RestlessSoul
Well-Known Member
Agreed.
I would say my belief that my senses are correct is based on reason and logic,; none of which constitutes a world view.
How does logic and reason bring you to that conclusion?
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Agreed.
I would say my belief that my senses are correct is based on reason and logic,; none of which constitutes a world view.
nobodyWho says it is possible to "transcend the limits of human cognition"???
Yes; optical illusions are a real thing, but the vast majority of things I experience I have no choice but to believe they are real; otherwise life becomes unlivable.The cognitive sciences don't support your opinion unfortunately.
Do you experience squares A and B as the same colour? Our brain doesn't work the way you wish it did.
It refers to a person's conception of reality. And we all have one.What is a worldview? And is this something that only applies to religious people?
Each of my 5 senses are confirmed by each other, and when I sense something, everybody around me senses the same thing.How does logic and reason bring you to that conclusion?
Yeah; I think part of the problem is the name, worldview sounds like it is your view of the world (hence the name); but it is obviously much more than your view of the world from what everybody is saying.It refers to a person's conception of reality. And we all have one.
True, it also refers to how we see our place within it. So it's not just a view 'outward', it's also from 'above'.Yeah; I think part of the problem is the name, worldview sounds like it is your view of the world (hence the name); but it is obviously much more than your view of the world from what everybody is saying.
Each of my 5 senses are confirmed by each other, and when I sense something, everybody around me senses the same thing.
Yeah; at a football game you’ve got a thousand different things going on at once, but nobody can notice all 1,000, maybe 200. But the 200 things you notice will not be the same 200 the guy next to you notices. So even though you may not notice everything going on around you, what you do notice is real/correct.Really? Ever been to a football match? Because if you ask 100 football fans, or 1000, who've all been to the same game to tell you what they've just witnessed, you'll get 100 or 1000 different stories.
Yes; optical illusions are a real thing, but the vast majority of things I experience I have no choice but to believe they are real; otherwise life becomes unlivable.
That was not me. I didn't say that. I asked a question.I’m not confused, it’s just that based on how you’ve described it, a worldview is something I don’t have. You mentioned a worldview as a biased lens? All lenses distort reality to various degrees (the clearer the lens, the less distortion), and protects what’s behind it. I don’t want a lens to protect and distort my reality, I would rather experience what is real without a protective lens.
Oh good. Then, we're on.I’m an atheist, and am more than happy to defend my position
I agree with you on this one.I disagree. I believe various people will experience the same thing as it is, but they will disagree on how they judge it. But just because they disagree in their way of judgment does not mean they are not seeing it for what it is
They are not.The cognitive sciences don't support your opinion unfortunately.
Do you experience squares A and B as the same colour? Our brain doesn't work the way you wish it did.
They are not.
Don't be duped. They are not the same shade of gray. The letters are the same shade as the squares.
Can we agree even though optical illusion is real, 99.9% of the time, what our 5 senses tell us is correct? Can we agree that we agree in the real world we must believe what our senses tells us otherwise life becomes unlivable? That when your senses tell you that you are about to pick up a pencil, that it isn't a dangerous snake you are about to pick up? That when you are about to eat something, it is the food as it appears and not a cyanid tablet that will kill you? That when you are walking across a bridge, the protective guard rail is actually there and you are not in danger of accidentally falling to your death? That when you are driving down the road, and it appears you are in the correct lane, going the correct direction; that you aren’t actually driving into incoming traffic? As I said before, in the real world, we must assume things are as they appear according to our 5 senses; otherwise life becomes unlivable.The point is why they work. They work because your brain has to balance accuracy with efficiency and thus has to fill in perceptual gaps.
In other areas of life, which are far more ambiguous and open to (mis) interpretation, we are even more reliant on filling in gaps and perceptual biases.
You can’t see inside people’s minds so you guess at their motivations and judge them. You have very limited knowledge of world events, so you rely heavily on partial information filtered through ideological and experiential lenses. You can’t experience the world and everything in it as the meaningless interaction of atoms in space and time, so you create subjective sources of meaning where none exists.
Like optical illusions, you experience them as real, even if you know they are just illusions.
The idea you don’t have a worldview as you have been unaffected by your culture, socialisation and experiences, that you have complete access to information meaning you don’t need to fill in gaps with guesswork, that you have purely rational processing abilities unaffected by personality, beliefs, values, needs and expectations and can therefore just take everything on its merits and see them as they are is just a conceit.
If you don’t think those are true of you, then you see things through a lens, and this lens distorts events to a degree that depends on the events in question.
If you were to replace the word “worldview” with “opinion”, and opinion with worldview; everything you said would make perfect sense to me. I think we are in agreement, we are just using different words to describe the same thing. It’s not that I don’t want to have a worldview; it’s just that to me it sounds indistinguishable from what I refer to as my opinion.That was not me. I didn't say that. I asked a question.
A worldview does not have to be biased. A worldview requires views, opinions, ideas, etc., to exist.
It doesn't come out of nowhere, and form views, opinions, ideas, etc., but after it develops, it can shape your views, opinions, ideas, etc
You so much want to not have a worldview, d you.
Can we agree even though optical illusion is real, 99.9% of the time, what our 5 senses tell us is correct? Can we agree that we agree in the real world we must believe what our senses tells us otherwise life becomes unlivable? That when your senses tell you that you are about to pick up a pencil, that it isn't a dangerous snake you are about to pick up? That when you are about to eat something, it is the food as it appears and not a cyanid tablet that will kill you? That when you are walking across a bridge, the protective guard rail is actually there and you are not in danger of accidentally falling to your death? That when you are driving down the road, and it appears you are in the correct lane, going the correct direction; that you aren’t actually driving into incoming traffic? As I said before, in the real world, we must assume things are as they appear according to our 5 senses; otherwise life becomes unlivable.
Just so I can understand what you mean by this; can you give an example of how our my senses are not a true reflection of reality?Your senses are a functional evaluation of the parts of our surroundings that we have evolved to be sensitive too.
They function well enough to keep us alive most of the time, but keeping us alive requires biases, heuristics and energy saving shortcuts. They are not a "true" reflection of reality, just a limited approximation of some of it.
True! My judgment of other people, political events, and other experiences are usually based on my experience with those thingsBut even if , for the sake of discussion, we said "our basic senses are more or less correct", this says nothing about how we view other people, political events, everyday experiences, etc.
No; I am far more likely to have a conversation with the person and form opinions based on my dealings with themYou can’t see inside people’s minds so you guess at their motivations and judge them.
I like getting my information from different sources, especially opposing sources(like Fox news and CNN) assuming they are both exaggerating and assuming the truth must be somewhere between the twoYou have very limited knowledge of world events, so you rely heavily on partial information filtered through ideological and experiential lenses.
I never suggested I wasn’t affected by those things, that’s how I form many of my opinions.You can’t experience the world and everything in it as the meaningless interaction of atoms in space and time, so you create subjective sources of meaning where none exists.
You don't seriously think you have been unaffected by your culture, socialisation and experiences,
Filling gaps with guesswork? What does that mean?that you have complete access to information meaning you don’t need to fill in gaps with guesswork,
My beliefs, values, needs, and other stuff you mentioned do not effect how I see them, they effect how I judge them.that you have purely rational processing abilities unaffected by personality, beliefs, values, needs and expectations and can therefore just take everything on its merits and see them as they are, do you?
Just so I can understand what you mean by this; can you give an example of how our my senses are not a true reflection of reality?
True! My judgment of other people, political events, and other experiences are usually based on my experience with those things
No; I am far more likely to have a conversation with the person and form opinions based on my dealings with them
I like getting my information from different sources, especially opposing sources(like Fox news and CNN) assuming they are both exaggerating and assuming the truth must be somewhere between the two
I never suggested I wasn’t affected by those things, that’s how I form many of my opinions.
Filling gaps with guesswork? What does that mean?
My beliefs, values, needs, and other stuff you mentioned do not effect how I see them, they effect how I judge them.