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Can you go insane from cognitive dissonance?

I shouldn't have tried to take Logic and Sociology in the same semester. Trying to reconcile what I've learned in both classes is making me crazy.
One of the things that Sheptoski is trying to get us to realize is that there is no objective position on a lot of things. This idea really bugs me. I am intellectually motivated by the desire to be right. Not in a "I cannot ever be wrong, so whatever I say goes" way, but in a "OMG, am I wrong? Tell me how I'm wrong please" way. I'm trying to push my worldview ever closer to a completely objective reality, and I can't do that if there is no objective reality. I don't want to be wrong, and if there's no objective reality, then there is no way I can be right.
Unfortunately, the only thing I have applied the previous statement to is the difference between my Logic class and my Sociology class.

Logic today was pure logical process. We've started getting into the use of mathematical symbols for logical statements, and it's actually a lot of fun--I get to use my high school algebra to demonstrate my amazing knowledge of parentheses. We did truth tables today, which concentrate on assigning truth values to letters and working out the validity of a statement mathematically from matrices. Very little real-life application here (who takes the time to assign letters to statements in a debate and then make a graph out of it, besides incorrigible math nerds?), but enjoyable as a puzzle. I like Logic; everything fits into place. It's either true or it isn't, and there's no Why or How or What If, just pure, smooth conclusion.

Sociology today was a discussion of why humans aren't rational. The arguments given:

A) We don't have all the facts, or we don't have accurate information, in any given situation.
B) We don't have unlimited cognitive powers or time.

Just having come from Logic class, I was still thinking in terms of thought processes. I suggested that these in and of themselves weren't indications of humans being irrational, but rather indications of limitations on the possiblity of rational thought. One of the other things we'd been discussing was the tendency of humans to ignore information that might undermine their worldview, which is something I can't reconcile with rational thought; the desire to be rational was, to me, the desire to have a realistic and therefore objective worldview, which cannot be achieved by ignoring information.
Apparently this is incorrect, and process, in ration, means little if you don't have the right information and accurate conclusions. No points for effort. So ration is the real-life version of logic, where one must work with facts and rules about the real world, and not logic, to arrive at an accurate conclusion.
This implies that the real world is not, in fact, logical, since logic doesn't always work in it.
This is the best argument for the existence of God that I have ever heard.
My oversimplified views on religion in general: God is not logical. If the universe is logical and mechanistic, there is no need for God to keep it running. If God exists, then there is no need for the universe to be logical and mechanistic in order to keep running. Boiled down to terms which would earn me points on a quiz:

A) If God exists, the universe is not logical.
B) If the universe is logical, God does not exist.

It has been proven that the universe is not logical, since logic does not work in the universe. Therefore, God exists.

I am not happy about this conclusion. Is there a religion that believes in God but is really pissed off about God's existence?

ETA: This argument is logical but may not be rational, as I may have been misinterpreting his comment. He may have meant that the reality defined by humans is not logical, as humans are not logical beings. Since he is a sociologist and not a cosmologist, this is the most likely interpretation.
In this case, I can go on believing that the rest of the universe is perfectly logical and that it's only humans that screw everything up with their crazy emotions and beliefs.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-03-04 06:55 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kaiwhakamarie.livejournal.com
I was interested to read the Chemistry student's answer in regards to hell. It's neat to see if analysed from a truly scientific perspective.

Only thing is, I wouldn't exactly say that MOST religions in the world believe non-members are going to hell. Hindus, Buddhists, Baha'i, Sikhs, Hare Krishnas and many others subscribe to theories that are quite the opposite. In fact, out of the five major world religions (Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Judaism, and Buddhism) only three technically believe this, and Christianity is the only one of the three that promotes the theory with any real dedication or fervor.

As Muslims believe that every human being is born Muslim and only denounce Islam when they embrace another religion, it is fair to say that the only people they believe might go to "hell" would be those who are another religion. That does not count humanists, athiests or agnostics. They have not embraced another God, and so therefore they are not against Allah.

Hell in general is a very Christian concept and while *some* other religions do have theories about what happens to non-believers, it tends to be more akin to the "absence of heaven" or the "absence of god/allah, etc" rather than fire and brimstone. Some religions might even suggest that "hell" is in fact, simply living on earth without God.

I drifted way off topic, sorry!

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