Pieter, 

 

People are always tasking me to find examples of where dualistic thinking leads 
us astray.  I think you have one, here.  The idea of self deception (or any 
deception, for that matter) implies that there is a Truth of the matter outside 
all experience, and knowing that Truth is adaptive.  But if there is no truth 
outside of experience, then the only truth we have is in the form of 
predictions that “come true”, if you see what I mean.  Now, predictions can 
come true in different time frames, long and short, and those time frames 
relate to the persistence of a type of organism depending on the life-span of 
the organism.   Coming true means something quite different to a mouse and an 
elephant.   Now my guy, Peirce, has defined Truth as that upon which belief 
will converge in the very long run.  Where there is no ultimate convergence of 
opinion, in Peirce’s word, there just is no  Truth.  But no organism is  around 
for that asymptote to be reached, so selection is insensitive to it.  So, 
Pragmatically (and pragmatically, as well) we are left with “truths”,  those 
consistencies in experience that endure long enough to have an effect on 
selection. 

 

Thanks, Pieter.  By god that was a New Thought!  Thanks for leading me to it. 

 

Nick 

 

Nick Thompson

 <mailto:thompnicks...@gmail.com> thompnicks...@gmail.com

 <https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/> 
https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

From: Friam <friam-boun...@redfish.com> On Behalf Of Pieter Steenekamp
Sent: Wednesday, August 25, 2021 3:13 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <friam@redfish.com>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] On the: RLY!? side

 

Gillian,

My take on your question of how this thinking, of being an antivaxer, works?

For me, the key lies in understanding human behavior. I know I'm waltzing on 
very thin ice because there are others in this group who have already forgotten 
what I still have to learn about human behavior , so I'm prepared to be 
severely humbled.

This Friam group is excluded of course, but for the rest of humanity, humans 
make decisions subconsciously and then rationalise their decisions with logic. 
Their subconscious minds do not care about logic or whether it makes sense at 
all, it's just about emotions. 

One of the books I'm currently reading is Making Sense of World History by Rick 
Szostakt and I can't verbalise it better than the quote from the book:
"Humans have an incredible capacity for self-deception. Our subconscious 
thoughts can guide us to act in ways that are cowardly, malicious, or jealous 
even if we would consciously disdain cowardice, malice and jealousy. Why did a 
mental capacity for self-deception evolve in humans? One theory is that 
self-deception aids us in other-deception. Humans have been selected for 
cooperation, and therefore selected to give and observe cues regarding 
dishonesty. As discussed above, we will feel guilty for lying (that is, 
violating a cultural value favouring honesty), and display this guilt 
physically. Human cooperation would be difficult if we lacked any ability to 
discern when others were lying. While cooperation depends on some degree of 
confidence in the honesty of others, individual success can nethertheless rely 
on some ability to cheat. In the complex evolution of human beings, then, we 
can expect selection pressure for both (detection of) honesty and dishonesty. 
Difficulty in consciously lying would encourage the cooperation on which human 
societies depend. Ability to lie subconsciously would be individually 
advantageous, and the limits it imposes on human cooperation might not prevent 
collaboration in hunting or gathering or agreeing on group decisions."

I'm not condoning the antivaxers. Personally I consider vaccination technology 
one of humankind's greatest medical inventions ever, and I'm also super excited 
about the potential of mRNA vaccination technology in more effectively fighting 
future viruses. I'm merely trying to explain illogical behavior, that's what 
you asked, not so? 

Pieter

 

On Wed, 25 Aug 2021 at 03:39, Gillian Densmore <gil.densm...@gmail.com 
<mailto:gil.densm...@gmail.com> > wrote:

What can possibly poses people to have a GD tantrum about vaccines.  The 
cynical of me thinks it's basically a tantrum mixed with deranged and dangerous 
levels of trolling. While the "Jedi" side er the small part wanting to see the 
best of these GD raving lunatics. It's, frankly, baffled.

The powers that be say put a GD mask on, and thank antivaxers.  What is pissing 
me off and just straitup confusing the ever living *** me  is how does this 
thinking work? Rejecting a compound that'll keep you healthy? For me: I 
(literally) couldn't get in line fast enough! I think I broke my caregiver who, 
I wanted to drive me their just in case. Meen while the other extreme are these 
people having GD tantrum. It's like: here's something that'll help you not get 
this virus,its free and you just need to get in a line. The first thing they 
say is: omg! free? why that smacks of [something they read someplace]. And ma 
freedoms

 

Can some please help me get just WTF these people are on, or how the hell 
anything about how they think can possibly make any sense?

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