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  • What happens after you die. (I'm not asking, I'm telling you, so pay attention.)
    ↪René Descartes


    Read further.
  • What happens after you die. (I'm not asking, I'm telling you, so pay attention.)
    ↪Bitter Crank


    I mean witch ever 1,000 years you originally mentioned; I can't adequately answer your question, because I too don't know which 1,000 years you were referring to...
  • What happens after you die. (I'm not asking, I'm telling you, so pay attention.)
    ↪René Descartes


    You probably assume, via the avatars of BC and myself, that we're two old men bickering about chess pieces. I'll dispose you of that false notion right now by letting you know that one of us is a phony, in that regard.
  • What happens after you die. (I'm not asking, I'm telling you, so pay attention.)
    You, for instance, will be among the last to be bored, since you have a well stuffed mind, or at least it looks like that at a distance. — Bitter Crank

    Again with these edits, as I re-read. Are you just placating me here? Or is this some fodder to make your case look better? I really don't know.
  • What happens after you die. (I'm not asking, I'm telling you, so pay attention.)
    ↪Bitter Crank


    Which 1000 years? I have a sense of humor, but it doesn't manifest itself when confronted with bullshit.
  • What happens after you die. (I'm not asking, I'm telling you, so pay attention.)
    Maybe you misunderstood. Read "shove" as "shovel"; shovel in as much as you can. The separate etymologies of shove and shovel is one of those things you can think about after death. — Bitter Crank

    Thanks for the edit here; I did read "shove" as "shovel", hence my use of "shove" in my initial comment....
  • What happens after you die. (I'm not asking, I'm telling you, so pay attention.)
    ↪Bitter Crank


    Well sure, my response, "bullshit", is just as probable as your entire OP, since no one knows what happens after death. Is that your point?
  • What happens after you die. (I'm not asking, I'm telling you, so pay attention.)
    ↪Bitter Crank


    Bullshit.
  • What happens after you die. (I'm not asking, I'm telling you, so pay attention.)
    What's pessimistic about "eat, drink, be merry, and learn as much as you can while you have the opportunity, lest your life after death be the worst possible drag"? — Bitter Crank

    There's nothing pessimistic about "eat, drink, and be merry"; but "shove it all in while you can!" is basically nihilism personified.
  • What happens after you die. (I'm not asking, I'm telling you, so pay attention.)
    ↪Bitter Crank


    What happened to "Against All Nihilism", or whatever?
  • Hello Fellows
    The most important answers being: poetry, humor, and courage. — Jonathan AB

    Sounds good.
  • What is a Philosopher?
    ↪Bitter Crank


    (Y) Measured, as always.
  • Currently Reading
    Memoirs Found In A Bathtub - Stanislaw Lem

    This is some almost-black-comedy/surrealist/horror 1984 shit. Really different; barely even sci-fi.
  • What Does Globalization Do to Art?
    ↪prothero


    I'm kind of embarrassed that I posted that back then, but I'll give it a shot.

    I wonder if you would be willing to attribute this to the "intelligence" of the subconscious (as the subconscious often behaves in very rational ways and solves problems for us without our directed attention). — prothero

    I'm fine with that interpretation, as long as it's not considered a dogmatic, metaphysically exclusive and exhaustive explanation. What exactly is the intelligence of the subconscious? Those waters are way too murky to automatically assume a materialistic position in which the theory that suggests the subconscious as the "answer" to the phenomenon lays all metaphysical doubts to rest. A psychological explanation could serve as an expression of the singular reality of what's happening. A mystical explanation, for instance, could also serve as an expression of that singular reality. I see no reason to assume one being primary or "more real" over the other, aside from pure assumption and personal metaphysical bias.

    I've been reading about the Christian mystics, and the Kabbalah as well recently. The experiences they had sound like the creative process to me. Pretty simple, really.
  • Follow up to Beautiful Things
    ↪T Clark


    I've probably talked about beauty more than any other topic on the forum.

    Is this beautiful?



    Is this beautiful?



    Is this beautiful?



    I challenge anyone to listen, fully, without distraction or interruption, to the full 20 or so minutes of music I just posted, before responding.
  • Beautiful Things
    Jeez, just make more job for him, will ya — Akanthinos

    For who?
  • Beautiful Things
    The discussion is about beautiful things. Please carry on. — Baden

    Oh really? >:O
  • Do you consider yourself a Good person?
    I don't consider myself a good person, no, but I also believe I'm gooder than I know or realize.
  • Beautiful Things
    ↪Bitter Crank


    I'm no expert, but the ones I posted are my favorites, and they're 60's/70's. The covers to the Lord of the Rings edition that I posted in that photo are probably my favorite book covers of all time. Those covers fueled my imagination as a kid long before my parents actually read the books to me for the first time. They come in a box set, and the box is equally amazing. I recently purchased my own copy on abebooks, but The Fellowship is already falling apart. I need to cough up the big bucks on a set that's in great condition.
  • Something above life?
    I asked a similar question here, albeit from a much different angle; it wasn’t very well received. Probably not philosophical enough, too imaginative. Ironically, we’re better equipped than ever, now, to ask this sort of question. A lot of people seem not only uninterested, but against the question itself. Indicative of the zeitgeist we live in?
  • A game with curious implications...
    ↪Banno


    Damn, looks like those rules haven't been voided, then.
  • A game with curious implications...
    ↪T Clark


    ha ha
  • A game with curious implications...
    By the way, Star Wars was pretty ok.
  • A game with curious implications...
    He who talks a lot, — Sir2u

    How is that measured? And would quantity of rules automatically be a good thing?

    Rule 4.2 seems meaningless.
  • A game with curious implications...
    ↪T Clark


    You always knew I would never become a despot. You said I would be fair. And yet now you demand tyranny. You've "washed your hands" before, and yet you always come back, thirsting for rule after rule. If you could only see yourself for who you are, you would be freed from this need. I await the creation of rules like a baby awaiting an unknown future she could never conceive of; I wear rules on my person like Tom Bombadil wore The One Ring.

    Anyways, I'm off to see the new Star Wars movie, wish me luck. Hope it doesn't suck.
  • A game with curious implications...
    ↪T Clark


    I await enlightenment, then.
  • A game with curious implications...
    ↪T Clark


    I like that rule.

    But I don't consider it one of my duties to deny or accept every rule. I only did so this time because it was requested of me.
  • A game with curious implications...
    ↪T Clark
    ↪Banno


    True leaders
    are hardly known to their followers.

    When the work's done right,
    with no fuss or boasting,
    ordinary people say,
    Oh, we did it.

    -Tao Te Ching p. 24
  • A game with curious implications...
    ↪T Clark


    I don't want to limit the game, so I reject rule #4.
  • A game with curious implications...
    whether or not those rules are accepted by Da Man. — T Clark

    Woah, you can do that?
  • A game with curious implications...
    ↪T Clark


    Provide us with rule #4 to redeem yourself.
  • A game with curious implications...
    ↪T Clark


    What do you expect me to do, descend to Earth in human form and dish out a bunch of rules that have nothing to do with each other, like we find here in the game?
  • TPF Quote Cabinet
    "Thought is like a mirror. One looking at it sees his image inside and thinks that there are two images, but the two are really one." - Perush ha-Aggadot, Azriel of Gerona
  • A game with curious implications...
    ↪Banno


    I haven't dropped the ball; no one seems to want to add a new rule.
  • We cannot make relationship with God
    God is changeless. — bahman

    There are a lot of conceptions of God out there. Some of them make room for a God that is both changeless and changing; Ein Sof in the Kabbalah, Paul Tillich's "God Above God", etc. And the idea of us having "a relationship" with God is a pretty modern, Evangelical notion. I'm not aware of it existing in other religions in the way it does in Evangelical Christianity, but I could be unaware.
  • Beautiful Things
    ↪T Clark


    But this forum is full of so many "incredible thoughts"...
  • Beautiful Things
    For some reason the title of this thread always makes me think of Michael Bolton's chorus on this song...sorry...

  • A game with curious implications...
    ↪Janus


    I don't understand.
  • A game with curious implications...
    ↪Janus


    Do you feel you haven't been listened to here?
  • A game with curious implications...
    ↪Janus


    Not at all; anyone, including yourself, can add a rule, and you've added several. That gives you power, and you can use that power in many ways, including oppression.
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