CameronPoe wrote:
Your error is that you perceive reason to be something that has a precise definition. It does not. It is a watery concept. Western concepts of religion are not. It (Christianity/Judaism/Islam) is written down in ancient textbooks and while you can argue over nuances in the scripture there is usually little scope for too much deviation. I understand where you are coming from on this (i.e., a massive culture shift may occur at some point) but I have difficulty with your theory because reason, as I see it, is not 'a concept'. In the solitary example nobody dictates it, nobody defines it, nobody restricts it. It is pure thought. Obviously we don't live in solitude so as I mentioned earlier environment and sociology influences the reasoning of people in a particular time and place, although it does not bind their thought down hard and fast. You can lambast me for being so dismissive - something you evidently think your OP allows you to laugh at - but I cannot envisage for one moment why the free exercise of the mind would be bad thing (the alternative necessarily being some restriction on that freedom - unless you can enlighten me otherwise).
I'm pretty sure reason has a precise definition, such as the one provided by RAIMUS who is ironically arguing about the exactness of reason.
"Pure thought" would always lead to the same conclusions, if not for our imperfection. Reason has been perverted every bit monotheistic religions have, like Islam in the present day and Christianity during the Crusades. Not that these are exclusively time periods where monotheistic religions have been abused, but they are good examples of their culturally destructive properties. Following that logic distorted reason can easily follow in their footsteps of bloodshed, into the jungles of Vietnam and the deserts of the Middle East.
Free thinking only seems perfect because of the environment we have grown up in. Realistically it has not necessarily given us anything radically new when other factors are taken into account, such as current level of technology or level of specification in a society.
CameronPoe wrote:
Your example of paganism to Christianity highlights the problem in your argument. That was a jump from one form of religion to another. Exercising freedom of thought is not such a jump. It is simply freedom to go anywhere with our minds and collectively - with no firm purpose or fixed/predetermined direction - come up with an improving or disimproving society and system of living as we progress.
Why are you so quick to denounce religion? Because it is unreasonable? That sounds an awful lot like jumping from one religion to another in the social sense.
Just take ten seconds and try to draw some parallels between not reason itself, but how reason is treated in present day society.
CameronPoe wrote:
I'm not exactly sure how you read a Nazi accusation into my comment but whatever. Again I reiterate. You are mixing definitions again. Common psyches are natural yes. I didn't say they weren't. I regard enforced common psyches as unnatural and abhorrent however. Your 'next step' must necessarily entail a restriction on freedom of thought, because reason is exactly that. I can never endorse such a thing, despite the ills such freedom sometimes brings. As I said earlier, the great thing about freedom of thought is that everyone can be 'right' by their own particular brand of reasoning. So until you can irrefutably prove me wrong, or come up with a reasonable argument I can concur with we will have to agree to disagree.
It is not enforced, as none of the underlying factors I have talked about have been, it is a natural progression. No one is forcing anything.
Everyone being right doesn't do anyone any good, also ironically as RAIMUS states. As he said, agreeing to disagree is a pretty pointless endeavor in a braoder sense. I don't know why you're so quick to jump to it.
CameronPoe wrote:
There you go again. Reason != 'Social Attitudes'. You make far too many confusing associations. The leap was from fixed indoctrinated thought to complete freedom of thought. In other parts of the world they have non-deity related systems of thought such as Taoism and Confucianism. All they amount to, like all religions and like modern humanism, is a guide to restraining ones animal impulses to enable peaceful coexistence. Perhaps reason might lead to our destruction but frankly you can't stop reason. You can't stop the freedom of the individual to come to their own particular logical conclusion on some issue. That's why there will always be terrorists. That's why there will always be anti-establishment types. That's why implementing some sort of 'what's best for humanity leap forward/culture shift' will be almost impossible to achieve. The people have tasted freedom and it is here to stay.
Bottom line is this: prevailing culture is the embodiment of reason, whatever that culture might be. Taoism is based on reason for instance - even Christianity is: 'love thy neighbour as thyself', etc. - in the interests of the common good. Every breakthrough man has had has been through reason and every prevailing culture since the beginning has its basis in some form of reason. Reason has persisted, it is culture that has changed - with reason as the driver.
You don't "implement" a fundamental social change, it just happens. I am predicting the inevitable.
Bullshit. To attribute
every advance to reason and not even some degree to blind luck just shows your utter bias.
Scorpion0x17 wrote:
Grrr... you're gonna force me to find a copy of the book I read about it in. But, in a nutshell, no, that's the beauty of math - it defines truth absolutely.
I understand that, but my point is that truth can only be defined absolutely in abstract terms. In the translation of those abstract terms to something we can work with in the real world there is too much lost in translation for it to be usable.
RAIMIUS wrote:
FM, are you arguing for the abandonment of science, mathematical justification, etc? If we do not use reason as the basis for decision making, we are left with emotion, religion (which includes elements of reason...), whatever someone in power says, or something we have not defined yet. Of those choices, reason seems to be the most beneficial/practical in our world.
Reason and reasoning are what we humans use to come to conclusions and agreements. Without reason and logic, science halts. Without reasoning, differing groups must either agree to disagree (which usually accomplishes nothing) or initiate conflict (wherein the stronger side wins, whether or not their view is the most efficient/beneficial). I'll stick with reasoning, given that there are no better alternatives being presented.
Reason has a place, I have never argued against that. My point is that reason will no longer be the primary motive in the next great society.
Uzique wrote:
This thread sounds like the title of a dissertation/lecture delivered by Prof. Richard Dawkins.
(Read: Oh dear).
suck my sock