My Dilemma: Objectivity and Subjectivity

denekin

Jedi
I have no idea where this post belongs on the forum.
Moderators please put it wherever it should be...

My dilemma: Subjectivity and Objectivity

Let me introduce this topic by pointing out that so far reading definitions of Subjectivity and Objectivity have not clarified my understanding. I should also confess that this is something of a rant, and that I started it several years ago and have politely kept hidden it as a draft.

I want to present a series of experiences that I come back to over and over again that illustrate my dilemma. I suspect that doing so will bring up other ideas I trip over, like rationality and irrationality.

I spent half my childhood in France and half in the United States. Our family doctor in France was a french man who was born and raised outside of Hanoi, when Vietnam was still a French colony. He started his training in Traditional Chinese medicine when he was twelve. At eighteen he returned to France where he attended the Sorbonne and went on to become a doctor. He then returned to Vietnam where he continued his training in TCM until Vietnam gained its independence. As a patient of his I and my siblings and parents were treated with acupuncture with consistently good results.

Upon returning to the United States, our family doctor (Harvard educated: bow down bow down!) informed me that my belief in acupuncture was “purely subjective” as there was no scientific validation of acupuncture. Any benefits that appeared to accrue from my acupuncture sessions were due to the placebo effect. In the mid-1970s, Western Science had done enough research on acupuncture to validate it. At that point, did my subjective appraisal of acupuncture become objective? The question strikes me as absurd but it begs to be asked. Are my beliefs merely subjective if I cannot find scientific “objective” verification of them, but those same ideas become objective if and when scientific verification arrives on the scene? Were our Harvard doctor’s views initially objective but became subjective? Was he granted an objective status just because of his scientific training, even though he had no experience with acupuncture in any circumstance? Absurd questions that beg to be asked.


My observation is that the terms “subjective” and “objective” by implication translate to “delusional” and “true”. Bear with me, if you have the patience to...( Implicative Communication is a huge subject in itself.)

I became involved with Transcendental Meditation in 1970. A few years later Herbert Benson published his research on meditators and meditation. In reading his research, it occurred to me that I was spending a lot of time in Theta states. This struck me as strange as I saw little evidence that I was particularly gifted as a meditator, and yet Theta states are considered “deeper” than alpha. It wasn’t until 1976 that I actually went into a lab and had my meditation monitored and, indeed, I was Theta prone.
http://www.brainwavesblog.com/tag/theta-waves/
Was my appraisal subjective before it was verified, but objective after being verified?

This article about Dr. Amen’s work brings up the objective/subjective dilemma well:
http://www.healthcentral.com/adhd/c/1443/135240/dr-amen-types-adhd/


In scientific literature, especially in the field of psychology, reference is often made to “subjective evaluation”…the implication is that by virtue of apparent subjectivity, my conclusions are necessarily false.

Now to the epistemological dilemma: when I quote a scientific study, when I state what has supposedly been scientifically proven, do I give evidence of objectivity? In my case, I would argue surely not. I am not a scientist, and a great deal of data that I can pull out of my memory banks may well be true, but I see little evidence that I have real and stable understanding. In other words, what I may say is true in this or that field may well be true, but am I true with it? In other words, can’t my reliance on “science” function as mere superstition?

The healer, Hugh MacKimmie healed people of cancer (http://www.amazon.com/Presence-Angels-A-Healers-Life/dp/0977054543). I knew him and watched his career from 1973 until his death a few years ago. I know of no scientific study of his work. When I make the statement that he cured people of cancer, is that statement untrue because it is not scientifically verified? Is it “merely” subjective? In 1974, a friend of mine confided in me that she had a huge lump in her left breast. We went to see the Dowser turned Healer, Wayne Cook, in Salinas. The tumor, which she was terrified of having biopsied, was the size of a small apple. In the course of a twenty minute session with him, it shrank before our eyes to the size of a lentil. She is still alive, in her mid-seventies and that lentil is still there. She is in perfect health. I cannot prove to you that that event took place. Are the facts of this case not objective facts because they have not been proven?

We don’t have a hard science of Ethics, or Aesthetics, and outside of the Hard Sciences, even of Epistemology. That being said, I can trump any ethical argument you come up with “Prove It!” You cannot prove to me that I shouldn’t steal your car. You can only give me compelling arguments. Now, here on this forum, I suspect we know that this is an absurd argument. We know that it is Objectively True that I shouldn’t steal your car, or anyone else’s. And yet, there is no hard science of Ethics. If I say, “That’s a beautiful piece of music”, you can respond with, “That’s a subjective evaluation.” Really? I can see how it might well be purely subjective, but why is it not purely objective? Again, we can come up with compelling arguments, but no proofs. I think when people throw out the labels "subjective and objective", they are often trying to derail or support the point at hand. The word subjective often implies a lack of validity whereas the word objective implies inherent validity. So, I can make my case stronger by saying that it comes from objectivity. Or, I can diminish/undermine your case by saying "that's purely subjective".

As a small tangent, I have always held that Carlos Casteneda was at least as much of a novelist as he was an anthological journalist. You have every right to claim that that is a subjective evaluation. Does that mean it is not objective fact? Is that a stupid question?

Can I point out that scientists often have ragingly subjective motives for holding to an objective truth? What does that do to Objectivity?

Now, I hope you can read this and understand that I am not indulging in Hippy New Age sentimentality: The conclusion I have drawn is that my subjectivity is always as objective as it is, and my objectivity is always as subjective as it is. this is NOT a feel good, groovy proposition: It is a never ending challenge to my assumptions, my propositions, and my preferences, and certainly to my perpetual belief (wishful thinking) that conclusions I find appealing are true.

Let me end with this question: Is your response to this post rational?
Or is your response to this post a reflection of a rationale? You can use the premises of Freud, Jung, Reich, L Ron Hubbard, Gurdjieff, etc etc, to interpret and evaluate my ideas. Each of these thinkers have given us rationales for interpreting what goes on around us. You can come up with an interpretation of me which is cogent, coherent, totally academically plausible and completely wrong. When are we truly rational? And objective?

Thank you for wading through this meandering epistle.
 
denekin said:
Let me end with this question: Is your response to this post rational?

If you want to know the difference between subjectivity and objectivity then let me ask you a question. Given the question from above, it implies that you might have an idea about what is rational, since you already asked this. Can you explain me how you define the "rational" from your question? Is "rational" something that corresponds with your ideas, concepts, something that you want to hear?

Hope this approach helps.
 
denekin said:
When are we truly rational? And objective?

Hi denekin. As I understand things, objectivity is an internal state when things are examined in and of themselves, sans preconceived notions and ideas...in essence, removing one's 'personality' from the equation. In my experience, objectivity has a definite 'flavor', or if you prefer, it lacks the particular 'flavor' of subjectivity. If you are a student of G's teaching, or even if you aren't, the first (l o o o o n g) step is observation. You must acquire data about yourself first of all. The very act of attempting to do so can be a lesson in what objectivity 'tastes' like.

Rationality is the 'perception of ratios', or, if you will, the application of logic in any given sphere to recognize and eliminate any internal contradictions. IMHO, rationality is dependent upon being able to be in a state objectivity.

Kris
 
Hi denekin. Since you've been carrying this around with you for a long time I thought to offer an in-depth response that I hope to be helpful.

denekin said:
I have no idea where this post belongs on the forum.
Moderators please put it wherever it should be...

My dilemma: Subjectivity and Objectivity

Let me introduce this topic by pointing out that so far reading definitions of Subjectivity and Objectivity have not clarified my understanding. I should also confess that this is something of a rant, and that I started it several years ago and have politely kept hidden it as a draft.

I want to present a series of experiences that I come back to over and over again that illustrate my dilemma. I suspect that doing so will bring up other ideas I trip over, like rationality and irrationality.

Do you view the paired terms: "Subjectivity, Objectivity" and "rationality, irrationality" as "opposites?" Many people do and might benefit by viewing them analogically (more or less) rather than digitally (on/off). That way one might understand that a word, phrase, or statement can be partially subjective and partially objective.


denekin said:
I spent half my childhood in France and half in the United States. Our family doctor in France was a french man who was born and raised outside of Hanoi, when Vietnam was still a French colony. He started his training in Traditional Chinese medicine when he was twelve. At eighteen he returned to France where he attended the Sorbonne and went on to become a doctor. He then returned to Vietnam where he continued his training in TCM until Vietnam gained its independence. As a patient of his I and my siblings and parents were treated with acupuncture with consistently good results.

Upon returning to the United States, our family doctor (Harvard educated: bow down bow down!) informed me that my belief in acupuncture was “purely subjective” as there was no scientific validation of acupuncture. Any benefits that appeared to accrue from my acupuncture sessions were due to the placebo effect.

Are you aware of the (trivial and non-trivial) machine model of western medicine that forms his unspoken premises? Concerning his unspoken conclusion, I can see how you might get the message subjective=delusional.


denekin said:
In the mid-1970s, Western Science had done enough research on acupuncture to validate it. At that point, did my subjective appraisal of acupuncture become objective?
The question strikes me as absurd but it begs to be asked.


Personally, I think a more appropriate ideation in this context is simply that your belief was vindicated. I really think that an application of subjectivity or objectivity here would be better as a way to categorize yours or someone else's statements about your belief, rather than to categorize your belief in relation to the reality; the belief itself now appears vindicated and empirically supported by actual experience - yours, your siblings and your parents. I could be off, of course, but this feels to be a more accurate statement of the matter.



denekin said:
Are my beliefs merely subjective if I cannot find scientific “objective” verification of them, but those same ideas become objective if and when scientific verification arrives on the scene?

Timothy Wilson's work on the adaptive unconscious and my personal understanding of semiotics leads me to believe that signs and signification are the relevant phenomena and issue here. I'll explain why when I unify your western doctor's views, the placebo comment and the more holistic asian treatments like Chinese acupuncture (see further below).


denekin said:
Were our Harvard doctor’s views initially objective but became subjective? Was he granted an objective status just because of his scientific training, even though he had no experience with acupuncture in any circumstance? Absurd questions that beg to be asked.

As previously mentioned, western medicine is based on axioms that describe the human body as a machine and basically treat symptoms with pills or surgery, somewhat similar to how a mechanic would repair and maintain your vehicle. I don't know how the question of subjective or objective is meaningful in this context. If it is, I just don't know how to answer in those terms.


denekin said:
My observation is that the terms “subjective” and “objective” by implication translate to “delusional” and “true”. Bear with me, if you have the patience to...( Implicative Communication is a huge subject in itself.)

Yes, people can certainly make statements containing those words and, by leaving their conclusion implied, leave us feeling like we've been trashed.

denekin said:
I became involved with Transcendental Meditation in 1970. A few years later Herbert Benson published his research on meditators and meditation. In reading his research, it occurred to me that I was spending a lot of time in Theta states. This struck me as strange as I saw little evidence that I was particularly gifted as a meditator, and yet Theta states are considered “deeper” than alpha. It wasn’t until 1976 that I actually went into a lab and had my meditation monitored and, indeed, I was Theta prone.
http://www.brainwavesblog.com/tag/theta-waves/
Was my appraisal subjective before it was verified, but objective after being verified?

What does "Theta prone" mean exactly and why create such a category or 'universal' which requires, as a reference, a "non-Theta prone" category and some imagined reference value? Could I just say that I have a natural tendency for increased theta-wave brain activity at some specific or varying level and intensity during meditation?


denekin said:
This article about Dr. Amen’s work brings up the objective/subjective dilemma well:
http://www.healthcentral.com/adhd/c/1443/135240/dr-amen-types-adhd/

Yes, Dr. Amen wrote a book that makes a case for six types of (so-called) AD/HD. Many of us have been saying all along that a continuum exists and that the DSM has always outlined a too-narrow conceptualization with too sharp boundaries between the types and between AD/HD'ers and "everyone else."

What stands out the most for me is that, on the one hand, like everyone else seems to, he has an undefined referent for some standard of "normal and proper" as shown by his idea that symptom clusters "...are a result of some part of the brain not functioning properly." On the other hand there's this...:

Some of the treatments Dr. Amen uses are lifestyle changes and supplements. He recommends ADHD medication only as a last resort, believing medication "can help some people, but can also make some people worse."

...which has already been demonstrated to be effective treatment and advice for many people. That's a good thing.

My points here are that behaviors he describes are real and can be witnessed - it's reality and may be called objective. Subjective components involve the mental categories which function as 'sets' containing specific "elements." These are simply his distinctions - the way he carves up a certain section of reality in order to communicate what he wants to communicate according to his purposes. Reality doesn't somehow magically split when we choose our usage of categories, though.

We might also say that his categorizing is a pragmatic act of sectioning off reality in order to enable him to handle complex matters within his, and our, very limited understanding. So we act as if reality is sectioned into ‘parts’ when, however, reality remains universally interconnected and continuous.


denekin said:
In scientific literature, especially in the field of psychology, reference is often made to “subjective evaluation”…the implication is that by virtue of apparent subjectivity, my conclusions are necessarily false.

That doesn't sound right. There is data or reality and there are interpretations of what the data mean with reference to some standard or something and in a context where a person has a pre-existing framework from which he views his reality, probably also a sponsor funding him, motive, purpose and intent - all or any of which you might not know. As such, a conclusion may be a combination of true and meaningful, true but irrelevant, true or inconsequential in that context, etc. The word 'necessarily' as it relates to a statement or combination of statements followed by a conclusion is a term from modal logics and appears to be mixed in with sentential or predicate logic in the above. Maybe you could benefit from understanding the various commonly applied logics, like: sentential logic, predicate logic (together making up 'symbolic' logic), and Aristotelian syllogistic and category logic. Or maybe those other people are confused? Or maybe just me?


denekin said:
Now to the epistemological dilemma: when I quote a scientific study, when I state what has supposedly been scientifically proven, do I give evidence of objectivity? In my case, I would argue surely not. I am not a scientist, and a great deal of data that I can pull out of my memory banks may well be true, but I see little evidence that I have real and stable understanding. In other words, what I may say is true in this or that field may well be true, but am I true with it? In other words, can’t my reliance on “science” function as mere superstition?

Yes it can, IMO, considering the corrupt state a lot of classical science seems to be in.


denekin said:
The healer, Hugh MacKimmie healed people of cancer (http://www.amazon.com/Presence-Angels-A-Healers-Life/dp/0977054543). I knew him and watched his career from 1973 until his death a few years ago. I know of no scientific study of his work. When I make the statement that he cured people of cancer, is that statement untrue because it is not scientifically verified? Is it “merely” subjective?

I think you could probably find a better description because there's actually a good reason why it can't be "proved." I'll bet it would be more accurate to say that the doctor-patient combination communicated and interacted and all this was followed in time by a certain cancer disappearing or going into remission or whatever.


denekin said:
In 1974, a friend of mine confided in me that she had a huge lump in her left breast. We went to see the Dowser turned Healer, Wayne Cook, in Salinas. The tumor, which she was terrified of having biopsied, was the size of a small apple. In the course of a twenty minute session with him, it shrank before our eyes to the size of a lentil. She is still alive, in her mid-seventies and that lentil is still there. She is in perfect health. I cannot prove to you that that event took place. Are the facts of this case not objective facts because they have not been proven?

The facts that you mention are objective to my mind.

denekin said:
We don’t have a hard science of Ethics, or Aesthetics, and outside of the Hard Sciences, even of Epistemology. That being said, I can trump any ethical argument you come up with “Prove It!” You cannot prove to me that I shouldn’t steal your car. You can only give me compelling arguments. Now, here on this forum, I suspect we know that this is an absurd argument. We know that it is Objectively True that I shouldn’t steal your car, or anyone else’s.

Well, I dunno. Yes, property theft is an objective crime based in common law, but still, you should probably steal my car if it would make the difference between saving your spouse's life by driving her to an emergency room or suffering to watch her pass away. I would understand and not press charges once I heard your story, but I can only speak for myself.


denekin said:
And yet, there is no hard science of Ethics. If I say, “That’s a beautiful piece of music”, you can respond with, “That’s a subjective evaluation.” Really? I can see how it might well be purely subjective, but why is it not purely objective? Again, we can come up with compelling arguments, but no proofs. I think when people throw out the labels "subjective and objective", they are often trying to derail or support the point at hand. The word subjective often implies a lack of validity whereas the word objective implies inherent validity. So, I can make my case stronger by saying that it comes from objectivity. Or, I can diminish/undermine your case by saying "that's purely subjective".

Well, I'm not going to argue with you, then. :)


denekin said:
As a small tangent, I have always held that Carlos Casteneda was at least as much of a novelist as he was an anthological journalist. You have every right to claim that that is a subjective evaluation. Does that mean it is not objective fact? Is that a stupid question?

Did he write novels? Did he do journalism for at least one anthropological journal? If yes to both, then I'd agree with you that those facts are objective and that the question is not stupid.


denekin said:
Can I point out that scientists often have ragingly subjective motives for holding to an objective truth?

Sure.

denekin said:
What does that do to Objectivity?

Might simply reveal a bias and a rigid thought process.

denekin said:
Now, I hope you can read this and understand that I am not indulging in Hippy New Age sentimentality: The conclusion I have drawn is that my subjectivity is always as objective as it is, and my objectivity is always as subjective as it is. this is NOT a feel good, groovy proposition: It is a never ending challenge to my assumptions, my propositions, and my preferences, and certainly to my perpetual belief (wishful thinking) that conclusions I find appealing are true.

Let me end with this question: Is your response to this post rational?

As rational as I can make it given the complete scenario of me and my circumstances.

denekin said:
Or is your response to this post a reflection of a rationale?

Can it be that too? What are the consequences that follow if it is a reflection of a rationale? That I'm using someone else's thoughts only and therefore what is being said should be summarily dismissed?


denekin said:
You can use the premises of Freud, Jung, Reich, L Ron Hubbard, Gurdjieff, etc etc, to interpret and evaluate my ideas. Each of these thinkers have given us rationales for interpreting what goes on around us. You can come up with an interpretation of me which is cogent, coherent, totally academically plausible and completely wrong.

Agreed.

denekin said:
When are we truly rational? And objective?

Probably when we prefer an independent reality-based analysis over an analysis based on analytical reductionist methods. See the final sentence in the last quote of this post.


denekin said:
Thank you for wading through this meandering epistle.

You're welcome. As promised, there is an underlying ground that may help to explain why western medicine works when it does, the placebo effect and why treatments such as acupuncture work when it does. Hopefully the below quote will reveal the semiotics (sign and signification) connection:

Simon who worked on this subject theoretically describes such interactions as follows: “Whenever a person is labelled as a patient, a specific context is defined, i.e. a social situation with given rules that differ from everyday pattern of behaviour and relations. The role of the ill one and the healthy one ensure that the rules of everyday (e.g. inner familiar) interactions are no longer negotiated freely, but follow a certain cultural determined expectation” (Simon, 1995: 111, my translation).
_http://www.systemic-medicine.eu/Chap/2.2.perception.html#Anchor-Th-14319
.
.
[Charles Sanders] Peirce's work is insofar remarkable as he made the study of signs and signification acceptable. In medicine there is a rudimentary theory of semiotics, found mainly in psychotherapy and in placebo research (Uexküll 2001; Walach/Sadaghiani 2002). In order to illustrate the importance of semiotics for the medical theory and practice I would like to make some examples.

[...]

It is futile and impossible to distinguish the object from its significance. This impossibility is supported by brain scan findings showing that imagination mimics the brain reaction seen during ‘real’ perception. “From a cortical point of view, sensory acquisition and sensory processing are inseparable” (Bensafi 2003). The object and the memory of it, present and past cannot be separated. Neither theoretical nor practical. This is underlined by the finding that imagined pain creates the same neuronal pattern as felt pain (Derbyshire et al 2004, Berns et al 2006).

Signs not only trigger physiological processes, they express them as well in communication. They are tokens for eigen-behaviour as von Foerster called it. Perception, communication and reaction are deeply interlocked with the signs they represent. For example, reading the word ‘smiling’ activates the facial muscles used during smiling (Foroni/Semin 2009). Or, physical purity is strongly connected to moral purity. Participants in a test which had been exposed to a process of physical cleanness found certain moral actions to be less wrong than did participants who had not been exposed to these manipulations (Schnall et al 2008).

It seems that signification is the glue holding communities together. This is why we are able to perceive complex phenomena just by the signs they represent.

[...]

The problem with analytical reductionist methods is that the various contexts of a fact are reduced to one and symbols are excluded by convention. Thus, signification is not observable anymore and is often even regarded as unscientific.
_http://www.systemic-medicine.eu/Chap/3.9.Peirce.html


Every therapy has a semiotic aspect, even the so-called udeno-therapy (do-nothing therapy). Exploring our own adaptive unconscious may help uncover our personal sign-signification relationships. But be prepared to realize just how little control the mind that thinks in words has over anything at all. Binary logic AKA the Cartesian split is a convenient method to maintain a linear, two valued methodology which is suitable for building computers and skyscrapers but which seems very unsuitable for biological processes.

Also worthy of note is that many studies in many domains involve people who are immobilized under stable conditions and fixed postures and this kind of setting alters the neuronal response in the primary visual cortex at least. A mind-body in motion is quite a different "subject" and some see a clear line that Ida Rolf once summarized as: "There ain’t no psychology, just biology."
 
I think it is first important to get a more or less precise definition of "subjective" and "objective." My understanding of these words, and the way I think they are used most often on this forum, is that objective is what is, as it is. Subjective is how we perceive and interpret (and/or experience) what is (closer or farther from the objective truth/reality, as the case may be), but usually not as it is.

Also, it's important to state that, as we are, we can't be truly objective, thus the importance of a network. Getting as close to a 360 degree view, so to speak, will bring us much closer to the objective truth/reality of ourselves and the world "outside" of us. Single experiences and perceptions, and the overall interpretations based on all sorts of social programing (and biological limitations of our level of being and how much access we can have individually to the objective reality) will necessarily be more "subjective" i.e. distorted, as compared to many experiences, perceptions, viewpoints and interpretations. I hope that's not too confusing.

This is essentially a philosophical question (obviously?) and many volumes have been written about these issues. To try to put it in a nutshell, coherent and non-contradictory philosophical frameworks that explain all the data and experiences best, use subjective to mean "experiencing". But the most comprehensive views I'm aware of posit that everything in existence "experiences" to some degree and subjects and objects (and everything else) are all connected by the experiencing of the whole -- most convincingly by information theories that make information "king" and, at least imply a "universal information field". All "transacts"/interacts/transmutes/transfers information with all else, so to speak.

It is too difficult to give a short and simple-to-understand reply, but there are discussions on the forum about philosophy books (some quite recent) that really delve into all this much better than I can. You can search on the forum to get a gist of the arguments against mechanistic materialism and for information/consciousness theories. The overall approach (with a whole lot of supporting evidence and logic) can be summarized by the term "irreducible mind" (and there's a book by that title). Hope this helps some (and was somewhat clear/understandable).

Oh, by the way, the questions about rational and irrational and/or conscious and unconscious processes are also covered well in the Psychology & Cognitive Science board threads (and discussed/recommended books therein) and covered some by Buddy above. Taking a look at those threads can also be fruitful.
 
This question appears to be asking "what is truth?" Our definitions of measurable and non measurable are crude tools and we prefer to have a truth have some finality about it. Yet truth is provisional. I may see a tree, have it's name, genus and all sorts of knowledge a tree and yet when asked "what is a tree?" move from here to here to mystery.


The conversations that throw rocks at that which is subjective or subject it to dismissiveness are political/philosophical and have lost interest in what's true and gone straight into "what's right" territory.


For me the words of Gurdjieff are a choice bit of wisdom. "Believe nothing, verify everything"
 
Thank you all for your responses, especially Buddy.

The issue of subjective/objective and rational/irrational as opposites is very relevant.
I have noticed that our tendency to think in terms of opposites, either this or that, either yes or no, while being postulated as a means to clarity, rarely has the desired result.
When I ask, “Am I a good father?”, or, “Is this a good decision?”, even if I get the academically correct answer, I don’t increase my understanding.
I can come up with an objectively correct answer for subjectively bad reasons.
And either/or-ing the dilemma does not encourage a more dynamic, and precise investigation of the issue.

When we speak of the Subjective versus the Objective, I often have the impression that people see a large box to their left with a sign on it which says “Subjective”, and another box eight feet to the right, with a sign on it that says “Objective”. The same image occurs to me with the rational/irrational supposed dichotomy. Without acknowledging a dynamic continuum, we can’t do justice to the ideas.

I think a central feature to my dilemma is what I perceive as the covert semantics of a corrupt world. The use of the words objective-subjective, rational-irrational, logical-illogical have assumed implications in popular use/abuse that often don’t clarify anything, and are, in fact, often used to obscure issues.

Buddy, thanks for this (below). I will go to that site. This quote bit me hard.
“The problem with analytical reductionist methods is that the various contexts of a fact are reduced to one and symbols are excluded by convention. Thus, signification is not observable anymore and is often even regarded as unscientific.
_http://www.systemic-medicine.eu/Chap/3.9.Peirce.html”

For Ginniebean, yes, the dilemma is about understanding What Is Truth.
And the need to go to What Is Right you mention is a big part of corrupt thinking.
Thank you all.
 
denekin said:
When I ask, “Am I a good father?”, or, “Is this a good decision?”, even if I get the academically correct answer, I don’t increase my understanding.

To my mind, asking questions like “Am I a good father?”, runs contrary to how your memory and human beingness actually operates in the world. The effort involved strikes me as attempting to manufacture truth instead of allowing truth as knowledge to arise internally or emerge via inference or implication from your actions in the real world.

Think about it: "Am I a good father?" is a question about relationships - like between you and your kids. The question is posed in Aristotle's syllogistic form using the law of identity (is-ness aka "denekin is a good father=true or false"). Syllogistic logic barely works for relationship questions, if at all. Better to use what some physicists might call "operationalism" or constraining statements to descriptions of actual real-world happenings.

Here's a thought experiment to show my understanding of the way that works. Let's say I'm recapitulating or contemplating my relationships with my kids when they were young children:

I refused to teach my kids to believe in fictions like Santa Claus, Easter Bunny and tooth fairy.
I teach my kids how to distinguish truth from fiction where, when, and how I'm able.
I experience many joyful family interactions with intelligent, creative children.

Assume the above is true and represents how you've been raising your kids over time. Those behaviors actually happened and can be contemplated with affective results. Doing so may lead your unconscious mind to emotionally evaluate your effectiveness and efficacy for raising healthy, happy children with minimum psychological dysfunction. These evaluations (emotions) would naturally be your feeling of being a good father according to your understanding of "good" in this context and as based on actual events in reality, so the question "Am I a good father?" probably wouldn't even arise, but if it did, it would most likely arise accompanied with an answer via inference, so you wouldn't even need to have someone validate it (although that feels nice too :)).

So, my advice for thinking about yourself in relationships is to practice going over your actual behaviors - what you actually did in the space-time continuum and what other people actually did. For relationships with people, trade the law of identity for law of Process and you'll be trading 'stasis' for 'the dynamic' that you're looking for. Keep your descriptions factually accurate and just quietly listen with, and to, your own heart.


denekin said:
The use of the words objective-subjective, rational-irrational, logical-illogical have assumed implications in popular use/abuse that often don’t clarify anything, and are, in fact, often used to obscure issues.

Indeed. Not only assumed implications, but they can also be presented with implied premises or conclusions. People in day-to-day life cannot take the time to compose logically correct propositions with all premises and conclusions made explicit. In fact, people normally assume that their premises, or mainly their conclusions, are obvious, even though we sometimes have to dig them out ourselves. If they did take the time to think about it though, I think some people may stop themselves in their tracks and duck-tape their own mouths closed for awhile. :)

Some of those darndest things people say have been described as 'memes', and actually, the word enthymeme or 'enthymemic argument' describes most normal daily arguments or statements made in conversation.

Example:

A mother or father who says, "Now, son, it’s eight o’clock, and all little boys have to go to bed at eight o’clock." That omits the premise that the son is a little boy, as well as the conclusion that the son has to go to bed now.

But what if the little boy doesn't have a problem with going to bed but he has a problem in his mind? He wants to understand "why" or have the whole argument exposed to his view because he is learning how to think in words and has an insatiable curiosity? Sounds like the "terrible twos" developmental stage doesn't it? I think that's a critical mind-forming stage and probably about the time in our life when people's "helpfulness" and teachiness starts screwing up our minds.

And the above represents just a tame example.
 
Re: Моя Дилемма: Объективность и Субъективность

I think that it is impossible to be absolutely objective
we all subjective
can only try to be objective in this case will be in some degree of objectivity
 
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