We want to be rational here, don't we? Let us do as men do and check our foundations rather than assume that part has been taken care of and rush to build a tall skyscraper on top of what could be, if unexamined, cobwebs.
The books and the podcasts of Freedoman Radio have premises that I can't find. I'm looking and I'm asking but either they're unstated or else they are hidden somewhere and paied little notice to. Funny either way, since they are what matter most. And, without them the applications predicated upon them are not worth our attention.
Example, FDR372 (re sadness) "...if you allow yourself to feel that pain, as you should, as you really really should...uhhh, we're not saying any of this is syllogistically proven yet. Yeah [jokingly,] that'll be the next podcast!"
Okay, syllogistic proof is being taken seriously as an important and difficult task here. A task not attempted though, or perhaps someone can furnish the link? Why not? Isn't that important? Why would anybody sit through this podcast before having reason to believe that the assertions it relys on are true?
And there is much much more of this pattern elsewhere. I know, because I've been going through these podcasts trying to find the part where the syllogistic proof of the efficacy of emotions was given. In podcast titles like these you'd expect to get that information wouldn't you? And some very valuable principles besides. But here is what I found...
FDR295 and 296: How To Change Your Emotions: Plea to donate to FDR and a story about some guy's life.
FDR297: Aggression Versus Assertion: Mom's advice about how to cope with aggressive people
FDR318: Moral Experimentation: Before you try your idea on the country try it on a town first, and before that, on yourself
FDR334 and 335: True Versus False Emotions/Selves: The reason/passion false dichotomy as seen in the Romantic Manifesto
FDR349: You are not broken: Statement that *maybe* you're not broken
FDR352: Rage and Anger: More in the series of ongoing assumptions that emotions track convictions, and that there are true/false emotions and that (somehow) we can tell the difference between them
You get the idea. The groundwork is never ever layed, but further podcasts rush on to take an authoritive position concerning the likes of anger, rage, sadness, fear, envy, jellousy, humiliation, loss, sex, vulnerability, and so on. All of the advice given on these subjects has the ring of truth but we rational ones must suspend our belief while we wait for the undiscovered backbone that has not been supplied. Meanwhile, the irrational are swallowing it up and divorcing their parents and friends and rewriting their value systems and lives and crying into their skype microphones (like today!) all on the strength of cobwebs!
If you who do this and see value in such podcasts cannot answer this (to yourselves, if not to me) then you're living in hypocrisyland. Probably you'll swallow whatever feel-good load of truthy jive you are next exposed to and eat that stuff as indiscriminantly and tearfully as you have this one!
Here's what we're looking to substantiate...
1. Conceptual distinction of the true/false self (this component, at least, has been stated fully)
2. Premise that our emotions each pair with one of our conceptions
- persistently unsubstantiated. Merely assumed that our emotional apparatus is fully functional in this way, akin to the efficacy of the senses. eg there's a whole podcast about how origional sin is rubbish and we are "not broken" but invites throughout only that we consider the possibility we are not broken. Well, are we or aren't we?!
3. That these emotions can be paired to a true and false self (if 2 were verified this would follow logically)
4. That we are able to tell these true emotions from false ones
- Even though the above is all assumed, it is never defined as to which emotions are true and which are false in a general sense
- Podcast 352, for example, gives some of the most detailed prescription seen out of any of these podcasts. Tries to make the distinction between anger as true and rage as false, even mentions the Aristotelean mean, and establishes four steps to sort true from false emotions as one would have expected in 295/296. Fails though, because it falls back on premise 2 being able to answer premise 4 for us instinctually rather than the intellect being able to discover true from false emotions. Also makes unsubstantiated assumptions such as that patriotism and aggression are 'just bad'.
To sum up, these answers are as wonderful as a unicorn and to be as desired as flying carpet. If only emotions really did work like that, what a great friend they would be and what a difference it would make if the fancy of these podcasts were not fantasy but lessons. Alas, they are consumed and relyed upon as principles but presented only as maybes. I may be quite wrong and the syllogistic derivation is out there, perhaps in an overlooked podcast or hidden in the tiny wee minuites of an obscurely titled one. Or, maybe it's coming soon?
At any rate, I trust that unless Freedomainers are ignorant of the backbone of their convictions they wont mind showing it just once?