Cold Iron, on 30 March 2010 - 09:42 PM, said:
Cougar, on 30 March 2010 - 11:16 AM, said:
I need to do more reading, I fear I'm still stuck at Plato in a world that has long moved past. Still, I'm not sure that your distinction has any meaning to the subjective individual - the feeling that Tiste describes is not dependant on others agreement, indeed he is ignoring his own conscious reasoning to "know" this "truth". My point is that we are all not only capable of this type of irrational response but we need it, we depend on it, we make a million decisions a day with it. Try if you want to deny it but you are drawing a false line in the sand, there is no real difference between a theist and an atheist, just social identity.
I can't help but feel that rationality is overestimated in discussions regarding truth. That subjectivity exists is one thing, but the very concept of truth means nothing if it isn't objective in some sense. You could argue that rationality is a sort of post-modern truth, that it supposedly effect everyone whether they want to or not. But subjectivity and rationality then becomes opposite edges of a two edged sword, and the argument are no longer able to paint the whole picture. But we do rely on other things than the immediate 'rationality', because if rationality is a sort of truth, there are many rationalities and many truths. There is no singular part that makes us into what we is, but a host of parts, if that makes sense.
One could argue that the feeling that Tiste describes is an intersection of those parts.
This post has been edited by Gem Windcaster: 30 March 2010 - 10:05 PM