We’ll put all the way through.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Oct 21, 2019 10:33 pmI would put it another way. "If you thinking is not supported by your action, how much do you really believe what you think you believe?"commonsense wrote: ↑Mon Oct 21, 2019 10:17 pmYes, it is. Another question is: shouldn’t your thinking support your action?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Oct 21, 2019 5:47 pm So the question really is, "How much to you believe that reductional, anti-materialist explanations of material phenomena are credible, given that practically anybody will instinctively act as if they're not."
Good question.![]()
Well, an involuntary action is more likely to reflect what you actually believe.To be sure, your thinking is deliberate, while your action, in this scenario, is automatic. Still, shouldn’t your involuntary act guide your deliberations?
It's like the woman who says, "My husband may have hit me, but he's sorry, and I'm sure he'll never do it again," but when he comes home and slams the door, she jumps anyway. What she says she knows is not what she really knows. And her instinct shows what she knows most deeply.
Should it always be the case that our instincts guide our beliefs as well as our acts?
No, because we do have good and bad instincts. Instinct can reveal what we DO believe; it cannot always tell us what we SHOULD believe.
But you're quite right that our instinctual reaction is more likely to reveal what we deeply believe than the stuff we say is.
That's different than saying instinct should dictate action, however.
Sure. But that would be a coerced situation. The great thing about an instinctive reaction is it's not coerced: you can react any way your instinct inclines you.If someone held a gun to your head and demanded that you must either defend or deny dualism, wouldn’t the circumstances direct your reply?
Perhaps. But we ought to be circumspect about how it should "inform" the intellectual. It can be revealing of what we are actually believing at the moment; but instincts can't be guaranteed to be right, because deep beliefs can't be guaranteed to be right either, and instincts are, as we said, only revelations of those deepest beliefs.If philosophy is in any way supposed to help us understand our world, shouldn’t the instinctual inform the intellectual?
"Revelations" but not "justifications." Again, I would say instinct tells us what we DO happen to believe at a given time, not always what we OUGHT TO believe. People can be wrong, even instinctively.
Now I’m wondering if I have conflated deeply ingrained instincts with deeply held feelings.
The battered woman who proclaims there’s no danger feels afraid of her husband’s behavior and her instinctive reaction to the feeling of being afraid is to cower. Maybe.
On further inspection, I could be splitting hairs in finding a distinction between instinct and feeling.
