barracuda wrote:Canadian_watcher wrote:Can you humilate an idea?
Humiliating ideas is a fine way to make progress. Some ideas need to have their pants pulled down and be stood in the village square where other ideas can stroll by and snicker.
I respectfully challenge this.
It applies to ideas the same treatment given to an Iroquois prisoner. If he is still standing after walking down a line of warriors being clubbed, then obviously he's ok (assuming he survives)
To me this is a sort of unexamined 'memetic social Darwinism' going on here.
This is the 'critical thinking' of testing an idea to destruction to see if it is any good.
barracuda wrote:crikkett wrote:Ridiculing an idea is different than ridiculing a person. 2nd one hurts.
The first one hurts as well, if the idea is held as forming an integral part of one's personal being.
An 'integral part of ones being' is a sliding scale from something one might mildly agree with to something one would happily gives ones life for.
Whether YOU YOURSELF agree or find value in another's idea - surely there is another thing to take into account - which is they acknowledgement that THEY DO.
It doesnt mean they are 'objectively right'.
barracuda wrote:crikkett wrote:Someone please let me know if the thread gets intelligent again.
Please send up a balloon should that unlikelihood actually transpire.
Passivity * Sneering = Cynicism
barracuda wrote:Searcher08 wrote:Ridiculing something is an act of power , power over whether it is women, gays, Irish, animals or ideas.
Thinking at all is an act of power. Consider the various metaphors we use for consideration: "get a grasp on", "wrap your mind around", etc. Attempting to understand is attempting to control.
Faith is an even more powerful power mechanism, as it makes real and material the ineffable.
Christ, every act is an act of power, including the act of submission.
What you describe as metaphors, I use the NLP language of representational systems - what you have given in that frame are examples of kinesthetic representations a la "I am in touch with" "I have a handle on" etc
I would say that attempting to understand is not just an attempt to get control but also to get a perspective on something. I see understanding as a dynamic on-going process rather than a one-off state that one enters into.
What I wanted to communicate though was about
ridicule as power OVER
When an idea is ridiculed, particularly in a group situation, more attention is often given to denigrating the person who puts the idea forward than the idea itself.
If anything , it tends to reinforce groupthink. By looking for the value in an idea that you intitally consider crap, you may find HUGE value that outweighs every bad thing you first thought of. Critical thinking is based on evaluation - so if you have already evalueated that the idea is crap, you will see no reason to look for value in it.
barracuda wrote:I would suggest that ridiculing is very poor thinking, because it is actually a somewhat arrogant response based on a partial assessment that doesnt include humane respect for the person having it.
Amputation is a shocking and humilating procedure as well, but it's performed in the hope of future wellness.
Interesting metaphor from surgery -
This comes back to the memetic Darwinism mentioned previously
Looking at it from the "Language of the Feminine" a la the Mysogyny thread
You subject ideas to
ridicule, humiliation, amputation, for their own good
barracuda wrote:Ridiculing an idea is a weak aspect of critical thinking.
Why? Because thinking stops at this point. It denies an entire aspect of thinking which is that of Movement - where does this idea lead TO.
The avenues of exploration opened up by abandoning an idea are just as numerous as those made available by accepting one.
The issue is abandoned after what process? Having a culture of ridiculing 'bad' ideas will tend not to create a climate where people feel confident about putting them forward. This is a huge weakness of 'critical thinking'
"WELL WHO HAS A GREAT IDEA?"
What about X
"THATS THE STOOPIDEST THING I EVER HERD!!!!"
>silence ensues tumbleweeds blow across the floor<
Why the silence? Because people do not want to be treated like a dick because their idea might need improvement.
barracuda wrote:I have seen creative problem solving sessions totally stymied by a (self-styled) critical thinker 'assessing' every idea as it came up.
"7. Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent."
The end result of Ludwig's process is action, not further discourse.
The end result of ridiculing ideas is that you ridicule people, reduce creativity, decrease communication between people and turn innovation into an ordeal which is not a good thing in the broader global context of 2011.