Liste des Groupes | Revenir à s lang |
On 28/07/2024 21:10, Rich Ulrich wrote:I don't think you are understanding Rich's post. He isn't describing his feelings, he is describing the clinical issue of Aspergers from the point of view of the symptomatic individual. Both the issue of the "sin" and the whether an accidental untruth is a lie is part of what they experience, according to his research and his prior contact with an actual symptomatic individual.On Sun, 28 Jul 2024 14:57:29 +0100, Hibou>
<vpaereru-unmonitored@yahoo.com.invalid> wrote:
Le 28/07/2024 à 10:57, occam a écrit :Consider this combination: Asserting something that is not trueOn 27/07/2024 18:52, Rich Ulrich wrote:Yes, I don't think it's peculiar to Asperger's or autism. People often adopt positions without exploring them thoroughly, commit themselves, and then feel obliged to defend that commitment, even when it turns out they're wrong.Peter Moylan wrote:Whoa! I'm no expert on Aspergers, but that is a big leap. There areOn 27/07/24 20:32, Steve Hayes wrote:Anecdote: The great mathmetician/statistician Karl Pearson was[PTD] would pronounce that something someone else had said wasThe Australian coat of arms shows a kangaroo and an emu holding a
wrong, when it wasn't and continue to insist on it even when several
people had produced evbidence that it was true.
shield. These two animals have something in common: they cannot walk
backwards. Their anatomy does not allow it.
That was PTD's problem. When caught in an error, he was completely
incapable of backing out. His only option was to dig a deeper hole.
He's the only person I've encountered with such a severe form of this
disability. Some others came close, but they got out of the impasse by
responding with a non sequitur.
also the first editor of Biometrika (for 35 years). He described
what we know as the Pearson chisquared test -- but for a few
years, he insisted that it had 3 degrees of freedom, not 1. And
he refused to publish the folks who argued (what he finally
conceded) for 1.
This is frequent a characteristic of Aspergers Syndrome (which
is a diagnosis no longer in the book; too bad).
half a dozen cognitive biases that could equally explain Pearson's
behaviour. Have a sift:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cognitive_biases
Just for starters:
- Escalation of commitment:
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Escalation_of_commitment>
- Illusory truth effect:
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illusory_truth_effect>
- Big Ego. As the editor of Biometrika for 35 years, he would certainly
not like to be corrected.
It's not easy to admit one is wrong, but it has its advantages. It brings discussion to a halt, instead of prolonging it embarrassingly, and one gains Brownie points for valuing the truth.
is LYING.
...unless you are not aware of it being not true. If the 'fact' you are
asserting is wrong, and you are not aware of it, you are NOT lying. You
are just being ignorant.
>LYING is very bad, like, a bad sin.>
Personal question - are you a Catholic by any chance, Rich? Only
Catholics lose sleep over 'sin'. I don't. I do lose sleep if I
knowingly lie, but I do not consider myself a sinner. Sin is a Catholic
invention, for Catholics, by Catholics.
>Please read carefully.So one is careful
in what one asserts. And one does not want to admit to the sin of being wrong. This creates a certain internal conflict, because there is also the notion that a 'sin' should be something
that was intentional; and the original mis-statement is not
something that one regrets.
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.