This Be The Verse
BY PHILIP LARKIN — Tom Storm
There's an old word for this "self-love": pride. But it's out of favor by now, it's not politically correct (although things seem to be looking up for it lately.) — baker
The link I see between solipsism and atheism is this:
In theism, knowledge of "how things really are" is received from others, and, presumably, originates with God. It's a top-down process. Someone else tells you "how things really are", you don't figure it out by yourself.
In atheism, no such higher authority is envisioned or made room for, man is left alone with his senses and his mind and whatever he can achieve with those. He believes it's up to him and him alone to figure things out. This way, atheism implies at least epistemic solipsism. — baker
Charlie pushes Thatcher into the snow, using Rosebud. Father takes a swing at Charlie, but misses. Then--
Father: "Sorry, Mr. Thatcher. What that kid needs is a good thrashing!"
Mother: "Is that what you think, Jim?"
Father: "Yes"
Mother: "That's why he's going to be brought up where you can't get at him." — Ciceronianus
There's no indication the mother is insane in the film. Also, she already had money, and clearly wasn't trading him in to obtain more. Thatcher was a hired man. I thought the scene made it apparent that Charles was being sent away because the mother feared what the father (or step-father, perhaps) would do to him. — Ciceronianus
think the problem here starts with that love label. It's such an umbrella term. — universeness
So solipsism can be seen as a mother or father of atheism. Atheism, consequently, is then the child. — Raymond
Only by killing the pagan father and the solipsist brother the theist son can, happily undisturbed, rape his pagan solipsist mother to make her truly realize he and God actually exist. — Raymond
And that's love. Giving away everything your inner rational egotist has acquired. — ucarr
But this view is controverted by experience. The love amongst family and friends is not a zero-sum game. My child will not benefit from demonstrations of sacrifice. The freely given benefits me as well as him. — Paine
My child will not benefit from demonstrations of sacrifice. — Paine
I... like to think... within the paradigm of an organism rather then the clockwork metaphor of the past. — boagie
the use of the term design is unfortunate — boagie
There is no reason to assume intellectual intent — boagie
things may behave in a myriad of ways appropriate to their natures, which there context dictates.. — boagie
Here the nature of the whole determines the environment which is itself a constitutionally complete entity. It is not this or that, it is in totality an endless process, process ------manifestation, process. Rather then regression, a closed system emploding in on itself? — boagie
I am saying, manifestation is consciousness. — boagie
it goes against my instincts, to think that there is not something before the manifestation of matter — boagie
↪ucarr
An existing thing, whether material or conceptual, is a road map to somewhere else.
— ucarr
How about, a thing is a dimensional construction which we create in order to organize and anticipate future events? — Joshs
Does the pencil as writing instrument have at least one existential attribute in common with the pencil as rocket?
— ucarr
Do you mean, do they both exist?
I don’t think ‘as’ confers or conjures existence. You can use a rock as a hammer, but you don’t thereby bring into existence the-rock-as-hammer alongside the rock itself, do you?
Or going the other way, in abstracting, you can look at a basketball as a toy, as a shape, as a souvenir, as a commercial product, and so on. Those are ways in which the basketball can be seen, but it’s the basketball being seen in this specific light, the basketball that is the thing here, and how it is viewed is not another and separate thing.
Or is none of this what you meant by ‘existential attribute’? — Srap Tasmaner
Pretending a pencil is a rocket is pretending something is a rocket... — Srap Tasmaner
This pencil is not a rocket. — Srap Tasmaner
Two predicates there and some existence. — Srap Tasmaner
We don't experience waves or potentiality. We experience actuality and particles. Waves are what we call that we can't experience — Gregory
Are you also telling me the PNC is a relic of the pre-QM past?
I'm only pointing out that your OP commits a performative contradiction rendering its conclusion nonsensical. I provided a link in my previous post which explains that the superposition principle predates QM (& "Schrödinger's Cat" gendankenexperiment) by nearly two centuries. — 180 Proof
The equations of e.g. linear algebra and functional analysis used for describing phenomena in superposition are founded on symbolic logic with axioms such as the LNC (i.e. bivalence) and therefore any claim that 'symbolic logic is refuted or invalidated by the very mathematical formalisms which are founded on symbolic logic' refutes itself with a performative contradiction (i.e. you saw-off the branch on which you're sitting). — 180 Proof
I provided a link in my previous post which explains that the superposition principle predates QM (& "Schrödinger's Cat" gendankenexperiment) by nearly two centuries. — 180 Proof
Minds digitize an analog world to create the meat of thought. Objects of the mind are the result. I believe that the world is process, relationships, or information, not physical. — Harry Hindu
The idea that physical objects exist is the result of this digitization of the world into discrete forms in space-time. — Harry Hindu
Turning your thoughts back on themselves in like the camera looking back at the monitor it is connected to. It creates a feedback loop - an infinite corridor - one akin to the void one peers into when running away with the thought of thinking about one's thoughts. — Harry Hindu
Well, for starters, how about, wherever there’s being, there’s sentience, and vice-versa?
— ucarr
How do you know this? — Harry Hindu
Each human enters the world as an instant immortal , having always existed, and being always to exist. This is the innate POV of all sentience.
— ucarr
This makes no sense. If a human enters the world, then the world preceded the human entering it, and didn't always exist unless there is somewhere else other than the world from which they came that does always exist. Sounds like the typical philosophical misuse of words in an effort to awe others with their world salad. — Harry Hindu
Sentience is the primary essence of the material universe, as consciousness is the greatest of all creations. It is an essence adorned with laurel.
— ucarr
Sentience is a view and a view is simply an arrangement of information - of information about states of the world relative to the state of your body. In other words, sentience is simply an arrangement of relative essences, like the temperature of your body relative to the temperature of the air around you. When we speak of existence, we're really talking about the existence of essences. If not, then what else could you be referring to when you use the word, "existence"? — Harry Hindu
The Hard Problem
Back in 1945, when Sartre uttered his existentialist credo, in my opinion he was tapping into QM.
— ucarr
And on what was - is - your opinion based? More opinion? Or something - anything - of any substance? — tim wood
Yeah. My approach to science (unfortunately) is through the lens of philosophy, whereas, it should be the other way around. When it comes to QM, I'm strictly a lay person & a novice. A legitimate science person can probably hammer my QM interpretations. Even so, without them, I haven't got a leg to stand on. Also, I like the scientific project in general because it impels practitioners to go chasing after difficult questions most people trash.I am always skeptical of mixing quantum mechanics, science, with metaphysics. To me it looks like the similarities are metaphorical rather than literal. That's why I disliked "The Tao of Physics." Being would be unapproachable even if reality were classical.
The only option for us is subjective existence. There may or may not be an objective reality - but we may never know the details because we're bound to subjectivity.
I might be wrong in all my judgments, but nonetheless I'm treating them as necessary fictions that guide me forward.
1. What is the difference between a sweet, juicy, red apple and a sweet, juicy red apple that exists? The difference between a red apple and a green apple, or a sweet apple and a sour apple, is pretty clear. But explaining clearly what is added to an apple by existing...?
