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Post a Comment On: Bruce Charlton's Notions

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Blogger T said...

Thank you for this post! I had a notion of this weakness in myself, but this made things explicit and brought a lot of clarity.

I wonder if you have any advice on what striving against this looks like?

Just understanding the problem is very helpful, but if you have similar light to shed on this aspect I'm all ears. A contrary virtue perhaps?

16 March 2023 at 15:21

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

@T - I suppose that each must find his own solution - but the main point is to decide how important it is to communicate clearly as the priority, and if it IS of sufficient importance; then trying to make the necessary sacrifices.

16 March 2023 at 16:30

Anonymous Bill Ryan said...

Bruce, this is Bill Ryan here, the very same. :) Thank you so much for your very generous mention.

You're astutely correct about my lack of embarrassment in discussing what I feel are important issues. I strive for rigour if at all possible, inasmuch as any opinions I share are usually carefully covered with caveats where needed. But I'd suggest that in our complex and multilayered modern world, the truth, whatever that may seem to be, must be discussed with as much intellectual honesty as we can all muster.

Richard Hoagland, an insider who used to work for NASA and has been fiercely critical of them, has famously stated that "The truth is different at every level". At the highest levels of the administrative and governmental pyramids that preside over the lives of every one of us, perceptions (correct or otherwise) of the "truth" may be very different from those held by the man or woman in the street.

And, far beyond the scope of this simple comment, what the person in the street believes to be "true" may be very much prescribed for him or her by those with powerful interests to keep the real truths protected and concealed from view.

My apologies for going slightly off-topic here -- but I do confess I'm not embarrassed to do so. :)

23 March 2023 at 12:21

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

Thanks Bill!

As I said, I think your original lack of embarrassment about speaking what you believe to be true was a gift of character; but the fact you have stayed that way is a consequence of many choices you have made over the decades.

Others I have known who began with your gift of confidence, made choices to do what was expedient, what others would find acceptable - and ended by conforming to the prevalent untruthfulness of the mainstream - and mostly self-blinded against reality.

Those who have 'normal' levels of embarrassment, of even hyper-embarrassment or shyness, may need to make uncomfortable or stressful choices that may go against their natures in pursuit of truth.

The purpose of this post is to suggest that 'normal'/ common embarrassment can get in the way of 'doing the right thing' - especially of expressing truth clearly; and this may need to be recognized and acknowledged as a personal flaw - *then* it may be possible to compensate for it.

23 March 2023 at 12:30