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Perhaps our brains can't handle the truth thus we deceive ourselves with our own version of it. Is it safe to say even our own brains don't think truth matters even if we are trying to convince ourselves it does?
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What's the difference between "truth" and "facts?"
I take your point here, facts are some form of verifiable information. Truth is the conclusions we draw based on a set of facts. Objectively, however, many if not most of the "truth" are conclusions that, if given more information, could be verified and become facts. Whether or not someone makes conclusions based on their bias is irrelevant to the actual facts that combine to form truths. "Truth" is just a incomplete collection of facts.
I am reminded of the parable of the elephant and the blind men. (I believe Uctdorf used it, IIRC in a talk once.) While each of the men is dealing with an incomplete set of Facts, they all come up with a different Truth.
This is my conclusion as well.jfro18 wrote: ↑Thu Jan 31, 2019 4:47 pm So I just do not believe truth matters or that facts are relevant anymore. The only way that becomes true is if you concede that truth is flexible and that facts are whatever you want them to be.
Maybe I'm just jaded from watching people through politics and this church, but I just do not believe truth matters anymore unless the people on the other end is actually open to receiving it.
This is a great example.slavereeno wrote: ↑Thu Jan 31, 2019 3:02 pm I am reminded of the parable of the elephant and the blind men. (I believe Uctdorf used it, IIRC in a talk once.) While each of the men is dealing with an incomplete set of Facts, they all come up with a different Truth.
How do you both explain cognitive dissonance? Humans experience actual emotional pain when their mental models aren't self-consistent. The kicker is that those mental models include memories and impressions of real-world observations, so cognitive dissonance continually pushes us toward more accurate mental models. There's an analogous reward pathway for making correct predictions, too.
jfro18 wrote: ↑Thu Jan 31, 2019 4:47 pm So I just do not believe truth matters or that facts are relevant anymore. The only way that becomes true is if you concede that truth is flexible and that facts are whatever you want them to be.
Maybe I'm just jaded from watching people through politics and this church, but I just do not believe truth matters anymore unless the people on the other end is actually open to receiving it.
Ok, I get it and concede that neither truth nor facts matter to many individuals or even entire groups of people for great periods of time. The pursuit of truth can feel exasperating and useless at times. When Galileo was defending the Copernican view of heliocentrism, I am sure he felt this way as he was placed under house arrest. Nevertheless the truth eventually won out. I still think that we should pursue truth, it may not bear fruit in our lifetime or with our loved ones, to jfro's point, but its a worthy pursuit. I am probably all kinds of hypocritical making this my hill to die on, but there you have it.
I agree with this 100%. Again I'm going back to the 2016 campaign because this is where I really ran into this for the first time in a widespread way, but I had people I was really friendly with that just hated me because I was trying to "out" Trump's issues with Republicans. I got messages from people calling me a "cuck" or "jew" constantly, which was great since I have never been Jewish.slavereeno wrote: ↑Thu Jan 31, 2019 5:47 pm Ok, I get it and concede that neither truth nor facts matter to many individuals or even entire groups of people for great periods of time. The pursuit of truth can feel exasperating and useless at times. When Galileo was defending the Copernican view of heliocentrism, I am sure he felt this way as he was placed under house arrest. Nevertheless the truth eventually won out. I still think that we should pursue truth, it may not bear fruit in our lifetime or with our loved ones, to jfro's point, but its a worthy pursuit. I am probably all kinds of hypocritical making this my hill to die on, but there you have it.
I'll have to read more about this. I'm familiar with the concept but concede I know nothing about it enough to have a semi intelligent conversation. I'll come back to this in a day or two.Reuben wrote:Is anybody here familiar with particle swarm optimization? Humanity is a particle swarm. We drag each other around in the space of mental models, looking not for the most accurate ones, but for the fittest. Applicable truth is always more fit than falsehood - eventually, on average. When enough of us find some truth, the rest of us tend to converge to it... eventually, on average.
I rather disagree. First, humans are terrible observers. Our real world observations gave us flat Earth, earth at the center of everything. Our hyperactive agency detection gives us paredoelia, gods behind the wind, thunder, comets as harbingers. The dissonance doesn't push us to truth, just an explanation we find acceptable.Reuben wrote: ↑Thu Jan 31, 2019 5:46 pm
How do you both explain cognitive dissonance? Humans experience actual emotional pain when their mental models aren't self-consistent. The kicker is that those mental models include memories and impressions of real-world observations, so cognitive dissonance continually pushes us toward more accurate mental models. There's an analogous reward pathway for making correct predictions, too.
What do you think will drive that change? People become more educated and tired of the current bullsh#t in society/politics and start to think about stuff and vote with their wallets and feet?dogbite wrote:Truth can matter, individually, but it doesn't matter inherently in human life generally so far. That may change.
I agree. I'll fall back on my earlier statement that integrity matters. Ironically some people would call me out for a lack of integrity because I haven't walked away from the church considering my lack of belief. I'd argue that my integrity keeps me doing what I'm doing for my family's sake. I hope I'm not damaging my integrity by living on the edge of Mormonism while hoping loved ones figure it out someday.jfro18 wrote: ↑Fri Feb 01, 2019 9:21 am It really comes down to how you define truth.
Is truth only truth if definitively backed up by facts?
So flat earth is not possible to be truth because we have proof that it's not flat, but who knows if Joseph Smith got a visit in a grove?
So maybe it's not if truth matters, but how we define it? Or how confident we are in that truth?
I think the truth is that Joseph Smith made it all up because the evidence all points to that, but I can't prove it beyond taking someone through the pattern that shows where Joseph got it wrong whenever he made a claim that we can now judge against it.
But even then facts don't matter because people will not acknowledge them if they contradict their belies.
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Again, I am super jaded here... but I just don't think truth matters and while facts *matter* in theory, they don't matter if people are willing to replace them with emotions.
I don't know why anyone would question your integrity for being able to keep a foot out of the church and a foot in for your family. That's not an integrity issue - that's just trying to make a tricky situation work as you hope for them to put one foot out with you.Red Ryder wrote: ↑Fri Feb 01, 2019 9:47 am I agree. I'll fall back on my earlier statement that integrity matters. Ironically some people would call me out for a lack of integrity because I haven't walked away from the church considering my lack of belief. I'd argue that my integrity keeps me doing what I'm doing for my family's sake. In hope I'm not damaging my integrity by living on the edge of Mormonism while hoping loved ones figure it out someday.
Reuben - I read up on the Swarm Optimization stuff last night and you make a valid point above. It's interesting that it occurs in nature and creates a pattern that can be systematically recreated through an algorithm. I wonder if anyone has applied that to the stock market and investor behaviors. Thanks for the breadcrumb there. I'm going to keep reading.
The exmo hard liner crowd does this all the time. Especially those who fall fast and hard. I guess it's a personality thing.jfro18 wrote:I don't know why anyone would question your integrity for being able to keep a foot out of the church and a foot in for your family. That's not an integrity issue - that's just trying to make a tricky situation work as you hope for them to put one foot out with you.
My guess would be the merging of mind and technology in pursuit of economic viability of the individual. But that's heavily influenced by my biases such as my view of the likelihood of the singularity, hard or soft. Assumes that close matching of your worldview and data collection to reality makes you more economically viable and productive. That is not necessarily true in much of our economy today. Consider Pro Sports, entertainment, for example. Disproportionate success and influence for often nearly illiterate world views.Red Ryder wrote: ↑Fri Feb 01, 2019 9:39 amWhat do you think will drive that change? People become more educated and tired of the current bullsh#t in society/politics and start to think about stuff and vote with their wallets and feet?dogbite wrote:Truth can matter, individually, but it doesn't matter inherently in human life generally so far. That may change.