No, they just look like they’re doing it; saying humans are athropomorphizing would attribute more intentionality to humans than is justified by the data.
Well, the mind seems to. I’m using “mind” here to mean the bit that says “I” and could reflect on itself it if it bothered to and thinks it runs the show and comes up with rationalisations for whatever it does. Listening to these rationalisations, promises, etc. as anything other than vague pointers to behaviour is exceedingly foolish. Occasionally you can encourage the person to use their “mind” less annoyingly.
I think they anthropomorphise as some sort of default reflex. Possibly somewhere halfway down the spinal cord, certainly not around the cerebrum.
I may be wrong, but I think that SilasBarta is pointing out, maybe with some tongue-in-cheek, that you can’t accuse humans of anthropomorphizing other humans without yourself being guilty of anthropomorphizing those humans whom you accuse.
I am finding benefits from trying not to anthropomorphise myself. That is, rather than thinking of my mind as being in control of my actions, I think of myself as a blob of lard which behaves in certain ways. This has actually been a more useful model, so that my mind (which appears to be involved in typing this, though I am quite ready to be persuaded otherwise) can get the things it thinks it wants to happen happening.
Yep. Anthropomorphizing humans is a disasterously wrong thing to do. Too bad everyone does it.
No, they just look like they’re doing it; saying humans are athropomorphizing would attribute more intentionality to humans than is justified by the data.
Well, the mind seems to. I’m using “mind” here to mean the bit that says “I” and could reflect on itself it if it bothered to and thinks it runs the show and comes up with rationalisations for whatever it does. Listening to these rationalisations, promises, etc. as anything other than vague pointers to behaviour is exceedingly foolish. Occasionally you can encourage the person to use their “mind” less annoyingly.
I think they anthropomorphise as some sort of default reflex. Possibly somewhere halfway down the spinal cord, certainly not around the cerebrum.
I may be wrong, but I think that SilasBarta is pointing out, maybe with some tongue-in-cheek, that you can’t accuse humans of anthropomorphizing other humans without yourself being guilty of anthropomorphizing those humans whom you accuse.
Edit: Looks like this was the intended reading.
I am finding benefits from trying not to anthropomorphise myself. That is, rather than thinking of my mind as being in control of my actions, I think of myself as a blob of lard which behaves in certain ways. This has actually been a more useful model, so that my mind (which appears to be involved in typing this, though I am quite ready to be persuaded otherwise) can get the things it thinks it wants to happen happening.
I was joking. :-P
Ha ha only serious ;-p