To the same degree that I hate and reject reality, I embrace and treasure logic. Not the extreme Spock-the-Vulcan logic, necessarily, where there is absolutely no wiggle-room, but good old common sense logic. Logic gives the world--well, me at least--a sense of order and meaning. Yet I am eternally dumbfounded by the utter lack of it around me.
You don't have to be particularly intelligent to be logical--only smart enough to realize when something does not make sense. I'm sure many of the most loathsome of those nominal human beings who exploit the lack of logic for their own gain do quite well on standard intelligence tests. Were their standard tests for morality, however, they would fail miserably.
The concept of logic is given at least lip service by most people: the problem is that so many simply choose not to employ it. Human greed is a major influence here. If something doesn't sound right, we're more frequently than not aware of it. But if what doesn't sound quite right involves something we want, we'll go along with it eight times out of ten simply because we want it to be right. And then, inevitably, after we've been whapped across the forehead with a coal shovel, we wonder how we could ever have been so stupid. To point out that we wouldn't have had to blame ourselves if we'd only applied a little common sense logic before going in is to talk to a tree stump.
Ponzi artists, get-rich schemers, politicians, religious leaders, spammers, and a host of others reap fantastic harvests of money and power on the rock solid and accurate assumption that the people they victimize are too stupid or too lazy to employ even the most rudimentary logic. And the sheer number of them speaks to their success. It literally makes me light-headed to think that otherwise good, otherwise intelligent people can believe that some African dignitary has chosen them out of the world's 5 billion people to ask for "help". Yet they do. They DO!
Not that I haven't occasionally overlooked--and inevitably regretted--logic's caution that something might be just a tad odd. But I hope it happens far less to me than to those millions of people who pump billions upon billions of dollars into the wallets and bank accounts of despicable cretins who delight in taking advantage of others' lack of logic.
Corporations routinely rely on the fact that you accept without question their every-thirty-second claim, while you sit on hold for 45 minutes, that "your call is very important to us." Making vague claims which, if not downright lies, are deliberately and patently misleading ("which emerging science suggests might help reduce the appearance"--six logic traps in that one phrase alone) is their stock in trade. And it works!
Political campaigns are one endless lack-of-logic-fest. How can anyone possibly, possibly believe the vomitous charges slung between candidates--or between political parties? Even the most rudimentary logic cannot get within miles of such excrement. Yet it works.
I've often noted that I credit my being an Agnostic totally to the fact than it is the only belief which logic can't blow out of the water. The mere fact that there are countless religions in the world, each one claiming to be the only true religion, should indicate that logic is missing here, somewhere. But of course it doesn't. Organized religions, on matters of dogma, have sidestepped logic's 800 pound gorilla in the room by devising the concept of "Faith." Absolutely brilliant because there is no objection which can be made which cannot be answered by that one word. It's almost as good an answer as "Because." Faith can indeed be a great comfort but it is the flimsiest of reasoning. "There are things Man is not meant to know" is all well and good, but behind even the most profound of questions there has to lie some sort of logic.
Does that make sense to you?
New entries are posted by 10 a.m. Central time every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. Please come back...and bring a friend. Your comments are always welcome. And you're invited to stop by my website at http://www.doriengrey.com, or drop me a note at doriengrey@att.net.
Wednesday, March 03, 2010
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