Saturday, May 29, 2010

What is Reason and Rationality?

Reason is that "intellectual faculty that adopts actions to ends," from Anglo-Fr. resoun, O.Fr. raison, from L. rationem (nom. ratio) http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?l=r&…

"Rationality" does come from "ratus, pp. of reri "to reckon, think," from PIE base *rei- "to reason, count" (cf. O.E. rædan "to advise; see read). (O.Fr. raisonable, from L. rationabilis" [ibid]

So where is the "ratio"? It is in the "correspondence theory", of which almost all western philosophers have subscribed, from Plato AND Aristotle (!) right into the 21st century. Relativists, however, go by the coherence theory, or some other epistemological method of straying from this ratio.

The "ratio" is the ratio of correct premises, correct inductions, and correct deductions to the state of objective reality. Objectivism is the modern philosophy based, almost word for word, on this 19th century origination: "in philosophical sense of "the doctrine that knowledge is based on objective reality," first attested 1854; from objective + -ism." http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?l=o&…

What is it that determines this ratio; in other words, who is to say what "objective reality" is? Actually, reality does a good job of telling us what it is. In the Baconian sense that "Nature, to be commanded, must be obeyed," reality tells us what it is that must be obeyed to be commanded; and it is in this obeying that we find out who has the "intellectual faculty that adopts actions to ends,"; and we discover in that faculty just what ends are "natural". It comes down to metaphysics:

"Metaphysics is the foundation of philosophy. Without an explanation or an interpretation of the world around us, we would be helpless to deal with reality. We could not feed ourselves, or act to preserve our lives. The degree to which our metaphysical worldview is correct is the degree to which we are able to comprehend the world, and act accordingly. Without this firm foundation, all knowledge becomes suspect. Any flaw in our view of reality will make it more difficult to live." http://www.importanceofphilosophy.com/Me…

What causes a person to act rationally? Ayn Rand stated that it is volitionally up to each individual to decide whether to follow reason, or to what degree, since it is a "faculty" of mind, will, and epistemological strength.

If a person makes a terrible mistake--let's say, she forgets her baby is in the back seat of a car and it dies of heat exhaustion while she is under anesthesia at the dentist's office, it could be argued whether or not her forgetfulness was rational. But rational people do make such mistakes, and she did not choose to volitionally act against her faculty of reason; for whatever cause, she just forgot the baby. Some people have to take a mild sedative 1/2 hour before going to the dentist. Others have to take an anti-biotic and anti-biotics have been known to cause irrational behavior.

But unfortunately for the baby (and the family) forgetfulness is not necessarily irrationality. Irrationality must be said to be the PURPOSEFUL neglect of "adopting actions to ends," not the human frailty of forgetfulness (or other frailties of mind and character) when we are placed in stressful situations.

Getting stoned and forgetting the baby would be purposeful neglect, i.e., irrationality, because it serves no good ends to use alcohol or drugs when attending a baby. In that case there is no correspondence of actions or ends, to objective reality.

The degree to which that mother's metaphysical worldview is correct is the degree to which she is able to comprehend that her world has a baby in it, and act accordingly.

Other references:

 

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Sunday, May 2, 2010

Shooting Our Way out of Plato's Cave

I like answering questions that others have posed, when I think I can give an Objectivist spin on the answer. And so I read the question of whether we are "reverting" to our animalistic nature, our brute side, with all the violence we seem to see that comes from not only terrorists, but from normal, everyday people. Is this reversion "predestined", asked the question. No explanation was given as to why it would be "predetermined", but the reversion to our brute side made me think in another direction.


No, not predestined. We are simply going backward into the cave of Plato, as we did after St. Augustine incorporated him into Christianity. Now, however, he has been incorporated, since the writings of Kant, into secular thinking.

"Aristotle may be regarded as the cultural barometer of Western history... whenever it fell, so did mankind. The Aristotelian revival of the thirteenth century brought men to the Renaissance. The intellectual counter-revolution turned them back toward the cave of his antipode: Plato." Review of J.H. Randall’s Aristotle http://aynrandlexicon.com/lexicon/aristo…

It was because of the Augustine/Plato connection that the Inquisition used torture, murder, and the killing of witches. 
  • St. Augustine, on the contrary, was still opposed to the use of force... Finally, however, he changed his views... Apropos of his apparent inconsistency it is well to note carefully whom he is addressing...in his writings against the Donatists he upholds the rights of the State: sometimes, he says, a salutary severity would be to the interest of the erring ones themselves and likewise protective of true believers and the community at large. link
  • "No human judge," Augustine wrote, "can read the conscience of the man before him. That is why so many innocent witnesses are tortured to find what truth there is in the alleged guilt of other men. It is even worse when the accused man himself is tortured to find out if he be guilty. Here a man still unconvicted must undergo certain suffering for an uncertain crime –- not because his guilt is known, but because his innocence is unproved. Thus it often happens that the ignorance of the judge turns into tragedy for the innocent party.
 Now the Platonic/Kantian epistemology has turned a different direction, from the religious to the secular, where men (and increasingly, women,) are randomly killing others on campuses and in post offices and other public places. 

Why? They have been taught that it does no good to leave the cave; the flash of rationality and sanity outside the cave is no longer what it was. Those who keep men chained to the cave and cast long shadows are now on the outside of cave where they can catch you, and it is safer inside the cave. 

No one wants to remain in a cave, so they shoot their way out.



The Academy of Metaphysical Naturalism sm, Journal of the Academy of Metaphysical Naturalism ©, The Academy of Metaphysical Naturalism Blogger ©, Academy of Metaphysical Naturalism Blogger Extra © and The Metaphysical Naturalist ©, are the educational arms of The Free Assemblage of Metaphysical Naturalists LLC, and are: ©2008-2010 by Curtis Edward Clark and, Naturalist Academy Publishing, sm 
Ardi Pithecus is a ™ of Free Assemblage of Metaphysical Naturalists LLC