I don't think boredom is a universal problem. It could be that our age is so entertained that it's no longer a problem. Or maybe I'm a lucky eccentric in this regard.This situation seems rotten itself as there is no unmitigated good. That is to say, one cannot just experience good without it somehow having itself a negative consequence (boredom, no longer novel, etc.). — schopenhauer1
:up:he reason the world of becoming is condemned so much throughout the history of Eastern and Western philosophy is a problem of the philosopher's own impotence — Albero
Why the disturbance? Why not Nirvana?
So ensues layers of post-facto reasoning. Here comes that shifty subversive "balance" again :smirk: — schopenhauer1
In this perspective, non-being is not synonymous with nothingness or annihilation but rather represents a state of freedom from the limitations and fluctuations of the material realm. — Existential Hope
Caring about suffering in the abstract is not our strong point. — schopenhauer1
so denial and vehement dismissal is the only way to react if confronted with it. — schopenhauer1
But I think Zapffe counteracts the determinism in a way. He psychologizes it rather than mechanizes it. In other words, it is learned, cultural, a defense mechanism perhaps, but one that can be unlearned by knowing about it in the first place. "Oh, mea culpa, I am just throwing up a defense mechanism by ignoring, denying, and anchoring". — schopenhauer1
And of course my not giving phenomenology enough credit is mostly a rhetorical ploy to keep the discussion in an area in which I am both more comfortable and more interested. That's not something I am alone in doing. It is quite self-consciously done. None of which detracts from my criticism of phenomenology. — Banno
Phenomenology would build an understanding from a foundation of personal, private, indubitable phenomenal experience. — Banno
I think the phenomenologists overcome internal/external, but it's very easy to read our Cartesian assumptions into their work. — Moliere
Oh yeah for sure, good points on the public performer. It's more an industry they have created for themselves, not trying to create real dialogue. — schopenhauer1
Still not what I'm talking about though. Social issues and existential issues are not the same, and perhaps even a bit opposed. — schopenhauer1
In that case, balance is the shady subversive word used. Thus one is quieting to become better at the parts that are not quiet. It is not to diminish one's need for need. It is another self-improvement strategy to live in the world of noise. It's not gnosis, its simply routine like the health-shake, exercise routine, etc. — schopenhauer1
They rather therapy to be individualistic, about their ego and how they move about in the world, not the human condition tout court. — schopenhauer1
But can there be more of a communal commiseration aspect to it rather? Like, "I see this, does anyone else see this? Isn't this crazy?!". — schopenhauer1
I was explaining how the the first written myth, the Epic of Gilgamesh, spoke of gods who were pissed at all the noise the humans made so flooded the Earth. Why do people want to create the din of noise? We can't be quiet? — schopenhauer1
Feuerbach urged his readers to acknowledge and accept the irreversibility of their individual mortality so that in doing so they might come to an awareness of the immortality of their species-essence, and thus to knowledge of their true self, which is not the individual person with whom they were accustomed to identify themselves. They would then be in a position to recognize that, while “the shell of death is hard, its kernel is sweet” (GTU 205/20), and that the true belief in immortality is
a belief in the infinity of Spirit and in the everlasting youth of humanity, in the inexhaustible love and creative power of Spirit, in its eternally unfolding itself into new individuals out of the womb of its plenitude and granting new beings for the glorification, enjoyment, and contemplation of itself. (GTU 357/137)
In light of the emphasis placed in his later works on the practical existential needs of the embodied individual subject, it should be noted that during his early idealistic phase Feuerbach was strongly committed to a theoretical ideal of philosophy according to which contemplation of and submersion in God is the highest ethical act of which human beings are capable.
Schopenhauer was serious, but his aphorisms had some humor. — schopenhauer1
I'd say it is serious in that people are seriously affected by birth and suffering. So the stakes are high, no? — schopenhauer1
It seems something to do with evangelistic outrage. — schopenhauer1
E.M. Cioran I think represents a gallow's humor sort of approach to AN. — schopenhauer1
How many planets are in our solar system? The number of planets is both an observation and an imposition. — Banno
And for my money the best way to talk about the various bits and pieces of our everyday use is with a bivalent logic.
That might not be the case in other specific circumstances, nor in ethics, aesthetics or mathematics. — Banno
A realist will say that either there is water at the poles, or there isn't - that either the statement or its negation is true. An anti-realist may say that the statement "There is water at Mercury's poles" is neither true nor not true, until the observation is made. Which is the better approach? — Banno
Anti-realism holds that stuff is dependent in some way on us, that thinking makes it so. — Banno
Perhaps you don't give phenomenology enough credit. Husserl alone is already great. Also the realism/antirealism seems like an echo, with realism favoring the external.That emphasis on internal/external is a derangement from phenomenology. — Banno
It's batteries and clusters and systems and hierarchies of concepts, never just one at a time, that we deal with, — Srap Tasmaner
Neither "the balanced end of an enquiry" nor "how someone ought describe a situation" lead inevitably to truth. — Banno
I'm puzzled by folk differentiating 'objective' truths from truths. Prefixing "subjective' or 'objective' to truth seems to me to do no more than muddle the nature of truth. — Banno
Worthy of Monty Python. Have you a view as to the sense of "we experience representations of plants and animals"? Seems much like experiencing our experiences... — Banno
If you like; I've no clear idea of what the difference between an oyster-for-me and an oyster-for-anyone might be. Isn't it all just oysters? — Banno
Oh no I'm not saying he's an idiot, sorry if that's how it came across.
It's just that it's hard sometimes to realize how far our understanding of the world has come since then, especially neuroscience and other fields. They worked with what they knew at the time so I wonder what they would say with what we know now. — Darkneos
Yes, all that. And as you seem to note, what is experienced is the world. We should avoid Stove's gem - the false argument that we only ever taste oysters with our mouths, hence we never tase oysters as they are in themselves... — Banno
Do you think that Kant's synthetic a priori derivation of the "pure forms of intuition" and categories of judgement could be mistaken (bearing in mind that they are only presented as being relevant to the context of human experience and judgement)? — Janus
Why do you think people lack sufficient free will enough? — schopenhauer1
”On could say, then, that the rule for the use of the word ‘same’ is instantiated in performances that are bound together by family resemblance, which means that they have no one thing in common. — Joshs
It's true, of course, that each individual organism needs to construct their own, in some sense 'private', model of the world (and themselves in it), because that's what brain development just is, but it's not true that each organism constructs the framework they will use to construct the world from scratch. There's an inheritance. A lot of 'choices' have already been made for you (by evolution, and on top of that by culture) so you build your own, sure, but not completely idiosyncratically -- and not incommensurably -- but using the same inheritance as everyone else, for the base level, and as everyone in your culture, your speech community, and so on, for others. — Srap Tasmaner
Ontogeny gets to recapitulate phylogeny rapidly because what used to be endlessly branching little pathways are now high-speed rails. As Hume put it, there are questions Nature has deemed too important to leave to our own fallible and imperfect reason. — Srap Tasmaner
Well, there’s certainly SOMETHING that constrains our constructions, but aren’t biologistic and physicalist terms like blood sugar, calories and oxygen contestable concepts that shift their sense along with revolutionary changes in the scientific and cultural epistemes that make them intelligible? — Joshs
Kant said a lot of things but that doesn't make them right. Classical physics was just a model that works at the macro level of things but fails when it gets to the Quantum Physics. It's a "good enough" method for day to day but not for understanding reality, at least according to the physicists I've talked to. — Darkneos