Ruminations of a Rationologist

Phil Roberts, Jr.


Rehabilitating Introspection
A Procedure for a First Person Psychical Science

Feelings of Worthlessness
An Annotated Outline of a Theory of Emotional Instability

Rationology 101
How the Author of Genesis Got It Right (and the Golden Rule Got It Wrong)

Why We Turned Out Like Captain Kirk
Instead of Mr. Spock

The Psychodynamics of Genetic Indeterminism


www.rationology.net














Ruminations of a Rationologist (Schematic)

Rehabilitating Introspection (pdf)

'Rehabilitating Introspection' provides the methodological foundation for my theory of ego/self-worth related emotion presented in 'Feelings of Worthlessness' which, in turn, serves as the foundation for the remaining two papers. One of the manifestations of this methodology is the presentation of a diagram of a `Phylogeny of Psychical Functions' in which the two primary phyla are 'Cognitive Functions' appearing on the left side of the diagram and 'Conative Functions' appearing on the right side of the diagram (Diagram II).

Cognitive Functions
(phylum)

What little I have to say on the classes of function in this phylum is presented in the `Rehabilitating Introspection' paper itself.
..
Conative Functions
(phylum)

Elaboration on the classes of function appearing in this phylum, and particularly the class referred to as `Higher Emotion', comprises the subject matter of the remaining papers.

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Feelings of Worthlessness (pdf)

This paper, which presents the heart of my theory, outlines the implications of the premise that `feelings of worthlessness' are a maladaptive byproduct of the evolution of rationality. This outline actually offers two different explanations for this, the first one based on psychodynamic considerations and the second couched in the language of a theory of rationality.

Explanation #1
(psychodynamics)

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Why We Turned Out Like Captain Kirk (pdf)

This paper fleshes out the psychodynamic explanation outlined in `Feelings of Worthlessness'.
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Explanation #2
(rationality theory)

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Rationology 101 (pdf)

This paper fleshes out one of the implications of the rationality theory explanation and employs the resulting insights to vindicate the general hypothesis presented in `Feelings of Worthlessness'.





Rationology

My reference to myself as a "rationologist" is a reflection of my belief that I have discovered a more science-like approach to the study of rationality than has traditionally been the norm. This belief is based on the following assumptions and considerations:
  1. The assumption that Thomas Kuhn ('The Structure of Scientific Revolutions') basically got it right in his contention that one of the more reliable indicators that a theory qualifies as "scientific" can be found in its ability to address a theoretical anomaly in a pre-existing scientific theory.
  2. The identification of a theoretical anomaly ('feelings of worthlessness') in a pre-existing scientific theory (evolutionary theory) as explained in 'Rehabilitating Introspection' ('Higher Emotion') resulting, not from the development of a more powerful telescope or precise measuring instrument, but rather from the abandonment of a mistaken assumption ('Rehabilitating Introspection' - first paragraph).
  3. The assumption that the aforementioned anomaly can be plausibly addressed by assuming that 'feelings of worthlessness' are a maladaptive byproduct of the evolution of rationality ('Feelings of Worthlessness').
  4. The assumption that the verification of a scientific theory is a function of its ability to maximize explanatory coherence (a la C.S. Peirce, Gilbert Harman, Paul Thagard, William Lycan, etc.) as I have demonstrated in 'Rationology 101' by resolving a number of rationality paradoxes (rational irrationality, cognitive vs. practical rationality conflict, the "rationality debate", the Prisoners' Dilemma, etc.) based on an implication of the premise that 'feelings of worthlessness' are a maladaptive byproduct of the evolution of rationality.








Doubts about the "standard picture"
The concept of rationality, one might say, is incorrigibly elusive... I believe it is fair to say that in philosophical discussions of rationality, there is a sense in which we do not "know what we are talking about" and can never do so, if what is demanded is a concise definition (Max Black).
If one assumes, as I have conjectured, that feelings of worthlessness are a byproduct of the evolution of rationality in the sense of resulting from a more comprehensive and objective understanding of how the world is put together, it seems to follow that what Edward Stein has referred to as the "standard picture of rationality" must be mistaken -- that 'being rational' is not so much a matter of slavishly conforming to established rules of inference (a process) as a matter of 'being able to "see" what is going on' as a result of reasoning that has already transpired, whether one's own, or culturally acquired (the product of a process). Accordingly, I assume our common sense rationality assessments can reasonably be construed as appraisals of a mental map of sorts in which the cognitive component of this "seeing" correlates with the extent to which the map is comprised of beliefs that accurately and coherently represent reality including, among many other things, beliefs about how to acquire beliefs that accurately and coherently represent reality (reflected in how well one reasons).

Compatible with the foregoing and the implication that rationality is a matter of degree, this would also mean that when we refer to an individual as "rational" or "irrational" that we are simply expressing a rough appraisal of how this individual's mental map compares to the norm and that the failure to appreciate this quirk in our ordinary use of words has probably been at the core of a considerable amount of confusion and disagreement (e.g., Cohen, 1981, etc.). For this reason, I do not construe experimental evidence that humans routinely violate established rules of inference (e.g., Kahneman and Tversky) as evidence that humans are irrational, but rather as evidence that expert opinion might be relatively more rational than the norm (in terms of 'being able to "see" what is going on') where such matters are concerned in much the manner some might argue that expert opinion has been relatively less rational than the norm with regard to its longstanding love affair with the "standard picture".*

One of the slipperiest terms in the philosophical lexicon, 'rationality' is many things to many people (Alvin Plantinga).

*As is so often the case, I suspect the lover in question may have been blinded by lust, on this occasion, the lust to reduce mind to matter via the reduction of rationality to logic/ computation/ rules/ principles/ processes/ procedures, etc. (mechanistic materialism)