Re: Austrian School vs. itulip / FIRE
I think this is the heart of the disagreement, and you are incorrect in your assumption.
I do not refuse to acknowledge that a person's actions can be influenced from the outside. In fact, that is what I have been saying all along--that what you have been describing as "not conscious choices" are merely examples of people acting (making conscious decisions) while under social influences. You also make a distinction in this case which I consider unnecessary--that of control being different from influence. In the context of social interaction, barring actual physical controls like handcuffs, "control" and "influence" are the same thing with slightly different connotations. Influence is used in "lighter" cases, such as under the influence of alcohol or the influence of an older sibling. Control is used in "stronger" cases, such as under the control of the powers that be or controlled by the hand that feeds. In both cases the individual that is being influenced/controlled still makes conscious choices. Barring mindlessness, they still have a decision calculus and still act upon it even when their actions are influenced/controlled/manipulated by others. They are still using conscious thought, even if it sends them to the hospital or if the outcome has no apparent gain for themselves.
As for fashion, I see what you are saying now. However, you seem to be confusing the phenomenon. Fashion is the perception that others have towards you. No, you cannot choose for them to perceive you as fashionable--what you can do is attempt to understand the context, make a decision on how to dress based upon what you think their perception will be, and gage the reaction of people to your style. "Fashion" is an interactive perception-based phenomenon that cannot be chosen, sure, but it does not disprove the notion of conscious choice because conscious choices are made continuously with regards to fashion.
Originally posted by c1ue
View Post
I do not refuse to acknowledge that a person's actions can be influenced from the outside. In fact, that is what I have been saying all along--that what you have been describing as "not conscious choices" are merely examples of people acting (making conscious decisions) while under social influences. You also make a distinction in this case which I consider unnecessary--that of control being different from influence. In the context of social interaction, barring actual physical controls like handcuffs, "control" and "influence" are the same thing with slightly different connotations. Influence is used in "lighter" cases, such as under the influence of alcohol or the influence of an older sibling. Control is used in "stronger" cases, such as under the control of the powers that be or controlled by the hand that feeds. In both cases the individual that is being influenced/controlled still makes conscious choices. Barring mindlessness, they still have a decision calculus and still act upon it even when their actions are influenced/controlled/manipulated by others. They are still using conscious thought, even if it sends them to the hospital or if the outcome has no apparent gain for themselves.
As for fashion, I see what you are saying now. However, you seem to be confusing the phenomenon. Fashion is the perception that others have towards you. No, you cannot choose for them to perceive you as fashionable--what you can do is attempt to understand the context, make a decision on how to dress based upon what you think their perception will be, and gage the reaction of people to your style. "Fashion" is an interactive perception-based phenomenon that cannot be chosen, sure, but it does not disprove the notion of conscious choice because conscious choices are made continuously with regards to fashion.
Comment