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Showing posts with label happiness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label happiness. Show all posts

Monday, January 25, 2016

Morning Meditation

   






The morning is a great time to practice meditation, especially for people new to meditation or out of practice. The mind is closer to the state of freedom in the morning. Later in the day can be a difficult time to get the mind from frantic to calm. The bridge is shorter in the morning.
Here is an idea for morning meditation practice:

1. The first suggestion is important: Do not wake up to an alarm clock. I know this isn't possible for everybody, but perhaps it would be a good idea to redesign life, if possible, to allow the body to wake up gently. Recent research (and ancient wisdom) suggests that waking up to an alarm clock is bad for physical and mental health. Don't worry about what to do today or what's wrong with the world today. You can be a raging beast later this afternoon. For now just take things slowly.

2. The next suggestion is to practice meditation before brushing your teeth, washing your face, taking a shower, or drinking coffee. Drinking room temperature water is ok.

3. For the actual practice...
  • Laying: Upon waking up, take it easy. Remain in bed and breathe. Begin your meditation right here. The mind is already calm and ready. Spend at least five minutes feeling life. You might fall asleep again here. That's ok. Start a new morning again when you wake up.
  • Sitting: Next slowly get out of bed and sit at the bed corner. Continue breathing. Sit at the edge of the bed with eyes closed and a straight spine. Do this for five minutes and then slowly stand. There's no need to rush. The world isn't going anywhere.
  • Standing: Finally, stand at the window or outside and absorb the scenery of the morning while taking in slow deeper natural breaths. Spend as long as you like here. The world around is coming alive and you are part of it. You may see things you normally miss and experience those things as they are rather than what they are. Move as slowly as the morning sun-god. If the gods can move so slow, then surely we mortals can too. There's actually nowhere to be but here. Don't be fooled into thinking otherwise.
Now you can begin the day with a pace set by your morning meditation. Brush teeth, drink more water, have coffee or tea, some food, take a walk, and if you must go to work, do so slowly.

“Every morning was a cheerful invitation to make my life of equal simplicity, and I may say innocence, with Nature herself.”
― Henry David Thoreau



Monday, November 23, 2015

Too Much Credit Given To The Tool




We live in a reality of action and reaction; cause and effect. This leads us to misunderstand the role of tools and actions. Far too often people credit (or blame) the tool for the action rather than the actor.
Below is a retort to common situations where the tool is blamed for the effect of the action...

Nobody was killed by guns.
No houses were built by hammers.
Nobody was saved by surgery tools.
Nobody who hanged themselves was killed by a rope.

We hear these logical fallacies often: It is the President's fault, it's your fault, it's their fault, it's because of guns, it's in God's hands, it's because of  this or that.

All the while the only thing accomplished is a passing off of personal responsibility. By "personal responsibility" I don't only mean the self (although self-accountability is a form of personal responsibility), but also the blame we assign to something arbitrary to the committer of actions. For example, a great many people blame all Muslims for the acts of Islamic extremists, they blame guns for the acts of murderers, they blame the alcohol for their buffoonery, they blame the President (scapegoat/figurehead) for the effects of a broken system.

Often the person is overlooked and we search for some factor that played a part in their actions, and there are external factors, but those external factors may have different effects on different persons. We can see this in experiments where results are not conclusive.

  • Some tests show that heavy metal music kills plants. Some tests show that heavy metal music helps plants grow. Heavy metal cannot be blamed entirely for bad actions.
  • Some Muslims study the Koran and (along with political influences) become violently radicalized. Some Muslims study the Koran and become vessels of peace. Islam cannot be blamed entirely for bad actions.
  • Some people take LSD and go insane. Some people take LSD and become enlightened. LSD cannot be blamed entirely for bad results.
  • Some people use guns to commit murder. Some people use guns for self-defense, sport, or hunting. The gun cannot be blamed for it's actions or use.
  • Some people eat chocolate and experience bliss. Some are allergic and almost die. Chocolate cannot be blamed entirely for death.
  • Some people use a hammer to build a house. Some people use a hammer to beat someone over the head. The hammer cannot be blamed entirely for the malicious intent.
  • Some people are rich and become greedy. Some people are rich and practice philanthropy and charity. The money cannot be blamed entirely for the greed of the individual.

Truthfully, we can change the battery of a car a hundred times, but that will never fix the broken transmission.


Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Some Of My Interesting Friends That You Should Follow





Some Of My Interesting Friends That You Should Follow

First let me say: Thank you for following me, Laren Grey Umphlett, and my "Apes Gone Askew!" project and my other projects.  
Now let me continue on to promoting my friends...


  • Steve Gibb

My lifelong friend Steve Gibb is an amazing and talented individual with great charm and wit. I would not be who I am today without his friendship.
He’s a multi-style musician who has played in metal bands such as Black Label Society, Crowbar, Kingdom of Sorrow, Jasta, and Saigon Kick. He also plays guitar for his father Barry Gibb, who is also an amazing individual. He is definitely a worthwhile person to follow and gain inspiration from. His life experiences have been vast and you may find his current experience and projects to be motivational.
Fan page: www.stcgibb.com



  • Cesar Cabrera

I first met Cesar in the mid 90s and we’ve had a few adventures since then. He started grappling with me 20 years ago and has since gone on to become a black belt under Renzo Gracie and an excellent jiu-jitsu coach. He maintains his coolness to this day. I highly recommend following him and getting in some training with him if he’s ever in a town near you.
Instagram: @cesarcabrerabjj


  • Cheick Kongo

Cheick is a true badass with a cool demeanor and a fun sense of life. He’s a professional MMA fighter and well worth being a fan of.
Instagram: @kongo4real


  • Nael Chavez

Nael is an interesting person with a passion for doing well for the world. He’s a leading example not because of his greatness, but because he embraces his imperfections and tries to improve. In the process he improves the lives of those around him. He is the creator of the Enlightened Warriors youth group which I volunteer for when I can. You should definitely follow Nael and the Enlightened Warriors.


  • Amy Goalen

Amy is a California based photographer, and more specifically, a yoga photographer. If you are a fan of yoga and/or photography you should definitely follow her projects.
Instagram: @amygpics


  • Kamal Shalorus

Kamal is an energetic spirit to be around. He’s an amazing wrestler and MMA/UFC fighter. Always fun to be around and train with. He’s originally from Azerbaijan and now lives In Washington DC and visits Austin TX on a regular basis. Follow him!
Twitter: @kamalshalorus
Instagram: @kamalshalorus


  • Rudy Reyes

Rudy Reyes is a real life hero. His presence is energizing and he is as much of a student of life as he is a master. He was a former Recon Marine who was in the thick of it all and has since been on a life mission as a fitness trainer/motivator, spokesperson, model, actor in several films and shows, and a wandering warrior. Follow Rudy to keep motivated. Get his book “Hero Living”.
Twitter: @realRudyReyes
Instagram: @realrudyreyes


  • Brett Tutor

Brett is a great person. He is a tv host for home shows, tv and commercial actor, and also has a non-profit organization that raises money and awareness for drinking water needs around the world.
He also own Property Doctors, a home inspection company which I work for. He lets me have plenty of free time to dedicate to my causes and efforts in life. He’s a good soul and you will be seeing more from him in the public arena in the future.
Property Doctors: www.austinpropertydoctors.com
Twitter: @BrettTutor


 

Thursday, April 23, 2015

Sombunall



The word "sombunall", which means "some but not all", could be a highly useful word. It was coined by ontological language master Robert Anton Wilson. It functions as a condition attached to the word following it. This changes the sentence from a jarring absolute into a soft semantic glide.

"Women are crazy."
"Sombunall women are crazy."

Which of these two sentences is wrong? Which offers enough leeway to be sensible and variable to context and other yet-to-be-determined conditions?
In actuality "sombunall" is an excessive use of syllables. "Sombunall" simply means "some", since "some" already implies "not all".
However, the word "some" is often easily overlooked, so for the spirit of effect I like to use "sombunall". It brings attention to the condition you are attaching to the subject.

Joe A: "Some dingos have displayed acts of aggression in some cases."
Joe B: "Hey this asshole just said all dingos are aggressive! Can you believe the nerve of this guy???"

Or alternatively...

Joe A: "Sombunall dingos have displayed acts of aggression in some cases."
Joe B: "Sombunall dingos? What the hell is a sombunall dingo???"

There are very few absolutes in this world.
2+2=4, but not all 2s equal 4. They only equal four when given the condition of +2.
You could say "Sombunall 2s equal 4." Then someone would need to figure out which 2s equal 4. Only the 2s that have the condition of +2 added to them equal 4, but not all 2s equal 4.
In societal culture we have situations that almost always have complex variable or unknown conditions. This makes "sombunall" very useful in statements about our complex relations. The more complicated the cultural situations, the more possible variables exist.

Here is an exercise.
Change these absolute statements into statements that allow for variables using "sombunall":

"Cops are dicks."
"White men can't jump."
"Snakes are poisonous."
"Frogs are green."

"Muslims are the enemy."
"Chickens lay eggs."
"Pot smokers are dumb."
"Humans are the smartest animals on Earth."
"Steppenwolf songs are awesome."
"Flags wave in the breeze."
"Republicans/Democrats/other/etc are wrong."
"Apes have gone askew."

Enjoy using SOMBUNALL. It can change the dynamics of your expressions and prevent you from getting backed into the semantic corners of absolutes.
ALSO! PLEASE JOIN OUR FACEBOOK GROUP "APES GONE ASKEW!"

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

I Am An Ape

I Am An Ape

I am an ape. That’s for sure. You too. Well, at the very least we are riding around in an ape body and experiencing reality with an ape brain with apish tendencies. If I slip on a banana peel I can break my tailbone and experience a pain in the arse. If I slip in my relations with other apes I can get a headache or perhaps I can be a pain in the arse. It’s all very complex apishness, these bodies and minds. The numerous variables of complex ape psychology are hard to comprehend. Yet, we are tied in for now to this primal primate set of limitations.

And that’s what the human experience is, a complex set of primate limitations experiencing a small fraction of reality and cursed by the certainties we have about it. Even the elevated and enlightened minds among us remain attached to the dear apeness we think we experience as the truth. Our highly regarded certainties sit on dynamic display through our human expressions into the frantic collective of other humans (society), and the display case is sometimes impenetrable. In some cases it is bullet-proof or even bomb-proof to allow no tampering with this prized “truth” we think we possess.

This is where the wild party gets started: in the colliding of rigid truths. And wild parties can get out of control in a second. A guy looks at another guy’s girl (his possession) and shirts suddenly fly off and grunting and flailing begins. Some would call this a “fight”, but a fighter would call this an absurd mess, as if Mozart were witnessing a Justin Beiber concert. Nonetheless, a melee has ensued and the crowd reacts in its various ways: some frightened, some appalled, some joyfully entertained.

Is that uncivilized behavior? I suppose alcohol fueled mayhem can be construed as uncivilized, but it is the same complex ape-like social operations we can see even at the highest levels of society. This is because it is all primate reactions. Don’t be fooled by the uprightness and fancy words. We are a highly out of control species compounded by complexities on top of complexities.

However, the elevated mind and even the heathenous mind having brief moments of clarity can transcend these primal reactions. At least the reactionary behavior can be reduced or applied appropriately or sensibly. Each moment offers something to jolt us into or out of these foolish guardings of erroneous certainty which is supported by the tricks of our own mind. It is a choice that can be made, but only if we see that our perspective of reality is not all reality; that many factors are ignored by our opinions of truth. Once the walls of certainty collapse new growth is possible, like letting sunlight into a room full of dying plants. And we are dying. We are suffering a long slow social and psychological demise, because time has moved forward without us. We’ve hung on to our “truths” for far too long.

Ok, Laren, since you seem to know it all….

Wait a minute, I know nothing. That’s what this is all about!

….why don’t you tell us what to do?

There’s the problem: this ape mentality of thinking we need to be led, or thinking that we need to lead.

Wednesday, March 4, 2015

An Amazing Time In History



We live in an amazing time in history.
Here are a few things to consider about the time we presently live in:

  • We can instantly communicate around the world through type, audio, or video in real time.
  • We have virtually unlimited information available at our fingertips; the equivalent of a million libraries.
  • Our governments are being exposed.
  • We can quickly learn almost any skill with access to teachers and tutorials online. For example, you can learn to fix a broken table leg or cook an amazing omelet or learn a language fluently without having to go through an immersed apprenticeship. In the past one had to go to great lengths to learn to cook and other skills.
  • We can interact with people of all nationalities and backgrounds. This expands our pool of knowledge and gives access to wisdom different from our own, which can exponentially expand our own knowledge and wisdom.
  • In the past we only heard stories or saw pictures of our deceased relatives. We are now entering an age where we can watch video of how whole past generations lived.
  • Alternative foods, building methods, energy sources, and ideas are available to us.
  • Through a greater understanding of nutrition and exercise, people have the opportunity to be fitter and healthier than people in the recent past.
  • The old restricting beliefs and standards of society are dying a slow death. This will allow the species to move forward.
  • You can watch a nature documentary on HD TV and see a cheetah take down a gazelle. 100 years ago people only heard stories and some saw an illustration in a book of these far away mysterious creatures. Very few people ever witnessed something like this, now it is seen by millions.
  • You can now learn far more at home than you ever could at a university. Autodidaction.
  • We send spaceships throughout the solar system.
  • Science has now proven that reality isn't reality.
  • We are on the verge of discovering life on other worlds. It has already been proven mathematically.
  • We have a deeper understanding of nature.
  • There's a "spiritual" consciousness awakening happening around the globe that contrasts centuries of religious and political oppression.
  • You have access to alternatives to the proposed status quo. You have access to alternatives to the proposed status quo. Again, you have access to alternatives to the proposed status quo.

Now what are we going to do with all of this information, capability, and potential?
You see, it turns out that it is actually YOU who is steering the ship.


Sunday, January 18, 2015

The Textbooks For Life And Living

THE TEXTBOOKS FOR LIFE AND LIVING

To function maximally physically one must consume high quality food and exercise the body.
To function maximally psychologically one must consume high quality information and exercise the mind.
If more people than not read the following book list we would find a world transformed and transcended beyond its own confusion.
These are the textbooks I recommend for graduating to higher levels of life and sanity.

 The Bhagavad Gita

Excellent teaching for non-religious philosophy as well as religious practices. As with all religious texts there is more gained when read metaphorically rather than literally.















Tao Te Ching

As with many old texts there are many translations. All translations are imperfect, even from English to English and person to person! Interpretations may be tricky, and you may read passages from the Tao Te Ching multiple times and gain multiple insights. Never read with the blinders of dogma and certitude.















Science and Sanity

"Science and Sanity" by Alfred Korzybski outlines the tools and practice of General Semantics. It is a very long and difficult book to read. I have read it in bits and once from cover to cover. Alternatively I would suggest reading "Drive Yourself Sane" by Susan Presby Kodish and Bruce I. Kodish.














The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali

This ancient text contains 196 sutras of Raja Yoga that can each be used as a tool towards higher mind.











Prometheus Rising and Quantum Psychology

When most people think of Robert Anton Wilson they think of his surrealist fiction books such as "The Illuminatus Trilogy" and "Schrodinger's Cat Trilogy". I find great understanding in his non-fiction psychology books. They are great tools for understanding the mind and unconvincing yourself of that which your brain tricks itself into thinking it knows. Understanding the functions of the mind and belief can help dissolve the ego fiction that rules the mind.















Freedom From The Known

Everybody's favorite anti-guru lays out a great lecture on embracing uncertainty in this mind-expanding classic.


















Walden and Civil Disobedience

Henry David Thoreau wrote "Walden", a transcendental observation of reality from his two year experiment of semi-isolation. It will offer an entirely new way of seeing your own world.
"Civil Disobedience" will transform your understanding of the importance of freedom and resistance to anything or anyone who wishes to impose upon your freedom. It greatly influenced Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr in their struggles against oppression.












The Book

Alan Watts was a great bridge between East and West thought. He was quite eloquent in his speaking and writing. Many think "The Book" is his best work. It covers topics that will take the reader out of daily petty concerns and into a bigger picture.


















Critical Path

Buckminster Fuller's writing can be tough to read but well worth the endeavor. In "Critical Path" he discusses the importance of taking care of our world and the importance of taking care of each other instead of only self concerns.


Tuesday, December 9, 2014

The Awakening Strain

The Awakening Strain



"Awakening" sometimes comes with many adornments: flowers, robes, good feelings, cultural adornments, artwork, support groups, etc. Cultural adornments can be easily passed off as superfluous bullshit, but these adornments can be tools for transcendence if they do not become dogmatic traps. Awakening comes with many great benefits and by way of various paths, but awakening isn't always all marshmallows and gravy.

Awakening, simply put, is transcendence. Transcendence is a beautiful path, but it requires work. For example, a musician really begins to feel music when they transcend the thought of music theory or structure, but the work is still required. Beyond the structure of music is where creativity begins. Music theory itself is not music, but a tool. A religious person can begin the process of true spiritual awakening when they transcend dogma, structure, or system. The symbols and adornments of the various cultural perspectives are tools much like music theory. A meditator achieves awakening by no longer consciously adhering to method and entering into a realm beyond the deliberate effort.

But the work doesn't end once the door is open. The awakened mind (in a relationship with the body) still operates with one foot remaining in the "real" world, and can often struggle to understand surface reality as it interrupts higher consciousness. It's much like swimming to stay above water. The awakened mind has broken through the surface to breathe, but is still doing the work and continues to get wet.

There are also the personal human confines -the relationship of the awakened mind to the animal. For myself, although "awakened" (or I should say "perpetually in the cycle of falling and awakening") I still enjoy a good fight, wood fired meat, horror movies, strange humor, sex, chocolate cake, and other earthly perversions. I still experience anger, judgment, worry, frustration, and fear (although to a lesser degree). These are not flaws to be corrected. These are animalistic tendencies to be observed and experienced. Much as yin has a relationship to yang, the awakened mind can have a relationship to the animal body. One does not necessarily need to derail the other. Despite my love of my inner animal, I also find greatness in the smelling of flowers, staring at trees, creating forms of art, intellectual conversation, deep meditation, and expressing love and compassion.

A lack of perfection is the journey of the awakening strain. There is never a cause to give up, just enjoy the adventure, for no adventure is an adventure if it is perfect. Certainty has no place in awakening, but uncertainty comes with its own strains that are well worth embracing. The work continues.

"Awakening is possible only for those who seek it and want it, for those who are ready to struggle with themselves and work on themselves for a very long time and very persistently in order to attain it."
-G.I. Gurdjieff

Saturday, November 22, 2014

The Gold Star

The Gold Star

When we were growing humans we were sometimes awarded something extra for our good performance. If we did well enough on a spelling assignment we would get something far more glorious than a letter grade -we would get a GOLD STAR. Ding!

We knew nothing of the value of this gold star other than its luster which made it stand out as something better than an A+. The imprint of the importance of the gold star was imposed on us by our teacher and by our own innate insecurities which lead us to want to be as good as the other kid who got the gold star. If we too can get the gold star everyone around us will be happy and we will be happy too. We learn to achieve self-validation through validation from others, and the trampling rat race to get the cheese begins. Nowadays every kid gets a gold star!

But the actually valueless gold star didn’t go away after childhood. It has sneakily followed us into adulthood. The gold star is now a collection of meaningless approvals we seek -employee of the month, a fancy car, the gold watch, the official club shirt, the better seat to the show, the cool shoes everyone else is wearing, etc. We can sometimes waste a lot of energy and potential chasing these ghosts. We can also lose sight of things of higher value in our endeavors to achieve things of perceived importance. We lose sight of the achievement itself and strive for the reward. Striving for importance is not invaluable. The encouragement can be an important tool, but the wild free mustang doesn’t wear blinders and doesn’t miss out on the world around. Ultimately, if we strive for achievements for reasons of true personal value, adequate amounts of superficial and superfluous toys and entertainments will still be there for our enjoyment without the need for extra running in the hamster wheel. The icing will find the cake.

There’s nothing wrong with desiring a few nice things, but we can steer our energies so to not waste them entirely on frivolous rewards at the cost of chronic loss of potential.

Sometimes these gold stars can be used to manipulate us into doing things we don’t like for the promise of the false reward. Sometimes we don’t fall for this trick. Therein is the personal revolution.

"Great things are not accomplished by those who yield to trends and fads and fashions." -Jack Kerouac

So, strive for greatness, oh standing apes, but make sure it isn’t just a worthless sticker.

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Plan Your Escape!

Here's a great series of articles at New Escapologist written by Drew Cagne about planning your escape:

Part 0
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
Part 5

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

"The Poetic Realities, The Poetic Fantasies" COMING SOON!

My next book "The Poetic Realities, The Poetic Fantasies" will be available soon on Amazon in Kindle and paperback format.

It is not a poetry book, but it discusses life, consciousness, meditation, art, philosophy, self improvement, science, spirituality, quantum physics, yoga, and the human condition. It is a very deep and unique book with plenty of entertainment, metaphor, and humor. In it you will find poetry, prose, aphorism, short story, and lecture. "A poetic reality is not the truth and a poetic fantasy is not a lie."

Visit my Amazon page for more info: http://www.amazon.com/author/larengreyumphlett



Monday, August 25, 2014

Apes Gone Aflat!


People believe a lot of things, and luckily that doesn't make it so. We wouldn't want to fall off the edges of a flat world, would we?

The kind round-Earthers over at I FUCKING LOVE SCIENCE have shared this little bit about The Flat Earther Society. Check it out...

http://www.iflscience.com/space/there-are-still-people-who-believe-earth-flat-usa

Enjoy!
And remember, what comes around goes around!


Friday, June 6, 2014

Logical Fallacies Gone Askew!

A Few Favorite Fallacies

Logical Fallacies in societal thinking are similar to the release of large numbers plague infested rats into a city. Like with the plague, people actually do suffer and die as a result of rampant logical fallacies, so this isn't some simple matter of "oops". This is serious business. It is of life or death importance to become aware of logical fallacies. Askew apes are running around with these behavioral absurdities like axes in hand and swinging at everything in sight. They are usually unaware of doing this or having it done to them. Dumb apes.
While it is true that not everything in reality is logical, it is helpful to be aware of our own uses of these fallacies and to avoid fallacious manipulation by others. Logical fallacies can be a great tool for humor, but unfortunately also a great tool for destruction.
Here are a few examples of logical fallacies (*please note that the names I have given the examples here are for entertainment only and are not scientific terms):

WE CAN'T LET THAT HAPPEN LOGIC (a.k.a. SLIPPERY SLOPE or LUBED SNAKE)- "If we let gays get married, the next thing will be people marrying their pets."
This logical fallacy states that if we allow one thing to happen then some extreme and unlikely next step will happen as a result. If a specific religious institution does not want to grant marriage to gays then that is their business, but if a religious institution wishes to grant marriage to homosexuals (or heterosexuals or asexually or swingers or whoever) then they should be able to. There are many churches of many different faiths that will happily grant marriage to gay people. But marriage is no longer only a religious tradition. It is a legal bonding and government-issued contract between two people. With the separation of church and state, no church has the right to force the government or other churches to not allow gay marriage. Also, Nature is the ultimate lead authority in these matters. Therefore, gay marriage is perfectly reasonable. Problem solved.

PROVE IT LOGIC- "God/Jesus/Shiva/Allah/Zeus/Satan/Zaroaster/etc is the supreme lord and you can't prove otherwise."
This absurd statement fails to recognize that the burden of proof lies with the believer rather than the non-believer. People may believe what they want, but that doesn't make it true or logical.

ARISTOTELIAN LOGIC- This is the erroneous belief that something either is one thing or it must be another- black/white, right/wrong, true/false, good/bad, this/that, and other relational certitudes. Certitude is the result, but is often wrong. In this process of logic, one would attach to one belief (based on life imprints, social identity, and environment) as absolutely true or morally right and view differing beliefs as "logically" wrong. We see this in politics and religion, we also do this in our daily relationships and experiences. Aristotelian logic can get out of control quickly. Western culture and philosophy is deeply rooted in this type of is/or logic.

DUMB APE FAVORITISM-
This is the act of taking a side of an argument or discussion even if it is wrong based on relationship or association bias. This is super-dumb ape mentality. For example, you are walking down the street with your sister and she says "screw you" to a random stranger. The stranger says "screw you too" in defense, and you say "Hey that's my sister! Watch it, or else." The logical thing to do in this case would be to put your sister in check rather than defending her. Another example can be seen when drunken hairless apes get into fist fights to defend their favorite sports team.

CAUSE AND EFFECT IRRATIONALITY (a.k.a. 2+7=3.4 LOGIC)-
Jane: "The cat got sick."
Joe: "Where did the cat get sick?"
Jane: "On the bed."
Joe: "Oh! The bed must have made the cat sick. We better not lay on the bed anymore."
This logical fallacy assumes that something associated with something else is a cause. This has led to superstitions, hatred, bigotry, classism, and other social maladies throughout human history.

JUST PLAIN DUMB LOGIC- "If we evolved from apes, then why are there still apes?"
I shouldn't even have to explain this absurd and uninformed statement. If someone is too dumb to understand this absurdity then they probably can't read (<--LOGICAL FALLACY!). A person who thinks this question is sane or sensible is too far from the lifeboat to be saved.

BLIND LOYALTY LOGIC- This logical fallacy happens when a person believes something based only on belief in a leader's authority. In 1997 Marshall Applewhite convinced 38 other people that there was a UFO hiding behind Haley's Comet and they could get aboard the ship by suicide with poison. Without any evidence of the UFO, based only on Applewhite's word, they all put on new Nike shoes and black outfits and took the poison. Mentally elevated people are generally less susceptible to blind loyalty and more likely to ask questions or for evidence.

RACISM- "Those white/black/brown/yellow/red/other people over there are bad, therefore all white/black/brown/yellow/red/other people must be bad." This is a type of generalization, usually negative, that identifies unrelated qualities of individuals as relating to all people of similar skin color. This is extremely illogical, and wrong.

SEXISM- "All men are pigs" is an incorrect emotional bias that claims all men as untrustworthy or malicious based on the experience of only a few men.

ASSOCIATIVE FALLACY- "Islam is evil because Islamic terrorists are Muslim."
The people who make these blanket statements seem to forget that the evil committed regularly within their own belief culture does not lead them to think of their own culture as evil.

GENERALIZATIONS GONE ASKEW- "All donkeys are asses."
Generalizations can be useful observations when not taken to extremes. For example, if I were to say, "In general, some (but not all) Chinese people are bad drivers relative to most Americans", this would be a reasonable generalization. Until recently China has not had a major driving or car culture relative to the United States, so this generalization does come from a realistic background. However, there are many good Chinese drivers. Also, there are many Chinese people and descendants living in the United States who drive quite well and regularly. So this generalization should have conditions with it to be understood. To say "All Chinese people are drivers" is a poor generalization, and a potentially racist one, depending on the intention. There are many bad American drivers too. We could also make the following generalization: "In general, many Americans are not good with using chopsticks." Some are, most aren't. What about white men? Can they jump?

NON SEQUITUR LOGIC- "I can't get the knot in my shoelaces undone because George Bush is President." This absurd logic associates a cause for something as due to something unrelated. It is often used as a blame game or as an excuse for failure.

BANDWAGON LOGIC- The idea that popular beliefs must be true. Of course this sounds absurd when we think about it, but we fall for it regularly. Popular culture and advertising use this sentiment regularly and with great success.

AD HOMINEM- This is the attempt to attack someone's character to disprove a point. For example, Joe told Tina he wanted to ask Dan for advice. Tina said "Dan's a drunk, why would you ask his advice on anything?" Joe replied, "I want a recommendation for a good whiskey." Often the attack will attempt to invalidate the point being made by attacking the person. Such as "Don't trust him to be honest, he smells bad" or "He knows nothing about auto-mechanics because he's a gambling addict."

EMOTIONAL LOGIC- "It's so wrong for that lion to eat that gazelle."
People who say this are usually speaking from emotion, bias, or sentiment. They aren't considering the balanced functions of nature or how horrific it would be for a lion to starve to death.

ASSUMED FACT (a.k.a. "ASSED FACTWARDS")- "We found the ruins of a large boat on Mount Ararat, it is Noah's Ark!"
I have no problem with the concept of an amazing guy named Noah who built a large boat and survived rising water levels with his family and goats, chickens, and gardens on board. Although it is a beautiful parable of metaphor, he did not repopulate all the species of the Earth, and finding the ruins of a large boat does not prove any aspects of the parable. It simply means a boat was found. Ancient people were skilled sailors and many boats existed throughout various periods of human history. Also, even if we found a big boat that had "Noah's Boat" written on the side, it would still not validate any other parts of biblical scripture and it would not prove the parable. To be quite honest, any person who literally believes the biblical parable of Noah (despite proof to the contrary) is not sane, but it is a really cool story.

APPEAL TO AUTHORITY LOGIC- "Look, the advert in the paper says a doctor said that margarine is healthier than butter. If a doctor says it, it must be true. Honey, we better switch to margarine."
People go to great lengths to create the appearance of authority on a subject. People will dress the part, companies will pay authorities to bend the facts, and politicians will pretend to know what they are talking about. It's a trap!

ASSOCIATIVE FALLACY- "Hitler was an artist. Hitler was a Nazi. Therefore, artists are Nazis."
It seems silly, but lots of people think this way. Maybe not only about Hitler or artists, but about many things.

STAY THE COURSE LOGIC- This is a logical fallacy that causes some one or group to continue on an incorrect idea or course of action even after it is proven wrong or mistaken in order to save face and not admit the error. Some police do this often when making arrests. Politicians do this too. Many wars drag on for this reason. This is also the fallacy of literal biblical creationists. They still believe something although it has been disproven by evolutionary theory. Cognitive Dissonance is commonly a result of this logic.

SCHRÖDINGER'S CAT LOGIC- The Schrödinger's Cat thought experiment states that if a cat is completely non-observable while in a box with a lethal mechanism that has a 50/50 chance of killing the cat that the cat would be in a superposition of both alive and dead until the box is opened and the cat is observed, in which case the condition of the cat collapses into being either alive or dead. This demonstrates the necessity of an observer in causal reality. Logic, as we relate to it in our ordinary experience would not allow something to be two contradicting things at once. However, in quantum mechanics this is true because non-collapsed (not yet consciously observed) reality is in a state of superposition. So this really isn't a logical fallacy, it is only illogical to our tricked minds.

Logic is not a definition of "the way things actually are". Logic is a general tool for tempering the experience of reality. AT ANY MOMENT ALL LOGIC MAY BE THROWN OUT THE WINDOW. In fact, logic, like any model or system, is itself to be transcended. Becoming aware of logical fallacies is not about "being right", but more about navigation through the minefield of shifting reality.


*Many examples from religion and politics are often used as examples of logical fallacies. This is not an attempt to belittle beliefs, but there are many logical fallacies within religious and political beliefs when taken too literally.

**Reality is a strange place. It bends and frays at the edges and seams. Logic that is too rigid may snap under the weight of the bizarre and unknown. So always note that logic is a tool, not a wall.


For more about logical fallacies, visit www.yourlogicalfallacyis.com

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Tuesday, May 13, 2014

For or Against?



Hello apes!

Today I've been thinking about the things I don't like and the things I do like, and trying to keep the scales of my world tipped to the positive side.

The world is an awful place. Actually, the world is a great place, but human society is an awful place in many ways.
We want to fix the world we live in, but we do so too often by being against something we see as an injustice and it can consume our souls and rot us from the inside out. That's a case of good intentions gone bad.
Everyone knows the world is full of bad and wrong. We each do not possess some secret knowledge of this that we must spread with maniacal fervor. Bad people and wrongdoings are many and we ALL deal with it every day, but it could be better to be in support of the good more than to be against the bad. This is not to say we shouldn't spread awareness of the bad, but it can ruin our lives and happiness and it should be balanced with AT LEAST a 2:1 ratio of positive to negative. Our perpetual efforts to fix the world through being against
injustice does not spread positivity but can actually propogate more dismay. Wrongs should be righted, but mounds of right should pile high for all to see. Should the beacon of hope we set out for our fellow humans be about all that is wrong in the world, or all that there is to embrace with joy and awe?
A fire can provide warmth and light, but an out of control fire can burn the world.

So as we gain knowledge of the ills of the world, and as we spread that awareness, we must keep our eye on the main prize- happiness. We can turn the empty pits into sludge pools of anger, or we can turn them into lifegiving ponds of beauty. It's a responsibility and something to be practiced. Spread more positive perspective than negative, and the world will eventually become a more pleasant place to live in.

As an example, we have a toxic food industry. We can scream and yell about it all we want, and nothing will change. But if we switch from being less against what is wrong to more in favor of what is right, then we can change the way things are. If you promote organic farming and food and purchase organic food, and encourage others to do the same, you will create a demand that will create a change. You can see it happening already in almost any store. Organic is growing.
That's just one example of many of how we can create greater change with positive awareness rather than negative confrontation. This is not to say that we shouldn't be against the wrong, but we should be more in favor of what can be right. I can offer a middle finger as good as the next guy, but more often I try to offer a double thumbs up.

"Be careful when you fight monsters, lest you become one." -Friedrich Nietzsche

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