HansMustermann
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2009
- Messages
- 23,741
You know, I've been thinking lately, and it seems to me like 99% of the time human speech, and by extension writing, doesn't actually have anything to do with actual logic.
As a random example, and the thing which got me started on this line of thinking, was remarking in another thread that those who use the "even animals do X" don't seem to actually take that as an universal axiom. The same persons have no problems with using "only dumb animals do Y", sometimes in the same breath. They don't actually have a consistent naturalistic system, or a "whatever animals do is good" axiom. It's just an ad-hoc rationalization.
Another example is from a recent thread about some "pro-family" group claiming that contraceptive pills don't just kill "unborn babies" and women, but harm the bloody environment too. So suddenly it becomes not just a fight for their dogma, but a saving-the-planet issue. I would have expected at that point to see some data about exactly what harm do those things do to the planet, but they don't even attempt to support that claim. It's just used as a meaningless buzzword, more there to help make it sound grand, than some supportable claim.
Yet another example are the endless arguments for some religion or another, some boiling down to such blatant nonsense as, basically, "it's true because it's useful". Sometimes actually phrased like that, but also the underlying thrust to stuff like that religion makes people moral. They're trying to support a claim that something is the Truth by merely arguing that that claim is useful. And I don't believe one bit that they have a consistent view that any claim X is automatically true if making that claim is useful. Otherwise, since having a weather forecast is useful, it would become true and you could change the weather by just saying so. And generally it would require a mode of thinking that is characteristic of small children, not of adults.
Etc.
So I'm thinking maybe they weren't trying to convey any logic in the first place. It seems to me like speech is more like a mechanism for aligning to a group or another. The amount and vehemence of arguments given for one issue or another are just supposed to let one gauge how strongly the interlocutor feels about some issue or another. So basically we can negotiate a common set of beliefs and attitudes for the "us" group.
As a random example, and the thing which got me started on this line of thinking, was remarking in another thread that those who use the "even animals do X" don't seem to actually take that as an universal axiom. The same persons have no problems with using "only dumb animals do Y", sometimes in the same breath. They don't actually have a consistent naturalistic system, or a "whatever animals do is good" axiom. It's just an ad-hoc rationalization.
Another example is from a recent thread about some "pro-family" group claiming that contraceptive pills don't just kill "unborn babies" and women, but harm the bloody environment too. So suddenly it becomes not just a fight for their dogma, but a saving-the-planet issue. I would have expected at that point to see some data about exactly what harm do those things do to the planet, but they don't even attempt to support that claim. It's just used as a meaningless buzzword, more there to help make it sound grand, than some supportable claim.
Yet another example are the endless arguments for some religion or another, some boiling down to such blatant nonsense as, basically, "it's true because it's useful". Sometimes actually phrased like that, but also the underlying thrust to stuff like that religion makes people moral. They're trying to support a claim that something is the Truth by merely arguing that that claim is useful. And I don't believe one bit that they have a consistent view that any claim X is automatically true if making that claim is useful. Otherwise, since having a weather forecast is useful, it would become true and you could change the weather by just saying so. And generally it would require a mode of thinking that is characteristic of small children, not of adults.
Etc.
So I'm thinking maybe they weren't trying to convey any logic in the first place. It seems to me like speech is more like a mechanism for aligning to a group or another. The amount and vehemence of arguments given for one issue or another are just supposed to let one gauge how strongly the interlocutor feels about some issue or another. So basically we can negotiate a common set of beliefs and attitudes for the "us" group.