How do people aquire the ability to make decisions based on reason?
Posted by edweaver 9 years, 3 months ago to Philosophy
It seems to me that some people are better at using logic and reason to make decisions than others. Is the ability to use reason natural at birth and some force destroys it or does it have to be learned or taught?
Discussion/thoughts??
Discussion/thoughts??
The second is being very honest in doing the first.
These two together teach one rather quickly that good results come from more honest and rational choices and more honest and rational choosing of values.
Psychoepistemology is the study of how the brain reasons and stores knowledge. If your parents had the ability to not face reality and then consequently use emotion instead of reason to raise children, you would have to be very strong-willed to avoid psychological damage and hence have an innate ability to reason...
That is until life hands you enough experiences that you begin to think for yourself.
On the other hand, "[A]ll babies are born {or, rather, conceived] geniuses and [most] get swiftly de-geniused.
-- Buckminster Fuller
If reason is not acquired at birth how can we explain the ability of a young child to learn? For example, if a child touches something hot they pull back because of the pain but they also quickly learn that touching the same thing again will result in the same pain. Seems to me that is the power to reason. If not wouldn't they just keep touching it unless there was someone there to stop them? IMHO, there are many lessons that are either taught or learned that would not be possible without the power to reason. Thoughts??
And, some have greater aptitudes for this training.
I is one. My family freaked at me. It was just natural for me.
musical environment! Chopin,Liszt - the greats!
My dad was also born in Hungary; didn't
play piano but could rock a harmonica like
no other!!
The statement that 'humans do not have inherent qualities' represents a theory that has been overturned by the Twin Studies and other research.
Jan
I feel for you with liberal children but applaud you do doing the best you can to help your grandson learn critical thinking, and not the common core kind either. I would concur your successful life if the lessons change him. We need all the help we can get. I say keep corrupting...the way you are. :)
I do believe that people, as they develop, probably have some innate "knacks" for doing better at certain things than others, whether it's "thinking" or athletics or art or whatever!
I think that trying to figure that one out is mental masturbation, and we'd be better off by Observing the Developing Child, trying to Discover their 'knacks' and helping them develop whatever innate skills or talents they're "good at."
I've got an Extremely Bright 'grandson' who's been open to questioning life and observing it forever. His parents are extremely liberal and I'm not, but over the past few years, I've introduced him to My Version of Critical Thinking, based roughly on Socratic Processes. Now he loves to ask questions and explore "answers" with me and I treasure our conversations together. I can nudge him in directions that might be more congruent with MY views than his parents' but I do it by repeatedly asking, "Well WHY does THAT happen?" and encouraging HIM to try to figure out the answers without just 'giving him the answer,' whether it's my view or someone else's.
I jokingly refer to 'corrupting his mind' and he keeps coming back to ask me more questions. Often, he'll ask me what 'my take is' on some subject. If I have an opinion or belief, I will readily provide my view, but immediately turn the conversation Socratic so we can both try to figure out why I, he, or others have the views they hold on the subject.
That may end up being the greatest contribution I ever make to the world in my life. I'll call my life 'successful' if those lessons have changed him.
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