Now we're throwing out science. It's getting clearer that people here just don't like what I'm saying and will go to any lengths to get it out of their brains.
You actually should really read Kuhn. So far from throwing out science it furthers the cause of science (significantly!) by demonstrating how our interpretive frameworks (aka paradigms) can shape our perception. If I had to sum up a lot of this conversation with you, I'd say people were making attempts to try to induce you to move beyond your theory laden (aka biased) perceptions. If you could get yourself to even entertain the idea that there might be a teeny bit more to the extremely complex reality than your very limited theory allows... well, you might learn something.
So how have ubiquitous warnings about the dangers of fat and sugar consumption changed your feelings about tiramisu?
Bad example actually. Well, a poorly aimed one. It is not the
warnings that make a difference. It is the experiences and the contexts that we associate (pre consciously) with those stimuli. As a matter of fact I
don't like milky way bars - why? Because I once bit into one, all unknowing, that was full of ants. I have not been able to face a milky way bar with impunity since. The WORDS don't necessarily matter. And conditioning is essentially experiential. You can't TALK a person out of a phobia!
the first person whom we know of to come up with the idea of "emergent orders", Lao Tzu. I love the idea that the most printed and most translated book in the world, second only to the Christian bible, is a 2500 year old anarchist text.
Thank you for that bit! Way cool, and yes.
Strangely, (or maybe not...) Utilitarians (Bentham and Mill and many others) are really pretty limited utilitarians, just as Kant was not a very good Kantian. Authoritarianism did seem to be something not very many people in the eighteenth (and even 19th) centuries were very successful at weeding out. A consistent application of the principles - coupled with a lot of practical knowledge and investigation - I think gets one ... to anarchy if it is possible. And you are perfectly correct, bad utilitarianism can justify pretty much any damn thing you like - there is no limit on what people with no imagination can think is ok. More's the pity.
It is possible I've stretched the principle of charity in reading philosophy beyond its breaking point.. but I do like to think Mill (and Kant for that matter) would have had their minds blown (in a good way) by what has been done social justice wise since their deaths.
I see with my eyes everyday and conventional wisdom since the beginning of time.
First person evidence is good - but not sufficient as we all have very LIMITED experience and it is biased - often in ways we have a hard time noticing.
Conventional wisdom ... is worth investigating, but has so very often proven to be not only wrong but actively harmful that this kind of appeal to authority is tantamount to intellectual laziness.
I didn't look at them, because I assume they are people on a rationalization hamster wheel trying to feel better about their bad choices.
Well, I guess you did a lot better at the mind reading class than I did. I can't read the minds of people I know reliably. And I certainly can't read the minds and know the hearts and intentions of people I've never even MET. Never mind judging whatever data that they've gathered before you even know what it is. And if you are not willing to give serious consideration to contrary hypothesis your position is hardly scientific - and a lot more "faith based" than many a theologian. "It is true because I believe it" is a time worn justification, but it has always kind of sucked. It certainly doesn't do a lot of good for those who get the short end of the social stick. Plus it is disrespectful of others.
More importantly, the inability to think about one's own experiences and beliefs critically is a kind of rigidity that can be really really limiting in healing and is terribly limiting in terms of learning. It is not, in short, adaptive in the widest sense.
Every single choice I've made in my life has made me undesirable to some men. And more desirable to others. That's true for all of us. Men & women alike. When I enlisted in the USMC? I became undesirable to many men
Ditto. Get a PhD, in pretty much anything and watch guys run. Except the ones "who like smart chicks." There is clearly such a thing as physical attraction - and what triggers it or not is tremendously complex. Not everyone is attracted to everyone else. Ever. This doesn't even happen with horses and dogs for goodness sake. If that is an implication of evolutionary biology (and no one who has been mentioned so far would be so silly as to suggest it) it is plainly false, and thus evidence that counts against that model. And, it is not like evolutionary biology is univocal! It is early days in the investigations...