Yes to all exactly.

This partly how I question terminology used and often ask for clarification 
of words and meanings.  I don't really want to know what a person has said. 
I can hear that. I want to know what a person means.

A woman once said of, I believe, Winston Churchill: "Sir I believe you are 
drunk" "Yes Madam, I am". "But you are ugly and in the morning I will be 
sober".

On Tuesday, February 10, 2015 at 7:35:54 PM UTC-5, archytas wrote:
>
> Francis Bacon classified the intellectual fallacies of his time under four 
> headings which he called idols. He distinguished them as idols of the 
> Tribe, idols of the e, idols of the Marketplace and idols of the Theatre. 
> An idol is an image, in this case held in the mind, which receives 
> veneration but is without substance in itself. Bacon did not regard idols 
> as symbols, but rather as fixations.  They expand a bit like this:
>
> 1. Tribe
>
> The example of desiring to see more order in the universe than is actually 
> there is one of his examples of an idol of the tribe. He thinks that we all 
> suffer from that one.
>
> 2. Cave
>
> An example of an idol of the cave (one of Bacon's examples) is that some 
> minds are more drawn to new things and new ideas than they are to what has 
> been around for a long time, while other minds are more drawn to 
> "tradition" and "old school" ideas and ways than they are to newness. Bacon 
> thinks we should become aware what our own tendency is so that we can make 
> corrections for it. He hopes that by becoming aware of our own mind's 
> tendencies toward loving novelty or tradition that we might be able to 
> "correct" for them and then hopefully see things more clearly and truly.
>
> 3. Marketplace
>
> We often use words very loosely in common discourse. Bacon sees nothing 
> wrong with that when we are just speaking ordinary language with friends 
> and family. But, when it comes to trying to describe the world accurately 
> and precisely, we should be aware of our tendency to use words loosely and 
> should try to correct for it. When we are trying to speak precisely we 
> should probably not say things like "The mountain is out today" (anyone 
> outside of the Puget Sound area wouldn't have a clue what this means); or 
> "The sun went under a cloud" (the sun did not go anywhere, let along 
> underneath something); or "The sun came up this morning" (the earth 
> actually just rotated). None of those sentences is precisely true, and if 
> we use language imprecisely like this it can sometimes accidentally lead to 
> huge misapprehensions about the world. Bacon thinks this misuse of words 
> and language causes far more problems than we realize.
>
> 4. Theatre
>
> If you can think of someone you know who has recently bought into a whole 
> new religion or philosophy or psychology, you can probably see how they 
> have suddenly come to interpret everything in the universe according to 
> their new world view. That world view has become the new lens through which 
> they perceive and interpret everything in their world. What Bacon says, 
> though, is that we all do this. We all interpret the world through the lens 
> of our own little world view. It's just easier to see other people doing it 
> than it is to see ourselves doing it. Bacon thinks we should become aware 
> of how these world views shape and distort our own perceptions of the world 
> so that we might be able to correct for it a bit.
>
> This is old work.  My questions are about how we recognise the 'second 
> head' as a delusion yet move hardly at all on obvious political delusions 
> like economics, votes counting, social care, public ignorance and the 
> making invisible of many social issues.  For me, deep questions on self are 
> involved.  The internet self is unlikely to be, as Tony says, the same as 
> the 'real'one - but then we have know for much longer than the internet 
> people don't say the same things in different contexts.  In fact the man or 
> woman in the bar often looks totally different the morning after, let alone 
> what the politician says in a speech compared with when she is with her 
> backroom boys in the spin room.
>
> .
>
> On Tuesday, February 10, 2015 at 10:17:04 PM UTC, archytas wrote:
>>
>> At least with my knowledge of delusions I can imagine certain people 
>> growing a second head overnight and shooting the wrong spare.  
>>
>> On Tuesday, February 10, 2015 at 10:11:09 PM UTC, archytas wrote:
>>>
>>> That seems to run to form Gabby.  
>>>
>>> On Tuesday, February 10, 2015 at 10:06:43 PM UTC, Gabby wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Facil picked up your question and gave his answer, I agreed and then 
>>>> came Allan barking at Facil and I told Allan to watch his tongue or leave 
>>>> to his own thread. Only then did you enter the group timeline to start 
>>>> your 
>>>> big daddy has come home show. Now tell me what my deceitful intent was ... 
>>>> Or better, tell me tomorrow, I'm off for today.
>>>>
>>>> Am Dienstag, 10. Februar 2015 schrieb archytas :
>>>>
>>>>> The only people I meet like that tend to be online students Tony.  We 
>>>>> use Skype video conferencing for a few sessions, so have actually seen 
>>>>> each 
>>>>> other.  I'm quieter than people imagine, though none have yet said 
>>>>> 'uglier'.  I'm very prone to catch whatever bugs go around university 
>>>>> environments too, so rather like electronic distance.  With colleagues, 
>>>>> the 
>>>>> situation is we know a lot more about each other than most in online 
>>>>> encounters.
>>>>>
>>>>> My version has 'confusion' written through it.  I say something, Gabby 
>>>>> takes it another way, or knows what I intended and chooses another slant 
>>>>> for whatever reason.  Online, I assume she has a sense of humour and a 
>>>>> good 
>>>>> turn with words.  Deception is not part of this in the first place.  Just 
>>>>> guesses with less risk than so called reality.  I suppose the classic 
>>>>> online deceiver is the groomer - where the intent is to set up and image 
>>>>> and then meet the victim.
>>>>>
>>>>> On Tuesday, February 10, 2015 at 7:54:18 PM UTC, facilitator wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>  On Tuesday, February 10, 2015 at 2:11:33 PM UTC-5, archytas wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> The delusion that we are what we project is interesting Tony. 
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> "We claim to be what we project".  Your version allows for reality 
>>>>>> mine allows for dishonesty. I think most people want to project a 
>>>>>> filtered 
>>>>>> image of themselves enough so that if we ever meet people who we've only 
>>>>>> conversed with online we become slightly astonished how different they 
>>>>>> appear and act in "real life".  
>>>>>>
>>>>>>  
>>>>>>
>>>>>  -- 
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>>>>

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