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GENERAL DISCUSSIONS
Would you say River is the soul of the ship?
Tuesday, January 8, 2008 4:54 AM
AGENTROUKA
Quote:Originally posted by christhecynic: You lost me at the last sentence. I admit that I have not studied psychology all that much, but in what I have come across I have never heard anyone make that kind of a claim.
Quote: There's an obvious counter example right in this thread where someone posted, "Jane doesn't like Sally, finds her bitchy and superior and annoying. (Truth: Sally's always talking about her experiences in college and Jane didn't go to college and feels insecure over it.)" To me that seems very believable, I don't see any reason that the parenthetical couldn't describe Jane's subconscious reason for feeling as she does. Assuming you don't find it unrealistic either (and if you do find it unrealistic tell me) I'd like to use it as an example.
Quote: Jane consciously dislikes Sally finding her bitchy and superior and annoying, what difference does it make to Jane or Sally if that is because of insecurities over college or because Sally subconsciously reminds Jane of someone else, or even that Jane's subconscious made the determination that Sally was those things?
Quote: In every case you'd have the same situation facing Jane and Sally both, since Jane is unaware of her reasoning it isn't going to effect how she decides to deal with not liking Sally.
Quote: Quote:Because, I do not think that those things apply to River. I should probably point out, again, that I don't really feel either way about the idea of River being the subconscious, I just disagree with your reason for refuting it. That's why there's a lack of, "No, look at what she does in ____, she's clearly the subconscious," in my posts.
Quote:Because, I do not think that those things apply to River.
Quote: I agree with you that River has information not available to the rest of the crew, for obvious reasons, however no one said, to my knowledge, that she is the subconscious of the crew members. Just as no one has said, to my knowledge, that Kaylee is the hope inside of Jayne. Kaylee doesn't necessarily know what Jayne hopes for, Kaylee probably doesn't want to know what Jayne hopes for.
Quote: When taking the crew as a whole River can never have more information than that whole, because she is a part of that whole, and in that case I'm not sure I see your reasoning.
Quote: Quote:Her reasons for acting the way she does are generally irrelevant to how her actions affect the crew - how the crew reacts to her. I think that, outside of therapy and deep introspection, this is true of most people's subconsciouses.
Quote:Her reasons for acting the way she does are generally irrelevant to how her actions affect the crew - how the crew reacts to her.
Quote: Quote:She identifies Saffron as a thief. The crew have no reason to know that outside of what River says. It's not a subconscious piece of knowledge they deny, more like a random newsfeed. And they entirely ignore her, rightfully. Minor nitpick: No they don't. They assume, incorrectly, that she was referring to something else Saffron stole, not the ship as a whole.
Quote:She identifies Saffron as a thief. The crew have no reason to know that outside of what River says. It's not a subconscious piece of knowledge they deny, more like a random newsfeed. And they entirely ignore her, rightfully.
Quote: If you consider her actions as being analogous to the times when the conscious and the subconscious interact I'd say that that is true of an person's subconscious as well. What happens below the surface, and stays there, does not effect you. It is only when something becomes superliminal that it has an effect.
Quote: Quote:Her reasons for those actions are generally irrelevant to how the crew would react, unlike what we associate with subconscious reasons for our behavior with are direct causes of their own effect on us. I'd be very interested to know where you learned that association. When you, for example, meet someone and like them right away do you stop and rack your brain to find out why? If you should determine that you do because they remind you of a friend do you react differently than you would if your introspection had revealed that you like them for another reason?
Quote:Her reasons for those actions are generally irrelevant to how the crew would react, unlike what we associate with subconscious reasons for our behavior with are direct causes of their own effect on us.
Quote: [Added] So I just noticed that out of every two recent posts in this thread one is me. I'm going to take a break and let other people talk.
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