What do you think the INTPs societal purpose is? What are we here for? Are we really just knowledge-builders, or something more?
3 pounds of flax?First things first. What's the purpose of society?
3 pounds of flax?
I hope I don't have one.
3 pounds of flax?
That's mad scientist complex, but yes I agree.You might have enjoyed yourself while working on a computer, or while designing something, or coming up with some kind of system. I think that itself is purpose: Designing and watching it come to life.
How are we going to fit in in the first place with that attitude?The problem is, how are we going to find our purpose in a society that we don't fit in?
The more fundamental question is: why does one persist in attempting to fit in to a society which one knows one does not fit into?
Your purpose is whatever you decide it is.
See I am a big believer in fate. You can choose your external "purpose", but it won't be satisfying internally unless you actually care about it, and you can't force care. Your purpose, at any given moment, could be nothing else but what you care about most deeply. It's hard to find that niche though where the externals match the internals - I'm yet to find any real purpose, well, certainly not in my job/occupation.
Basic drives, perhaps?The more fundamental question is: why does one persist in attempting to fit in to a society which one knows one does not fit into?
Well your purpose is what you care about, and you can't choose what you care about. How could you? How could you choose what you value? The whole idea of values is that they underlie your choices.
Do you then believe that you were born with values instilled in you? When we first enter the world the only desires we really have are physical ones like hunger. Our responses to stimuli are comparable to any other animal's since we simply don't have the same cognitive abilities that adults do. At that stage in our life we can't possess values, we're not complicated or developed enough.
You could say that older children (let's say between 5 and 10) possess values. They've probably learned that family is important, that it's wrong to hurt people important to them, and beliefs like that are partly instinctual and partly instilled by the society in which they are growing up in. But these are still only very basic values and beliefs that are developing at this point in time.
It seems to me that real, lasting values come into being later in life through our awareness of the world. They are a response. We take in our experiences, our observations, and either consciously or unconsciously form a system of beliefs. If what we care about is not a choice, how do you account for the differences in values adopted by people throughout the world, or why our values often change later in life?
They are a response. We take in our experiences, our observations, and either consciously or unconsciously form a system of beliefs.
I question this. Not implying that you're wrong, more to wondering about this.In terms of moral values, well I think they work in just the same manner. They arise from experiences and preferences outside of our control, and hence are not chosen.
If one 'feels' one should fight for animal rights or if one logically rationalises this choice, the choice is still made. What would be the difference and is one method better or worse than the other?There is a big difference between someone who chases after a purpose from his gut, from his heart, and another who chases it from a rational choice.
I question this. Not implying that you're wrong, more to wondering about this.
If one experiences an event which prompts a moral decision, where does this decision arrive from 'outside of one's control'? One may have an immediate emotional or physical reaction to this event, but the morality of the event is an internal judgement upon one's conscious reflection concerning the event. One may immediately think 'That is evil', but where does this judgemental thought arise from? Values already consciously held? Is an act inherently good or evil, or is the morality of an event afixed consciously subsequent to the event on a subjective basis?
If one 'feels' one should fight for animal rights or if one logically rationalises this choice, the choice is still made. What would be the difference and is one method better or worse than the other?
Well, you can stake that claim
Good work is the key to good fortune
Winners take that praise
Losers seldom take that blame
If they don't take that game
And sometimes the winner takes nothing
We draw our own designs
But fortune has to make that frame
We go out in the world and take our chances
Fate is just the weight of circumstances
That's the way that lady luck dances
Roll the bones
Why are we here?
Because we're here
Roll the bones
Why does it happen?
Because it happens
Roll the bones
Faith is cold as ice
Why are little ones born only to suffer
For the want of immunity
Or a bowl of rice?
Well, who would hold a price
On the heads of the innocent children
If there's some immortal power
To control the dice?
We come into the world and take our chances
Fate is just the weight of circumstances
That's the way that lady luck dances
Roll the bones
Jack -- relax.
Get busy with the facts.
No zodiacs or almanacs,
No maniacs in polyester slacks.
Just the facts.
Gonna kick some gluteus max.
It's a parallax -- you dig?
You move around
The small gets big. It's a rig
It's action -- reaction
Random interaction.
So who's afraid
Of a little abstraction?
Can't get no satisfaction
From the facts?
You better run, homeboy
A fact's a fact
From Nome to Rome, boy.
What's the deal? Spin the wheel.
If the dice are hot -- take a shot.
Play your cards. Show us what you got
What you're holding.
If the cards are cold,
Don't go folding.
Lady Luck is golden;
She favours the bold. That's cold
Stop throwing stones
The night has a thousand saxophones. So get out there and rock,
And roll the bones.
Get busy!
Roll the bones
Why are we here?
Because we're here
Roll the bones
Why does it happen?
Because it happens
Roll the bones
Rush - Roll the Bones
I see no true purpose to life. Does it really need one? I think adding a purpose/meaning to our existance de-values the gift. We exist because we exist and we do what we do.
I'm not saying that having goals is a bad thing, just that it is pointless in the long run. Once you die that's it (as far as we know). Life is a freak accident and we have yet to find any form of it off this planet.
Offer to the world what you must but remember to enjoy the ride. I began thinking about this when I was bored at work last night. Life is limited in its length and there I was wishing time would go faster so that my shift would end...
To put it another way:
Are one's intentions a priori to value, meaning and purpose or are all four of these factors an integral part of one equation?
Hehe... thanks for the compliment, but I'm just another poor lil' existentialist smuck banging his head against the brick wall of his own ego.Well before I start, I know how good you are at this EB, and I know you will roast me if I play you at your own game![]()
Then you would have more confidence in your own intuition than in your reasoning out of a question of morality?I believe what I wrote in my post because that's what all of my internal thinking has come to up to this point, through asking questions like the ones you've put forward above. So instead of answering them directly, I think I'm better off trying to paint a picture of what my thoughts are. I guess I can summarise them by saying that I have very little faith left in the conscious mind. I think we give it way too much credit.
I agree here. So the problem would lay in that one must 'define' each of these four factors in relation to each other. I can see how this then becomes an almost unsolvable equation.As far as value, purpose, meaning and intention: yes, I believe that they are all part of the one equation. Dividing them up, separating them and defining them as separate entities won't result in any real clarity.
Again, intuition. Yes, I can agree here as well. I have experienced times where I just 'knew' that a decision was the right one for me even though I could not ascertain any logical or reasonable justification for the choice.But when you have intention, you know it, in your body. When you have purpose, you know it. When you find meaning, you know it. The fact that our conscious mind can't really define and pinpoint what's going on, but our body/intuition does, makes me think it is the wiser one.
Heart. Good point, and one which did not occur to me.Ok, no difference in theory as an isolated incident. But in real life, you need to put sustained pressure on the world to make it work, you can't just make the odd good decision. A decision is only as good as the energy put into carrying it out. Put it this way: someone I know tried to rationalise himself into getting back into an old relationship, but you know what, it was obvious that his heart was not in it. And guess what? It didn't work, and I wasn't surprised. I think the "logical rationalising" you talk about is much less relevant to the logical mind than it is to the conscious mind. If someone fights for animal rights with their conscious mind but resists it in their unconscious, well, they're not going to be much of a fighter.
Hmmm... interesting point, but will have to ponder it.I think the conscious mind can make a difference, but only inasmuch as it can infliuence the unconscious, or convince the body of its truth.
Though the four factors (and now the fifth one, heart) can be used for a decision makng process, the difference here is that a tool is something that one uses, whereas a life is something that one is.These four concepts could be seen as four differing POVs of the process/equation of UTILITY. If one substitutes the word,'Tool' for the word.' Life' - in many of the previous statements and questions, a certain amount of resolution takes place. How does one fit (as a tool) into the greater society. What Purpose does a tool have? What is the Value of a tool? How is A Value a tool in itself? What goal or Intention is to be reached by the use of a particular tool? What differences denotes a tool's Meaning?
I agree with the inclusion of temporality, though for something to be 'valid', it must have value and meaning to one's self. The relationship between validity and value is that validity is determined in part by what one values.Again as with many concepts, it is difficult to determine the temporal boundaries of these four things, yet each does contain an 'element' of time as a factor... Perhaps the statement 'We had intentions, that our purposes of the past would result in valued meanings in the future" is valid, or in other words, has value. There is a relationship between the valid and the valued...
Though the four factors (and now the fifth one, heart) can be used for a decision makng process, the difference here is that a tool is something that one uses, whereas a life is something that one is.
The value or meaning of a tool is relatively easy to discern as it is an object external to who one is, but one's life is not external to one's self. A claw hammer has a different meaning and value to a carpenter than a surgeon. The question of life would more pertain to why someone would choose carpenter or surgeon in regards to the five factors.
I agree with the inclusion of temporality, though for something to be 'valid', it must have value and meaning to one's self. The relationship between validity and value is that validity is determined in part by what one values.
With 'validity', we enter the realm of subjective truth and subjective truth is determined in part by what one subjectively values, by what one considers as important to one's self - the subjective amount of quality some person, thing, concept or event adds to one 's life.
Great post EB; I always love reading themIf you have enough money though, you can create your own society. I have heard of someone buying a decomissioned aircraft carrier and changing it into a hotel.
If you have enough money, there are a few options you can take. You could always buy an island, buy an oil rig in international waters, buy a boat, go into space, etc. Most of these ideas are not accessible to most people, but it might be possible if a large number of people pooled their resources together. One of the big considerations for any of these projects would be resources available to your society (once it is created). Unless you maintain contact with the mainland, you will have to find natural resources to sustain yourselves.
Finally, being recognized as a soverign power may also be an issue that a society faces (if it chooses to go that route).
True, but the question still remains subjective. If one chooses an external reason for one's individual purpose, then if that reason alters or ends, then where is the person left?Truth, however, is not this discussion an example of trying to externalize and objectify that internal subjective turmoil that may result in the statement, "Oh! What's the Use...?"?
I question whether one's self-esteem should be in any way founded on the opinions of others. Though it maybe the case in practise, I am of the opinion that the subjective opinions of others should be of no consequence to one's purpose or meaning in life, not that they are in present social relationships.Also, is not our self-esteem determined, to a certain extent,by how much utility Others derive from relationships with us? To me the statement "I have absolutely no Use for that person" is quite an insult...
No contest here, I see the connections and agree to a point, though I still consider initial values to be chosen and validated individually and then expressed in the social world. Not saying that one's values will not change, merely that one should create a fundamental structure of value to assess the social world by, some of which is the natural inherent attitudes one is as an individual such as desiring solitude or needing companionship.True again, I would add though that the 'universe' of subjectivity is where we exist and that existence is defined on a dimension of social identity, as well as dimensions of individual personality. The five concepts on the table also have definitions in the plural, the "We' of our subjectivity. This means that our subjective values have added value when they are shared concepts - shared values, shared morals, shared ethics, shared intentions, shared meaning, shared....
Thanks. I will see if I can find it.(BTW the article "Perception of Time and Causation Through the Kinesthesia of Intentional Action" by Walter J. Freeman might be of interest in regards to this topic)