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- From: mlloyd@westmark.Stanford.EDU (Mike Lloyd)
- Subject: Re: Altruism (was: two men)
- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.013509.24377@leland.Stanford.EDU>
- Sender: news@leland.Stanford.EDU (Mr News)
- Organization: DSO, Stanford University
- References: <1992Nov16.044921.25977@rat.csc.calpoly.edu>
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 92 01:35:09 GMT
- Lines: 95
-
- pclary@mushroom.csc.calpoly.edu (Ellen Clary) writes:
- : This thread has gotten me thinking about western philosopy all
- : over again. As an undergrad, I was encouraged to be a philosphy
- : major, because I did quite well in a class. I considered it for
- : awhile, but then decided that, while I was interested in 'searching
- : for the truth' [whatever that really means] and other common
- : philosophical quests, I wasn't that interested in getting into
- : the seemingly testosterone-laden logic fights ('my logic can beat
- : up your logic' type of thing). My question to those involved in
- : this thread is first: is this your experience? and second: why does
- : this happen?
-
- Mike stifles gleeful sounds at such a setup. I promise I'll try to keep
- my inevitable response to the above coherent and relevant, if I can.
-
- "Searching for the truth." I guess we all do a bit of that now and
- again. Most philosophy types I know will witter on about it; the more
- elightened ones (who have heard of more than just Dead White European
- Men) tend to say things about searching for the "essential truths"
- embodied in all the major religions, spiritualities, etc. My personal
- favourite argument with these people is to take the line that There Is
- No Absolute Truth. Simple, neat, clean, and if well-defended, quite a
- showstopper. I've had so much fun with that one, I think I even choose
- to believe it now (although clearly not absolutely).
-
- Yeah, to answer question one, I've seen plenty of stuff that smells like
- (male) teen spirit in logic arguments. Why? Well, there are loads of
- different answers. The typically teen-agey stuff seems to have clear
- roots when you combine two things: (1) the observation that men are
- rational, analytic beings, either by nature or nurture (or chromosomes
- and bias - and no, no prizes for guessing which one *I* think is true)
- and (2) the way youthful idealism tends to take up a new-found hammer
- like logical thought and then treat the world as so many nails. Once
- the hammer is discovered, nobody is safe, be they a nail or not, until
- further enlightenment sets in.
-
- One can then, of course, conclude that the more formal, academic
- occurences of the "Me ape-man, see my logic" behaviour are just cases
- who never left the hammer-obsessive stage of rational development.
- That's just a shade too cruel for me (just a shade). I guess if people
- are willing to devote their lives to logic, or even logical
- philosophising, that's fine by me - it's probably a rather good thing -
- but I don't think I could do it without holding my nose. It would seem
- you feel similarly.
-
- : Ellen
- : (Whose experiences are never adaquately described by logic anyway.)
-
- Well, yeah. To me, logic is like a toy, wind-up car. Wind it up, put
- it at point A, and it goes from there, although often in circles. A
- really good toy car can even make it to point B, so long as it's close
- and accessible. But if you just pursue it for its own sake, you keep
- finding that from any start point it eventually hits a wall, falls off
- the table, or winds down.
-
- Icky math bit: Godel. Yes, as in GEB, that bookend of many a student's
- shelf. His point is that an axiomatic system is either (a) too weak to
- say anything interesting or (b) posessed with statements which cannot
- logically be either proven or disproven, despite their truth or
- flasehood. I guess the continuum hypothesis is the best-known example
- in math: if this stuff is not all yawningly familiar to anyone, I
- suggest you go ask a math-weenie about that one.
-
- If mathematical systems cannot even reach all statements using logic
- based on axioms, it seems readily apparent (though unproven, of course,
- in the best circular tradition) that logic has little real power over
- things like experience. When our axioms rarely get better than sketched
- as a blurry, grey outline, it seems hopeless.
-
- The only use left for logic is for local checking, forwards or
- backwards, in discussion. (FYI, I owe this point to Muffy, really.)
- You can get the toy car to proceed from some statement, forwards to a
- blatant contradiction (and then you can argue about whether that is a
- bad thing), or backwards to elucidate which axioms must have gone in to
- the statement, if it is a logical one. That's fine - a neat, useful
- discursive device - but hardly the answer to any serious problems, like
- where to eat lunch, who to love, and what to do when you make the wrong
- choice.
-
- hugs from the pointedly paradoxial and happily heuristic
- Mike, who is happy he did not have access to his math degree when he
- fell from logical grace and realised there's more to life than logic -
- he might have ceremoniously burnt it.
-
- PS Birelevance? Ooer. Tough. Could I plead that this stance is of
- use when dealing with certain knuckleheaded phobes who want to
- rationalize away biness or its attendant troubles? After all, what this
- group discusses is essentially emotional (isn't it?) so it is >juuust<
- scrapingly relevant to propound the suggestion that logic-fetishists,
- while very amusing, are not really the messengers of the New Dawn.
- --
- Mike Lloyd, B0/1 h- f- t w- g+ k+ s m- e? | "Bloody nose and burning eyes
- Retro-hippy, music nut, bi and | Raised in laughter to the skies"
- backrubber of devotion | - Bruce Cockburn
- --The end of confusion is the beginning of death--
-