jammieg
What is hate?
Originally posted by jammieg
I hold this to be true, that when people truly understand each other they can't harm each other.
Originally posted by Dissident Dan
I say yin-yang, schming-shang. We must strive to understand how irrational and dangerous hate really is. Now, I'm not saying to suppress your emotions to the point that you explode, but we must learn to reduce hate as much as we can.
Originally posted by Elledan
'Hate', like all other 'negative' emotions, is a side-effect of the failure to understand something.
It requires energy to visualize the cause-effect process as well as similar relations between things. Failing to accomplish this, this energy instead is converted into what is commonly referred to as 'negative emotions'.
Originally posted by Thallium
Hate is absolutely not a consequence of ignorance as you imply here.
"The side-effect of the failure to understand something". We may understand Hitler's ferocious attitude towards Jews and his hate for everyone of a non-Aryan origin, but this understanding we have does not mean that we will not hate him for it. (At least those who do not agree with his views)
The thing is that no one 'hates' something. 'Hate' is just the name given to a particular feeling, a feeling which is merely a symptom of another process, namely that of trying to fit that which one sees in one's sense of 'order'.Originally posted by Thallium
That depends on what you hate.
One 'fights' to make everything appear consistent with one's sense of 'order'.If your hate is a fight towards something evil, then the hate should not be made into anything else than hate. Loving and understanding the value in everything is impossible, and to do this you must have multiple personalities and not make any stands against something. Antagonism is a part of us, we fight for something we love and whatever fights against this, we deject and oppose against with hate. Not always of course.
Never once did I mention "ignorance". I used the term "failure to understand something", referring to the inability of one to 'fit' something in one's perception of one's surroundings.Hate is absolutely not a consequence of ignorance as you imply here.
Once one moves on to a more realistic sense of 'order', one founded on a more solid scientific basis, things like the example you gave are easy to explain."The side-effect of the failure to understand something". We may understand Hitler's ferocious attitude towards Jews and his hate for everyone of a non-Aryan origin, but this understanding we have does not mean that we will not hate him for it. (At least those who do not agree with his views)
I think hate is an emotion that stems from a feeling of inadequacy against a particular situation that goes against what you want or need.Originally posted by jammieg
What is hate?
Exactly.Originally posted by Evo
I think hate is an emotion that stems from a feeling of inadequacy against a particular situation that goes against what you want or need.
I disagree. There's no rational version of 'hate'.Originally posted by NIT14
This is my philosophy of "hate."
There are two different kinds of "hate." First, we have the irrational hate, which accomplishes nothing and is the result of ignorance. This hate is probably a product of anger and/or frustration. And on the other hand, we have the rational version of hate. When we understand something to be malicious to ourselves, or something essential to us, we tend to hate whatever that element may be. But we hate it for good reason. This hate is the product of love, and usually rational and responsible fear.
I think what NIT14 was trying to say was that hate might be justified if it was directed against an actual evil or threat, not a 'witch,' or some unreasonable scapegoat for all of life's problems.Originally posted by Elledan
What you call a 'rational' version of hate is in fact no different from the hate of people during the Middle Ages when confronted with a 'witch', or 'possessed' individual.
Well, I hate them. I don't see how one couldn't. Our hatred for them is precisely what prevents them. I suppose it's just a matter of what you believe we are and aren't allowed to prevent.Would you say it's okay to hate child predators?
However, one can only hate what one doesn't understand. As long as one perceives the snake (to use your example) as a threat without attemping to grok the snake's nature and motives, that snake remains a bogeyman: the subject of irrational fear and hatred.Originally posted by NIT14
What I meant was that "rational hate" is something that occurs when one is confronted with an issue that is critical to his survival, or something to that extent. For example, if insects were rational entities, with the ability to feel emotion, it would be rational for them to hate snakes because the snake is what eats them. Their hate would kind of be a defense mechanism, in a sense. I'm not sure if you can understand what I'm saying through that strange example, but my point was that I believe "hate" isn't always irrational, and is at times necessary.
No, one can definitely hate what he understands. The insect realizes the snake is not his friend. He understands that the snake must eat him to survive, but he is not interested in the snakes interests. Therefore, he hates him, because the snake is a detriment to his agenda and survival. How can it be irrational to hate something that you clearly understand and when you know exactly where the hatred arises from? I understand exactly what "child predators" are, and I hate them for good reason.However, one can only hate what one doesn't understand. As long as one perceives the snake (to use your example) as a threat without attemping to grok the snake's nature and motives, that snake remains a bogeyman: the subject of irrational fear and hatred.
This is where you are wrong.Originally posted by NIT14
How can it be irrational to hate something that you clearly understand and when you know exactly where the hatred arises from? I understand exactly what "child predators" are, and I hate them for good reason.
Well, I see what you are saying, and you're right in a sense. I certainly do not understand the mind of a child molester. Being one yourself is probably a prerequisite to have this understanding.You do not understand "child predators", just like you aren't capable of explaining and predicting human behaviour.
Well, I screwed up. I should have said "one can only hate something which one fears." instead of "One hates that which one fears." :)Originally posted by Thallium
I am not familiar with space. I do not know it, but I do not hate it.
On the contrary, I love it because its unfamiliarity is so exciting and mysterious.
Speaking as a scientist, isn't the essence of the scientific method that a theory is right until it is sufficiently proven to be wrong? I have not found sufficient evidence to discredit any of the theories I've explained in my posts in this thread. In that regard I am right and the post I replied to is wrong.You should never say "You are wrong" to anyone Elledan. In a philosophy forum of course we expect logical reasoning andwellfounded arguments, which you have done very well here, but never say "You are wrong" because you might not be right yourself and "You arew wrong" is not a very discouraging comment. Say rather, in my opinion.
Wrong. I seek explanations, understanding. Explaining emotions was just one of the many things that had to be done to reach this goal.It appears that you seek a perfect human that does not hate.
The problem is that this is hardly a rational explanation. You're going for the mystical approach by making unfounded statements, like "[..] even though hate, grief and anger are irrational feelings, as you claim, we need them.". In what way do we need them?I disagree. We do not hate everything we do not know, as illustrated above, and even though hate, grief and anger are irrational feelings, as you claim, we need them. We were born with hormones and brains that are capable of responding with such feelings. These feelings are produced by chemicals, nerve impulses and genes for that matter. Negative emotions sustain the balance that we need.
On this I completely disagree. Humans become tired of living because they're not really living. Instead they're resisting it by not recognizing reality. What's wearing them out is the discrepancy between their sense of order (pretence) and reality.If all was Heaven and Merry-go-around, we would become tired and weary of living.
I understand all of those states of mind which you mentioned. They're fully explainable in a scientifically acceptable manner.No one understands child predators, rapists, psychopaths etc etc. Hate is natural and acceptable reaction, though seemingly not to you.
We are living organisms yet, and we are stunning, amazing, powerful, yet foolish and irrational. Accept it. A struggle towards something better would be desperate.
Originally posted by Elledan
The problem is that this is hardly a rational explanation. You're going for the mystical approach by making unfounded statements, like "[..] even though hate, grief and anger are irrational feelings, as you claim, we need them.". In what way do we need them?
You can only say that conscious beings require emotions if you can prove that those emotions play an essential role in their functioning.
On this I completely disagree. Humans become tired of living because they're not really living. Instead they're resisting it by not recognizing reality. What's wearing them out is the discrepancy between their sense of order (pretence) and reality.
I used to consider emotions as things without any direct relation to each other except that they were all called 'emotions', and that they were an intrinsic property of neural networks. It wasn't until I really began to study emotions that I realized that all emotions can be explained as the symptoms (output and error-messages, if you wish) of a single process: that of maintaining and expanding one's sense of order. Every concept or combination of concepts that are unfamiliar, pose a threat to this sense of order. If this threat can be neutralized by finding a place for it in one's view of reality, this leads to 'positive' emotions, like when you grok a complex mathematical concept.Originally posted by Thallium
In response to the first paragraph, perhaps I should have formulated my reply a bit clearer. We do not exactly need the negative feelings, but they are there because there exists such a thing as negativity. Illness and evil etc are such things we fight against and many hate them. We hate evil because we know it is no good or at least many of us do. Whether or not we hate illness could be discussed, but the main point is that there exists a negaitivity.
Does the negative feelings have an essential role in our functioning? I have to think about that for some time before I post my suggestions.
About four years ago I had a sudden insight in reality which was more than just shocking. It is an experience which is hard to describe, but what it felt like was as though I had been sitting on the ground, scribbling stuff in the sand and moving pebbles and other small stuff around, when suddenly I looked up to see a vast empty space around me, after which the ground and everything else vanished until I was left alone in a dark, cold place. Yet around me I could still see and feel such a vastness while at the same time I realized that everything I had been doing up till that point had been completely pointless.To the second paragraph in the quote, that is correct. I had not thought of that before and I retract my earlier comment. But I would like to ask if it would then be worth living if everything was Heaven and Merry-go-around, as I put it? Would there we have values, aims and dreams that we needed to fight for? And if not, would our lives become boring and not worth living?
Reality to those who don't understand logic yet is covered by pretence, yet it is impossible for any virtual reality to completely obscure reality. A good example of this is death. Easily explained by science (which is the study of reality), death is twisted into something significant, often something religious/spiritual, in order to fit in virtual realities, but this way death is merely covered by a blanket of pretence, underneath which its shape is still visible. This inability to explain death is what results in fear, anger, sadness and grief.It is interesting what you point out in the last line. What is wearing them out is the discrepancy between their sense of order(pretence) and reality, but what is reality in relation to their sense of order?
Originally posted by Elledan
Reality to those who don't understand logic yet is covered by pretence, yet it is impossible for any virtual reality to completely obscure reality. A good example of this is death. Easily explained by science (which is the study of reality), death is twisted into something significant, often something religious/spiritual, in order to fit in virtual realities, but this way death is merely covered by a blanket of pretence, underneath which its shape is still visible. This inability to explain death is what results in fear, anger, sadness and grief.
Death is the result of total organ failure in the body, after which all organic molecules which make up the body's structures are either used by other organisms or decompose into other molecules.Originally posted by Thallium
..and which is why there have been made up stories and "fairy tales" of where we go when we die.. But be careful. We do not know where we go after death, if death might be a door to another space/time/world.
I regard such stories and theories merely as another sign that we still don't have the faintest clue of how (biological) neural networks function.I have heard interesting near-death-stories, but whether these are true or not there is too little scientific research for to say anything about it. Roger Penrose and an American brain surgeon explained the near-death experience in the way that our conscience consists of superpositionary particles in our brains. These can move outside the body and in that way comprehend what is going on on the outside in spite of the person's state of clinical death. We are here taling of patients undergoing surgeries in a hospital. The patients have then experienced this as moving further and further away from the body and coming to another world where they have seen perhaps their grandparents who died years ago.
When they return and wake up they can tell what the surgeons where saying during the surgery. They can describe the instruments that were used without having seen them before the operation(the instruments are covered up to remain sterile).
A study employing the scientific method. I don't think that there is a commonly accepted term for the kind of research I do, or at least I'm not aware of one.You said you had studied emotions. What kind of study was this? Psychology?
Originally posted by Elledan
I regard such stories and theories merely as another sign that we still don't have the faintest clue of how (biological) neural networks function.
You misunderstood me. I didn't say that I think that those stories/theories are nonsense or anything like that, only that they're among many other stories and theories with all of those theories failing to fully explain the functioning of neural networks like the human brain.Originally posted by Thallium
The typical narrow-minded thinking of a scientist. And the way to failing in including all possibilities.
Originally posted by Elledan
It's easy to believe something to be true. It's hard to find sufficient evidence to back up a theory. The moment you believe a theory to be correct, you're often no longer motivated to search for evidence in favor of or discrediting that particular theory.
In that case we both agree :)Originally posted by Thallium
I agree. This theory is however only lingering in the air and I don't know if there has been more research to proove this theory, but yet it cannot be fully disproved. I am open to anything and I only presented this theory and I do not believe in it until it is proven.
Originally posted by jammieg
On second thought there's probably something fundamentally wrong with love too.
Originally posted by jammieg
What is hate?
Originally posted by String Theorist
I think hate is bad.