Please excuse me if I have accidentally set off an eternal loop of thought from 
which there is no escape (although what if consciousness is such an eternal, 
strange loop for which there is no solution? Gilbert Ryle says in "The concept 
of mind" that the "self" belongs to the things which remain confusing no matter 
how you look at it: "Should I, or should I not, put my knowing self down on my 
list of the sorts of things that I can have knowledge of? If I say no, it seems 
to reduce my knowing self to a theoretically infertile mystery, yet if I say 
yes, it seems to reduce the fishing-net to one of the fishes which it itself 
catches")I was trying similar to Victor Klemperer to understand the evil that 
haunts us. At the core evil is selfishness, but why are people so easily 
deceived by it? As you know Klemperer was a German linguist who tried to 
understand the Nazis by examining their language (in his LTI book) and their 
actions (in his diaries). He used the tool which he knew best, which was 
language.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LTI_%E2%80%93_Lingua_Tertii_ImperiiIf 
there is a (wannabe) dictator at the top who is deceiving us, how he is doing 
it, is the deception somehow visible in his language, and what role do emotions 
play in the bigger picture as a mechanism of deception and control?Donald Trump 
for example seems to judge everything if it is good or bad for him personally. 
Everything is always about him. He seems to be unable to discuss things in an 
objective way, and his speeches are full of subjective descriptions, from 
simple judgements to heavy insults. Things around him are either terrific or 
terrible, tremendous or tedious, awesome or awful, great or ghastly, huge or 
tiny, 
etc.https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/03/how-to-talk-trump/550934/As
 you you know Hitler was full of emotions in his speeches too. In his speeches 
he talked himself regularly into a rage. Demagogues almost embody negative 
emotions. The rage and hate towards the perceived opponent, and the shame of 
the own situation soon to be replaced by pride, as Arlie Russell Hochschild 
describes in her latest book "Stolen Pride: Loss, Shame, and the Rise of the 
Right"https://speakoutsocialists.org/book-review-stolen-pride-loss-shame-and-the-rise-of-the-right/-J.
-------- Original message --------From: [email protected] Date: 5/9/25  
12:17 PM  (GMT+01:00) To: 'The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group' 
<[email protected]> Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Your personal truth Oh Gosh, Jochen.  
On the one hand I am deeply indebted to FRIAM members for allowing me to noodle 
in areas of thought where I have no business; on the other hand, I feel 
obligated not to hide from you how very, very bad I think Mary C. Lamia’s 
thinking is.  In the first place, lover of metaphors that am, I think the 
anthropomorphism of the brain is one of the most dangerous metaphors a human 
can bring to psychology, because it sets off an eternal loop of thought from 
which there is no escape.   Meteorology and Psychology have much in common.  
They both have to do with objects with innards operating in environments.  With 
Psychology, the objects are human, the innards are the guts and brain, and the 
environment is the people and things around us.  In Meteorology, the objects 
are the storms, the innards are the fronts and other structures of cyclones, 
and the environment is the earth’s surface and the larger circulation of its 
atmosphere.  Perhaps I feel drawn to Meteorology just because it seems so like 
a behavioral science.  (Or, to get the order of events right, I was drawn to 
Psychology because it was so like Meteorology.)   But we must keep our levels 
of organization straight.  And if we, like Mary C., are to make metaphors 
between the whole (the person) and the part (the brain) and then to say that 
the part is manipulating the whole, she ought to be damn clear what kind of 
metaphorical world she his let herself into or she will never get out alive. I 
don’t think she knows anything she is talking about.  I would be terrified if 
one of my college-aged grandchildren were to fall into the hands of such a 
person.   I am deeply sorry if I am being a jerk.  (And will no doubt deeplier 
sorrier when one of you points out both that I am both being a jerk and  that I 
am wrong).  If you were tempted to carry on this conversation further, now I 
have been a jerk, I would love to explore with you how some aspect of Mary’s 
thought accorded with your experience and perhaps gave you comfort or insight 
because of that.  When she talks of the brain, what is she actually talking 
about for you.  Because, if one thing is damned sure, it is that when people 
talk about their brains, they are talking about something they have never 
touched or seen or heard or felt.  They are talking about a beetle in a box, a 
nothing.  Or they are using the brain as a model of behavior.   OK, Russ, Dave, 
Glen, Marcus, Erics, have at me.   Nick From: Friam <[email protected]> 
On Behalf Of Jochen FrommSent: Thursday, April 24, 2025 2:10 PMTo: The Friday 
Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]>Subject: [FRIAM] 
Your personal truth If Nick shares his struggles with weather I can share my 
unqualified thoughts about psychology :-P I was thinking about the orange 
menace, how he deceives everyone and how he manipulates his followers by 
controlling their emotions and I was wondering if emotions deceive us in 
general. Do emotions deceive us by creating a reality distortion field that 
paints the objects they have identified as desirable (primarily food & mates 
for supper and pairing time) in the brightest colors?  Emotions certainly need 
to manipulate us in order to control us. Their purpose is to influence our 
behavior and interactions. Psychologist Mary C. Lamia writes "Without any 
deliberate effort on your part, your brain evaluates every situation you 
encounter and decides if an emotion should be activated to alert and protect 
you" [1]. They are in a sense the PR machine and advertising agency of the 
body. As if the body would create an advertising agency that highlights the 
objects it should seek.  Emotions deceive us because they exaggerate. If we are 
in love they turn the desired object of person into some kind of wonderful 
dream. We only perceive positive traits while negative ones are overlooked. If 
we hate something we only perceive negative traits. These distortions act on 
top of your beliefs which "create a cognitive lens through which you interpret 
the events of your world" [2] They exaggerate to alert and protect us. Mary C. 
Lamia writes "By creating anxiety, anger, sadness, fear, guilt, shame, disgust, 
embarrassment, or any number of emotional responses that your brain has at its 
disposal, your emotional system attempts to inform and protect you by making 
you feel whatever it is you need to know." [1] Emotions deceive us because they 
can be misguided based on your previous experience, for example in anxiety 
disorders or addiction: "Your emotional system has no reason to lie, although 
it can be misguided based on your previous experiences in the world that have 
informed it." [1] Apparently emotions create a personal truth for each of us 
which shows us the world as they (on behalf of our selfish genes) want us to 
see it. A kind of personalized, distorted version of reality that reflects the 
importance of each object based on our personal longings and desires. Mary C. 
Lamia writes "nevertheless, your emotions will tell you the truth - your truth 
- even if you don't want to listen." [1] [1] 
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/intense-emotions-and-strong-feelings/201208/do-emotions-lie
 [2] 
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/living-forward/202009/how-your-thinking-creates-your-reality
 -J. 
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