But back to point, consumption with self leads to destruction might be one way to say what it says. That's a most general statement at least. — Hanover
The application of a systemic approach lead Vygotsky to another very important conclusion: since psychological functions are organized in hierarchical systems, developmental processes become central for understanding the human mind. The crucial role of developmental processes in the system as a way to understand the system itself is a direct consequence of a principle of systemic organization: when a component becomes part of a system, both the properties of the new whole and the properties of the component change (Vygotsky, 1932/1960; Koffka, 1935; Kohler, 1947). Vygotsky argued that once new components enter the system, they affect the system in general and all other components of this system accordingly. For example, once a child masters language, its psychological functions become semiotically mediated and thus change their qualities, becoming higher psychological functions. This principle was essential for Vygotsky, who maintained that the structure of the mind cannot be understood by researching the mind of an adult. To know what a mind system is, we need to observe mind development in a child. It is not enough to observe only the final product of these processes. — Olga Basileva and Natalia Balyasnikova
Sorry, I can't get this ... "the Moment" and "the result of stilling the mind" are two things of totally different kind. One refers to time and the other to mental activity. How can these be compared? — Alkis Piskas
The life which is in time and is merely that of time has no present. It is true
that to characterize the sensuous life it is commonly said that it is ' in the
instant' and only in the instant. The instant is here understood as some-
thing abstracted from the eternal, and if this is to be accounted from the
present, it is a parody of it. The present is the eternal, or rather the eternal
is the present, and the present is full. (CD 77-78; VI, 175) — Translated by Lowrie
I said a very simple thing and which can be applied by anyone and on the spot. How have you managed to make it so complicate? :smile: — Alkis Piskas
how do I get to the present when the past is the very essence of "knowing" it is there at all? — Constance
Do not think. Thinking involves past and future. Just be there. Be aware. Observe. Perceive. This is the only way to be in the present. — Alkis Piskas
Of course the world is always, already interpreted. Your reaching for, talk of, an uninterpreted world is a conceptual mistake. — Banno
Maybe I missing something, Athena. Which "tradition" are you referring to when you say "traditional family values"? — 180 Proof
What’s the difference between simply being infatuated with someone and loving them? — Benj96
But Narcissus was sooo beautiful, people could not resist him--even if he'd just as soon they go bother somebody else — Bitter Crank
Narcissus was self-sufficient. He entertained himself in a reflection, felt happy with what he was doing, and deep down inside, while sitting there looking at himself... felt happy inside. — Shawn
The real question is, does the world "speak"? I mean, religion is a philosophical matter, and the reason this idea sounds counterintuitive is that philosophy, in the minds of many or most, has no place in the dark places where language cannot go, but this is a Kantian/Wittgensteinian (Heidegger, too, of course; though he takes steps....) legacy that rules out impossible thinking, and it is here where philosophy has gone so very wrong: Philosophy is an empty vessel unless it takes on the the original encounter with the world, which is prior to language, and yet, IN language, for language is in the world. Philosophy's end, point, that is, is threshold enlightenment, not some foolish anal retentive need for positivism's clarity. — Constance
What other ways can it be read in? — Shawn
So, what was so special about Narcissus? — Shawn
Specifically I define it, and through this definition have found that nothing can exist outside of information - outside of the interaction of two or more forms. — Pop
Here begins the world of informational structure. What came first - the thought or the physical structure that enabled it? How are these different? Can one exist without the other? — Pop
People only benefit from mediation and consensus building if they both agree to participate fully as honest interlocutors. And it's often when you arrive at the question of values that you start to hit the rocks. — Tom Storm
To the horror of the Greeks, the new believers maintained that the Logos - in other words the divine principle - was in no sense identical with the harmonious order of the world, but was incarnated in one outstanding individual, namely [the] Christ." — tim wood
Do you mind elaborating the point you wish to discuss? — Ennui Elucidator
More generally, what we must not overlook is that religious beliefs were quite common among ancient philosophers, and it seems unwarranted to assume that they, and Socrates, were secret atheists. — Apollodorus
By the divine do you mean the intelligible soul? — Fooloso4
There are a couple things that stick out to me in this statement. The first is that Socrates confines the possibilities of what death is to just two things, which correspond to the atheistic and theistic versions: there are no third nor fourth, etc, options available. Why does belief in god(s) require the immortality of soul? Because we wouldn’t believe in them unless we were granted the same immortality they enjoy? — Leghorn
The Athenian says:
If soul does drive the sun around ...
Whether or not it does is an open question. In Anaxagoras' account Nous orders all things but he holds that the sun and moon are rocks. Why does the Athenian propose that the sun is driven by its own soul? Is there some concern with autonomy? Some problem with a separate Mind that imposes order? Is this related to the political order and the imposition of laws? — Fooloso4