(EDIT: You edited the parent after I replied; I take no responsibility for whether my reply has any relationship to the new parent. I really wish people would stop doing that. I may come back to this later and reconcile.)
Not quite transparent.
I more or less understand what it means for a belief B to not be clearly counterfactual, and what you mean by my terminal values V.
I don’t understand what it means for B to “justify an emotional reaction” E, and I understand what it means for B to “have a connection to” V, and I’m not sure what the relationship between B and V has to do with E.
(EDIT: You edited the parent after I replied; I take no responsibility for whether my reply has any relationship to the new parent. I really wish people would stop doing that. I may come back to this later and reconcile.)
For what it’s worth, your response wasn’t there when I started making the edit, and I didn’t see it until after I had changed my comment. I frequently find a few seconds after leaving a comment that I had more to say, and revise my comment to reflect it.
Yes, I understand that people do this. One consequence of doing it is that other people’s replies are retroactively disconnected from the thing they appear to reply to.
I just don’t like my replies being treated that way, is all.
Of course, I can’t do anything to prevent it, and nobody else is obligated to respect my preferences. The best I can do is edit my replies to note that any disconnections might be retroactive, which is what I did.
(EDIT: You edited the parent after I replied; I take no responsibility for whether my reply has any relationship to the new parent. I really wish people would stop doing that. I may come back to this later and reconcile.)
Not quite transparent.
I more or less understand what it means for a belief B to not be clearly counterfactual, and what you mean by my terminal values V.
I don’t understand what it means for B to “justify an emotional reaction” E, and I understand what it means for B to “have a connection to” V, and I’m not sure what the relationship between B and V has to do with E.
For what it’s worth, your response wasn’t there when I started making the edit, and I didn’t see it until after I had changed my comment. I frequently find a few seconds after leaving a comment that I had more to say, and revise my comment to reflect it.
Yes, I understand that people do this. One consequence of doing it is that other people’s replies are retroactively disconnected from the thing they appear to reply to.
I just don’t like my replies being treated that way, is all.
Of course, I can’t do anything to prevent it, and nobody else is obligated to respect my preferences. The best I can do is edit my replies to note that any disconnections might be retroactive, which is what I did.