That seems kind of a stretch. — Darkneos
I'm not sure what to say about this. I've already gone out on a limb a bit, being too definitive in rejecting your point of view. Maybe too rigid is a better way of saying it. It just sort of rubs me the wrong way, which I recognize is not much of an argument. — T Clark
So, how come there are only those few number of ways to make the stable particles? What underlies the perfect symmetry for the stable electron, proton, and photon? — PoeticUniverse
It must have to do with the nature of waves… such as charge could have to do with the wave amplitude being above or below the zero point of the something and the anti-something. — PoeticUniverse
In free space—the electron(-) and the proton(+), — PoeticUniverse
Into an electron and proton pair, — PoeticUniverse
Hope you don't mind me chipping in on this point. — Wayfarer
But there's another dimension to consider, and that is the sense in which deep spiritual or existential enquiry is necessarily first person. There are states of being, or states of understanding, which can only be realised in the first person. They can be conveyed to another, only in the event that the other has realised or has had access to insights of a similar nature. So that kind of insight is non-conceptual or non-discursive, so to speak - beyond words, which is the meaning of ineffable. But real, and highly significant, regardless. — Wayfarer
What is there to understanding a concept beyond understanding the words used to describe it? It seems to me that, in Taoism, conceptualizing something is the same as naming it, i.e. putting it into words. — T Clark
I often say that there's only one world, so all the different philosophies and religions are describing the same thing in different words. I guess that means I agree with you. — T Clark
But to greatly oversimplify, there is only one kind of thing - an apple - yet a multiplicity of ways to describe it. That doesn't mean there is something missing from our understanding of apples. — T Clark
Each culture and tradition describes their experience of ultimate reality, but ultimate reality doesn't exist beyond those descriptions. — T Clark
Whether or not you capitalize "god" depends on whether you consider it a name or a description. — T Clark
You see, even though we agree, you may not think so because words or names for you are static, while for me they are fluid. That is our difference. Whatever word you or i use makes no difference. I mean, even the Tao suggests that we see beyond the names of things down to their essence. — punos
I don't understand. — T Clark
I don't see that there is an ultimate puzzle. Each understanding of ultimate reality stands on it's own. It can be interesting and enlightening to compare different religions and philosophies, but that doesn't mean something is missing. — T Clark
Are you saying that the god of monotheistic religions is fundamentally different from the gods of multi-theistic ones? I don't see that. My, perhaps idiosyncratic, understanding is that, in Taoism, the Tao comes before God or the gods, whichever you like. — T Clark
I didn't understand your mathematical interpretation of ultimate reality the last time we discussed it and I don't understand it now. — T Clark
The Tao does not replace god, it comes before it. God is just one of the 10,000 things - the multiplicity of phenomena in our world brought into being by the Tao. — T Clark
The Tao is an empty vessel; it is used, but never filled.
Oh, unfathomable source of ten thousand things! — Tao Te Ching - Verse 4
If the Tao is eternal and there is a flow in time and space, it should not be limited to the TTC. Let it soar outside the text box. :sparkle: — Amity
In short, while physics provides empirical insights into the workings of the universe, metaphysics offers a framework for understanding the underlying principles that govern those observations. One can inform the other. — punos
Isn't this necessary if we are to have an holistic approach to understanding life?
It's similar to what I've just discussed with Fooloso4.
Regarding the play of opposites.
I see no reason why this would be objected to by the author/s of the TCC. — Amity
Those who want to relate the Tao to either physics or information or logos, might do well to look for those connections in the much older book, the I Ching. — unenlightened
For me - Tao = metaphysics; quantum vacuum = science. — T Clark
So, you're going to improve on the Tao Te Ching. I'm having a hard time figuring out how to respond. — T Clark
I see the Tao Te Ching as metaphysics, you don't. For me, that's a fundamental and profound difference. — T Clark
No, I think you and I have diametrically opposed understandings of what Lao Tzu was trying to say. — T Clark
You and I are just repeating our arguments without adding anything new. I suggest we leave it here. — T Clark
What is measurable is always connected fundamentally to what is not measurable. — punos
I don't know what this means. — T Clark
Whatever scientists did to hypothesize dark matter is, in my view, the same as what the old Taoist sages did to hypothesize the Tao. — punos
You and I understand this very differently. — T Clark
Admirably condescending. — T Clark
The Tao can, in part, be conceived as the mathematical value (or non-value/non-thing/nothing) of 0 (zero)... This is also the kind of thing that happens with the quantum, or false vacuum at the very foundation of our universe. — punos
I don't know what the first sentence means and in the second sentence are you mixing up metaphysics and physics again. — T Clark
I actually agree with much of this, although I suspect I mean something different by it than you do. — T Clark
I'm glad you're on the forum: you have a lot to offer! — PoeticUniverse
There are damning problems with the scheme of Presentism as a sequence of nows with the past not kept and the future not yet existing, the first problem being its unrelenting besiegement by Einstein’s relativity of simultaneity. — PoeticUniverse
Second, the turning of a ‘now’ into the next ‘now’ sits on the thinnest knife edge imaginable, the previous ‘now’ wholly consumed in the making of the new ‘now’ all over the universe at once in a dynamical updating—the present now exhausting all reality. The incredibly short Planck time could be the processing time. — PoeticUniverse
Third, what is going to exist or was existent, as the presentist must refer to as ‘to be’ or ‘has been’ is indicated as coming or going and is thus inherent in the totality of what is, and so Presentism has no true ‘nonexistence’ of the future and the past—which means that there is no contrast between a real future and an unreal future, for what is real or exists can have no opposite to form a contrast class. — PoeticUniverse
I just think Taoism is an attempt to remind us that while we produce concepts, no matter how genius and functional, we can reduce/alleviate our universal anxiety by simply being aware that we are just producing concepts. — ENOAH
It's like we can play football and take it as seriously as we want, even with complete determination to win, and so on, but if we forget we're just playing a game, we risk all of the suffering associated with winning/losing. — ENOAH
I need to know whether time is linear, as in Presentism, or if there is an all-at-once block-universe, as in Eternalism. No one yet seems to know, since both modes of time would appear the same to us. I'm stuck having to always figure out things two ways. — PoeticUniverse
Perhaps shorten this to "I'm a monist, and thus i believe that whatever things are, they are made of one "thing", for the Tao would be the only fact, as you said, ever identical to itself, as the only real thing, whereas the temporaries from it are never identical to themselves over time, but are semblances, such as the sun burning its fuel, but remaining as a sun semblance to us. — PoeticUniverse
How does one measure a single 0-dimensional point inside a non-zero dimensional space? It cannot be measured because measurement requires a beginning and an end point. It cannot be done with a single point. How does one measure one instance of time? It cannot be done for the same reason; one needs two instances to measure the time interval between them. For anything to be measurable and quantifiable, it must have a beginning and end point of measurement. — punos
I don't understand how this is relevant. Scientists hypothesize physical dark matter based on requirements of theories of gravitation even though it's never been measured. I can know that a question will have a true or false answer even if I don't know what it is yet. — T Clark
I don't need people to agree with me about my views, but I need to test whether I really understand, even believe, what seems right to me. I also find that hearing other people's ideas and their responses to my statements helps me clarify, and sometimes even change, how I see things. — T Clark
I definitely don't agree with you about energy. — T Clark
Geez Louise, you're getting way ahead of me. Give me a chance to catch up. — T Clark
I'll say what I always say - the Tao is metaphysics. I'm an admirer of R.G. Collingwood who said that metaphysics is the study of absolute presuppositions - the underlying assumptions, usually unspoken and unconscious, that underly our understanding of reality. Absolute presuppositions are not true or false - they have no truth value. — T Clark
I see Taoist principles as useful perspectives on how to think about the world. Why would that change? — T Clark
If something is not the Tao, then what is it, what could it be instead? — punos
One of the 10,000 things. — T Clark
I agree causality is metaphysical. I'm not sure about information. — T Clark