Rombomb wrote:
No apology necessary. Misunderstandings are common. (Nested quote removed.)
What you told me is very uncommon knowledge. You know it, most people don't.
Why wouldn't people acknowledge your knowledge? Maybe they are wrong. Or maybe they know you're right but are jealous of you.
Discards wrote:
I don't know I really doubt anyone is jealous of me. But, you know, if I'm right about certain things, what are people going to say? I usually leave little left to talk about. It's problematic. I should maybe say less I guess. Leave more to the imagination. Be somewhat more dishonest on an intellectual level.
No. Don't appease evil!
Discards wrote:
This is my artwork.. image.jpg
I like it.
Check out my mom's artwork:
here and
here and
here
-- Updated March 2nd, 2013, 10:41 pm to add the following --
Alias wrote:The machine won't ask this in the words of my preference: What, pray, is "theory-laden" when it's at home?
That is a metaphor for something, but I don't know what. Explain?
Alias wrote:
In general, I do not agree to theory-laden jargon.
You don't agree with the word or the idea?
To clarify: I'll explain why I believe the theory that *all human thoughts/emotions/behaviors are theory-laden* -- and what the theory is and what it implies about reality.
_What's the problem with the current theories of human thoughts/emotions/behaviors?_
Previous theories are flawed because they fail to explain reality. Those theories all share the idea that some parts of the human brain are hardwired (namely the from the part of the brain that is responsible for the mind, e.g. language ability). There are cases in recent history that refute this brain-is-hard-wired theory. For example, there was a girl who lost her language ability because of permanent brain damage to the part of the her brain that did language, and then she relearned language in another part of her brain. This implies that the brain (at least the part that relearned language) is not hardwired. The failure of the brain-is-hardwired theory in explaining this is its refutation. -- This is a problem which was solved by the theory that says that the brain is not hardwired.
Another problem with previous theories is that they all assume that much of human thought/emotion/behavior is due to genes -- meaning that genes encode the hardwiring of the brain. But this doesn't work since most of these human attributes were created after memetic evolution started replacing genetic evolution. By that I mean that as soon as humans started living longer lives because of technology, their otherwise-unfit genes didn't die as much as before because the natural selective pressures were changed/alleviated by the technology. Memetic evolution started as far as 2.3 million years ago when early humans started using stone tools. We started the cooking meme 250,000 years ago. We started using symbols to represent concepts 50,000 years ago -- which is when civilization started -- which is also when genetic evolution mostly stopped.
_What is the theory?_
All human thoughts/emotions/behaviors are theory-laden, which means caused by our ideas.
In the case of emotions, it is always interpretation first, then emotion. The interpretation causes the emotion. The interpretation depends on the ideas of the person. Many of those ideas are memes learned from other people. Some of them are unique to that person.
Note that no two people have the exact same set of ideas, which means that everyone is unique -- one consequence of which is that different people will do the same things for different reasons, and that different people will do the different things for the same reasons.
Note also that memes (aka ideas) are shared by lots of people, which means that many people share the same emotions and emotional habits.
The same is true for thoughts and behaviors/actions. Interpretation first, then thought. Interpretation first, then behavior.
To clarify, the interpretation part is largely subconscious. By the time you are aware of a thought, your subconscious has already done a lot of work and has produced a thought and served up to your conscious.
We are all fallible -- anyone of us can be wrong about any one of our ideas. So shielding any one of my ideas from criticism means irrationally believing that I have the truth.