Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Logical Fallacies

So, we were told to find a logical fallacy in class, and I kinda did. I didn't see something that was a logical fallacy but in construction, we had a good discussion about one. We were talking about tin telepathy and whether or not we believed it to be true. There are many warning signs to recognize logical fallacies, and a major one is confirmation vias. If a twin finds out that their twin was say in a car accident and they hit their head, if by chance, the other twin got hit with a ball in the head, they would certainly remember that once they found out about the accident. If they had not found out about the accident, they most likely would never remember the pain in their head. Confirmation vias is when you know something happened to someone or something, and you remember or create an instance in your mind that would not have been a big deal otherwise. In my opinion, twin telepathy is fake and there is no real imformation to support the idea. If they could, perhaps, prove it with tests and true studies, then maybe I would believe this. The red flag, warning sign, of confimation bias, has led me to believe that twin telepathy is not true.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

True Beauty.

Beatiful dance!

Do we perceive this as beauty or do we perceive this as dance and reason that it is beautiful?

This goes along with when we were trying to decide what we perceive and what we reason.

Perception AND Reason

I know we have been comparing perception and reason, and trying to choose which one is better, but I can't honestly make that decision. They are both so important in gaining true knowledge and I don't think you can seperate them and still learn much. Not only do you need those two, but you need language and emotion as well, because all of them need to work together to fix each others' flaws. As we said in class, your perceptions can deceive you and need your reason to decide what is real and what isn't. For example, the optical illusion(in my other post) with the lines that appear crooked, but are really straight, you need your reason to decide what they are, as your perception is telling you they are crooked. However, you can do other visual tests to figure out if they are straight, which I guess is only using your perception and not your reason. All in all, I think you need all four ways to gain true knowledge because they all work together to detect false information.

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Perception---Deception


Are the lines straight or slanted?
Obviously at first glance, your mind is telling you that the lines are slanted. But after a close examination, you could probably tell that the lines are actually straight. This is a perfect example of your perception decieving you. I would love to say that perception is better and more important as a source of knowledge than reason, and I do believe that to a certain extent, however I realize that your perception can be false. Before our tok class I would have easily argued how great your perception is, however after all the optical illusions, I am not so sure. I still believe that you need to percieve something before you can use your reason to rationalize it, however without your reason, you would believe false things. If I didn't reason that the lines are actually straight, I would have believed that they were slanted, because that is what my perception told me. So which is really better? I think you need both to work together or it will be nearly impossible to gain true knowledge.