You're not interested in what? If you're not interested don't worry - you'll lose in the political arena, that will be sufficient to get you interested perhaps.I know, and I'm not interested. — jamalrob
To what use? I would have preferred all of us not to read Kant, if this was what it took for us to be more virtuous.I would never have been able to travel without cheap flights, and I would never have been able to read Kant without leisure. I'm pretty sure this is a cultural as well as a material enrichment, and it was made possible by capitalism. — jamalrob
Yeah ... what's so great about that? Honestly, what's the big deal? I've travelled my fair share, and it's nothing special. I don't see the point of it. When I hear people wanting to travel for holidays it kind of drives me mad. Is that what life is about, traveling? Honestly?! :s I think if my ancestors heard this they'd be horrified! Do you really buy this idea that traveling will necessarily enrich your life and make you happy and content?Thanks to cheap flights, people--non-rich people--travel now for all sorts of reasons. — jamalrob
You are mistaken. Progressivism is the new form of organisation of capitalism. In order to get people to work for the big and large corporations (which is becoming normalised, and a matter of prestige), they introduce all sorts of PR moves such as being green, such as levelling down hierarchies, and so forth. This is a way to get people to accept their chains. On top of this, Hollywood is reshaping morality in order to maximise the efficiency of capitalism. See my post here.But Hollywood is full of anti-corporate sentiment, and is now firmly seated on the green anti-consumerist bandwagon — jamalrob
Are you mostly watching porn? O:)Where that's done well, a movie can work and be a healthy engagement. It rarely is. — Baden
>:O - so do well and defund it.Food. Sleep. Sex.
It's simple. These are our basic human instincts. Sexuality is as basic to life as food and sleep
In my opinion:I'd be interested how one ought to solve this situation? — Question
Increasing the ease of movement combined with encouraging displacement of people for material gain leads to extending the social fabric, in the same way that physical space itself extends. Just as physical space extending causes the space between planets, galaxies, etc. to grow so too this phenomenon of globalisation causes the space between people to grow - both physical space and psychological space. For example, what happens with a couple when one of them wants to move countries, and the other one doesn't? They break up most often. What happens when a family member goes to work in a different country? He loses contact and connection with the rest of his family over time. Globalism is equivalent to social instability and social chaos, especially among people who lack virtue and go after the carrot mindlessly. We're witnessing what is the equivalent of the Big Rip in physics, in our own societies.Yes, yes, yes. That is exactly what i was getting at in a roundabout way. (Though "globalism" may not be the only term one could use, it will do nicely. And for the term "communities", I would define that as "communities of life", so as to extend it to include more than humans alone, since we do not exist in a vacuum. But that is simply my wording preference.) — 0 thru 9
If it is, then the "transcendent experience" is actually not transcendent at all but immanent, taking place in the world the same way sight, or hearing or any other experience takes place, simple.What if it is? — John
What, more precisely, don't you understand about Willow's remarks? You have to be precise, otherwise nothing can be clarified.Sorry, Willow, I really haven't a clue what you are talking about; so it would be pointless to respond. — John
Okay so you mean it has crisp, as opposed to vague existence. Definite and stable properties can be determined about it right?Being determinate or objective means it is a phenomenon that be intersubjectively determined to be this or that. — John
So finitude has to do with whether something is crisp instead of vague?Phenomana which can be determined to be this or that are finite — John
So I take it that transcendent experiences don't involve the senses?they are also immanent to sensory experience. — John
But what if the vision is caused by God through worldly means such as altering the activity of the brain?If a vision is caused by God though, for example, then the cause of the vision is not of this world, that is, it is a transcendent, not an immanent cause. Of course if there is no God then there are no transcendent causes. — John
Well obviously because God is the world in this case isn't He? If so, then God is reality, and everything is immanent in God - God isn't in anyway transcendent.If this world is an expression of spirit, of God, then God is within everything, and everything is within God. There is no separation, but God does not appear in the world, and hence is not a finite, determinate, objective, immanent phenomenon. — John
Why mate, it's true, he said it himself! >:OBTW, Agustino, you are soooo full of shit.
:-}
. — John
I don't understand. Hasn't Wayfarer stolen the language, words, ideas and expressions found in that Wikipedia sentence and attributed it as part of his own post, without making note that it's not his?...wait....what have I just done? :-# — Heister Eggcart
Wayfarer, did you plagiarise this from Wikipedia?Hegel's counter-argument to Kant was that to know a boundary is also to be aware of what it bounds and as such what lies beyond it – in other words, to have already transcended it. — Wayfarer
Hegel's counter-argument to Kant was that to know a boundary is also to be aware of what it bounds and as such what lies beyond it – in other words, to have already transcended it.
I read the entry. On that basis, not the kind of writer I'm going to study. Life's too short. — Wayfarer
Okay yes.What is perceived by the intuitive intellect is not determinate or objective in the way that what is perceived by the senses or conceived by the rational intellect is. — John
How does this follow? What does being determinate or objective have to do with (1) being finite, and (2) being immanent?What is determinate or objective is finite or immanent; what is indeterminate or subjective is in-finite or transcendental — John
But in what sense is this the case? Hearing for example is also another dimension of experience compared to seeing. Why isn't one of these transcendent then?It is truly another dimension of experience, a transcendent dimension, compared to what can be seen, heard, smelled, tasted, touched and measured — John
Okay so if the transcendent doesn't refer to something that is ontologically separate, in what way, again, is it transcendent? And what notion of transcendence are you employing? The Cartesian one, or?Of course the immanent realm of sensory experience and rational intellection is suffused with this transcendental dimension, and would be literally nothing without it, so it is certainly not a question of "separation" — John
It would suddenly dawn on him that there really is a God? >:OOr maybe Willow would get blasted to a different planet...
:-O — John
Tell that to these Buddhists:That is certainly true. — Wayfarer
What's not true? That progressives are latching onto Buddhism? Just try typing "buddhism" and "sexuality" into google, and let's have a look together in, say the top 10 results. In fact, even your favorite book "To Meet the Real Dragon" makes no notice - no notice at all - in the chapter "not to do wrong" in any of the 10 precepts of not doing wrong that it gives about sexual morality. But of course most traditional forms of Buddhism have a principle to do with sexual morality even in a list of FIVE precepts! Let's see, why is that? Is it because Buddhism is trying to appeal to a decadent mass of the public and thus doesn't want to tell the truth lest it scares them off? Is that how it is then? We'll masquerade the truth to gain adherents and followers! In fact scratch that! We'll change the truth if that's what it takes to get more followers! Sounds like a great idea to me - keep it up! (Y)Well, that's not true — Wayfarer
Not you personally, but some of the views you recommend.yet, strangely, I am the one accused of 'nihilism' — Wayfarer
The very idea of a "higher truth" vitiates all the lower truths of meaning. That's why I say that it is nihilistic. If there is a higher truth, then these lower truths don't matter.I would say that the idea of such 'higher truth' is represented in various philosophical traditions - Greek, Christian, Hindu, and Buddhist amongst others. — Wayfarer
Well let's see why are you not being understood? Is it because I'm acting in bad faith and despite your attempts to clarify and answer my questions I still refuse to engage with you? Or is it because you have repeatedly not answered even a single objection except by brushing it off?But obviously I am not being understood — Wayfarer
Well do as you wish, but packing your stuff and going is certainly not going to solve any of your problems. This is very childish behaviour. If your philosophy is worth anything then it needs to withstand criticism - so far it seems that at the weakest objection it's crumbling - and when it's crumbling you pack your bags and run away. I don't mean to be harsh with you, but you have to understand that these are important matters, so we have to discuss them seriously. It's not my fault that you're getting easily upset. I'm not responsible for your inability to deal with criticism. You should be upset at yourself first of all, because it is you who is failing to adequately engage with all the questions and objections that are placed to you.and another timely reminder to myself to stop wasting time arguing with strangers. So, bye for now, taking time out from Forums, may or may not be back in future. — Wayfarer
I actually agree ;) ;) ;) - but if I said that to Willow I'd get blasted to a different planet.A person can only matter per se if they matter to God, otherwise...no. — John
Can I be a person of significance if someone doesn't give me that significance (or I don't give it to myself)? In what sense is it even possible to talk of significance except to an actor who has feelings?person with significance. — TheWillowOfDarkness
A person who matters to who? Mattering is a value judgement. You can't say I matter, except by pointing to who I matter to. Maybe I matter to you because you're a kind-hearted person. Still - it's with reference to somebody.object which produces value or a person who matters — TheWillowOfDarkness
All this says something about the person evaluating me, and not about myself. If they are good people they will evaluate me as an individual who matters. If they aren't, then they won't. In fact, this is even Kant's notion that he argues about with regards to always maintaining your self-respect - never falling below your own principles. In that case it's about you mattering to yourself - caring about your own self.Are you only understood to be an image which produces value? Or do people grasp you as an individual, a logical and ethical subject that matters in-themselves? — TheWillowOfDarkness
Capitalism is like the man who at night goes and throes stones breaking the windows of his neighbours' houses, and in the morning comes in to repair them :-OThe sophistication of capitalism is quite frightening whereby these so-called 'individuals' in their expensive clothing and cosmetics are now taking selfies in the bush and marketing people to go back to nature and be natural - all artificially, almost as a trick that ascertaining what is authentic is becoming close to impossible. This is what needs to end. — TimeLine
Yes I agree. Capitalism doesn't want you to be virtuous because virtuous people don't need much so you can't sell to them. But those governed by fear, lust and the other vices - they are very easy to sell to so long as you present a product which can "solve" whatever problem you have artificially created in them. That is why capitalism is tied with democracy - it requires the levelling down that can only be achieved in a democracy. The evolution of say - morality - in the last 50 years is dictated solely by capitalism. People generally have whatever morality they do today, largely because this morality is the most conducive to commerce. For example - we admire diversity and globalisation only because their existence means more markets and more business. We are more benevolent and compassionate not because we are becoming better human beings ("We're no longer in the Middle Ages!") but because this sells. Being compassionate means we produce for people in Africa. We get money from governments in order to buy vaccines and the like, and so on.massive egotistical capitalist culture that prohibits any self-reflective contemplation and this consciousness of our finitude — TimeLine
(Y)It is good to be back, almost symbolic as I overcome certain things one step at a time. As said by Schopenhauer, "I believe that if a woman succeeds in withdrawing from the mass, or rather raising herself from above the mass, she grows ceaselessly and more than a man.” — TimeLine
>:OQuibbling is the fun bit >:) — TimeLine
This is the same point I've made before that there is a tension between the individual and society (or the family) which has to be maintained for the well-being of both.But the point he makes is that a species that goes against the laws of nature might exist for a time, but even a thousand years is an evolutionally short amount of time. And to go against nature is (to borrow Agustino's phrase) to saw off the branch they are sitting on. Individuals are needed to devise alternate ideas, but without the support and action of the majority/collective, even the brightest ideas will wither on the vine. — 0 thru 9
If someone who lives in the midst of Christianity enters, with knowledge of the true idea of God, the house of the true God, and prays, but prays in untruth, and if someone lives in an idolatrous land but prays with all the passion of infinity, although his eyes are resting on the image of an idol - where, then, is there more truth?
[...]
The one prays in truth to God although he is worshipping an idol; the other prays in untruth to the true God and is therefore worshipping an idol — S. Kierkegaard
For if, because power is not given, the hand is free from the murder of a man, is the heart of the murderer forsooth therefore clean from sin? Or if she be chaste, whom one unchaste wishes to commit adultery with, hath he on that account failed to commit adultery with her in his heart? Or if the harlot be not found in the brothel, doth he, who seeks her, on that account fail to commit fornication in his heart? Or if time and place be wanting to one who wishes to hurt his neighbor by a lie, hath he on that account failed already to speak false witness with his inner mouth? Or if anyone fearing men, dare not utter aloud blasphemy with tongue of flesh, is he on this account guiltless of this crime, who saith in his heart, 'there is no God'? Thus all the other evil deeds of men, which no motion of the body performs, of which no sense of the body is conscious, have their own secret criminals, who are also polluted by consent alone in thought, that is, by evil words of the inner mouth — St. Augustine
Well I think I missed you too :P There's few on these boards like you with insight to talk to about really significant matters (I love that your philosophy is always practical and practically oriented), if you can believe it, I'm busy here quibbling about matters such as whether 2 is a subset of 1 >:OI missed you. — TimeLine
I agree. Life is a mixture of pragmatism and love. A family without love is at best an army - that is if it hasn't also lost the other pillar holding them together, virtue. However, a loving family without pragmatism (and discipline) is like a ship with a hole in the bottom. For lack of better words, a family thrives when the "male" - "female" tension is maintained, and there exists mutual respect between them (and this respect is born of the understanding of the family's dynamics). Love is needed - but love cannot reach the point of annihilating discipline. Discipline is also needed - but it cannot reach the point of extinguishing the flame of love. Most houses crumble because the partners don't adequately maintain this tension, and each seeks to impose their will over the other - for example one partner imposes their discipline to the point that family life becomes like an empty and lonely desert, held together only by mutual hopes and fears. Or one partner imposes their love to the point that the family loses direction, and becomes a victim to the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune :PA house is just an object without genuine love — TimeLine
I have as well, but so what? I witness virtue mocked more frequently than I hear it praised in fact. Dogs will go on barking, and those lacking character will go on mocking virtue, and those foolish will go on cutting the very branch on which they're sitting. But I don't want to be like any of them - for the one thing that is impossible to lose unless you surrender it is dignity. Society - modern society at least - has a corrosive effect on virtue due to the mechanisms of peer pressure that it employs almost in its every move.but I have witnessed virtue mocked and the immoral praised as long as this immoral adequately fits within the social requisites — TimeLine
I agree.Moral consciousness and not the master-slave morality is what makes us human rather than objects. — TimeLine
Happiness in and by itself (without virtue) is unstable - it quickly degrades into unhappiness. Now virtue isn't a guarantee for happiness today or tomorrow - it's only a guarantee for happiness in the very long run (which may be even longer than your own life). But happiness is a certain outcome of virtue - regardless of how far into the future it lies. Whereas happiness without virtue is always uncertain and can never satisfy our need for perfect happiness.If happiness is merely an externalisation or a quantitative multiplicity that represents spatial influences and that quantifies the very fibre of our existence, then what is real or authentic? — TimeLine
Then I certainly don't have a "perfect life" nor a "beautiful wife", for physical beauty would not be sufficient to make her a beautiful wife.Ah, would that be so even if your wife prostitutes herself but she is beautiful or your family — TimeLine
Well I'm not sure about this. Say my family loves me because of my money-making ability. Is that not part of me as well? What the trouble would be in that case is simply a problem of their lack of virtue - lack of loyalty to be more specific. If, for some reason, I can no longer make money - they leave me or no longer love me. So the issue isn't that they shouldn't like my money-making ability (for that is also part of who I am) - but rather that I desire them to be virtuous. It's their lack of character that I dislike, not the fact that they like me for a variety of reasons including my money-making ability.only "love" you for things other than who you really are? — TimeLine
If you have all that and still feel that something is missing, then something is indeed missing - it is your own head and reason ;)For instance, you could have a perfect life, a home, loving family, beautiful wife so then why would you feel like something is wrong? — TimeLine
It was clear from my second reply to you. A motive is grounded in something - in the relationship of the person with reality - hence why I said that I know their motive but not how they arrive to it. Without having access to the ground - not through knowledge, which is impossible, but through first person awareness, how can I make sense of their motives? They are almost nonsense to me = I know the motive but not how it is arrived at.None of that was clear until you elaborated your idea further, but fair enough. — Noble Dust
They are almost nonsense to the person in question because they don't have access to their first person relationship with reality, not because they cannot imagine being in that situation and having that motive.No, in the bit about the Emperor, you're saying that his motivations "are almost nonsense to people who aren't the person in question". But you just said that we can know the motivations of others. That's the inconsistency I was pointing out. — Noble Dust
Not only our own motive, the motive of others too are knowable.1) our own motive is knowable to us — Noble Dust
The source of our own motive is not knowable because it cannot be put into concepts. The source of others' motives is not known because we have no direct access to their relationship with reality, since we are not them.it's source is not knowable — Noble Dust
Knowing what his motives are is different than understanding why they are his motives. — Agustino
I can imagine being in their situation but I cannot imagine arriving there. — Agustino
The path as to how these persons arrive at having such fundamental motivations is not known. Why? Because their motives emerge from their own particular relationship with reality, which is unknowable. You can know their motivation is X - you can imagine being in their situation and having that motivation - but you cannot imagine ARRIVING there - you cannot imagine their relationship with reality that grounds that motive.The motive is strictly personal - one could want to live in Hawaii because they were born in very poor conditions, where life was very difficult and ardous - living in Hawaii would be a release for them and their family. Someone else could be motivated to become Emperor of China because he feels the destiny of his nation sits on his shoulders - feels he is asked to do something for it. And so on - these are very particular reasons, that are almost nonsense to people who aren't the person in question. — Agustino
We don't share fundamental motives with others. However, them reaching their goal may help me to reach mine and conversely, in which case we'll both work together.I think that two people can share a motive. That's why we can cooperate. And if you're certain that you don't share a motive with someone else, trying to find out what they want, by your lights, is pointless. — Pneumenon
No I'm not saying it is unknowable. I'm saying that its source is unknowable - it's not known why Steve Jobs has that motive.So you're saying the foundational motive is unknowable? — Noble Dust
I disagree because some motives are primary. It's simply what it means to be Noble Dust that you have such a driving motive. Without it, you lose your very own essence. Otherwise we'd have an infinite regress of motives, which is nonsense. Some motive has to be primary and foundational to one's character.I definitely disagree here; understanding why his motives are what they are would just be discovering the further motives underneath those motives. We don't choose our motives, as you say. Steve Jobs chose his career path, but he did so because of underlying motives; he didn't choose those motives. If I had been one of his closest friends or family members, I could probably elaborate further on what some of his motivations probably were.
Do you disagree with what else I've said here about motives? You don't really seem to be responding to my thoughts, just to what I say about your thoughts. — Noble Dust
Knowing what his motives are is different than understanding why they are his motives. It's part of his freedom, having chosen those motives (or being chosen by them :P ). For example, why was Steve Jobs motivated by the idea of creating ground-breaking and revolutionary products for the world instead of, let's say, go and become a Buddhist monk? Both were viable alternatives, but he chose one of them. Why?Can't you just ask the guy? >:O
Really though, I partially agree, at least in that the motives of another are not always knowable or clear, but I think we can certainly apprehend some amount of another's motives. Actions also reveal motives, for instance. We can make decently accurate assessments, given enough time. We can make an assessment accurate enough, for instance, to make a judgement and then take an action. The results of our action could reveal that our judgement of the other's motives was accurate. — Noble Dust
Because one's motives reveal themselves to them, and to no one else. I do not know how, for example, the guy wanting to become Chinese Emperor, how he started to perceive it as his duty to become the leader of the country, and start feeling it is his responsibility to do so.Why not? — Noble Dust
I can imagine being in their situation but I cannot imagine arriving there.But surely by learning about their reasons, you can make sense of it for yourself? — Noble Dust
