Second, do you mean elude, as in evade, or illude, as in trick? Seeing as though you can't trick proper description, I'll assume you mean elude. It might not even be an important distinction. — Reformed Nihilist
So why are it that there are all sorts of other concepts, like the concepts of "properties" or "consciousness", slippery concepts, that people can have disagreements about the finer points of, but that can be succinctly defined in one or two sentences satisfactorily? Why would you propose that spirituality would be different? How is that not just special pleading? — Reformed Nihilist
How do you know that you share the experience? What specifically did he write that made you say "yup, that's the same thing for me"? — Reformed Nihilist
It's the feeling of being almost-at-home, but not quite, as if you're approaching some big discovery and part of the deal is that it's mysterious, and that once you finally arrive it'll all make sense, including why it had to be mysterious in the first place. — darthbarracuda
I understand how metaphors work, thanks. — Reformed Nihilist
I'm asking what's so dead about asking for someone to be succinct, and what's so alive about being vague and self-contradictory? — Reformed Nihilist
To the appeal that there's something to describe, outside of what can be described, I can only quote Wittgenstein "Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent". — Reformed Nihilist
If it is part of a share experience, then we should be able to indicate to each other what it is that we share, put a word like "sprituality" on it, and voila! we have a meaningful word. — Reformed Nihilist
As far as the "dead dictionaries" and "alive concepts", it's a nice bit of poetics, but I don't see how it is actually a reflection of any state of affairs. — Reformed Nihilist
Seeing as though I have literally no clue what spirituality might refer to if not to a dualistic nether-world where our vaporous homunculus reside, I am asking for a definition that at least gives me a succinct and graspable starting point, and at the same time testing if whomever is answering has thought about the subject to the extent that they understand what they are proposing well enough to give such a definition. So far, I have not found that to be the case, but am always open to hearing it. — Reformed Nihilist
What is the meaning of death?
From a pragmatic standpoint, death clears up the limited habitat, making space for newer, younger, better suited designs to replace the outmoded, old life forms. For life, as a whole, to survive, genetic mutation is absolutely necessary - the environment changes with time and life must adapt and the only way to do so is through floating innumerable different mutations, a few of which make the cut and perpetuate the species.
Also, death, in terms of predator-prey dynamics, weeds out the weak and sick. Again, death has an overall positive effect on the ecology. — TheMadFool
positive effect on the ecology. — TheMadFool
2) Maybe there is something to it, and no one has been able to explain it well enough for me to grasp their meaning. If it is either complex enough or subtle enough, perhaps I just missed it.
Now it's a little self serving, but I have been pretty good with complex and/or subtle ideas in the past, and my personal experience also lends weight to the first hypothesis, so that's the one I favor, but I keep my mind open to the second, or the possibility that there's another explanation that I haven't considered yet. — Reformed Nihilist
Here's the problem I have with this response.You haven't really clarified anything. When you use the word "spiritual" do you mean "feeling of belonging"? or "serving a higher purpose"? or "almost at home but not quite"(which seems to be a contradiction to "feeling of belonging")? or "a deep, primordial desire to belong and see what it "all" is about"? — Reformed Nihilist
Australia, for sure. We have backyards, you see. — TimeLine
Your bromance is appealing, but alas my preference has always been a backyard wedding with a handful of people and a cake I bake myself. And lots of fairy lights. No entertainment necessary. — TimeLine
I have long sought the company of a man of true philosophical brilliance, the one who has all the answers and as I await collection for a late night sesh at the movies, ponder why I feel like I spend most of my time in the company of people I merely tolerate when it could be spent with you. — TimeLine
All I am saying is that I think an ability to re-enter the state of childlike innocence is necessary, but I am not saying sufficient, for artistic (and spiritual) greatness. — John
I don't see history as 'humanity's growth' being analogous to the growth of an individual through childhood, adolescence to adulthood.I don't believe in 'progress' for humanity as a whole as 'becoming ever better', but rather as a progression as in 'chord progression'. — John
I think you may have meant to write "I do not think we're in disagreement here", but I'm not sure. — John
I agree that it is possible that the culture as a whole may learn form mistakes, but it's just as possible that what has been learned will be forgotten and the same kind of mistakes repeated again at another time. — John
I am just not convinced there is any telos to history; — John
or that we are somehow in a 'higher place' spiritually and creatively speaking than the ancients or the medievals or even the so-called 'primitives'. — John
it can go anywhere, end with a whimper instead of a bang, and then come roaring back; it is more like play, than programme. — John
I kind of get your usage of "apophatic" in this context, but I'm not sure it is really appropriate. For sure learning form a mistake is learning that this is not the way, that "not this"; but the "neti, neti" of Advaita is an all-encomapssing 'not this'. It is 'not anything' in a way similar to the God of apophatic theology. — John
A return to the spirit which is always there even if obscured. — John
in the subject, the object, in both or perhaps in their relationship. — Cavacava
Maybe this is the wrong question and 'art' is not something stored on a CD or hung on the wall, but rather, similar to reading a book, it's an active experience that we enter into with our imagination. We suspend reality and we become 'absorbed in' a reality created by an author. — Cavacava
a kind of purposeless purpose or unfocused focus. — Cavacava
I'm not saying it would be a return to a specific past state, but a return to a state of health if you like. Think of having the flu. After you get over it you return to the state (health) you were in before you caught it, but you don't return to a previous version of yourself. That's why I said earlier that i don't have any idea of regression in mind here. — John
Was it inevitable that humanity went through the phase of conceptual art? — John
I was really trying to emphasize the feeling for the eternal that I think the innocence of the child consists in. — John
I find this in the great art, music and literature of the past, but increasingly less in (much of but by no means all) modern work, and the apotheosis of this absence is reached in conceptual art, as I see it, anyway. — John
My point all along, though has been that it doesn't change the fact that those mistakes are mistakes, and they may be devoid of spirit; they may represent the spirit turning against itself, denying itself; and I don't believe that any specific movement of the spirit is inevitable. I also think there is always something of value to be gained form any movement, even if that value consists only in the wisdom gained by denying the movement and moving beyond it. I also think the moving beyond is always in a significant sense a return; perhaps something akin to Plato's idea of anamnesis; without memory we could have no compass. — John
We seem to agree about the important details anyway. :) — John
the fact that we're so self-centered at times. We even have a word ("history") that only refers to our story about ourselves, and there's no comparable word for the set of events that occurred prior to our story about ourselves. — Terrapin Station
really do not think that Jesus ever claimed to be Son of God. To my knowledge, he referred to himself as Son of Man. — Metaphysician Undercover
The question is "is it art" or perhaps "how is it art"? Cage was chasing the pure experience of silence, if you remove the aesthetic from a work of art all that remains is the form of the work, the score, the three piece movement here the comprehension of the work is only available through thought. Cage's choice of work was based on his desire to recreate what he heard in the sensory deprivation tank he had tried. — Cavacava
Isn't minimalism a natural consequence of conceptual art,? — Cavacava
I think art tries to be original (even when it cannot be good) its movement seems to be best described as dialectical and perhaps Conceptual Art arose from Art's :P need to be original, and not be associated with the past. — Cavacava
Conceptual Art's reaction is very unemotional, indifferent to emotion. I think that Conceptual Arts ability to disrupt (as when Warhol's Brillo Boxes hit Danto over the head) makes itself art by its ability to disrupt the way it does. Perhaps the dignity in all art lies in its ability to disrupt and change or challenge the way we experience life. — Cavacava
I think human beings have certain psychological needs that lead to the belief in God. Probably the biggest one is that we fear death and we need to find comfort in the fact that we are going to die.
After all, what could be more comforting to someone fearing death that, in a sense, you don't really die, but that you instead live forever. With God, that become possible.
So that's the psychological aspect. — Brian
Prophets can be profoundly wise one moment and stupidly dumb the next. Wise teachers can have funny episodes when they go completely weird and then go back to being wise teachers — Cuthbert
Isn't a return to health a return to a pre-addiction state? — John
I don't see it this way at all. I think the idea that when one comes through an addiction one is better for having been addicted than one would have been had one never been addicted is based on false reasoning. Equally one cannot say that one is better for never having been addicted. — John
I think this is the meaning of Christ's: “Truly, I say to you, unless you turn and become like children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven". — John
Perhaps you are thinking of spiritual constraints, ethical constraints? There is no freedom without constraint, I would say, so any kind of a "logical extreme" along these kinds of lines could not be freedom at all. — John
as I said before I don't think it is exhaustively determined by time and experience, which is what I thought you wanted to say by calling it "inexorable". — John
I would not classify either Cage's or Ive's music as "conceptual" in the sense I was talking about. Cage, for example I take to have been exploring radical formal possibilities, in a way more analogous to minimalist art than conceptual art. — John
I can't see how someone fighting addiction can do it without hearkening back to the time before they were addicted. — John
how else could they know the state of being free from addiction? — John
On the broader scale, going forward would be impossible without drawing on tradition. — John
If the "nature of human thought" was "inexorable" then I can't see how it could be free. — John
There is always a true freedom and spontaneity at work, and the way things will turn out in the future is by no means pre-determined by the past. The element of truth, though, is that things are perhaps determined in their broadest outlines. — John
Also, there is nothing that precludes the possibility that epochs may be more or less spiritually healthy, insofar as they are more or less consciously in touch with the divine. There is nothing to preclude the possibility that the human spirit will find itself in a cul de sac and need to backtrack to regain its compass. — John
I don't think it is possible for music (without vocals) to be a conceptual art; — John
One of the striking aspects of response to conceptual art is just how "mysterious" it appears to many. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Conceptual art is more about what is understood to be art than a change in the "mystery" of how anything is art. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Many times an artist will have taken some simple form, a found object, a clear white canvas, given some detailed personal account of their work, only to have half the audience respond with, in all this knowledge, "How can this be art?[/i]..." The "mystery" remains no matter how much is known about an artwork. — TheWillowOfDarkness
The "mystical" quality of art taking the soul to a world more profound then the everyday remains. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Conceptual art (believing it is following Duchamp) wants to say just the opposite. On this 'conceptual' view, in principle at least, everything about individuals, society, culture and history can be analyzed, explicated and commented upon; there is no room for any genuinely intractable mystery. I think this is a huge mistake, with catastrophic potential for the arts, and by extension, for humanity. — John
The spirit of the work, in my estimation, is how the artist's idea for the work gets sorted out by the materials the artist uses in execution of his idea. — Cavacava
I think the characters in Hamlet took over the play, and forced its conclusion on Shakespeare, — Cavacava
So, I think it's relevant to note that although the spiritual is individually, socially, culturally and historically mediated (and mediating) it is not exhaustively determined by (or determinative of), nor constructed by (or constructive of) individuals, society, culture and history. — John