| > The way formal logic works, and the way we think, talk and convince one another.. they are very far apart. Strict logic is "pedantry", "JAQing off", Sea-lioning, "conspiratorial thinking", etc. I know of no social media platform where this is not true (based on replies and voting). And (seemingly) ironically, "scientific thinkers" are often particularly prone to the phenomenon. > That doesn't mean we can't grasp logic. We can. That which is physically possible is not necessarily metaphysically possible. People can use logic sometimes, but very often it is culturally (thus consciously) non-permissible, like during COVID[1], war time[2], etc. I am not aware of any current or historical attempts to solve this problem, the scientific method being somewhat of a specialized exception. [1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38332076 [2] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38332346 |
Smart people are dangerously good at finding compelling rational arguments for any position. Logic and reasoning has no guarantee what-so-ever to end up correct.
Communism is perfectly rational. So is is national socialism, slavery, "a modest proposal", "Brave new world". Self reasoning may just make you more stubborn.
two things i think helps? but that may just me by own rationality tricking me.
1. Limit the death of the argument. Don't go too many steps away from the axioms or assumptions. Leaps of logic give us the most freedom to creatively warp the outcome.
2. Die on all the hills. Argue your misguided ideas loudly and proud to your peers. Discussing dumb ideas is the only way to find what dumb idea is the least dumb.
Being scared of being wrong, and aligning with others, leaves dumb ideas unchallenged, and dumber ideas unexplored.