However, the individual does not need to remove oneself from society, nor avoid human contact in order to isolate, or enter the cave — Merkwurdichliebe
Ah, ok, no worries, thanks for explaining.No offense meant. I was simply being facetious in implying you held that position, I didn't really think you held it. Consider it a bad attempt at a bad joke. — Merkwurdichliebe
Oh, sure you did. Since I disagreed I MUST be ignoring the problem. So, if I don't agree with your approach, this entails that I cannot see the problem out there. Hence it could be the only approach. Read you own shit and take responsibility for your own mistakes in assumption. You act like something is entailed by what I wrote, when it isn't. If I don't agree with you the only possible cause is I don't notice the problem. Get it. Your assumptions.Loving sure has not worked. I did not qualify my views as the only approach. Stop putting you lies into my mouth, please. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Duh. This from the guy who is telling me what I am not noticing when I do. Who is instructing me to correcteth, when I obviously do. You imply and assert shit all the time about other people. Taste of your own.Stop putting you lies into my mouth, please. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
That first sentence is pretty much unitelligible. In the context of our discussion about hating ourselves, you plop in a quote from scripture - appealing to the authority of books that you consider to be problematic - about a father correcting.I never indicated it was while quoting that it is the loving thing to do. Reading comprehension is good. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I did, right up yours.As to your personal psychobabble. Shove it. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I don't think it's simple, at all. But none of what you write changes the fact that ideas have been pouring into you for years from others. That you modify, translate, falsely interpret these ideas, reconfigure them, misunderstand them, in addition to taking in reasonably close approximations doesn't change the fact that your mind has been constructed with tremendous input from other minds and this is still going on if you are not isolated from communicating with the others. And the language we get also carries with it all sorts of implicit and explicit ideas and makes it harder to have certain ideas and models of reality. Then all the things that one DOES to achieve various goals, which we learn through imitating others - often forced to use these heuristics - also imply a lot about reality, what other people are and how they are motivated, what 'works' in the world.I'm sorry, it is just not that simple. — Merkwurdichliebe
There's nothing I have said that remotely implies or acts as evidence I didn't know this.And, in fact I did know the Japanse treated, for example, POWs horrifically in WW2.You'd be surprised how many GI's died after horrendously creative and drawn out torture sessions implemented by Imperial Japanese. — ISeeIDoIAm
Of course people resist torture, many for quite a while.But my intuition tells me that torture has gotten progressively worse throughout time because people have the tendency to resist torture. — ISeeIDoIAm
Nope, I don't ignore that.You want to hate many things, to improve things, yet ignore that it is mankind who is doing the destroying and should be hated. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
So, what you are saying is 'my idea that we hate ourselves is the only approach that can work.' I don't think that approach will work, even the slightest. Good luck telling people to hate themselves. Let us know what your successes are with that approach here. You can post them in the thread. Along with the science or other evidence it is a worthy approach.We default to loving ourselves and each other and unless we change to what you dislike, nothing will change. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Correceth, is not hateth. And in current English to correct is not to hate and that father no doubt loves his son. And don't tell me how to love as if you know how I love - my son, my self, others. Nothing I have said even remotely implies I do not correceth. As you should know from your own experience.Love more like scriptures tell you to love, which is the way I love.
Proverbs 3:12 For whom the Lord loveth he correcteth; even as a father the son in whom he delighteth. — Gnostic [quote=
No, what happened is I didn't agree with you and so you just assume a bunch of stuff. You're just another internet narcissist who cannot be criticized and so makes up stuff to justify not learning anything from others. iOW you cannot be correctethed. Which means a part of love you cannot experience.You do not seem to want to love that much. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Wow, that's harsh. Been through torture yourself?A man can own another man's body. A man can never own another man's mind. Men decide to give in the will of others because their own is fragile; weak. — ISeeIDoIAm
Minds can be broken. You don't decide to break, though there are likely gray areas and some who decide before being broken. So, sure, sometimes people give up and in. But you can destroy a mind and then fill it. Long term probably that person can regain their mind. Solitary, sensory deprivation, then various pain assaults, interfere with sleep. We need thing to remain whole. Minds need things to remain whole. If we starve a body it does not make a decision to give in - at a certain point it simply has not had enough nutrition and stops functioning. Some may give up early, sure. But bodies have needs. And minds need things to stay organized, to have boundaries, to even know what is happening.But in all those cases the people being tortured decided to give in. — ISeeIDoIAm
Setting aside the issue of telepathy for now, you use language right, when you think. That language has, for example, dead metaphors THROUGHOUT which are ideas from other minds. You have introjected assumptions from parents, teachers, peers, media. Your mind has been influenced by the minds of the books you've read, the movies you've seen and so on. This was pouring into you well before you ever started questioning memes and further even the ways you question and what you question also flowed into you. Cultural biases, and subcultural biases and all the aimed at your unconscious ideas in advertising, films, politics. Sure, you can go off into a cave and avoid all this....now. But you carry with you the thoughts and tools and heurististics of other minds. And this also involves threats within that culture about what not to think and what the ideal is like and so on that will affect how you begin to look at the memes you have. Cognitive dissonence avoidence, denial, confirmation bias in introspection and a host of other factors also trot into that cave also. You are a social mammal with a culture, even when alone.Well, I'm more than willing to hear how that works out. I always assumed that telepathy was fiction, and that the thought that I experience is confined to my mind alone. Furthermore, how is it that my mind can exist within the mind of another, and still continue to remain my mind? — Merkwurdichliebe
One you start 'thinking for yourself' it's already a fait accompli. Sure, we can unravel stuff, but if you haven't noticed that you parents' thoughts and ideas in media and language based assumptions are still having a powerful set of effect in your mind now, then the great challenge hasn't even begun.Thoughts are private, when one thinks, the actual thinking travels no further than the mind doing the thinking. — Merkwurdichliebe
And is it not still the individual who does it all, and to the individual for who it is most valuable, regardless whether that one is reinventing the wheel or merely studying the historic tradition? And who else should it be useful to? — Merkwurdichliebe
It's a very social field and one is immersed in the other philosophers, as one must be. And there are very strong currents in philosophy. You can't just go off and think. Or you can, but you will likely just reinvent the wheel - since one has absorbed via culture and language all sorts of philosophical assumptions- if one is lucky. One is more likely to reinvent something vastly less useful than the philosophical wheel.I might also add: since it is always the individual that practices philosophy — Merkwurdichliebe
I agreeI can agree with this, but the issue is that mistakes will still be made, regardless of how skilled you become. — Pinprick
I have no idea what an AI would be like as a philosopher. Symbolic logic can be programmed but applying that to reality - iow semantics, and understanding the world, all the content of useful deduction, for example - is a whole nother ball of wax. It seems to me how the damn this is programmed, 'raised', what sensory systems and information gathering systems it has and the personality that is 'grown' could make for just about anything including a psychopath AI that concludes we are like a mould on bread it wants to eat.I would say even if you had an AI that was capable of applying the rules of logic with 100% efficiency it would still be incapable of solving many philosophical problems — Pinprick
Logic without intuition, for example, can do very little. Just shuffle symbols, perhaps play checkers.This leads me to think that logic, as well as whatever other philosophical methods, are the wrong tools for the job — Pinprick
Welll, philosophy in general is very words on a page focused. And the one we tend to know is very middle class academic, bow down to science, Western with a lot of assumptions that fit all that. It's a subculture with a lot of pressure on it. And that pressure distorts and limits it, just as pressures distort and limit other subcultures. In general that is. Individuals may break out of that box.Maybe. I think today’s philosophers can rule out several theories in various fields as a result of science, but it seems to me like the big questions in philosophy are still unanswered. — Pinprick
Well, that's not what I believe. I think you can force it.So that hinges on the individual willingly giving up their agency. In other words: no you can't force your will on others. So success is dependent on the torturee agreeing to give up. — ISeeIDoIAm
i don't know what part of that sounds pompous. I didn't understand it however.Sorry to sound pompous, that's just the best way I can illustrate my understanding. — ISeeIDoIAm
The first question I would ask is what does it mean to successfully torture someone/something? — ISeeIDoIAm
Yes, i think so. I mean, we have temperments, we are not blank slates, so our temperments and eariler experiences and desires and proclivities will affect how we are affected by experience. But when we talk about fundamental changes I think new types of experiences are a must."Experience" is either a major component or the sole factor in what moulds a individual's world view. — ISeeIDoIAm
I think you can head yourself in a direction. You can choose to explore. You can choose experiences that will change you and even perhaps in a specific direction. One can challenge one's own beliefs. In a sense risk them. One can try to get rid of beliefs that plague you - cognitive behavioral therapy can be quite successful with this, for example. You can't simply decide to belief X, but you can move yourself in that direction and see if you can, through a variety of experiences come to that belief.But my thought is what of the influences on a person? To what degree is change created internally vs externally? — ISeeIDoIAm
We are our systems. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I guess that my gut reaction is that self-hate will nto improve things and I see self-hate as causal in the way we damage the environment. Our disenchantment and disconnection from nature is a form of self-hatred since we are a part of nature. It is a part of disregarding ourselves. Just as shitting on our mother would be a form of self-hatred. I get what you mean, and I can sort of accept it as provocation, but as a real suggestion I think it just muddles the issue. People hating themselves will have even less contact with themselves, wanWe are the enemy of the environment and should hate what we do to it. I do not separate what we do from what we are, so hate whatever you like of those two options. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I was pointing out that the argument you used was appealing to our self-love and encouraging us to treat ourselves well by not destroying the environment. In the context of saying we need to hate ourselves, it is precisely the opposite approach you then take.Yes, as we are allowing our default position of love to rule us when I think we should let our hate for what we hate rule us and move us to do the right thing for the future generations, if it is not already too late to mitigate that harm. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Yes and no, and to varying degrees person to person. If you said something like we should hate our disconnection with nature or hate what we do in relation to nature when we X, that's one thing. But you start with a general, we should start to hate ourselves. I can tell you that I know that hating myself more will not help the planet in the slightest. Their may be people who in a core way hate their mother planet and they need to hate some of their current practices and values. Fine. But that we all need to hate ourselves more which would mean love ourselves less is NOT something I think would be remotely good for anyone or anything in my case. In fact if I and my wife hated ourselves more tomorrow, I think it would only serve the ones who really hate life and nature. For much the same reason I dislike the way various religions teach self-hate (while denying it) I dislike this encouragement to self-hate, however much I appreciate the goal of getting us to where we will treat nature better. It's nothing for me. And it just creates even more problems for us to unravel. It is as if those who hate and destroy nature and want to hang on to those practices and do not, like me, grieve what is happening, are showing self-love in their relationship with the planet. They are not. They may think so, but they are wrong. They might as well be hitting themselves in the face with a hammer. I see little self love in them. They don't even know themselves.Are we not a part of the systems we should hate? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Which are filled with self-hate. And the members of that we are all kinds of different things. If you think hating yourself more will help the planet, well, do that. Hate yourself more. I am skeptical that will clean up one plastic bag in the ocean, or create legislation that is much more careful with nano-tech pollution. But I don't know what you will do if you start hating yourself (more).We are our systems. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
With the necessary time and methods can a man change the belief of another man, no matter how powerful that belief is, or are there certain beliefs that are rooted so strongly that they simply become irreversible and they cannot be changed not even in an eternity? — Eugen
I agree with this. It is misused and misunderstood.Occam's Razor sucks like a black hole...and is probably misapplied more than any other philosophical "principle." — Frank Apisa
the idea is not to look for simple explanations. It is that if one is given a choice between two explanations, each of which fit the evidence equally well, it is better to go with the explantion that has less posited entities. That's useful for communal knowledge.If one looks for simple explanations one will eventually find one that fits well enough to be considered adequate. — Frank Apisa
What do you mean by 'hate of self' here. Are you actually suggesting we learn to hate ourselves? Isn't our denial of our connection to nature already a form of self-hatred?If we do not turn our love of self to our hate of self, we are bound for our near extinction. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Here you are appealing to our self-love. Many of us will die, our lives with be less good, those that survive.Science is also showing us that we are in a major extinction event that may well include a vast number of people. I doubt that our full extinction will come to pass, but we will be reduced to such small numbers that we will likely revert to a less sophisticated system and city states. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Hating the systems is not the same as hating the self, or?I think, given the incompetence of all governments and gods; we should let our great love for what leads us and turn it to hate, as we should, to insure the survival of people right here and right now. Start to hate the systems that got us all to this pitiful place in time. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
You would be fooled less, in the context of a philosophical discussion. Being fooled less - by your own poor arguments, by the poor arguments of others, by noticing fallacies, by noticing where semantic assumptions are taking place (as a few examples) - you would be less likely to be convinced of things that are false. That is closer to the truth or less far from the truth, at the very least.That makes sense, but I’m not sure that there is a good way to tell if your skills are improving or not. I guess making fewer mistakes could be a marker for improvement, but does making fewer mistakes get you closer to the truth? — Pinprick
Well, for me this bird's eye view is a very hard one to demonstrate or counter. However from my in situ view, my own practice doing philosophy had led to my noticing when arguments are sound or not to a much greater degree. This keeps me from being misled. Which keeps me from being led into falsehood.My way of thinking is that if you look at the 2,000 plus years humans have been using philosophical methods you realize that our methods inevitably lead to flawed results. It’s like we are continually trying to shove a square peg into a round hole. We desperately need a different peg, but none can be found, so we just continue shoving. — Pinprick
Do mean you the guy I was responding to should have written 'stupidity' instead of 'insanity'? For whatever it's worth, I've seen both versions a few times. Either way, there are plenty of good reasons to repeat actions even if the first results of these actions are under par.Isn't that stupidity? Not insanity. — wiyte
Of?Beating a man to death for wearing a rival football team's attire is a better descript. — wiyte
A common, although perhaps inaccurate, definition of insanity is repeating the same actions, but expecting different results — Pinprick
Nothing that can't be detected or measured i.e. perceived is real in science. — TheMadFool
What do they look like? What are they made of? Are they physical? Made of atoms, quarks? They can be deduced, sort of.Natural law, if meant here as the laws of nature, can be observed. — TheMadFool
That's very hard to prove and further, are you willing to put in the time to become an expert in things you have decided are not real? And certainly some people both from experience and innate talent have a much easier time. And then last, again, my point was just how common it is that when one person can perceive something this is due to expertise/experience rather than your generalization that this is usually hallucinations, etc.It is possible for anyone to become an expert. — TheMadFool
Again easy to say and further it does not refute what I wrote. Furhter there are tempermental and paradigmatic reasons certain people never try to be experts in many areas. Then they assume things, like you do, about those who are experts or may be. And then they talk as if they know that those experts are not basing their beliefs on empirical stuff.As I said, anyone can be an expert. — TheMadFool
Sure, and then the issue becomes are there some people who can perceive things others cannot that are nevertheless real.Firstly, as this "someone near him" reveals, there must be someone to whom color is perceivable. — TheMadFool
But in science things are often posited that are not perceived. We see effects on new causes that effect something else and this makes a meter move. Sometimes things are accepted as real that do not even do this, but are deduced. Like the idea of a natural law.Secondly, the fact that you say "seen by some but not others" implies what I've been saying all along - that whatever is deemed to exist must register on the senses of someone. The very requirement that "some" perceive indicates the essence of being real is to be perceived. — TheMadFool
I disagree. I would say the usual contexts are where there is expertise: poker professionals, art authenticators, dermatologists, botanists, carpenters, detectives, psychologists will all perceive things where non-experts will not. This is a regular part of a vast range of fields, but is also happening in all sorts of leisure and private settings and activities.The usual contexts in which such kinds of privileged perception, only some perceiving, appears are in deception and insanity. — TheMadFool
We can always remain agnostic. Sometimes merely trivially and formally, in other cases with more serious agnosticism. There is no need to make an immediate binary choice.How will we know we're not being deceived? — TheMadFool
That is a fairly useless heuristic and we depend on the special perception of experts regularly and certain in crisis. And these can be mundane experts like spouses, friends, parents, not to speak of professional experts. We are constantly engaging others who are better at perceiving some things.After all the only means we have, that what is real, and not a deception, must necessarily be perceived by all, is now useless. — TheMadFool
But a lot of what is considered 'physical' in science cannot be sensed.The idea of the physical is intimately tied to the senses. What is physical is exactly that which can be sensed; the converse, however, is false for the reason that hallucinations occur. — TheMadFool
Ibid, but further the word 'physical' no longer has any substance related meaning. IOW it looks like a claim about substance, but it now simply means real. Regardless of the qualities or lack of qualities of something if science decides something is real, it will fall under naturalism and be taken as physical, even if it shares nothing in common with chairs and rocks.Naturalism, to me, is the philosophy that claims that all there is is the physical; in other words, what is real has to be sensible in some way or other. — TheMadFool
But colors do make a difference in a blind person's world. A blind person could ask someone near him what color the light is and know (to the degree he trusts the sighted person) whether it is time to cross the street or not. Perhaps all sorts of things that are supposedly 'non-physical' are simply seen by some but not others.There is good reason to assume such a position because to admit the non-physical as part of reality is like a blind man admitting colors into his world; even if there are colors, the blind man will never perceive them and it will fail to make a difference to his world. — TheMadFool
First, many so called supernatural phenomena are perceived. Perhaps misinterpreted, perhaps hallucinated, but there is a very large empirical facet to religion and 'supernatural experiences.' This does not prove that the religious and those who believe in the supernatural (a truly badly labeled category) are correct, but it is as if there is no empirical facet to these things when there is. And we know that things have been said to be impossible, when sensed by a minority which have turned out to be real.If both the perceptible and the imperceptible are real then what is not real? — TheMadFool
I don't know what quantum mechanics has to do with final causes. I don't know of any studies about the purposes of elementary particles. — David Mo
If the universe is empty, presumably there is no light. There is absolutely no way someone would come up with the concept of colors without ever experiencing light.By the way, what are the minimum necessary concepts to derive the concept of colors? — Zelebg
Logic is just grammar; ways of putting symbols together. Nothing to symbolise means no symbols. — Banno