Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Feb 22, 2020 3:49 am
RCSaunders wrote: ↑Sat Feb 22, 2020 2:42 am
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Feb 21, 2020 8:18 pm
The problem there, RC, is that "rational" describes only a
process, not a
content. "Rationality" only tells us how to think consistently and coherently
once we've already got the basic facts in place...it doesn't tell us anything about what those facts
may be.
One can only be "rational on the basis of X or Y." Not just purely "rational" on no basis at all.
It is only a problem for someone who does not know what reason is or what a rational being is.
Quite the opposite is true.
"Rational" is what anybody is who follows through on the logic of their own ontological beliefs. However, the ontology is up for debate. People who fail to see that imagine that everybody who disagrees with them must necessarily be "irrational." But this is their folly. For they mistake their own chosen ontological suppositions for the only ones possible. And thus, they cannot even imagine why anybody sensible would think differently than they do.
Who does that. My assumption is that every human being is a rational being, meaning they are capable of reason. I have emphasized that in almost every comment I've made. Those whose views are mistaken have just reasoned incorrectly.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Feb 21, 2020 8:18 pm
Your view is entirely dependent on two things...not only whatever view of "human nature" a person takes, but on your ability to prove that it is appropriate to act on that supposed "nature," rather than to resist or modify it.
Prove to whom?
To yourself, if to no one else: because beliefs you have no rational grounds to explain to yourself are exposed to yourself thereby as irrational beliefs. But also, to prove to anybody who is skeptical that you are right.
You keep saying that, but no one has to prove to anyone else their own life is theirs to live as they choose for their own self-interest.
They can only fool themselves.
It seems to me that those who believe they can have knowledge without reason, no matter what they call it, faith, intuition, a priori, or inspiration, are fooling themselves.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Feb 22, 2020 3:49 am
They neither created themselves nor, barring suicide, choose the time and circumstances of their own end; and in the middle, most of their circumstances are not within their control. Much, in life, is a "given," a set of circumstances with which the autonomous individual must learn to interact, if he is to find any success in his personal choices.
You, for example, have not chosen your ethnicity, your gender, your parentage, the situation of your birth, your family, your early education, your physiological particulars, your potential limit level of talent in mathematics or art or music, the colour of your own eyes, your maximal height and weight, your potential for athleticism, your biological predisposition for diseases like cancer, the specific people who you will meet and not meet, and so on. All those are circumstances you just have to accept, and then figure out how to work with or work around, to get what you hope to get out of life.
What is the point of all these irrelevancies. Of course every human being is different, with different physical and psychological characteristics and abilities. They have nothing to do with what is morally right or wrong, they only prove that no list of "do's" and "don'ts" will ever be right for everyone, because everyone is different.
Moral values cannot be proscriptions and prescriptions. Moral values must be principles pertain to what is common or universal to all human beings, their volitional rational nature, not to some irrelevancies like differences in ethnicity, or sex (gender only pertains to language), or physiological and psychological differences.
All those differences you describe are exactly what you called some of the, "potentials." None of them dictate what any individual's life must or can be. Within the limits of physical possibility, and one's own physical and psychological abilities there is no limit to what one can make of their life.
What no human being can do is fail to learn what reality and their own nature require for them to do to survive and flourish or fail to meet those requirements and survive.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Feb 21, 2020 8:18 pm
So if human nature is intrinsically selfish, that doesn't show we do well to be selfish; what it begs is the question, is selfishness a desirable or undesirable feature of human nature, and should we resist it or amplify it?
Human life is
not behaviorally intrinsic anything. [/quote]
Well, Rand thought it was inherently at least supposed to be rational, and rational meant "self-interested." So human beings, according to Rand, if they are being what human beings are supposed to be, are motivated by "rational selfishness." So she disagreed with you about that. She thought human nature, rightly interpreted, had at least that one intrinsic property.
It seems you're not such a Randian after all, then.[/quote]
Well I'm not a "Randian," and I'm not an Objectivist, and have never claimed to be. I've written extensively criticizing Rand's philosophy. But I have studied her philosophy and her, as a person, because both are very interesting, especially because so many people hate her with such vehemence, which is bewildering, since, as far as I know, she was never a threat to anyone, except those who did not wish to have their own irrationalities (mystics of all varieties, collectivists, anti-intellecutuals, and most philosophers) closely examined. I think she is most despised by those who hate anyone who actually achieves something by their own independent effort. It is very difficult for them to claim she only achieved what she achieved by what she learned from others and to simultaneously claim she was in defiance of what all those others taught.
Even if Rand, or anyone else, did believe what you say, why would you bring that up to me. You know I do not accept any so-called authority on any issue. (Do you just conveniently forget what others have said?)
Now I suggest you not bring Rand up again unless you wish to continue exposing your ignorance of what she actually taught and believed. The only, "intrinsic," attribute Rand believed human beings have is their, "living, rational, volitional nature." Everything else has to be developed, because nothing is given, except the necessity and ability to learn, think, and chose what one does and is.
Nothing is given to man on earth except a potential and the material on which to actualize it. The potential is a superlative machine: his consciousness; but it is a machine without a spark plug, a machine of which his own will has to be the spark plug, the self-starter and the driver; he has to discover how to use it and he has to keep it in constant action. The material is the whole of the universe, with no limits set to the knowledge he can acquire and to the enjoyment of life he can achieve. But everything he needs or desires has to be learned, discovered and produced by him—by his own choice, by his own effort, by his own mind . . . .
That which [man’s] survival requires is set by his nature and is not open to his choice. What is open to his choice is only whether he will discover it or not, whether he will choose the right goals and values or not. He is free to make the wrong choice, but not free to succeed with it. He is free to evade reality, he is free to unfocus his mind and stumble blindly down any road he pleases, but not free to avoid the abyss he refuses to see. Knowledge, for any conscious organism, is the means of survival; to a living consciousness, every “is” implies an “ought.” Man is free to choose not to be conscious, but not free to escape the penalty of unconsciousness: destruction. Man is the only living species that has the power to act as his own destroyer—and that is the way he has acted through most of his history. [The Virtue of Selfishness, “The Objectivist Ethics.”]
Man exists and his mind exists. Both are part of nature, both possess a specific identity. The attribute of volition does not contradict the fact of identity, just as the existence of living organisms does not contradict the existence of inanimate matter. Living organisms possess the power of self-initiated motion, which inanimate matter does not possess; man’s consciousness possesses the power of self-initiated motion in the realm of cognition (thinking), which the consciousnesses of other living species do not possess. But just as animals are able to move only in accordance with the nature of their bodies, so man is able to initiate and direct his mental action only in accordance with the nature (the identity) of his consciousness. His volition is limited to his cognitive processes; he has the power to identify (and to conceive of rearranging) the elements of reality, but not the power to alter them. He has the power to use his cognitive faculty as its nature requires, but not the power to alter it nor to escape the consequences of its misuse. He has the power to suspend, evade, corrupt or subvert his perception of reality, but not the power to escape the existential and psychological disasters that follow. (The use or misuse of his cognitive faculty determines a man’s choice of values, which determine his emotions and his character. It is in this sense that man is a being of self-made soul.) [Philosophy: Who Needs It, “The Metaphysical and the Man-Made.”]
Another interesting point to be noted here: man is given his entity as clay to be shaped, he is given his body, his tool (the mind) and the mechanism of consciousness (emotions, subconscious, memory) through which his mind will work. But the rest depends on him. His spirit, that is, his own essential character, must be created by him. (In this sense, it is almost as if he were born as an abstraction, with the essence and rules of that abstraction (man) to serve as his guide and standard--—but he must make himself concrete by his own effort, he must create himself.) [The Journals of Ayn Rand 13 - "Notes While Writing: 1947-1952"]