The Pathology of Absolute Reason
Description
The philosopher Bry Willis, writing on his Philosophics Blog, argues that reason and rationality are frequently overvalued and misunderstood in modern society, despite being treated as ultimate truths. Willis defines reason as the faculty of inference and rationality as the practice of applying that faculty, asserting that both exist on a spectrum rather than as absolutes. The central thesis is that when reason is worshipped as absolute, it becomes pathological, leading to maladaptive behaviour that borders on psychiatric conditions like obsessive consistency. Willis proposes that true rationality requires emotional ballast and contextual awareness, demanding the ability to temper logic, equivocate, or even lie when a kind response is more effective than a cold fact. Ultimately, the piece contends that rationality that cannot bend is no rationality at all, functioning merely as a tool with a specific range of application.