List,

I find the notion of instinct as a separate and distinct category of knowledge, 
“written down in the DNA,” as it were, problematic. There must be, imho, a way 
to account for instinct within the context of pragmatism, the three categories, 
and ultimately, “knowing how to be.” I suspect that DNA entanglement 
(nonlocality) might have a crucial part to play... this is an unsubstantiated 
hunch on my part, and I know that many people are reluctant to go down this 
“DNA entanglement” route. But I figure that an interpretation within the 
context of DNA entanglement will resolve a number of intractable issues in 
biology, physics and biophysics, this instinct distinction being number one 
among them... I would also rank the problem of entropy (the natural proclivity 
of ordered DNA “data” to disorder) as equally important, but that lies beyond 
this question of the instinct distinction.

sj

 

From: John Collier [mailto:colli...@ukzn.ac.za] 
Sent: Wednesday, 15 July 2015 2:36 AM
To: mig...@cegri.es; peirce-l@list.iupui.edu
Subject: RE: [PEIRCE-L] Instinct

 

Thanks to everyone who responded, but especially to Miguel for sending this 
gem. Now I just have to figure out what lies behind it. 

 

I agree with Jeff that the Century Dictionary entries are not particularly 
useful.

 

I should be asleep. Best to all,

 

John

 

From: mig...@cegri.es [mailto:mig...@cegri.es] 
Sent: July 15, 2015 1:18 AM
To: John Collier; peirce-l@list.iupui.edu
Subject: Re: [PEIRCE-L] Recently published: Hitler and Abductive Logic

 

Dear John,

In the last paragraph of an extremely interesting text, "A Theory of Probable 
Inference", W4: 408-450 (1883); Peirce points that "Side by side, then, with 
the well established proposition that all knowledge is based on experience, and 
that science is only advanced by the experimental verifications of theories, we 
have to place this other equally important truth, that all human knowledge, up 
to the highest flights of science, is but the development of our inborn animal 
instincts."

Best,

Miguel Angel Fernandez

El 14/07/2015 a las 19:08, John Collier escribió:

Folks,

 

I am very interested in instincts for various reasons. I recently gave a talk 
on Piaget’s views on instincts at the International Society for Philosophy, 
History and Social Sciences in Biology in Montreal last week. I would be most 
interested if there is a Peircean position on instincts that can be supported 
by his writings. I would be surprised if this were not so, but so far I have 
not seen anything that I could use.

 

Best to all,

John

 

From: Helmut Raulien [mailto:h.raul...@gmx.de] 
Sent: July 12, 2015 8:04 PM
To: ozzie...@gmail.com
Cc: Stephen Jarosek; Edwina Taborsky; Benjamin Udell;  
<mailto:peirce-l@list.iupui.edu> <peirce-l@list.iupui.edu>
Subject: Aw: Re: [PEIRCE-L] Recently published: Hitler and Abductive Logic

 

Ozzie, Stephen, Stephen, List,

I agree. And I think, that idealists are in fact realists, because: Liberty, 
equality, fraternity and justice are not only ideals, but also human instincts, 
inherited structure of the human race, written down in the DNA. That is so, 
because genetically we are still hunters and collectors, and they have led a 
free life, people were quite equal with their rights and plights, everybody was 
dependent on everybody else, and they had to solve conflicts in a just way. So 
I think, that culture is often overestimated, a rigid culture can block these 
instincts for a while, but they will reappear soon. This view is just rosy 
because of its hope, that no rigid culture will gain total control.

Best,

Helmut

  


Ozzie <ozzie...@gmail.com>
 

Stephen ~ 

I don't go along with your characterization of American history in such generic 
terms.  You seem to say the founding fathers supported personal freedom -- end 
of story.  But America's founding fathers revolted for a specific reason: 
English citizens living in the American colonies did not have representatives 
in the British Parliament or the protections of British law.  

 

The US Constitution established a central government with constraints on what 
it could do, but among those constraints we do not find a limit on the size of 
government, special rights for a privileged minority or protection of the 
status quo (independent of other legally recognized rights).  Live-and-let-live 
is the law of the land, but when enough citizens support new policies the 
founding fathers provided them/us a means of promoting their/our aspirations.  
New laws, new states, new voters, and Constitutional amendments were all 
anticipated within their master plan. Change. 

 

Thus America was a controlled social experiment.  The founding fathers 
established a mechanism for seeking the most beneficial social policies, but 
didn't prescribe them.  

 

As far as outcomes, everyone has an opinion.  That's politics. 

 

Regards, 

 

Tom Wyrick 

 

 

 


On Jul 12, 2015, at 6:54 AM, Stephen Jarosek <sjaro...@iinet.net.au> wrote:
 

It would seem that Edwina and I are on the same page throughout most of this 
topic. It is often said that the founding fathers of America understood 
something about human nature, hence their emphasis on minimal government. What 
was that “something?” Let me posit a guess. IMHO, it would proceed by way of 
the following reasoning:

1.       Idealists are usually well-intentioned enough. They see the world 
through rose-coloured glasses and want to fix things that they perceive are 
“wrong” or “broken.” But accompanying their best intentions is a problem... a 
very intractable problem;

2.       To make the naive but well-intentioned vision of idealists work, they 
need to harness cultural groupthink, and they need to implement the machinery 
of bureaucracies... ie, big government. They need to give license to groupthink 
to make it work. The person that assimilates well into the cogs of bureaucratic 
groupthink is a very different kind of animal to the naive but well-intentioned 
idealist;

3.       The typical idealist is usually a very congenial person with passions 
and ideas. The typical bureaucrat (at least from the perspective of my own 
experience as a whistleblower-turned-refugee) is usually a secretive troglodyte 
that maps his own agenda to the purpose of the greater bureaucratic machine. He 
uses the bureaucratic machine, principally, to further his own ends, and his 
ideal situation is synergy between his own agenda and that of the bureaucracy. 
Any person that is perceived as a threat to both agendas is perceived as 
dangerous and is to be eliminated. In the meantime, while all this takes places 
under the cover of The Privacy Act, EEO, FOI, HR, and other such 
smoke-and-mirrors hogwash, the bureaucracy carries on its people-friendly 
masquerade that is usually publicly associated with the intentions of the 
idealists.

I think that America’s founding fathers were onto something. How tragic that 
it’s all falling into a heap now. This then, is the crux of the problem. 
Bureaucracies require the application of a very different kind of groupthink 
psychology to that of the individualistic idealist that inspires them... the 
secrets and hidden agendas that make the behemoth of stoopid work are very 
different to the congenial, public best wishes of the idealists, and there is 
no solution to this conflict of interest. It is at this juncture that the 
well-intentioned idealist becomes naught but a useful idiot... useful as a 
public face of the bureaucratic machine that takes on a life of its own.

sj

 

From: Edwina Taborsky [mailto:tabor...@primus.ca]
Sent: Saturday, 11 July 2015 2:54 PM
To: Thomas
Cc: Benjamin Udell; peirce-l@list.iupui.edu
Subject: Re: [PEIRCE-L] Recently published: Hitler and Abductive Logic

 

Yes, very nice outline, Thomas, of the strength of the 'melting pot' tactic, 
which I support. And that's why I'm against the current focus on 
'multiculturalism' and 'identity politics' which is all the rage in America and 
Europe now. It actually retains and fosters those ancient irrational tribal 
hatreds. And any 'progressive' who, in their multicultural/identity political 
sanctimonious zeal doesn't understand that these minority enclaves - which are 
kept insular by multiculturalism/identity politics.... can be even more racist, 
bigoted and irrational than any majority...is naive in the extreme.

 

Edwina

 

 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Thomas 

To: Edwina Taborsky 

Cc: Benjamin Udell ; <peirce-l@list.iupui.edu> 

Sent: Friday, July 10, 2015 11:46 PM

Subject: Re: [PEIRCE-L] Recently published: Hitler and Abductive Logic

 

Edwina ~ 

Germans and the other groups you listed have all assimilated into American 
society, and none of the nationalities or races have proved particularly 
intractable. The melting pot is imperfect, but it does a good job of 
challenging cultural myths and ancient hatreds that seem to continue for 
centuries in closed/insular societies.  The demagogues of America appeal to the 
down-and-out of most/all nationalities -- almost as though they're broad-minded 
humanists.  That reveals a focus on laws and justice, as opposed to settling 
scores with ancient enemies. 

 

By contrast, Europe, Asia and the Middle East are comprised of far more insular 
societies. Historically most people there have been poor and ruled by 
often-brutal and almost-always deceitful autocrats who coopted the church to 
hold onto power.  Little wonder that warlords and terrorists have played such a 
big role in their political histories. 

 

Regards,

 

Tim Wyrick

 

 


On Jul 10, 2015, at 6:05 PM, Edwina Taborsky <tabor...@primus.ca> wrote:

Yes, stereotypes are basic to our identification of 'identity groups' - whether 
it be Jews, Italians, Germans, Russians, Chinese. Such distorted and simplistic 
images-of-the-other are found among all people. Americans are viewed by 
Europeans as...and so on. But the few key variables of behaviour that we 
understand to define 'that nationality'  are not, in my view, an explanation 
for the rise of fascism in Germany.

 

That is, my point is that we are all as human beings,  susceptible to emotional 
blindness in our political and societal views; we aren't at all 'rational 
beings' when dealing with political and social affairs. Therefore, if the 
economic and societal order breaks down, I'd say that we are all susceptible to 
fascism. There is a critical threshold when the rule of law, the political 
order, the societal order, the economic viability breaks down - and a 
power-bloc can move in and take over..and then, impose its fascism.

 

The ideology of 'old Germany', with its aristocracy, its ideals of governance 
had little to do with the ideology of 'pure race' of Nazism, nor the Nazi focus 
on nationalism as a biological construct and the contempt for 'lesser beings'. 
After all, the British upper class had a similar focus as the old Germans on 
'noblesse oblige', strict rules of behaviour, a military career and so on - and 
were not susceptile to fascism. [But many were susceptible to 
communism/socialism!].

 

There were plenty of people in the old upper class and the middle class of 
Germany who were opposed to fascism and Nazism. 

 

Yes, the  horrors of WWII did bring a requirement that US military bases remain 
in Germany after 1990 reunification - but, logically, such a demand by the 
French and others cannot PROVE that, 'Germans are basically capable of moving 
back into fascism' without such a presence. That is - the modus ponens 
statement of: 

IF there are bases, THEN, they will be peaceful"

 

can't be turned around to declare:

'They are peaceful; that's because there are bases'. (Fallacy of Affirming the 
Consequent).

 

So- I am not convinced that the German people are predisposed to fascism, nor 
that Hitler's rise was a mysterious event. I remain focused on the economic, 
political and societal infrastructure - which can decimate a culture's deep 
beliefs in a decade. We have our own examples.

 

Edwina

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Benjamin Udell 

To: peirce-l@list.iupui.edu 

Sent: Friday, July 10, 2015 6:19 PM

Subject: Re: [PEIRCE-L] Recently published: Hitler and Abductive Logic

 

Having grown up in the 1960s on Manhattan's West Side, when WWII wasn't so long 
ago and a German accent was immediately associated to movies and TV series 
about Nazis, I admit that I may be unduly predisposed to regard certain strains 
of militarism, morality by government fiat, and 'just taking orders' as 
problematic aspects of the early-20th-Century German culture. Also I read 
_Roots of the Nazi Mentality_ when I was an impressionable kid.

But I don't think that power affairs (military+politics) and economics are 
everything against culture (glamour!) and society (status!) as some sort of 
zero. You've a case to make there, Edwina, if you wish to convince people. The 
problematic character of early-20th-Century German attitudes - militarism, 
morality by government fiat, 'just taking orders' - have not gone unnoticed by 
anybody around Germany. The reunification of Germany in the 1990s involved US 
guarantees of maintaining military bases in Germany, guarantees sought by the 
French and other governments.

Best, Ben

On 7/10/2015 3:16 PM, Edwina Taborsky wrote:

No, Helmut, I don't think that the German people 'had more barbaric instincts 
than other people'. We are all similar in our capacity for emotional 
irrationality and violence. When a societal system of law and order breaks down 
for various reasons, i.e., is not providing security, is not functioning in a 
just and fair manner, is corrupt, , is subverted by a higher authority - then, 
the 'cooling off' phase of rational examination of the situation is rejected - 
and we get either a mob, or a 'controlled mob, i.e., a band of thugs'.

Democracy is not, in itself, a barrier against barbarism. As Tolstoy said, 
'Wrong does not cease to be wrong because the majority shares in it'.  
Democracy, to be just, requires a constitution and the rule of law, set up as 
created by men, and capable of change by men, but applicable to all.

Edwina

----- Original Message -----
From: Helmut Raulien
To: Ozzie
Cc: Edwina Taborsky ; <stever...@gmail.com> ; Peirce List
Sent: Friday, July 10, 2015 2:51 PM
Subject: Aw: Re: [PEIRCE-L] Recently published: Hitler and Abductive Logic

I agree, that his "abduction-type message is" only "a big part of that 
success". Tenacity, authority and apriori also are. I wrote, that a false 
abduction to laypersons of logic can look like a proper conclusion. But not all 
Germans were too much laypersons to see the lies (eg. Heidegger). Nevertheless 
they followed him. Putting the emphasis on Hitlers intelligent ways of 
manipulation should not assign him a bigger part of the guilt, and lessen the 
guilt of the Germans. They had more barbaric instincts than the other peoples, 
and were no democrats. Other in than other nations, there has not been a 
democratic constitution initiated by the people.
Best,
Helmut

 Ozzie <ozzie...@gmail.com>


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