Category: ethics
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Mind and world: Isolation or world-involvement
Recall where we are. We are in the midst of dismantling an erroneous picture of the mind and, in so doing, we are making it possible to inquire into the everyday mental activities we perform: into how they operate, into how they involve us n the world, and into how to bring them out when they…
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Epistemic error: Distrust follows from the unknowability of other minds
I am slowly working my way toward a reconsideration of concepts like ‘inner’ and ‘outer,’ ‘inward’ and ‘outward,’ ‘internal’ and ‘external.’ In most cases, I will take these to be metaphorical descriptions of certain mental activities that, because they couldn’t anyway, can’t reveal themselves to the eye. I would like, as it were, to do away with them or,…
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Light laughter and genuine curiosity
There are two connected attitudes toward living a well-led life that cannot be adopted by anyone who believes that the mind is inherently sickly and prone to illness. (The sickly mind is consistent with the metaphysical view of the world as being bad and ugly.) These attitudes are light laughter and genuine curiosity, and both spring from a…
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The emotions accompanying our mental activities
It is time to put to rest the Platonic assumption that emotions are one kind of activity (or faculty) and reasoning another kind of activity (or faculty). They are not two forces vying against each other, and it is not that one is the ‘slave’ or the ‘master’ of the other: Hume holding that reason…
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Healing the sickly vs. trying to understand another’s character
Recall that this is the invalid and deleterious argument that I have sought to examine: 5.) Because the human mind, like the human body, tends to be sickly and ill, it seeks healing or cures. In the past couple of posts, I have been trying to say some things that I believe to be accurate…