Archive for the ‘Evaluceptology’ Category
Entry 1638 — Choice of Ethotactic, Part 3
Friday, November 21st, 2014
A Note to the Fore:
Please, Dear Reader, I implore thee: when you have read as much of this entry as you feel like reading, let me know whether you have found it worth reading in full or not by clicking “YES” or “NO” below. You would help me a great deal, and might even get me to make my entries more reader-friendly. (And for the love of Jayzuz, please don’t try to spare my feelings by politely declining to click the NO although you think the entry Vile Beyond Imagination. Oh, some of you may need to know that I am not asking you whether you agree with me or not!)
Note: I will be repeating this request in some of my entries to come. Feel free to click one of my buttons each time I do, but please don’t click either more than once a day.
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A new start. What I think I think now is that an ethotactic is any choice of action that is made fully or to a great extent on the basis of anthreval- uceptual input. Do I need to say more? Surely that clarifies the subject satisfactorily? (I’m exercising my wit here because I’m scared that if I go on, I’ll horribly bungle the amplification what I’ve just said requires. But my verboceptual awareness—along perhaps with some part of my scienceptual awareness—has convinced my socioceptual awareness, that I have a verosophical moral duty to expose my full thinking on this in spite of how bad my egoceptual awareness, trying to stop me, will feel about my exposing the lameness of my brain. More exactly, my evaluceptual awareness, which right now I think has offices in each of the rest of the cerebrum’s awarenesses as well as a brain area all to itself where it collects the votes pro and con about all the choices available to the behavraceptual awareness, where a final choice of action will generate the action the person involved takes.
You know, I truly do not know whether I’m making sense at all. I’m fairly sure that I have a good idea what I’m saying, but am also certain that I am over-simplifying what I think is occurring. Which may not be. Not that it matters, since I don’t think I can make any headway toward a reasonably intelligent rough description doing anything other than taking a series of very simple steps of description.
Note: it is at this point that I thought of constructing the YES/NO buttons above.
Okay, what happens in slightly more detail is that (1) a person experiences instacon A (i.e., “instant of consciousness A”), or the contents thereof, which I probably have a name for but can’t now recall. (2) Instacon A activates a number of possible actions out of the awarenesses participating in it. Let us say, for instance, that it contains data depicting an ant on his kitchen counter that activate cells in his visioceptual awareness (a sub-awareness of his protoceptual or fundaceptual awareness [whose name I haven’t permanently chosen], data activating cells representing “me, innocently going about my daily business, in the egoceptual sub-awareness of my anthroceptual awareness (I’m going into detail to try to keep things straight for myself), data activating cells in the socioceptual sub-awareness of my anthroceptual awareness representing “enemy deleteriously approaching my food,” data activating cells representing the word, “ant,” in the verboceptual sub-awareness of the linguiceptual sub-awareness of my reducticeptual awareness, and maybe data activating cells causing a barely perceptible reaction to fear of the sting of a fire ant.
All these active cells will send attempt to activate behavraceptual cells capable of causing appropriate behavioral responses like moving a hand that’s near the ant, carefully sliding a piece of paper under the ant and removing it from the house without injuring it, splotting the damned thing, or singing a song about “Aunt Delores,” if I knew one. Meanwhile, instacon A would probably have continuing sequences of information in it with nothing to do with the ant—something to do with why I’d come into the kitchen, for instance. Behavraceptual cells responsible for various appropriate behavioral responses (or behavioral responses that seem appropriate to me) would activate those responses.
In effect, they would vote for the action begun, or continued—make that actions, because we generally carry out more than one action during each instacon. Each activated cell or cell-group would try to send energy to the muscles or glands responsible for carrying out its desire. But much of that energy would be blocked by the greater energy another cell or cell-groups responsible for a behavior in conflict with the behavior the first cell or group was trying to cause. In other words, a lot of votes would be cast, and the evaluceptual awareness, where they were being cast, would determine which candidates receiving votes would win, and succeed in causing action. If any. For I may take no action, no cell or cell-group’s transmission being strong enough to cause me to do anything.I suspect that in this case, the word, “ant,” would make me say to myself, “Damned ants.” This would be an ethotactical response based on my perception of the ant as an intruder, and—possibly—my empathy for the robotic damned thing. Perhaps my laziness would be a factor, too. Would it have any ethical component? I think not. I think I would have a musclaceptual reaction of “don’t squash, too much work” that would be purely, amorally, protoceptual—i.e., having to do with my desire not to exert myself, nothing else.
Which suggests a question to me: can something a person does with no ethical intentions be ethotactical?
TO BE CONTINUED
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Entry 1599 — Evaluceptology Update
Monday, October 13th, 2014
Almost fifty years ago, I thought I’d worked out a first-rate theory of pain and pleasure. I believed there were just one kind of pleasure, caused by anything familiar but not too familiar, and two kinds of pain, caused either by that which was too unfamiliar or that which was too familiar. There was also that which caused nothing in particular which I didn’t bother with.
My theory was simple, but I worked out actual brain mechanisms that would monitor what we were aware of and tag it pleasurable, painful or neither.
I’m not sure when I finally accepted two other kinds of pain and pleasure: physical pain and pleasure. Ten or fifteen years later, I guess. I have bias for maximal simplicity, so had worked out ways of considering a bee-sting, for example, “unfamiliar,” so not causing a special kind of pain. Absurd. It caused reflexive, physical pain. So now I had five “evaluceptual” sensations (i.e., sensations of our body’s “evaluation” its stimulus’s place on the pain-to-pleasure continuum): physical pleasure and pain, and cerebral pleasure, pain and boredom.
I’m writing about this now (Columbus Day) because a day or two ago I realized my theory didn’t explain certain kinds of pleasure and pain. Today I’m adding them to my list as the pleasure one gets as one closes in on and attains the goal of one of the hum drives like the hunger drive, or the exploratory drive, and the pain one gets as one failing to close in on and attain such a goal. My Columbus Day discovery, 2014. What’s most interesting about it, it seems to me, is that it took me so long to realize the need for it. Not very encouraging. What other huge holes are there in my theory I’ve been oblivious to?
Note: this is a serious entry . . . but it is also a joke since I know no one will have any interest in it. Meanwhile, I will be in (and out of, I hope) a surgical clinic today (13 October) Urinary bladder stone.
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Entry 1435 — Exaltation
Saturday, April 26th, 2014
I’ve been thinking about exaltation this morning–because I seem unable to achieve it, even by taking a hydrocodone! Aside from that, I was wondering about how different it is from most other human pleasures–so different that I can’t compare it to any other. I guess that’s because it’s cerebral rather than physical. Is it the only cerebral pleasure? I consider it to be a sense of ultimate satisfaction that feels pretty much the same regardless of its source, which may be beauty, triumphancy, kincognition, verity–basically a feeling that one is king of some important domain (with or without subjects). Mini-megalomania. (Hey, my spell-check program didn’t tag that an error. And I thought no one whoever writes spell-check programs would know would think in terms of degrees of megalomania, or anything else.)
I continue to believe that, evaluceptually speaking, there are only pain and pleasure, albeit in a wide range of intensities. But each physical evalucept comes flavored by its source–to make a sexual evalucept extremely different from a gustatory evalucept, and a gustatory evalucept caused by strawberry ice cream quite different from a gustatory evalucept caused by an equally pleasurable (or unpleasant) roast beef sandwich.
I tend to think exaltation lasts longer and involves more of the brain that any other pleasure–but is not as intense as sexual pleasure, say, or the pleasure of a simple glass of water to someone close to dying of thirst.
I just thought of love, which I would consider a combination of kincognition and sexual pleasure. Probably many of the highest forms of pleasure are combinations of two or more different pleasures.
Just a few beginning explorations of the subject to get this entry out of the way, so I can concentrate on My Final Adventure.
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Entry 1639 — Choice of Ethotactic, Part 4
Saturday, November 22nd, 2014
What I’ve said so far suggests a question to me: can something a person does with no ethical intentions be ethotactical? For instance, say I am with a friend I know to be much more poor than I and we come upon an apple tree in a public forest with one apple on it, and I pick it and eat it, not thinking of my friend. Or, for a more colorful example, say I have been taught that Irishmen are subhuman creatures without the ability to feel pain, and that hunting them will be good practice in the use of firearms that one may one day need to fight off aliens from outer space. So I shoot a few Irishmen between the eyes, inflicting pain on them without realizing it, and even perhaps killing one or two of them. Have I behaved immorally?
According to my theory of knowlecular psychology, no. That’s because an ethotactic, or the choice of a moral or immoral action, can only be the result of some anthroceptual decision based on living in harmony with a known social code.
I think I would go so far as to say that my killing an Irishmen or two in such a case is not immoral even according to most people’s standards. Many would protest, but because it would seem that I would be excusing a Nazi taught to consider Jews sub-human for gassing them. I would excuse the Nazi, but only morally. For me, he would be not immoral, but homicidally stupid—and therefore deserving to be reprimanded! Sorry. I have a weakness for black humor. What I believe is that such a person should be prevented from continuing to gas Jews by being executed—unless one truly believes some kind of re-education can make him accept Jews as human, and he is compelled to repay society for his social stupidity by spending the rest of his life shining the shoes of Jews for free or something.
Ultimately, I believe all reprehensible acts are acts of stupidity, and that what kind of stupidity is involved—moral stupidity or some other kind of stupidity—is irrelevant. Society should be maximally protected from the person acting reprehensibly (and protected from his genes, for I believe criminals [real criminals], and that’s who I’m talking about, should not be allowed to breed). Of course, I realize I’m making a complex subject seem much more cut&dry than it is. Just ideas to counteract simple-minded bad/good anti-continuumism and the insensitivity of certain sentimentalists to Evil.
About evil I will say that all definitions of it are necessarily subjective, but that it does exist, and can be defined sociobjectively. Sociobjectivity is a view of an idea that is held by such a large majority of the members of a society and which has an objective neurophysiological basis as to be close enough to true objectivity as to be taken as such. Take the evil of killing an innocent child. Almost everyone would disapprove of that, and (I believe) almost all of us are instinctively repelled by the deed, and—in fact—would instinctively try to prevent a child, innocent or not, from being killed.
Not that our instinct to use reason would necessarily not be involved. If effective, it might tell us that our standing in society will go up if we stop someone from murdering a child. Although our instinct to advance statoosnikally would be part of that. Actually, I think in most cases, protecting the child would be reflexive whereas our explanation would be taken care of mostly by our reasoning.
To be honest, if I were dominated by reason, I would never risk my life, even as the old man I now am, for some child, because what I believe I may contribute to World Culture is almost sure to be more than what the child will, however long he lives. The problem with that, of course, is that my ability to reason may be defective, in which case, my not saving a child at the risk of losing my own life would be stupid integrity–that is, acting according to my code that I should protect my own life at all costs because of its great value to the world. I claim that following that code would be absolutely valid if I were another . . . Nietzsche, without his breakdown.
Needless to say, the idea that Evil is what some deity has said it to be is absurd; various deities have universally defined certain acts as evil because the men who invented them were instinctively against those acts. Other non-universal acts, like saying something contemptuous about some deity, have also been said to have been ordained Evil by a deity invented by men not because their inventors were instinctively against such acts but because the definition of Evil helped them gain power or destroy other tribes, or simply because of some personal dislike—of a priest once clawed by a cat that made him claim his main god had defined cats as evil, for example.
I do think that reasoning should dominate every moral choice one makes, but it can’t overcome one’s instincts, all of which are ultimately moral, for a given person. We can only argue about whose individual morals would work best for the society we want to live in, and perhaps use reason to show that giving in to a society’s chosen code will be better for each individual in the long run, the long run excluding some never-seen Heaven or anything like it.
Which brings to mind the question of whether or not it is moral to lie to the masses and tell them some God will do horrible things to them if they don’t accept a society’s code. I realize that there are those who don’t believe that our species naturally, due to our genes, divides into different social classes–three of them, roughly speaking: masters, slaves, and . . . cerebreans. They’re nuts.
I divide ethics into the study of socioethotactics and the study of egoethotactics . . . I think. There are two major problems: formulation of a maximally fair and biologically advantageous set of socioethotactics by a society, and an individuals’ reconciling his inevitably conflicting set of egoethotactics with his society’s socioethotactics.
More on this eventually, if I think I can say anything at all interesting about it.
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Note: on the day I made my first entry here about ethotactics, 36 people checked up on me at my Wikipedia entry; rarely do more than 4 people visit it on a day, and none since the first month it was up have anywhere near that many done so. Were they fans of Jonah Goldberg, whose article I was commenting on? The visits after that have been few, for or five in a day at most.
Last, and definitely least, here’s this SURVEY again:
Please, Dear Reader, I implore thee: when you have read as much of this entry as you feel like reading, let me know whether you have found it worth reading in full or not by clicking “YES” or “NO” below. You would help me a great deal, and might even get me to make my entries more reader-friendly. (And for the love of Jayzuz, please don’t try to spare my feelings by politely declining to click the NO although you think the entry Vile Beyond Imagination. Oh, some of you may need to know that I am not asking you whether you agree with me or not!)
YES
NO
Note: I will be repeating this request in some of my entries to come. Feel free to click one of my buttons each time I do, but please don’t click either more than once a day.
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