Common Uses of "Acceptance"

post by Yi-Yang (yiyang) · 2024-07-26T11:18:30.719Z · LW · GW · 5 comments

Contents

  1. “Acceptance” as seen in dictionaries
    1.a. Acceptance as receiving something
    1.b. Acceptance as agreeing
    1.c. Acceptance as giving someone or something a positive value judgement
    1.d. Acceptance as allowing a person to join a group
    1.e. Acceptance as believing something as true
    1.f. Acceptance as tolerating or giving in
  2. “Acceptance” as seen in various advice
    2.a. Acceptance as an act of letting go of one’s struggles
    2.b. Acceptance as an act of receiving subjective experiences without resisting
    2.c. Acceptance as an act of suspending value judgements
    2.d. Acceptance as an act of treating people kindly
    2.e. Acceptance as an act of liking a person
    2.f. Acceptance as an act of believing that one has unconditional worth
    2.g. Acceptance as an act of believing something bad as true without resisting
    2.h. Acceptance as believing that one has limited control without resisting
    2.i. Acceptance as an act of acceptance
  3. Some thoughts and analysis on how “acceptance” is commonly used
    3.a. How different are dictionary definitions of “acceptance” and definitions of “acceptance” used in advice?
    3.b. Do writers often need to point out possible misinterpretations or confusions?
      Confusion between tolerating and giving in
      Confusion between giving in, giving positive value judgement, and believing something as true
      Confusion between unconditional and conditional acceptance
    3.c. Did the authors achieve what they wanted with the way they defined “acceptance”?
    3.d. So, should one love every part of oneself, even if one likes hurting people?
  References
  Appendix
    Unconditional Positive Regard
None
5 comments

Edit (2024-07-31): I changed the introduction.

If you have Googled “how to do acceptance” and you have found a lot of the explanations confusing or in conflict with one another, you have come to the right place. Learning about “acceptance” as a mental move was surprisingly challenging to me too, and I think it’s because of these reasons:

  1. It is obvious that “acceptance” has different dictionary definitions (and hence mental moves), but when “acceptance” is used in more casual advice, they can be unclear. Take a look at these three examples: (a) “you should accept yourself”; (b) “you should accept your feelings”; and (c) “you should accept reality”. Ask me to differentiate these back in 2023 and I’ll probably give you some “vibey” answers that are probably half-correct. I’m usually fine with just going off from vibes, but they seem to bounce off from me this time.
  2. More comprehensive advice do describe the actual mental moves at a concrete level, but they’re also all quite different from each other despite using the same word. In fact, I’ve found nine different types of “acceptance” related advice from ten different sources (e.g., Acceptance Commitment Therapy). A single standard for “acceptance” doesn’t exist.
  3. Furthermore, a few of these sources incorporated new definitions (e.g., kindness) into “acceptance” that are not in fact dictionary definitions of “acceptance”. “Radical Acceptance” is one source that did that. And I got the sense that “acceptance” as a concept has been “stretched” pretty far.

Taken together, they turned my journey to practise “acceptance” into an amateur disentanglement [? · GW] exercise. My cursory search of “acceptance” turned into a much wider literature review, including literature around the use of words in relation to truth-seeking [? · GW]. And I’ve decided to put some of my findings down in this writing with this following structure:

  1. “Acceptance” as seen in dictionaries
  2. “Acceptance” as seen in various advice
  3. Some thoughts and analysis on how “acceptance” is commonly used

Here’s a warning, this piece of writing can get tedious--I’ve written this for people who have found literature on “acceptance” confounding. Or if you’ve been wanting to practise “acceptance” but don’t know where to start, you can just jump straight to Section 2 and pick a type of advice that you resonate most with. Or if you’re just interested to learn more about my thoughts on “acceptance”, Section 3 should be your next step.

1. “Acceptance” as seen in dictionaries

I agree with Yudkowsky (2008) that dictionaries are more of a historical record of how words are used, rather than an authoritative record on how words should be used. And I also agree with him that words can be treated as public goods—the more one uses a word in a way that has a very different meaning than how people commonly use it, the harder it is for people to coordinate. For example, if a significant number of people start calling pens as “pencils” and pencils as “pens”, you’ll need to constantly ask (probably with annoyance), “wait, are you talking about the thing that has ink or the thing that has graphite?”

So, there’s no need to worry about the dictionary police enforcing how you should use a word, but understanding how “acceptance” is commonly used and comparing them to definitions found in common advice related to “acceptance” might help us better understand how boundaries are drawn between acceptance, kindness, love, etc.

I’ve chosen six definitions out of many that I thought are most commonly used by people from the Oxford English Dictionary (n.d.) and The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (n.d.), and I’ve listed them below:

1.a. Acceptance as receiving something

Definition:

Example:

1.b. Acceptance as agreeing

Definition:

Example:

1.c. Acceptance as giving someone or something a positive value judgement

Definition:

Example:

1.d. Acceptance as allowing a person to join a group

Definition:

Example:

Notes:

1.e. Acceptance as believing something as true

Definition:

Example:

Notes:

1.f. Acceptance as tolerating or giving in

Definition:

Example:

Notes:

2. “Acceptance” as seen in various advice

First, let me be clear with the kind of “acceptance” I’m looking for in advice. It needs to fulfil both of the following criteria:

  1. They are mental moves. When you do “acceptance”, you’re taking an action or series of actions that happen inside your head.
  2. One of the outcomes they have, either primary or secondary, is the regulation of one’s own emotions, as suggested by Wojnarowska et al (2020). You can use “acceptance” for other purposes, such as being more authentic or happy. But I suspect that, for many including me, regulating one’s own emotions is one of the most common, if not the most common, reasons for practising “acceptance”. They are usually found in personal development or mental health related advice.

And now, here are the nine types of “acceptance” related advice I’ve found.

2.a. Acceptance as an act of letting go of one’s struggles

Objects to accept:

Actions to take:

Referenced in:

“Acceptance does not mean ‘putting up with’ or resigning yourself to anything. Acceptance is about embracing life, not merely tolerating it. Acceptance literally means ‘taking what is offered’. It doesn’t mean giving up or admitting defeat; it doesn’t mean just gritting your teeth and bearing it. It means fully opening yourself to your present reality—acknowledging how it is, right here and now, and letting go of the struggle with life as it is in this moment.” (Harris, 2007)

How is this advice different from dictionary definitions?

  1. The definitional equivalent of the act of tolerating or giving in is used here, but things that cause frustration are the primary objects of “acceptance”.

2.b. Acceptance as an act of receiving subjective experiences without resisting

Objects to accept:

Actions to take:

Referenced in:

“Traditional Buddhist meditation manuals describe mindfulness as paying attention to what we experience, not what we would like to experience. In short, mindfulness implies friendly acceptance of the totality of our changing experience rather than avoidance or manipulation of experience.” (David et al., 2013)

“To practice nonattachment is to accept that the objects of experience wax and wane, and that to allow them to come and go naturally is preferable to any attempt to control or retain them” (Williams & Lynn, 2010)

“Mindfulness is the defused, nonattached, accepting, nonjudgmental, deliberate awareness of experiential events as they happen in the moment.” (Hayes & Smith, 2005)

“By accepting absolutely everything, what I mean is that we are aware of what is happening within our body and mind in any given moment, without trying to control or judge or pull away. I do not mean that we are putting up with harmful behavior—our own or another’s. This is an inner process of accepting our actual, present moment experience. It means feeling sorrow and pain without resisting. It means feeling desire or dislike for someone or something without judging ourselves for the feeling or being driven to act on it.” (Brach, 2003)“

How is this advice different from dictionary definitions?

2.c. Acceptance as an act of suspending value judgements

Objects to accept:

Actions to take:

Referenced in:

“Nonjudgment involves describing stimuli rather than adding evaluations of them. Nonjudgment is a central component of mindfulness meditation, and can be found in the Zen concept of fushizen-fushiaku, literally “not thinking good, not thinking bad,” which represents a transcendence of distinguishing phenomena as good and bad” (Fischer-Schreiber et al., 1991, as cited in Williams & Lynn, 2010)

“This is why evaluation—judging the best way to maximize the pleasure of the breath—is essential to the practice. In other words, you don’t abandon your powers of judgment as you develop mindfulness. Rather, you train them to be less judgmental and more judicious, so that they yield tangible results.” (Bhikkhu, 2016)

“Obviously, the ability to judge is vital to our wellbeing. But as we have already seen, many of the mind’s judgements are extremely unhelpful. All too often they set us up for a struggle—with ourselves, our feelings or reality itself. As with any unhelpful thought, the aim in ACT is to let such judgements come and go; rather than buying into them, we can simply acknowledge, ‘It’s a judgement.’” (Harris, 2007)

“... It means that he prizes the client in a total rather than a conditional way. By this I mean that he does not simply accept the client when he is behaving in certain ways, and disapprove of him when he behaves in other ways. It means an outgoing positive feeling without reservations, without evaluations. The term we have come to use for this is unconditional positive regard.” (Rogers, 1961)

How is this advice different from dictionary definitions?

2.d. Acceptance as an act of treating people kindly

Objects to accept:

Actions to take:

Referenced in:

“The second wing of Radical Acceptance, compassion, is our capacity to relate in a tender and sympathetic way to what we perceive. Instead of resisting our feelings of fear or grief, we embrace our pain with the kindness of a mother holding her child. Rather than judging or indulging our desire for attention or chocolate or sex, we regard our grasping with gentleness and care. Compassion honors our experience; it allows us to be intimate with the life of this moment as it is. Compassion makes our acceptance wholehearted and complete.” (Brach, 2003)

“Perhaps more than anything else, cultivating self-acceptance requires that we develop more self-compassion. Only when we can better understand and pardon ourselves for things that earlier we assumed must be all our fault can we secure the relationship to self that till now has eluded us.” (Seltzer, 2008)

How is this advice different from dictionary definitions?

2.e. Acceptance as an act of liking a person

Objects to accept:

Actions to take:

Referenced in:

“Putting this in simpler terms, to feel unconditional positive regard toward another is to "prize" him (to use Dewey's term, recently used in this sense by Butler). This means to value the person, irrespective of the differential values which one might place on his specific behaviors. A parent "prizes" his child, though he may not value equally all of his behaviors. Acceptance is another term which has been frequently used to convey this meaning, but it perhaps carries more misleading connotations than the phrase which Standal has coined. In general, however, acceptance and prizing are synonymous with unconditional positive regard.” (Rogers, 1959)

“Self-acceptance happens through the process of self-discovery and self-awareness. It’s a state we experience when we welcome, include, and take pride in all that we are and all that we’re not yet. When we welcome every part of ourselves, the pressure to perform or suppress our true characters lifts... It’s only when we like ourselves, and care for ourselves like we would a loved one, that we begin to feel that we deserve to be visible and feel we belong.” (Dobson-Smith, 2022)

How is this advice different from dictionary definitions?

2.f. Acceptance as an act of believing that one has unconditional worth

Objects to accept:

Actions to take:

Referenced in:

“By acceptance I mean a warm regard for him as a person of unconditional self-worth—of value no matter what his condition, his behavior, or his feelings. It means a respect and liking for him as a separate person, a willingness for him to possess his own feelings in his own way. It means an acceptance of and regard for his attitudes of the moment, no matter how negative or positive, no matter how much they may contradict other attitudes he has held in the past.” (Rogers, 1961)

“Unconditional self-acceptance. You always, under all conditions, evaluate your self (your being or your personality) as a valuable, good person. (1) Because you are you (and no one else); (2) because you are alive; (3) because you simply decide to do so; (4) because you acknowledge your "bad" traits and dislike them but still accept yourself with these; (5) because you refuse to give any global rating to your you-ness but only rate your thoughts, feelings, and actions as "good"-meaning, leading to effective individual and social results; (6) because you believe in some God, who always accepts you with all your failings and has the power to make you a good person; (7) because you use some other unconditional form of total, persistent acceptance of you with all your "good" and "bad" characteristics and performances.” (Ellis, 2006)

“There is, fortunately, an alternative to self-esteem. It is unconditional self-acceptance. Think of yourself as the crate and all your actions and qualities as the oranges. Your crate – you – contains hundreds if not thousands of oranges – discrete acts and traits accumulated over a lifetime. Many of your oranges (your good deeds and virtuous qualities) are ripe and luscious. But, some are bruised, puny, rotten – your mistakes and faults. When you run across a damaged orange, you may dislike it, even act to rid yourself of it but you never – ever – denigrate or damn your whole crate of oranges.” (Grieger, 2013)

How is this advice different from dictionary definitions?

2.g. Acceptance as an act of believing something bad as true without resisting

Objects to accept:

Actions to take:

Referenced in:

“What Is Radical Acceptance?

1. Radical means all the way, complete and total.
2. It is accepting in your mind, your heart, and your body.
3. It’s when you stop fighting reality, stop throwing tantrums because reality is not the way you want it, and let go of bitterness.

What Has to Be Accepted?

1. Reality is as it is (the facts about the past and the present are the facts, even if you don’t like them).
2. There are limitations on the future for everyone (but only realistic limitations need to be accepted).
3. Everything has a cause (including events and situations that cause you pain and suffering).
4. Life can be worth living even with painful events in it.”

(Linehan, 2015-a)

“... I think most importantly - you should always be striving to accept some particular argument that you feel isn't sinking in.  Strive to accept "X implies Y", not just "Y".  Strive to accept that there are no ghosts because spirits are only made of material neurons, or because the supernatural is incoherent.  Strive to accept that there's no maniac behind the door because your thoughts don't change reality.  Strive to accept that you won't win the lottery because you could make one distinct statement every second for a year with every one of them wrong, and not be so wrong as you would be by saying "I will win the lottery." (Yudkowsky, 2009)

“What is true is already so.
Owning up to it doesn’t make it worse.
Not being open about it doesn’t make it go away.
And because it’s true, it is what is there to be interacted with.
Anything untrue isn’t there to be lived.
People can stand what is true,
for they are already enduring it.”

(Gendlin, 2003, as cited in Yudkowsky, 2007)

How is this advice different from dictionary definitions?

2.h. Acceptance as believing that one has limited control without resisting

Objects to accept:

Actions to take:

Referenced in:

“When we encounter difficult situations, there are often things we can control and things we cannot. The Stoic approach to acceptance teaches us to focus on what we can control and accept what we cannot. This can help us to feel more at peace and in control of our emotions, even when faced with adversity.” (Stoic Simple LLC, n.d.)

“What are we to do, then? To make the best of what lies within our power, and deal with everything else as it comes. ‘How does it come, then?’ As God wills.” (Epictetus, n.d./2014)

“Some things are within our power, while others are not. Within our power are opinion, motivation, desire, aversion, and, in a word, whatever is of our own doing; not within our power are our body, our property, reputation, office, and, in a word, whatever is not of our own doing. 2. The things that are within our power are by nature free, and immune to hindrance and obstruction, while those that are not within our power are weak, slavish, subject to hindrance, and not our own. 3. Remember, then, that if you regard that which is by nature slavish as being free, and that which is not your own as being your own, you’ll have cause to lament, you’ll have a troubled mind, and you’ll find fault with both gods and human beings; but if you regard only that which is your own as being your own, and that which isn’t your own as not being your own (as is indeed the case), no one will ever be able to coerce you, no one will hinder you, you’ll find fault with no one, you’ll accuse no one, you’ll do nothing whatever against your will, you’ll have no enemy, and no one will ever harm you because no harm can affect you.” (Epictetus, n.d./2014)

How is this advice different from dictionary definitions?

2.i. Acceptance as an act of acceptance

Objects to accept:

Actions to take:

Referenced in:

“Self-acceptance. n. a relatively objective sense or recognition of one’s abilities and achievements, together with acknowledgment and acceptance of one’s limitations.” (American Psychological Association Dictionary of Psychology, n.d.)

“[Self-acceptance is] an individual’s acceptance of all of his/her attributes, positive or negative.” (Margado et al., 2014, as cited in Ackerman, 2018, Pillay, 2016)

“Self-acceptance is the act of accepting yourself and all your personality traits exactly as they are. You accept them no matter whether they are positive or negative. This includes your physical and mental attributes.” (Perry, 2021)

How is this advice different from dictionary definitions?

3. Some thoughts and analysis on how “acceptance” is commonly used

3.a. How different are dictionary definitions of “acceptance” and definitions of “acceptance” used in advice?

Looking at the diagram below (Figure 1), I found that:

Overall, I feel like that most of the “acceptance” related advice given have a pretty similar definition with dictionary definitions. Even the least similar advice (treating people kindly from “Radical Acceptance”) still seem pretty close to “acceptance” in concept space [LW · GW]. Despite that, reading about “acceptance” still confused me a lot, perhaps because there’s like nine type of advice that are all subtly-to-moderately different from each other, and some advice has more than one dictionary definition or an entirely new definition inserted.

I also think it’s interesting that the “acceptance” definition of the act of tolerating or giving in is probably the most typical [LW · GW] type of “acceptance” in advice. Not too surprising, because I had this instinctual vibe that acceptance feels like surrendering yourself to something, so you stop struggling and be less frustrated.

3.b. Do writers often need to point out possible misinterpretations or confusions?

Another way to spot how “acceptance” can be a challenging word to use, and I do see some instances of authors clarifying or pointing out subtle differences in “acceptance” and other kinds of confusion. Here are some examples:

Confusion between tolerating and giving in

“Acceptance does not mean ‘putting up with’ or resigning yourself to anything. Acceptance is about embracing life, not merely tolerating it. Acceptance literally means ‘taking what is offered’. It doesn’t mean giving up or admitting defeat; it doesn’t mean just gritting your teeth and bearing it. It means fully opening yourself to your present reality—acknowledging how it is, right here and now, and letting go of the struggle with life as it is in this moment.” (Harris, 2007)

Confusion between giving in, giving positive value judgement, and believing something as true

“The very concept of accepting the reality of facts that are not in dispute can be difficult for many participants. This is particularly true when participants have been victims of horrific abuse and believe that life has been very unfair to them. A common pattern here is believing that to accept something is to approve [giving positive value judgement] of it or to be passive and not change things [giving in] that are destructive.” (Linehan, 2015-b)

Confusion between unconditional and conditional acceptance

“The phrase “unconditional positive regard” may be an unfortunate one, since it sounds like an absolute, an all or nothing dispositional concept. It is probably evident from the description that completely unconditional positive regard would never exist except in theory. From a clinical and experiential point of view I believe the most accurate statement is that the effective therapist experiences unconditional positive regard for the client during many moments of his contact with him, yet from time to time he experiences only a conditional positive regard...”” (Rogers, 1957)

“However, its hidden paradox emerges when one critically analyzes Rogers' definition of the self and its relation to behavior. Rogers postulates a self in personality which is separate but causally related to behavior. Herein lies the paradox: if the self is causally related to behavior how can one respond conditionally to the latter without doing likewise to the former since some element of a cause is always inherent in its effects?” (Patrick, 1980)

“It is important to make a distinction between experience and external behavior - between, on the one hand, all my client's feelings, thoughts, fantasies, desires, and, on the other hand, his actual behavior. Unconditionality refers to my acceptance of his experience.” (Lietaer, 2001)

“... to fully accept yourself and all of your flaws and mistakes does not mean that you condone any bad behavior or accept and embrace unhealthy or harmful actions... You do not need to condone or approve of your actions, traits, and characteristics to accept that you did engage in those actions and that those undesirable traits and characteristics are a real part of who you are.” (Ackerman, 2018)

3.c. Did the authors achieve what they wanted with the way they defined “acceptance”?

Yudkowsky (2008) argues that the purpose of drawing boundaries around words or categories is to figure “where to cut reality in order to carve along the joints”, or in my own interpretation, to define words in a way that allows for empirical predictions. The author talks about one could technically put dolphins in a set that are mostly fishes, but putting dolphins in a set that are mostly other aquatic mammals allows one to have a more accurate model of the world (since mammals and fishes are quite different).

However, Alexander (2014) suggests that the purpose of drawing boundaries should be about capturing “tradeoffs you care about”. He gave a thought experiment about a time traveller failing to convince King Solomon that whales are a type of mammal and not a fish. The time traveller failed, because the only thing that Solomon cared about was whether whales should be butchered in the coast (where his ministry of fish is located) or butchered inland (where his ministry of legged creatures is located). So in essence, you can define words however you want as long as they are achieving your goals.

Without thinking hard about this, I’m leaning closer to Alexander’s stance on this.

So, do I think the authors, who gave the bunch of advice above, defined “acceptance” in a way that helps people understand how to regulate emotions better? Overall, I would give them a "B" score for the following reasons:

So how does one get to an "A" score (from me) when talking about “acceptance”?

3.d. So, should one love every part of oneself, even if one likes hurting people?

Mostly likely not. But I might write more about this in the future.

References

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  35. Wojnarowska, A., Kobylinska, D., & Lewczuk, K. (2020). Acceptance as an emotion regulation strategy in experimental psychological research: What we know and how we can improve that knowledge. Frontiers in Psychology, 11. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00242
  36. Yudkowsky, E. (2008-a). The Argument from Common Usage. https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/9ZooAqfh2TC9SBDvq/the-argument-from-common-usage
  37. Yudkowsky, E. (2008-b). Where to Draw the Boundary? https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/d5NyJ2Lf6N22AD9PB/where-to-draw-the-boundary
  38. Yudkowsky, E. (2009). Striving to Accept. https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/Cxcormwz6jb98gGzW/striving-to-accept

Appendix

Unconditional Positive Regard

Despite referencing PCT’s use of “acceptance” in the table above, I found that the term was not in fact clearly defined in literature. However, I decided to still include PCT, since it was an influential form of psychotherapy and “acceptance” was mentioned quite consistently as being part of “unconditional positive regard” (UPR)—a necessary feature of doing PCT (Rogers, 1957).

Ironically, even the concept of UPR was similarly vague and under-defined (Farber, 2011; Ort et al., 2022; Suzuki & Farber, 2016), making the effort to understand “acceptance” much more challenging. Collating all of the varied definitions of UPR further is beyond the scope of this writing, but for those who are curious, here’s one (modern) interpretation of UPR that is easier to understand. UPR is essentially a merger of two concepts:

  1. Positive regard: a combination of positive feelings including care, support,  respect, liking, affection, validation, warmth, support, and affirmation (Barrett-Lennard, 2015; Farber et al., 2022); and
  2. Unconditionality: “the degree of constancy of [positive] regard felt by one person for another” or “how little or how much variability there is in one person’s affective response to another” (Barrett-Lennard, 2015).

5 comments

Comments sorted by top scores.

comment by Viliam · 2024-07-27T20:43:56.323Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

So, should one love every part of oneself, even if one likes hurting people?

I think you could decide to stop hurting actual people, but keep enjoying the safe (for others) alternatives such as killing characters in video games. Then nothing prevents you from loving that part of yourself, too.

Replies from: localdeity, yiyang
comment by localdeity · 2024-07-28T03:00:32.495Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

There was also a character, Kotomine Kirei, who was brought up with good ethics and tried to follow them, but ultimately realized that the only thing that pleased him was causing other people pain... and there's an alternate universe work in which he runs a shop that sells insanely spicy mapo tofu.  I suppose he could have gotten into the BDSM business as well.  Drill sergeant?  Interrogator?  (That might not work, but there probably would be people who thought it did.)

Replies from: yiyang
comment by Yi-Yang (yiyang) · 2024-07-29T02:24:50.408Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I find the image, of this character watching their customer suffer through their mapo tofu and finding a lot of joy from it, extremely hilarious.  

EDIT: typo and making my sentence clearer

comment by Yi-Yang (yiyang) · 2024-07-29T02:25:26.754Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Nice, thanks for pointing out this potential way out!

comment by localdeity · 2024-07-28T03:28:57.564Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

So, there’s no need to worry about the dictionary police enforcing how you should use a word, but understanding how “acceptance” is commonly used and comparing them to definitions found in common advice related to “acceptance” might help us

I see you practice acceptance. ;-)