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Etherman50 wrote:In other words,How much are human beings instinct? How much of us is environmentally determined(personal experience)? How much of us is enculurated(the way we are raised to be)? How much is individuated human thought(character based)? MR
Foszae wrote:socialization produces a fundamentally Pavlovian conditioning to the sense of self. without breaking it down into the constituent steps of cognition or flipping between conscious vs subconscious thought, the 'unwashed masses' are significantly subliminally driven.Does enlightenment depend on "smartness?" I know smart people who do not seem very enlightened, and people of "the unwashed masses" who seem much more so. Because we are animals, it is unlikely we will ever be free of "Subconscious response to stimuli", or instinctive behavior. Instead we may become aware of it and bring that awareness to bear upon our instinctive reactions. Given the track record, aren't societies more likely to push one deeper into unconsciousness than drag one back into awareness.
is it possible to be a smart person who can watch as the 'average' person goes about their choice-making relying entirely on self-gratification for example. a person who chooses rewarding feelings will self-select their own direction, acquiring memory and opinion which fortifies the certainty that they are right in how they feel an think.
the ability of Awareness, is the ability to disregard one's own subconscious response to stimuli thereby enabling the empirical evaluative mind (consciousness). unfortunately, that ability to feel emotion without blurting it out is something socialized conditioning has allowed people to avoid doing.
if a falsehood is a conviction which pleases you, you will continually reinforce that falsehood as our emotional response of happiness. deprogramming oneself of that tendency is difficult. it is painful, there is no overt reward to influence your behaviour to doing so. and the resultant awkward self-awareness that it inflicts on people will just seem impossible, ridiculous and unimportant to pursue. it is their habituated self which seeks external affirmation and distraction. and every experience which they perceive as pulling them the other direction will end up (on their part) as emotionally and logically conflicting, at which point they refer to the certainty of what they feel they know.
the change which occurs in society will drag them kicking and screaming back into awareness simply because they have trained themselves to not even see the possibility until after the truth has hit them.
Gregorygregg1 wrote:Hello Foszae,let's come up with a more adequate definition of smartness then. it is not having a lot of information at your disposal (because the mind can trust feeling more than memory). it is not IQ, because that is simply a matter of pattern recognition and and only influences behaviour after the conscious mind has evaluated that response.
Does enlightenment depend on "smartness?" I know smart people who do not seem very enlightened, and people of "the unwashed masses" who seem much more so. Because we are animals, it is unlikely we will ever be free of "Subconscious response to stimuli", or instinctive behavior. Instead we may become aware of it and bring that awareness to bear upon our instinctive reactions. Given the track record, aren't societies more likely to push one deeper into unconsciousness than drag one back into awareness.
Foszae wrote: let's come up with a more adequate definition of smartness then. it is not having a lot of information at your disposal (because the mind can trust feeling more than memory). it is not IQ, because that is simply a matter of pattern recognition and and only influences behaviour after the conscious mind has evaluated that response.Sounds like a liberal attitude. Wasn't Democracy designed to keep us aware of our behaviors as a society and permit changes in response to unacceptable behaviors like torture and preemptive warfare? How conscious does a society have to be to see and respond?
my professional defnition by contrast is the relative frequency with which one re-evaluates those instincts. at the dumbness end of the scale would be people who rarely reconsider how they feel. at the other end people who frequently question how their 'self' responds.
society, taken as an entity, roughly follows the same scale. forgive me for being metaphoric, but a relatively smart society is one which witnesses itself and deliberately plans for improved behaviours. the dumb society will tend to stick to ideas it feels are perfect for how they feel.
but that entity, the putative society, is not actually self-aware. it cannot change itself, because it does not know it even exists. it can develop dumb habits, as if it were subconsciously convince itself it were right. but you can't even make an analogy that the society itself derives solutions to its problems (like a smart person would).
Foszae wrote: for an extrapolation of this example, let us look at the actual Enlightenment. that putative society again, was awoken by interesting stimuli. as if its subconscious tendencies received a signal that was beyond its capacity to respond and threw it up to the boys in the consciousness department for their more exhaustive analysis. Newton and Galileo brought two new paradigms to light, and they defied the "common sense" responses. the ideas were too interesting to ignore, and too contradictory to gloss over. so society responded. a rush of new philosophies, the dawning of the Age of Reason. the chance, at last, to work out things that seemed more likely to be true. then Hume came along and told us we couldn't really prove it and shut the whole thing down again.)It is almost as if you are implying a "social mind." But you give individuals power within that mind. you are contending that conservative individuals have greater impact on the "social mind" than free thinkers. I read this as path behavior by the herd. Wasn't public education supposed to solve that problem?
What did we lose? the willingness to look for more accurate truths to build with. and why? well, it's almost as if society had a knee-jerk fight/flight response to something it couldn't cope with. ducked its head back into the sand and continued reassuring its constituent members that there were no other answers to even consider.)
Foszae wrote: now having said that, yes, societies in general will work to the acceptable level of the majority. it's an exact reflection of how dumb people respond. i can cope with this much and i'm sure nothing else will matter. and that is a downstream, cumulative effect of the per capita individual following that same training and general direction.Science has not always been a stalwart champion of truth or even consistently shown much wisdom. As for better ideas: atomic bombs, biological warfare, nuclear power plants. One might question the wisdom of creating a scientocracy.
but, as is true of brains and society, objective reality still exists whether you notice it or not. you can watch a person who believes a fantasy and still know in your own opinion how that person can be disproven. and as Science has progressed, external fact can disabuse the best of scientists of their own disprovable delusions. the sort of short form of the scientific method is "well, yeah we used to think that but..."
Foszae wrote: society will paralyze itself with indecision and fall back to habituation, yes. have you seen the state of modern Democracy? the primary assumptions haven't even changed. the crowd is not the source of new ideas. nor is memory where inspiration develops. they are nothing more than reference used to contextualize the potentials being considered by the smart part of the social brainIs the "smart part of the social brain" the enlightened individuals or the scientists? As for more likely outcomes, it seems obvious that the big rock will fall faster than the smaller one. perhaps we should focus our (collective consciousness) on identifying and remaining aware of the illusions upon which our societies are based.
creativity, imagination, hypothesizing and refining hypotheses verifies its own likelihood by looking back at the dumb part of what it knows and thinking about what could be ahead of us. relative probabilities are judged roughly along the lines of Idea A seems to be more probable than Idea B. so, let's focus our (collective) attention toward the more-likely outcome. it's how consciousness works.
Better yet, can a society be based on objective reality and cleanse itself of illusion?
Foszae wrote: and now, pursuant to your actual question, it is perfectly possible for society to change into an active and evolving form as opposed to an inertial and unchanging beast. but the problem is, still, that people haven't come to terms with some ideas being "better" than others. as a scientist, it is my obligation to constantly be searching for the better idea, even if it annoys me to be wrong about what i previously thought. and honestly, yes i can think of innumerable ways that we could 'refine' our ideas of society. there are plenty of people who do consider the wholesale overhaul of everything we do.
have you heard of the Venus Project? a collection of scientists and engineers who are simply willing to come up with new ideas which could work better. the arguments are perfectly sound in science and would make a perfectly lovely plan for improving global human culture. and i find it personally appealing because i can trust that as scientists, they will be willing to unlearn that they currently espouse at such time that better ideas come up. and that would pretty much be the society which would defy your current expectation that society is inherently stupefying. but honestly, even bringing it up with masses of people would be pointless. it challenges too many of their primary assumptions and so each of them will individually self-select denial and the comfort of their own delusions instead. they won't even hear the possibility simply because it exposes the craziness of their own beliefs. think of 300 million Americans suddenly having to accept that they're wrong. what are the chances they will even be interested in hearing what science might suggest?
Gregorygregg1 wrote:Sounds like a liberal attitude. Wasn't Democracy designed to keep us aware of our behaviors as a society and permit changes in response to unacceptable behaviors like torture and preemptive warfare? How conscious does a society have to be to see and respond?it's an interesting analogy you make. but i cannot really work with that idea as truth. society wasn't 'designed' specifically to fulfill the needs of emotional growth in individual citizens. it was designed (by Classical Greeks) as a method to fulfill their collective needs as white, wealthy, land-owning male citizens. if you want to assign a goal to it, that would most certainly be the perpetuation of their power. it enshrined their right as a narrow minority to control the lives of slaves, women, labourers.
Gregorygregg1 wrote: It is almost as if you are implying a "social mind." But you give individuals power within that mind. you are contending that conservative individuals have greater impact on the "social mind" than free thinkers. I read this as path behavior by the herd. Wasn't public education supposed to solve that problem?i am trying to illustrate that the neuro-cognitive patterns of the human mind are reflected in the social discourse. i am not bothering with the politic of it. but to take the social mind as the example, then what we witness is someone caught in a pattern of failure to learn. the results are patently obvious, yet the behaviour leading to it does not change. we have no collective consciousness which re-examines itself and tries to modify its behaviour to produce better results; we simply repeat the pattern which ends in failure. the fact that we have done so for four-hundred years now just makes us look collectively oblivious.
Gregorygregg1 wrote:Is the "smart part of the social brain" the enlightened individuals or the scientists? As for more likely outcomes, it seems obvious that the big rock will fall faster than the smaller one. perhaps we should focus our (collective consciousness) on identifying and remaining aware of the illusions upon which our societies are based.i don't see that we have a 'smart' part yet. we have politicians who are beholden to special interests. they could be. but they don't act anything like a 'thinking person' would. they fight to sustain the myriad illusions we face. in fact, the nature of politic is to accept that all ideas are equally valid and that emotional conviction leads our direction. as an example, we have to accept that Creationism is just as good as teaching Evolution and we treat it as a political debate. even trying to bring up the 'rational' viewpoint is pointless. perpetuating the delusion profits someone and the collective intransigence reassures (profits) the masses who believe the illusion.
Better yet, can a society be based on objective reality and cleanse itself of illusion?
Gregorygregg1 wrote:Science has not always been a stalwart champion of truth or even consistently shown much wisdom. As for better ideas: atomic bombs, biological warfare, nuclear power plants. One might question the wisdom of creating a scientocracy.yes, you are perfectly right on that point. but science, by nature, doesn't have a lot of room to obey morality. atoms are crackable. there was no way science could have progressed without having discovered that fact. science didn't need to kill anyone to understand nuclear physics, nor did the laws of physics oblige us to slaughter innocents either. the applied use of that knowledge, though, was then driven by politics. the perceived morality that drove those end results has always come from that same social mind.
society wasn't 'designed' specifically to fulfill the needs of emotional growth in individual citizens. it was designed (by Classical Greeks) as a method to fulfill their collective needs as white, wealthy, land-owning male citizens. if you want to assign a goal to it, that would most certainly be the perpetuation of their power. it enshrined their right as a narrow minority to control the lives of slaves, women, labourers.But then there were Moses,Socrates,Jeremiah, and Confucius, also two whom you mentioned before, Newton and Copernicus.Also all the poets and heroes such as Blake and Boudicaa, the lesser rebels against the stupid status quo of society. The imaginative individual is historical fact just as is the stupidity of the over-socialised man.All we need is the TOP criterion to assess which rebel against stupidity is the good rebel, and which the bad one.
Foszaei wrote:I am not saying that science is not valuable, it is a two edged sword, that without enlightenment will cut the hand that wields it.Gregorygregg1 wrote:Science has not always been a stalwart champion of truth or even consistently shown much wisdom. As for better ideas: atomic bombs, biological warfare, nuclear power plants. One might question the wisdom of creating a scientocracy.could we improve the lot of every man, woman, and child on this planet? can we release them from the obligation to work? can we ensure them food, water, and shelter as free gifts just for being born human? yes, absolutely we could; it is technologically possible. it should, it seems, even sound appealing to people. i could dig up socio-anthropology to illustrate cultures where the obligations are minimal and people have freedom. and they do so without the miracles of modern agriculture, transportation and organization. simply because it suits their public mind.
we could re-engineer the entire planet to provide free sustenance to all peoples. the obligation to "work" would be so unneeded that there would be too many people motivated to work that we wouldn't even be able to employ them. we simply have evolved our society past the point where labour is a necessary commodity. but for some (irrational) reason, that technically viable possibility has not occurred to the social mind. in fact, the social mind is convinced of completely the opposite. but there is no self-awareness in that social mind to recognize a better, more workable idea.
simply, the social mind is too proud. it is convinced that it is already doing the best possible. it congratulates and reassures itself that this is perfection. as such, it will turn no interest to ideas which challenge its pride. it is insulted at suggestion that it is not ideal, and will rail against anything which disturbs its fantasy. why does society reject progress which is potentially there? why do we not try to be better people given that immoral science can imagine more viable options?
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