Irrationality is just less instrumentally rational—less likely to win. You seem to have split rational and irrational into two categories, and I think this is just a methodological mistake. To understand and compare the two, you need to put both on the same scale, and then show how they have different measures on that scale.
Do you mean by “irrationality” something like a biased way of thinking whose existence can be objectively determined? I don’t mean that by irrationality. I mean things whose existence has no rational justification, such as stream of consciousness. Things like dreams. If you are in a dream, and open your (working) wrist watch, and find out it contains coins instead of clockwork, and behave as if that were normal, there is no rational justification for you doing so—at least none that you know of while seeing the dream.
Also, now that I look at more of your responses, it seems that you have your own highly developed theory, with your own highly developed language, and you’re speaking that language to us. We don’t speak your language. If you’re going to try to talk to people in a new language, you need to start simple, like “this is a ball”, so that we have some meaningful context from which to understand “I hit the ball.”
You’re perfectly right. I’d like to go for the dialogue option, but obviously, if it’s too exhausting for you because my point of view is too remote, nobody will participate. That’s all I’m offering right now, though—dialogue. Maybe something else later, maybe not. I’ve had some fun already despite losing a lot of “karma”.
The problem with simple examples is that, for example, I’d have to start a discussion on what is “useful”. It seems to me the question is almost the same as “What is Quality?” The Metaphysics of Quality insists that Quality is undefinable. Although I’ve noticed some on LW have liked Pirsig’s book Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, it seems this would already cause a debate in its own right. I’d prefer not to get stuck on that debate and risk missing the chance of saying what I actually wanted to say.
If that discussion, however, is necessary, then I’d like to point out irrational behavior, that is, a somewhat uncritical habit of doing the first thing that pops into my mind, has been very useful for me. It has improved my efficiency in doing things I could rationally justify despite not actually performing the justification except rarely. If I am behaving that way—without keeping any justifications in my mind—I would say I am operating in the subjective or mystical continuum. When I do produce the justification, I do it in the objective or normative continuum by having either one of those emerge from the earlier subjective or mystical continuum via strong emergence. But I am not being rational before I have done this in spite of ending up with results that later appear rationally good.
buybuydandavis said:
Do you mean by “irrationality” something like a biased way of thinking whose existence can be objectively determined? I don’t mean that by irrationality. I mean things whose existence has no rational justification, such as stream of consciousness. Things like dreams. If you are in a dream, and open your (working) wrist watch, and find out it contains coins instead of clockwork, and behave as if that were normal, there is no rational justification for you doing so—at least none that you know of while seeing the dream.
You’re perfectly right. I’d like to go for the dialogue option, but obviously, if it’s too exhausting for you because my point of view is too remote, nobody will participate. That’s all I’m offering right now, though—dialogue. Maybe something else later, maybe not. I’ve had some fun already despite losing a lot of “karma”.
The problem with simple examples is that, for example, I’d have to start a discussion on what is “useful”. It seems to me the question is almost the same as “What is Quality?” The Metaphysics of Quality insists that Quality is undefinable. Although I’ve noticed some on LW have liked Pirsig’s book Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, it seems this would already cause a debate in its own right. I’d prefer not to get stuck on that debate and risk missing the chance of saying what I actually wanted to say.
If that discussion, however, is necessary, then I’d like to point out irrational behavior, that is, a somewhat uncritical habit of doing the first thing that pops into my mind, has been very useful for me. It has improved my efficiency in doing things I could rationally justify despite not actually performing the justification except rarely. If I am behaving that way—without keeping any justifications in my mind—I would say I am operating in the subjective or mystical continuum. When I do produce the justification, I do it in the objective or normative continuum by having either one of those emerge from the earlier subjective or mystical continuum via strong emergence. But I am not being rational before I have done this in spite of ending up with results that later appear rationally good.