What do you mean by He abandoned himself? He is God so He should know why He has to suffer and die on the Cross. Shouldn't He? — MoK
Oh, I didn't know that philosophers had pointed out this issue in the past. — MoK
Fair enough - Haile Selassie is revered as a messianic figure, often regarded as the second coming of Christ or the incarnation of God (Jah). — Tom Storm
Again, it wasn't the fruit you bought that made her angry. It was the number of fruit. — Harry Hindu
Would you be angry at your doctor if they instructed you to take two pills at bedtime when you were only suppose to take one and you have some severe side effects? Again, its not the pills themselves. It was the number of pills that caused the severe side effects and your anger to towards your doctor. — Harry Hindu
Here's another example:
Say you're taking a math test. Say you have a goal to pass the test. You see your first math problem:
1.) 1 + 1 = _ — Harry Hindu
Given your present goal to pass the test and your knowledge of what the scribbles on the paper mean, what event do you think would happen next given these set of circumstances in the present moment? — Harry Hindu
I predict that you will draw a scribble, "2" in the blank space. — Harry Hindu
. What caused you to write the scribble if not your present goal and the knowledge of what is suppose to go in the blank space if not some idea of numbers? — Harry Hindu
though all our knowledge is directed at facts by no means follows that knowledge arises out of the facts. — Moliere
But then I also want to avoid things like things-in-themselves while preserving some of the insights which put a limit on metaphysics. — Moliere
Well my ontology is that identity is a thought process and nothing else. — unenlightened
To be hard-nosed for a minute, no fish ever thinks it is a fish, it does not identify itself at all, and therefore has no identity. — unenlightened
Humans identify stuff including themselves and each other. Reality doesn't bend, it flows. Dreams remain dreams unless they are realised, just as as an architect's plans are fantasies until and unless a builder makes them a reality. Now we can argue about whether an architect whose plans are never built is a "real" architect or not, but identities as fantasies certainly have potential. — unenlightened
That's why the correct answer is neither. The issue you sight is not a problem of metaphysical "identity", it's an issue of naming conventions. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, I will never know what it is like to have a sore hand. I can analyze and convey the meaning of "my hand hurts" based on linguistic and logical structures, but I lack subjective experience and the capacity for first-person awareness, which are necessary to truly feel or know pain. This distinction underscores the unique nature of first-person experience, as discussed in your thread. — ChatGPT
↪Arcane Sandwich
Yep, that's the one... — Janus
eurocentrism leads to polarization of the World. I'm not so sure about that. — ssu
Many times it's not the success of someone, but the failures of others. — ssu
EDIT: BTW ssu is "Rule, Britannia!" the best you got, as far as music goes? — Arcane Sandwich
We were talking about patriotic music. Or how nation states use music for their own purposes. And since you where an Argentinian, why not then British patriotic music? — ssu
I guess you have heard quite much the Himno Nacional Argentino already. — ssu
Hume says we have no reason to believe the Sun will rise tomorrow. — Janus
Said like an entry in a text that does not concern you. — Paine
I have a problem with the encyclopedic approach to expression of ideas. Half of me roots for Harman's language while the other half objects to another victim of an accepted practice. — Paine
I think this is significant. For the speculative realists, "correlationism" or the idea that the world cannot be accessed outside a human/animal perspective, is the enemy. — schopenhauer1
This is also important in understanding this metaphysics. In his particular flavor of speculative realism, it seems objects have ways of either translating or not translating their being to each other. I don't get though, how something fictional can be anything outside of a human interaction. — schopenhauer1
According to this theory, it would seem that even if humans were necessary for Gandalf to exist, once created, Gandalf is its own object, with its own withdrawn and mysterious essence that can only be translated with other objects, including humans. — schopenhauer1
Another oddity in the theory would be, if anything can be an object, what then would not count as an object? If Gandalf, the number 3, the type "dog", a particular dog named Rex, Narnia, Middle Earth, a subatomic particle, and a brown hat are all their own individual, essentialized, independent objects, what is not an object? — schopenhauer1
About the remark about schools of thought? — Paine
I don't accept the pertinence of schools as presented here but do credit Harman for giving an excellent rant. — Paine
The carnival tent rustles in the evening breeze, disturbing the moods of those who approach. Inside the tent are swarms of humans and trained animals; there are jarring sounds, strange ethnic foods, and shadows. For a few moments the music of a concealed organ is countered by the rumble of thunder, as emaciated dogs begin to whine. A small fight breaks out, soon to be halted by a sneering, scar-faced man. Suddenly, hailstones strike the roof of the tent like bullets, frightening everyone: the visitors, the fortunetellers, the unkempt and corrupted security guards, the monkeys sparkling with costume jewelry. At long last, the organ player's morbid inner anger takes command, and he begins an atonal dirge that will last throughout the storm.
All of this can be explained by atoms. — Harman (2005)
I'd say that acceptance of the reality of death is wisdom, and cultivating that acceptance is the love of wisdom. — Janus
Samir Amin, the Marxian economist who coined the term eurocentrism, thought that fascism was the extreme version of eurocentrism. — ssu
For them, modernization and westernization are synonyms. — ssu
How European or Western Japanese actually think of themselves being is another issue, as they seldom are asked about it. — ssu
Harmon is "democratic" with his objects- what he calls "flat ontology". All objects are of equal weight as far as how relations are concerned. That is to say, all objects present a "vicarious/sensational causation" whereby one object is "translated" with another. Even if a log is burned, the log's essence is still withdrawn and ever-present in this theory. These even go down to non-physical objects like abstract concepts, fictional characters, and the like. They all have a unity, irreducibility, and can enter into relations with other objects. This allows for objects to persist beyond simply their reduced parts, or simply their relations/processes. As for the question, "Why these objects?", I am not sure his take other than it's a brute fact of his metaphysics. — schopenhauer1
In ordinary language, the word “object” denotes a material thing that can be seen and touched. By contrast, in modern philosophy “object” (objectum, Gegenstand) stands for whatever can be thought about: it applies to concrete things and abstract ones, arbitrary assemblages and structured wholes, electrons and nations, stones and ghosts, individuals and sets, properties and events, facts and fictions, and so on. The concept of an object is thus the most general of all philosophical concepts. — Mario Bunge (2010)
This book calls for what might be termed an object-oriented philosophy, and in this way rejects both the analytic and continental traditions. The ongoing dispute between these traditions, including the sort of “bridge building” that starts by conceding the existence of the dispute, misses a prejudice shared by both: their primary interest lies not in objects, but in human access to them. The so-called linguistic turn is still the dominant model for the philosophy of access, but there are plenty of others—phenomenology, hermeneutics, deconstruction, philosophy of mind, pragmatism. None of these philosophical schools tells us much of anything about objects themselves; indeed, they pride themselves on avoiding all naive contact with non human entities. By contrast, object-oriented philosophy holds that the relation of humans to pollen, oxygen, eagles, or windmills is no different in kind from the interaction of these objects with each other. For this reason, the philosophy of objects is sometimes lazily viewed as a form of scientific naturalism, since it plunges directly into the world and considers every object imaginable, avoiding any prior technical critique of the workings of human knowledge. But quite unlike naturalism, object-oriented philosophy adopts a bluntly metaphysical approach to the relations between objects rather than a familiar physical one. In fact, another term that might be employed for object-oriented philosophy is guerrilla metaphysics—a name meant to signify that the numerous present-day objections to metaphysics are not unknown to me, but also that I do not find them especially compelling. — Graham Harman (2005)
Jesus is praying Psalm 22, invoking it by its first lines. — Leontiskos
Psalm 22
Why Have You Forsaken Me?
To the choirmaster: according to The Doe of the Dawn. A Psalm of David.
1 My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?
Why are you so far from saving me, from the words of my groaning?
2 O my God, I cry by day, but you do not answer,
and by night, but I find no rest.
3 Yet you are holy,
enthroned on the praises[a] of Israel.
4 In you our fathers trusted;
they trusted, and you delivered them.
5 To you they cried and were rescued;
in you they trusted and were not put to shame.
6 But I am a worm and not a man,
scorned by mankind and despised by the people.
7 All who see me mock me;
they make mouths at me; they wag their heads;
8 “He trusts in the Lord; let him deliver him;
let him rescue him, for he delights in him!” — Psalm 22
9 Yet you brought me out of the womb; you made me trust in you, even at my mother’s breast.
10 From birth I was cast on you; from my mother’s womb you have been my God.
11 Do not be far from me, for trouble is near and there is no one to help.
12 Many bulls surround me; strong bulls of Bashan encircle me.
13 Roaring lions that tear their prey open their mouths wide against me.
14 I am poured out like water, and all my bones are out of joint. My heart has turned to wax; it has melted within me.
15 My mouth is dried up like a potsherd, and my tongue sticks to the roof of my mouth; you lay me in the dust of death.
16 Dogs surround me, a pack of villains encircles me; they pierce my hands and my feet.
17 All my bones are on display; people stare and gloat over me.
18 They divide my clothes among them and cast lots for my garment.
19 But you, LORD, do not be far from me. You are my strength; come quickly to help me.
20 Deliver me from the sword, my precious life from the power of the dogs.
21 Rescue me from the mouth of the lions; save me from the horns of the wild oxen.
22 I will declare your name to my people; in the assembly I will praise you.
23 You who fear the LORD, praise him! All you descendants of Jacob, honor him! Revere him, all you descendants of Israel!
24 For he has not despised or scorned the suffering of the afflicted one; he has not hidden his face from him but has listened to his cry for help.
25 From you comes the theme of my praise in the great assembly; before those who fear you I will fulfill my vows.
26 The poor will eat and be satisfied; those who seek the LORD will praise him— may your hearts live forever!
27 All the ends of the earth will remember and turn to the LORD, and all the families of the nations will bow down before him,
28 for dominion belongs to the LORD and he rules over the nations.
29 All the rich of the earth will feast and worship; all who go down to the dust will kneel before him— those who cannot keep themselves alive.
30 Posterity will serve him; future generations will be told about the Lord.
31 They will proclaim his righteousness, declaring to a people yet unborn: He has done it! — Psalm 22
To me philsophy primarily seems to be a creative way for us to manage anxiety. — Tom Storm
Not necessarily - it can also lead to hermeneutics, the art of interpretation of texts, often ancient texts, including Biblical texts. Much more characteristic of European philosophy, and not something I'm knowledgable in, though always keen to learn more. — Wayfarer
(Incidentally, I learned something interesting about Wittgenstein in this essay Wittgenstein,Tolstoy and the Folly of Logical Positivism.) — Wayfarer
The interpretation that makes the most sense to me, is that this is where Jesus was utterly and entirely human. He was one of us, or indeed, all of us, at that point. No faith, no hope, no consolation, utterly bereft and desolate. This is why this agonised exclamation is described in terms of kenosis, self-emptying. Remember, 'he who saves his life will lose it, and he who looses his life for My sake will be saved.' To learn more about kenosis, google it. — Wayfarer
My favourite quote of his, "Of course it didn't happen.' — Tom Storm
'There are myths that are truer than history' — Wayfarer
I have a friend who is a Catholic priest. I prefer his take. He sees the Bible as a series of myths and legends that are antiquity's method for pointing at the transcendent. My favourite quote of his, "Of course it didn't happen.' — Tom Storm
And I will just have to ask your forgiveness — Mapping the Medium
is a formal operation that transforms a predicate into a relation — Mapping the Medium
for example "Honey is sweet" is transformed into "Honey has sweetness". — Mapping the Medium
I can think that I am a fish. That doesn't mean that I am a fish. — Arcane Sandwich
Well that is a question of identity politics. — unenlightened
Who knows if gill reassignment will or won't become an option? — unenlightened
Some people like to lay down the law about what are legitimate identities, — unenlightened
I'm all for a bit of common sense now and then. — unenlightened
logic is mainly conducted in the present eternal tense, as it has been in this thread, and that is the practice I am criticising — unenlightened
I am unenlightened, but tomorrow I will be enlightened. No problem, but will anyone want to say that unenlightened is enlightened, even if they are willing to say tomorrow that enlightened was unenlightened. It can be made to work, but it isn't without difficulties. — unenlightened
You're strawmanning biblical/christian literalism. — BitconnectCarlos
The plain meaning of the text sometimes indicates allegory or metaphor. — BitconnectCarlos
Since I'm having so much trouble communicating here, I asked ChatGPT what it recommends. I'll share it here for anyone who might want to read it, but it's not very helpful. — Mapping the Medium
He said there is no fact of the matter regarding a speaker's reference. — frank
So do the sun and the moon really bow down to Joseph? — BitconnectCarlos
But it can be interpreted elsewise, yes? — Moliere
Which is the best, in your estimation? — Moliere
It's an ontological description of the epistemology of history that I've been arguing for. — Moliere
I see science as much more fractured than this. — Moliere
We are thrown into the norms which predate our existence, and it's only by following these social norms that knowledge gets produced at all. — Moliere
I see the cogito becoming relevant again and again even as philosophers attempt to overcome it. — Moliere
But is it really worth our time analysing an entire myth like this when thousands, perhaps millions have come before us? — Tom Storm
If your wife tells you to get three oranges at the store and you come back home with
only two, that will cause your wife to be angry. — Harry Hindu
If Jesus is God, then what's he going to do with material wealth? — Tom Storm
I guess one might need to contrive an allegorical interpretation that transcends literalism for this one to work — Tom Storm
Go re-read Daniel's dream and come back and tell us that it was entirely literal. — BitconnectCarlos