religion is, or even can be, true.

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.

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.
I mean - why do you think it's a good illusion?

My purpose in bringing up the ideal of freedom of research was to show it is exactly the same type of "illusion" as the others which were mentioned as inspiring. As I said, I think those illusions are necessary to us and they have value. It is more true of science than it could be. In part it is more true because we have the illusion. It is an aim/ideal which we can articulate and we can argue for and defend when it competes with other conflicting ideals. It is not in itself "scientific". But without it it would be harder to resist attacks on academic freedom, since we would not have a "story" to tell about why that is an important value. Like your "heroes" it does not exist in objective form, and that is why I call it illusion: but that does not make it unimportant. And it does not make it false, even though it does not actually refer to anything in the real world. Once again there are those who would say it is false because it has no "objective" existence. And that is what I am disagreeign with, Not sure if that is any clearer. I am trying :)

I sort of agree with you here - it makes sense to have ideals that can never be achieved. On the other hand, that doesn't preclude knowing that they can't be acheived. Given that, how is aspiring toward those ideals believing in a falsehood?

If I draw a circle on a piece of paper, taking care to make it as round as possible, am I believing in an illusion because it is impossible for me to make a perfect circle? I don't think so - I know I can't make it perfect, but do my best regardless. My knowledge of the impossibility of my "dream" here doesn't detract from my ability to use my "dream" as something to which to aspire.

As I said: for me it is not. But those who are debating me deny that an ideal can be "true". I am not entirely sure if that necessarily implies it is false and I do not wish to attribute that simple dichotomy if it is not what they mean. What I think you are missing is the fact that it is the ideal itself which they deny as "true" or capable of being "true". Whether you know it is unattainable is somewhat secondary and does not answer the objection being raised. At least that is how it seems to me


Edit: If I disagree with anything it's the implication that I found in the opening post that it is useful to believe in falsehoods. I can actually accept that there are times when it is but in general I don't think it is. I'm not sure if you are saying this Fiona, and if not I don't think I disagree with you - rather I probably misinterpretted you. Anyway, I'll find out if you reply to my post. :)

I am not advocating belief in falsehoods and I hope that is clearer now. I am saying that there is more than the very narrow version of "true" which has been proposed. As I understand you post you agree with me that such things as "compassion" can be "true" and can be valuable to us. I do not think we are disagreeing really but if I misunderstand then I will be interested to hear more
 
You don't think that sounds like a dichotomy, wasp?

Here he is clearly saying that the scientific approach 1) should offer a source of exaltation and 2) if it did, it should be an optional replacement for other sources of exaltation.

And this illustrates my point perfectly -- he is trying to trick people into thinking that science is something it is not, and then on the basis of science failing to provide something it isn't even supposed to, that it is a poor replacement for something it isn't even meant to replace. The end result? People thinking they have to choose non-rational exaltation over the scientific method.

If we sound upset over this seemingly trivial thread, it is because the same thing is happening out there in the real world, and the results are definitely non-benign.



OK, gotta admit that sounds more like a strict dichotomy. I must have glossed over that part. But, I still say that all anyone need reply is -- no, the scientific method doesn't, but none of us is a robot. Science produces all sorts of wonders -- that Cassini picture of Saturn eclipsing the sun is utterly breathtaking -- but science, in and off itself, doesn't drive us to greatness politically or poetically. Politics and poety do though, and we have those as well.
 

Back
Top Bottom