The question of the OP seems to be about the something v. nothing. This is scientific question and not a being question. — tim wood
How does this work? What is it about my equating trivial decisions with decisions about a philosophical journey which prevents me from understanding your distinction? — Pseudonym
Very true, and the fact that there is disagreement is very important to working through these ideas, and it's very important to not being bored. :nerd: — Sam26
I believe you exaggerate the importance of language, — unenlightened
we go the way we are drawn
this is actually quite beautiful. Is this from somewhere or did you make this up? Either way, I like it.Reveal — mrnormal5150
I don't understand the distinction you're trying to make here. — Pseudonym
According to the theory of evolution (TOE) traits that confer an advantage in the environment survive while those that are disadvantageous lead to extinction. All life-forms extant have been passed the test of survival. Am I right? — TheMadFool
Having free will implies that we have the ability to choose over many options. With free will we can choose from the environment elements that are beneficial for our survival. In other words having free will is a survival advantage. — TheMadFool
How do you differentiated ''draw'' and ''preference''? — TheMadFool
You're right in a way but apply this idea to the very beginnings of every branch of philosophy and we realize that logic or reason (claimed bedrock of philosophy) has a small role to play if any. — TheMadFool
Eye and Mind — StreetlightX
We are not agents experiencing a work of art.
We are the experience of the work. — Arne
Then that must therefore hold true for experience generally - of life generally. — raza
Yes. What is Red? Where is Red? When we know Red and find Red we will have solved the Hard Problem of Consciousness, not just for Red but for all Conscious Experience. — SteveKlinko
Then that must therefore hold true for experience generally - of life generally. — raza
To put it more succinctly, the question would be whether there are any electrons there, or just clouds, without the human act of individuation, which distinguishes individual electrons. — Metaphysician Undercover
I didn't raise any language issue. A bunch of posts back somebody made the claim that if we could just "Get the Language Right" then the Hard Problem would go away. — SteveKlinko
The only thing that would make me hesitate is not wishing to detract from the Heidegger and Wittgenstein reading groups. — John Doe
I'm working on a dissertation heavily focused on Merleau-Ponty. — John Doe
Do we not feel the world as unheimlich precisely because we could lose it, and thus lose ourselves, at any moment? And on the other hand whenever choices are made are we not "being towards death" in the sense that we feel the death of all the possibilities that become closed off due to choice, and the existential dread that comes with that? — Janus