• Unpopular opinion: Nihilism still doesn't reflect reality. Philosophical pessimism is more honest.
    If you haven’t found a way to feel a sense of belonging, mutual understanding and connection with others, then this failure will define the quality of your solitary experience as well.Joshs

    I think it boils down to one's view on life. It then becomes personal value. It is not a matter of truth or falsity. You value human relations and belonging in the group you care for as the utmost criteria for your meaning of life. No one can argue with that, or deny it.

    Me? I have an infinite size of universe in my mind that I am happy with, to ponder about anytime I would like. I am also too busy with various hobbies that I enjoy, and it makes life interesting. Friends come and go, and I don't lose sleep over relationship fallouts. Nihilism is still a useful view of life from time to time to get into, because it tells what the world is facing, and where all the people including me are heading to. Nihilism is realism.
  • Unpopular opinion: Nihilism still doesn't reflect reality. Philosophical pessimism is more honest.
    That's an amusing outlook and seems such a cultivated position. The opposite also holds. Life is long and full of adventure and what matters is the moment and the sparks of light and adventure along the way. A party doesn't have to last for eternity to be a good party. God forbid. If a person truly can't find joy then perhaps they are clinically depressed; or maybe are that very common phenomenon, a morose teenager.Tom Storm

    Nihilism, for me, is just knowledge and mental attitude about life, with the prospect of all life of human being being finite and limited, therefore nothing is really meaningful to feel distressed or desirable, so take it easy, calm and cool. That's all. Nothing more or less.
  • Unpopular opinion: Nihilism still doesn't reflect reality. Philosophical pessimism is more honest.
    I can't see how 'eternal nothingness' (such a deliberately dramatic term) matters two fucks. We are all familiar with nothingness - it is quite beautiful in its way. Just think back across the billions of years before you were born. Death's just like that.Tom Storm

    Nihilism is not all that miserable and horrible position for one to be in, as some tries or seems making out. Many are actually quite content and happy being nihilist.
  • Matter and Qualitative Perception
    I think it will be possible to introduce features of organic subjectivity into electronic devices for instance. This is an application that proves the theory is accurate. The full gamut of perceptual processes will take a while to figure out, but it should be possible to arrive at a model of percepts as detailed as our model of the brain's reward system (dopamine, nucleus accumbens etc.).Enrique

    I think recent A.I. Robots technology are still mostly based on the microchips architecture and programming around them. So the codings still might have lots of the programming functions and procedures of If ... then ... do, else, and while such cases do, for 0 to n do loops with the traditional machine language or C programming or even Ada type PL.
    I doubt that they can replicate the human brain with some biochemical structures using particles or molecules based constituents. It would be interesting to see how far the A.I. tech will progress in our lifetime. Because what they have achieved so far is certainly phenomenal stuff, and actually they may be very near to be able to reveal the true nature of the human consciousness soon in near future.
  • Unpopular opinion: Nihilism still doesn't reflect reality. Philosophical pessimism is more honest.
    guarantee you that a person who does not see the world as an ugly place, who empathizes with others , even those who we are told to despise, who delights in their friendships and in their solitary enjoyments , such a person will have no use for nihilism.Joshs

    Most famous philosophers in history enjoyed solitary living for their thinking and writing. Human relations come and go, and it is something of a contingent affair for most grownups.
    I still think nihilism is based on the nature of life, that it has a short finite time, hence no matter how successful or happy one has been, it will not last. The end is coming very soon, and after the end, nothingness will last for good. So, there is no meaning in trying to achieve anything. No meaning to worry or feel pain. They are all meaningless.

    I think (I don't care what the bloody Wiki says), nihilism is about the death and post death, which is eternal nothingness therefore it even affects life at present into something meaningless.

    Pessimism is about looking at not just life and death, but even birth as a tragic event, because when one is born, one has to go through suffering, get old, and then must face death.
    Pessimists such as Schopenhauer would say, the best thing in life is not to be born. Once born, the next best thing is to die as soon as possible. The irony is that he didn't die soon. He tried to live as long as possible.
  • Matter and Qualitative Perception
    Physical or biological entities can be replicated for the exact cloning. If you are saying that human consciousness is constituted with the workings of the molecules and particles in physical and biological forms, then it should be possible to replicate, and even clone the consciousness into other beings. That would be clear proof that the theory is true. If it cannot replicate, then the theory does not have a physical or biological basis.
  • Unpopular opinion: Nihilism still doesn't reflect reality. Philosophical pessimism is more honest.
    It seems the source of nihilism is the end of life, which is inevitable death, rather than life now, which is suffering and not being perfect.

    Because even if it is hard now, people can try to make it better for the future. That is hope and potential to be good and meaningful.

    But no matter how successful one is, having a fantastic perfect life right now, it will not be forever. It will not last. He / she is getting older every day, heading towards old age and inevitable death. All the billionaires will leave the billions behind, all the powerful figures in politics and nations will have to come down from the throne, all the celebrities with fame, beauty and mega money will fade into old age, and all have to die one day. That is why life is viewed as tragic, therefore nihilism is realism.
  • Matter and Qualitative Perception
    Unless they can fully explain, replicate, transfer the workings of the full intelligence and consciousness from one being to another and demonstrate, it would be a difficult theory to convince the most.

    Explanations and demonstrations on more complicated human mental activities such as emotions (worries, fears, jealousy, anger, happiness, love, care, desires..... etc), intuitions and creativity and reasonings and doubting with any type of physical or biological constructions and mechanisms look not easy, if not impossible task to achieve.

    Demonstrating some light detections and simple perceptive phenomenon via the workings of the particles, molecules and electromagnetic forces is as much meaningful attempt as saying when you open the blind on the window, it will pass the sun light into the room.
  • To Theists
    For instance, if you wrote "Nonsense, babytalk" then you must back up that utterance with clear and solid logical argument, why you came to that conclusion which drove you to make the utterance.
    Not doing so, will leave the others to embark on their psychological investigation and analysis on the utterance, and come up with any judgment they think might be the case. Not a good position the utterer to be in. Same with the silence or all category of emotion ridden no factual statements. If that is what the utterer, poster or silencer intended, then fair enough.
  • Death Positivity, the Anxiety of Death, and Flight from It
    Honestly, doing things like reading the poems of Arthur Rimbaud, but, I would imagine that there is a kind of joie de vivre that I could actualize upon.thewonder

    Sure. I like the Rimbaud poems. They are mostly surreal, dark and nihilistic, but the vocabulary and atmosphere it creates is deep and rich. Problem with pleasure from life is that they can run out of steam, and take us back to the entrance to nihilism. And still time will keep dragging all of us to the dark reality of the future, where death is waiting.

    Buddhism tells us the best way is, to detach every good thing in life. Desert everything, and just have a rag around the body, and beg to survive meditating and praying. Then life becomes so simple, banal and painful, death will feel like rescue from this world of suffering, taking us into some nirvana world. Understandable logic to some degree, but not for everyone, and definitely not for me.
  • Death Positivity, the Anxiety of Death, and Flight from It
    What would be your ways of revolting against death?
  • To Theists
    When the posters suddenly change the subject in the middle of discussing on the points or topics, or make emotional or unclear statements or utterances with jokes, cliches or rhetoric or proverbs, they are then subjected to psychological or psychoanalytic readings on their intentions, presuppositions or  mental states, which might work for or against the discussions and the poster.  If they were all under the agreement on their points and emotionally aware of the situation under the engagement, it will be positive, but otherwise it is likely to go negative in reaching the constructive conclusions from the discussions.

      Because usually statements or utterances like that do not carry relevant succinct or logical meanings, and do not present useful communicational messages to the other parties.  Even silence can be interpreted as symbolism for either accepting the other posters suggestions or conclusions, or just abandoning the discussion with no comments or disgust.  It all depends on the contextual stream of the discourses.
  • Why am I me?
    Yet there is but one reality. So are these statements in conflict? Is there a trick of language? What's going on?bert1

    I think it is not one reality. Reality is on its own in a closed box of the owner's mind only free in its own imagination and thoughts like the monads of Leibniz, and there are billions and billions of different realities. When the owner of the mind dies, the reality of the owner dies too, evaporates into nothing.

    "I" is for the sayer who means the sayer itself, no one else.
  • Why am I me?
    What is the casual story that resulted in you being corvus and not Cheshire?bert1

    I was born as "Corvus", and Cheshire was born as "Cheshire".   It is not a very meaningful answer, because it is a causal explanation of the origin of individuals in physical existence.
    As I said, if I were asked to explain any further than that, as soon as I try to come up with my answers, it will spiral into either religious mysticism, metaphysics or shamanistic stories, which might be meaningful to me, but not to you.
  • Why am I me?
    "why" questions can only be asked meaningfully in the situations where answers come from either one's psychological state or motivation or physical cause of the changes of matters.

    When asked why did you do it, why did you say it or why did you go there, the meaningful answers are based on one's psychological motivation, feelings or dispositions. Because I just wanted, because I didn't understand, because I was to meet her in the cafe etc.

    For the examples of "why" questions for the causality of matters could be, "Why does it go faster, when the accelerator is pressed down?" Because more fuel is entering the engine chamber, resulting in faster and more gas explosion. Why does it make sound when the button is pressed? Because it is connected to the speaker, and when the current and voltage flows to it, the cones inside the speaker vibrates etc.

    Anything pertaining to metaphysical or ontological questions such as why were you born, why are you you, why am I I,  this type of WHY questions cannot yield meaningful answers.
  • To Theists
    If you desperately want the explanation based on psychoanalysis, it is an attempt to hide the ignorance with crude juvenile proverbs.
  • To Theists
    Yep. One person's turd is another coprophagic's lunch.180 Proof

    That sounds like a babytalk.
  • To Theists
    I reject the expression. Not really relevant.
  • To Theists
    like babytalk and jabberwocky, glossolalia and pseudo-science180 Proof

    Pseudo-science is a fully established formal concept in Philosophy of Science.
  • To Theists
    Nonsense to you could be meaningful statements, proposition or belief to others.
  • Logical Nihilism
    Looks like a really interesting video. Only watched first 8 minutes, but sounds inspiring. I am always interested in some new or different view point on the subject or topics. Will bookmark and watch the whole lot either tonight or this weekend. Thanks for sharing. :up:
  • To Theists
    I believe in God … I used to be atheist then went through personal experiences which left me in awe …simple as that. I do not try to convert though …each to their ownDeus

    Sure. Religious faith is a personal system arrived by personal intuition, insights and beliefs. No logic to prove anything is required.
  • To Theists
    True statement can happen anywhere. Superman can say 1+1=2 and even though he doesn't exist that statement is still true.hope

    Statements need verification to be true.
    Existence is the precondition for thoughts and actions.
    No existence, then no thoughts and no actions.
  • "Kant's Transcendental Idealism" discussion and reading group
    It’s only been four days since.......

    The thing-in-itself is a real, physical, space/time thing,
    — Mww
    Mww

    Thanks for reconfirmation. It sounds new and fresh concepts no matter how many times I go over them :D
  • "Kant's Transcendental Idealism" discussion and reading group
    .....the thing-in-itself can never conform to the mind; that is precisely what it cannot do. If it did, or if it could, the entire Kantian transcendental treatise drops headlong into the metaphysical crapper. It may stand in such relation in other doctrines, but not in this one.Mww

    Does God belong to the thing-in-itself in Kant? Maybe yes maybe not. What type of objects actually are classed / regarded as the thing-in-itself? Or is the thing-in-itself supposed to be a concept of its own?
  • To Theists
    I'm inside your solipsism.hope

    My solipsism informs that your statement is not true. Because for a statement to be true, it must have happened in reality. It has not happened in reality, therefore it is false.
  • To Theists
    “Look down on me and you see a fool, look up at me and you see a god. Look straight at me and you see yourself.”hope



    I looked down, and saw my feet.
    I looked up, and saw the ceiling.
    I looked straight at you, and there was a computer screen.
    Where are you?
  • Examining Wittgenstein's statement, "The limits of my language mean the limits of my world"
    see. Maybe then you have to look up the word confusion. Well, I'll make it easier: "Uncertainty about what is happening, intended, or required", "a situation of panic or disorder, the state of being bewildered or unclear in one's mind about something", "a situation of panic or disorder" (Ofxord LEXICO). Did I "look" I was in any of these states? :gasp: :worry: :yikes:Alkis Piskas

    Well, the lesson is that sentences also carry emotions, not just meanings. What was radiating from the OP was a sense of confusion and panic. I stepped in to rescue you, as anyone would for the person drowning into the river of philosophy of language limited and shadowed by presence of the unfathomable universe.
  • Examining Wittgenstein's statement, "The limits of my language mean the limits of my world"
    No, I was certainly not confused about Wittgenstein's quote. If I was confused about something, this was with your overall response. Which is evident, since ended with questions ...
    And I didn't get "brighter" with your new response.
    It's not a big deal, though. Let's pass over it, shall we?
    Alkis Piskas

    Well the OP sounded like the author was in deep confusion. Because you were talking about - the world is limited and the infants don't have their worlds because of the linguistic deprivation. And you were also wondering how you can use the computers even without knowing the linguistic abilities to describe the workings of it ... etc.  It sounded a bit dramatic.  I thought you were thinking as if the language is limited, so the world is limited, and the childrens cannot have their worlds etc.
    I simply said, that the world is not affected at all, no matter how limited your languages are, even if you don't have language.
    Well, I didn't reply to you to make you any brighter. I don't believe that anyone can make anyone anything. You make your own self whatever you want to be.   No one said it was a big deal. See, you making out something which is not, and making out which is not, to something. It is just communication, which has been initiated by you, if you think it over. I couldn't quite understand what you meant, when you asked if I agreed with you, and I was just clarifying the whole situation, in case you were misunderstanding something further.
  • "Kant's Transcendental Idealism" discussion and reading group
    I thought about it, and this is what I feel.
    If you say, the origin of knowledge is the sensory organs, then it would be like saying, the origin of photographic images are the lens of cameras, which may sounds not wrong, but not meaningful either.
    The photographic images are the copy the objects in the external world, and the external world's objects are the origin of the images sounds correct.

    And if you say, the external world does not exist, because without the sensory organs we cannot perceive anything or all we get is just illusion, then you are a sceptic. If you say, the external world do exist regardless of the sensory organs and all the illusions we get, then you are a realist. But in both occasions, you are an empiricist.
  • Conceiving Of Death.
    completely. I also think that is a pretty beautiful way of thinking.javi2541997

    and Philosophy is the coolest subject in the universe. :)
  • Conceiving Of Death.
    There might be afterlife, who knows? When we philosophise and read many books, and make us wiser, we might be back to the earth with wiser minds, newly born bodies but without any memory of the previous lives. Sure, this idea is from pure insight and faith, but there is no proof to say, it is wrong. Therefore it is true. :D
  • "Kant's Transcendental Idealism" discussion and reading group
    Not at all. Empiricism is a claim about the source of knowledge as primarily sensory (as distinct from say, first principles a la Descartes). It does not necessarily entail the existence of a 'material world'. Only that, whatever there 'is' - ideal or otherwise - we come to know it though the experience of our senses. It is about the relation between a knowing being, and that which is to be known, and not the relata themselves. In the SEP for example:

    The Empiricism Thesis: We have no source of knowledge in S or for the concepts we use in S other than sense experience.

    https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/rationalism-empiricism/#Empi
    StreetlightX

    Great point.

    I used to think in terms of, how can sense experience ever happen without the material world? It will be just empty space we will be facing and staring. Shouldn't empiricism suppose the existence of the external world, and base it as the source of the all sensory data? But you are right on the points. I will read the link article, and mull it over. Thanks.
  • "Kant's Transcendental Idealism" discussion and reading group
    I take empirical idealism to mean that we are only acquainted with the private data of our own minds.darthbarracuda

    Empirical idealism, to me, sounds like a contradictory concept. Empirical means from out in the material world, and idealism means from within mind. But maybe that is what Kant wanted to say. Perception requires the both, i.e. data from the external world which enters the mind of the perceiver.

    Another contradiction in the CPR seems, the concept of space. Space is normally regarded as part of the external world, but in Kant, space is a priori schema in mind. It is presupposed for all perception of the objects in the material world. NKS says that space is being added when perception occurs. How can there be two types of space? One in the material world and one in the mind of perception, although they are different kinds. Could we not just say, there is just one type of space, and it is the one in the material world?
  • Conceiving Of Death.
    Death is a total cease of the being and being as an existence in this world, which includes the being's conception, perception and all the mental activities for good. Without the mental activity, it would be illogical to suggest that the being can conceive anything.
  • Motivated Belief
    This I think says it all. We admire reason and logic and try to live up to them as standards, but they don't capture everything. I would say not just faith and religion, but life is not ultimately reasonable. Which is why I find a lot of contention over fine points of logic to be frustrating, especially when there are clearly extra-logical factors involved.Pantagruel

    Logic can be a little help at times, but its capability is limited for dealing with the real world and life problems in logical manner.

    Perhaps and phenomenologically speaking, it could be the reason why Phenomenology has been born.
  • To Theists
    Because I am god. So I know of my existence directly the same way you know of yours.

    :strong:
    hope

    I got a funny feeling that I might had seen you before. :chin:
  • Brains in vats...again.


    If the brain in the vat was given the faculty of reasoning, then it will keep doubting about itself. Sooner or later, it will find out, that something is not right. It might say "I perceive, therefore I am connected."
  • Examining Wittgenstein's statement, "The limits of my language mean the limits of my world"
    Thank you Corvus for your repsonse.Alkis Piskas

    You are very welcome.

    Right. So, should I then conclude that you generally agree with my position? Or have I missed something that supports Wittgenstein's position, namely, that language does indeed limit our world?Alkis Piskas

    In the OP, I was under the impression that you were in deep confusion with the understanding of Wittgenstein's quotes and his philosophical points with his sayings regarding the limitation of the world and language.  Hence I explained in detail what I think about the quotes and its meanings in my post.

    I was expecting your reply whether you agreed with my points or not.  Of course I agree with me.