continuation of being reasonable thread
Posted: Sun Sep 18, 2022 8:03 pm
as noted before, this question of being "reasonable" vs
being "unreasonable" comes down to our childhood indoctrinations,
our education, our family, our society and/or state's values....
Depending on who is doing the counting, a statement such
as "there is a god" can be both reasonable or unreasonable...
and how are to know? What criteria can we use to judge such
statements?
We have but two ways to understand knowledge.... theory or
experience... we can define a Christian by how they understand
the theory of being Christian or we can judge them by their
actual practice of being Christian... we can judge them within
experience... the bible says, "Everyone is welcomed at God's party"
(luke 14:15-24) and within that saying, we can judge a Christian
by how closely they follow the bible... we can use experience to
judge a Christian... experience can be a way to judge people,
actions, events, beliefs...
I am a father.. and in raising my daughter, what has more use or value,
theory or experience... I can explain until the cows come home about
stoves and how hot they are and what might happen if she touches
the stove... but frankly until she touches a stove, experiences a stove
my daughter will not understand a stove and its dangers...
the fact is human beings learn from experiences far more than from theory...
education is experience based, not theory based...and what do experiences
tell us about ''reasonable'' and ''unreasonable'' people?...
Do we educate children to be ''reasonable'' or ''unreasonable'' and how we
judge that? One such criteria is getting with people... and as human beings
are social creatures, and that we must, must engage with other human beings
in order for us to survive, meet our needs, to find love, to procreate, to
become educated, to find happiness, in other words, we cannot become
human beings without the impact and influence of other human beings..
human being must, must engage with other human beings..
if there is a biological necessity, that is it, the human experience
is one where we must interact and engage with other human beings..
and the only way that works if people are "reasonable" with each other...
in other words, if we are difficult or demanding or narcissistic
we will create difficulties in our interactions with other human beings....
the key to success of being human lies in our working with and being part
of the human race... if we get along with, if we can communicate with,
if we can work with, if we want to survive, succeed, prosper as a human being,
we must be able to get along with other human beings... and much of
the human experience, means in a very real sense, that we must
"go with the flow"... to survive as a human being, we must be able
to get along with and work with other human beings.. the fact is,
to survive, we must be "reasonable" with other human beings...
to accommodate, to be understanding and become accustomed to
others..
thus experience demonstrates to us how we are to engage and act
with other human beings...not theory, but actual usage...
within real behaviors and actions with others...
experience is our guide into how we are to act and behave....
not theory...
Kropotkin
being "unreasonable" comes down to our childhood indoctrinations,
our education, our family, our society and/or state's values....
Depending on who is doing the counting, a statement such
as "there is a god" can be both reasonable or unreasonable...
and how are to know? What criteria can we use to judge such
statements?
We have but two ways to understand knowledge.... theory or
experience... we can define a Christian by how they understand
the theory of being Christian or we can judge them by their
actual practice of being Christian... we can judge them within
experience... the bible says, "Everyone is welcomed at God's party"
(luke 14:15-24) and within that saying, we can judge a Christian
by how closely they follow the bible... we can use experience to
judge a Christian... experience can be a way to judge people,
actions, events, beliefs...
I am a father.. and in raising my daughter, what has more use or value,
theory or experience... I can explain until the cows come home about
stoves and how hot they are and what might happen if she touches
the stove... but frankly until she touches a stove, experiences a stove
my daughter will not understand a stove and its dangers...
the fact is human beings learn from experiences far more than from theory...
education is experience based, not theory based...and what do experiences
tell us about ''reasonable'' and ''unreasonable'' people?...
Do we educate children to be ''reasonable'' or ''unreasonable'' and how we
judge that? One such criteria is getting with people... and as human beings
are social creatures, and that we must, must engage with other human beings
in order for us to survive, meet our needs, to find love, to procreate, to
become educated, to find happiness, in other words, we cannot become
human beings without the impact and influence of other human beings..
human being must, must engage with other human beings..
if there is a biological necessity, that is it, the human experience
is one where we must interact and engage with other human beings..
and the only way that works if people are "reasonable" with each other...
in other words, if we are difficult or demanding or narcissistic
we will create difficulties in our interactions with other human beings....
the key to success of being human lies in our working with and being part
of the human race... if we get along with, if we can communicate with,
if we can work with, if we want to survive, succeed, prosper as a human being,
we must be able to get along with other human beings... and much of
the human experience, means in a very real sense, that we must
"go with the flow"... to survive as a human being, we must be able
to get along with and work with other human beings.. the fact is,
to survive, we must be "reasonable" with other human beings...
to accommodate, to be understanding and become accustomed to
others..
thus experience demonstrates to us how we are to engage and act
with other human beings...not theory, but actual usage...
within real behaviors and actions with others...
experience is our guide into how we are to act and behave....
not theory...
Kropotkin