Agreed, but I don't think words are required. I believe that birds and mammals can do that, as in: animals that learn from experience and adapt their behavior accordingly.Maybe we mean different things when we say "drawing lines." For me, they are drawn using words and symbols. It's a mental practice. — T Clark
Quite the opposite, I believe that wolves do the most fundamental kind of line-drawing:Generally speaking, I don't think wolves do much line-drawing. — T Clark
Yes, I agree. We should try to reflect on all the lines, and not take any of them for granted, or believe them immovable."If we don't want one to exist or it doesn't benefit us, we shouldn't have it". — TogetherTurtle
Concerning Moses and the Exodus:On page 89 he says that there is not a lot of evidence of an exodus from Egypt and what is available is inconclusive. — Fooloso4
This "exception" is a religion that has endured for more than 3000 years as the main religion of large and powerful nation.Look, if you you're an exception, then good for you — S
Why not? It's not a metaphor for "something else", but a metaphor for that which it truly is.Sure, except that you don't really believe that if that's all a metaphor for something else entirely. You can't have it both ways — S
I have read the paragraph again, but I apologize, I have not found these differences.Pay closer attention to my first paragraph, there are distinct differences between what I said and what you characterised as my argument. — DingoJones
You're apparently using Abrahamic religion as your only point of reference.Again, you must explain how it makes any sense for a theist to believe that scriptures are entirely metaphorical. — S
I personally believe that the gods and goddesses exist, that I can interact with them in meaningful ways and that one of them created our world (ok, more like three of them, but it's complicated :grin: ) Therefore: Theist. (Polytheist, to be precise)In what sense are they theist? What does that mean? How are they distinct from an atheist? — S
I believe that the divine is too vast to be grasped by a human mind. Therefore metaphor is a necessary instrument to approach it.What's a divine being a metaphor for, then? — S
Well, my approach is not very conventional in the modern Western world, but I didn't make it up to "suit my preconceived notions", I merely build up on an old African tradition.There must be some definition of theism or set of criteria for one to count as a theist. I'm simply abiding by the conventional definition, which is meaningful. Are you going by some idiosyncratic meaning which suits your own beliefs, ideals, preconceived notions...? — S
That is to say, conclusions that there is a god are not scientific.
The two are not compatible.
(...)
If science is your standard, you cannot believe in god. — DingoJones
Weren't you just warning against the No True Scotsman fallacy yourself?But you can't take everything in scripture as metaphorical whilst maintaining to be a theist in any meaningful sense of the word, and this is not a common position. The key tenets, most essentially God, are not widely considered metaphors, and no credible science leads to a supernatural creator of the universe or whatever. — S
I'm not disagreeing. But I still posit that this is not in the specific passage I quoted - Hegel is using the Embryo-to-aware-self as a metaphor, he's not expounding a theory of education.The development of the thinking I is a historical development not something that develops on its own in each individual. — Fooloso4
However much the embryo is indeed in itself a person, it is still not a person for itself; the embryo is a person for itself only as a culturally formed and educated rationality which has made itself into what it is in itself. — Hegel
It is not the capacity for rationality but the culturally formed and educated rationality that allows the person to become for herself what she is in herself. While the importance of culture was recognized by the Greeks, it was to a large degree atemporal. — Fooloso4
The English goes:für sich ist er es nur als gebildete Vernunft — Hegel
is a person for itself only as a culturally formed and educated rationality — Hegel
... which has made itself into what it is in itself. — Hegel
Yes, but is the objective worth the killing? Who as the right to decide that?That's the cost of war. These men have to kill people in order to accomplish the objective. — MomokoBandori
Wrong side? Is there ever a right side, in any war?but lots of these men have to fight the wrong side of the war simply because they believed it was right. — MomokoBandori
It's easier in Germany, where Napoleonic law and its derivatives comprise the system. — god must be atheist
I don't see how that would elevate the soldier to a higher status than any other key professions. A doctor, a politician, a policewoman, a sewage worker and the administrator of your local water treatment facility: All of them have the job to serve the public and make your life safe. The sewage worker is probably more important to your comfort and safety than the average soldier.The role of a soldier, the training they undergo, and the fact that each soldier serves their nation is all deeds worthy of respect. — MomokoBandori
Some of these Nazis are my great-grandfathers. I respect them as humans who tried to survive in a difficult situation, but I don't respect them for being soldiers.A Nazi and a Japanese soldier is an example. But I don't hold them in high regards. I don't like them, but the thing I respect about them is them fighting for what they believe in. — MomokoBandori
Exactly, well said.Fighting for what you believe in doesn't deserve respect at all without qualification. It entirely depends what you believe in, and even then, you should be judged on your actions over and above your beliefs. — S
Absolutely.I think when we give soldiers, politicians, police, business owners, priests, etc permission to shirk responsibility for their actions and hide behind an illusion of authority from some higher or universal power, influence or control, then we invite them to act without regard for the ethical standards to which we hold everyone else accountable. — Possibility
do soldiers, as in every soldier, deserve respect? — SethRy
One: Not all soldiers have served in an actual war.Why I believe so is simply the fact that every soldier has gone through war and may have lived to tell the tale. It does not seem so convincing but war can indeed take a toll on a soldier's mind a lot, which can lead to decisions from a soldier that I think most of us would consider "immoral" to say the least — MomokoBandori
So aside from learning knowledge how to kill the enemy AND survive at the same time, a German soldier is burdened with having to deal with and make accurate decisions on heavy theoretical legal, and philosophical choices related to soldiering. — god must be atheist
I totally need to memorize this sentence, that's a brilliant way of describing it!You don't go to a restaurant to get what you like, rather you go to a restaurant to (because you) like what you get. — tim wood
Agreed! The only thing we need to guard against is a too strong fixation on our ideas and decisions. We need to keep checking if they work and adjust as necessary, or we run the risk to becomeIn taking control and making your own tentative (though firm) decisions, likely you will try to apply the ideas concretely - or I do, at least - where they both make sense and work. And in our present circumstance with Hegel, I think that serendipitously turns out to be the right way — tim wood
those who tell both you and Hegel what he means! — tim wood
Yeah. The style is typical for the time, but it could be wielded with more elegance and clarity. Take Goethe - his reputation as a master of language is sometimes a bit blown up, but not undeserved. Texts by Goethe are far easier to read. On that note: Kant's style is even worse, in my opinionAnd his style doesn't help. His audience understood his language and context. But they too are long gone, so nothing for us in this is easy. — tim wood
Very good summary!Even in such an elementary example of seeing a tree, (I argue) Hegel's "universal" of that tree is not complete until and unless you "see" the tree in 360 degree view all the way 'round, including roots, and its history from seed through and including its death and long decay. Together with its interconnectedness with its world - which includes you! — tim wood
Well, there is nothing new here in the sense that I still don't get it no matter how often he may repeat himself. This:
The true is the whole. However, the whole is only the essence completing itself through its own development. This much must be said of the absolute: It is essentially a result, and only at the end is it what it is in truth. — Hegel
I have read this and similar phrases over and over. It seems to be the nub of the matter.
I am tempted to throw my arms in the air and shout 'So what !?' :meh: — Amity
1. Immediacy comes first. If it means intuitive and simple perception of the world. A vagueness.
Non conceptual. Universal.
2. Mediation is opposed to immediacy. If it means conceptualization. Cognition. Particular.
3. The process of reasoning ( ? involving 1. and 2. ) > Self development > Individuality
Or something like that ? — Amity
Now, this sounds like he faced some lively opposition to his ideas already, doesn't it?However, it is this mediation which is rejected with such horror — Hegel
Would it be too forward to translate into modern vernacular:as if somebody, in making more of mediation (...), would be abandoning absolute cognition altogether. — Hegel
Yes, but we need not discard our immediacy of perception, right? We need to find the synthesis of both world and mind, Wesen(essence) and FormSo indeed those of us accustomed to trying to think categorically and to reason everything back to some fundamental ground as providing a foundation for knowledge, with Hegel have got to get comfortable with process itself as ground, and not from the world - which imposes its own constraints - but from mind. — tim wood
However when obesity rates in America triple in three decades, then something must be going on to cause such a large demographic shift. What has been going on over the last three decades, that is still going on, that may have effect on the obesity of the population?
I would say, most definitely, third-wave feminism. — Ilya B Shambat
Oh, I don't know... what about industrialized food production, online shopping or reality TV?What has been going on over the last three decades, that is still going on, that may have effect on the obesity of the population? — Ilya B Shambat
I agree! :grin: :lol:Have to say though, Latin, German and Italian are easier for me to understand than Hegelese. — Amity
Perhaps war is a state of chaos, or, one might argue, a state of injustice.Our world is a war-ridden world. War, is a state of lawlessness — a disregard to the law. — SethRy
I like the German answer to this problem. See here:Are Soldiers, of whom fuel the scope of war, responsible for immoral actions that occur without the central guidance of the law? Furthermore, are soldiers different people in different places? Should they be responsible, would they no longer be responsible if peace is acclaimed? — SethRy
Until here, we continue from before, right? Abstract universality is nice, but useless, because it's somehow incomplete (not sure I get the "otherness" and the overcoming of that alienation, though).However, this in-itself is abstract universality, in which its nature, which is to be for itself, and the self-movement of the form are both left out of view. — Hegel
Now, this is actually rather clear, isn't it?Precisely because the form is as essential to the essence as the essence is to itself, the essence must not be grasped and expressed as mere essence, which is to say, as immediate substance or as the pure self-intuition of the divine. Rather, it must likewise be grasped as form in the entire richness of the developed form, and only thereby is it grasped and expressed as the actual — Hegel
This group discussion is a bit of a mix. Apparently taking place during a first read, hence the advice to carry on and not get bogged down. It seems we carry on - in various stages of ignorance - and return later, having gained an overall picture. Or in the perhaps vain hope of
... looking at Hegel to supply that clarity. — tim wood — Amity
Good idea. If we can at least keep track of some key words, that's a big step already, and the glossary is a huge help there.I like to note and understand key words first... — Amity
Now, I'm not an expert, but this part reminds me of Plotin a little. It sounds like substance is To Hen, the platonic oneness which is totally abstract, and according to Hegel it requires a notion of being a subject, an awareness, a reflection on itself - as the platonic "nous", intellect.everything hangs on
grasping and expressing the true not just as substance but just as much as subject. — tim wood
"inert simplicity" - I think this is what Hegel tries to avoid at all cost. He likes the idea of there being a universal principle, but an unchanging, abstract oneness is useless in his eyes. He wants this highest notion to be aware, dynamic, "begreiflich" (graspable...)if thinking only unifies the being of substance with itself and grasps immediacy, or intuition grasped as thinking, then there is the issue about whether this intellectual intuition does not then itself relapse into inert simplicity — tim wood
And here we have another notion of change, of constant movement and reflection, right? The living substance.it is in truth actual only insofar as it is the movement of self-positing, or, that it is the mediation of itself and its becoming-other-to-itself. — tim wood
it is the mediation of itself and its becoming-other-to-itself. — tim wood
Yes, that's the "I can't make that much of a difference on my own, so why should I try" argument. I hear that all the time when in try to talk people into caring for politics.This is different because me consuming slightly more or slightly less energy barely helps anyone. Even if I don't eat that much food, that doesn't mean it translates to a hungry child in Africa eating it probably just means more food loss — khaled
Yes, exactly. I try for an ethical conduct in that sense, but I often wonder if what I do is enough, if I should not try much harder and give away more of my money and time.. It would be great if you started a petition to boycott those shoes until conditions improve, but you don't have to. If you think you have to then you're committing an atrocity by your own values by wasting time typing here instead of starting that petition — khaled
How come you don't think that doing good is a duty? Being caught up in an unjust system, is it enough to just draw back and not care? Shouldn't we at least try to make it a better world, to the best of our ability?In my system of values, doing good is not a must but it is encouraged (because it's called doing GOOD) — khaled
Isn't that second part of the sentence rather impossible to achieve? All of our actions have effects on other people, and our inactions, too. And we cannot always know in advance what exactly is going to happen. We're human and we're not perfect. When we consider an action that we hope is good overall, I believe that the risk of doing harm must be carefully considered, but it's not enough to veto the action automatically.however never at the expense of harming someone in the process without them knowing. — khaled
Ah, so are you admitting then, that we violate other people's right to consent all the time? That we also cause harm, be it because we don't have the right data, because we need to choose the lesser of two evils, because we didn't even notice or simply because we don't care...The stakes aren't even close. In this case you have all the necessary data to determine that 80 years of life is not a light transgression, no where near taking someone to the hospital which is a very light transgression. — khaled
But as a consequence, you're still giving up on humanity as a whole.antinatalism isn't about how you live your life it's just the simple statement that you can't take risks with other people's lives. — khaled
1- doing X to someone is bad and doing Y to someone is good
2- You do not have to do Y but you do have to avoid X
It doesn't matter what X and Y are but so far I haven't seen anyone that challenges those premises. — khaled
A most generous gift! (and I love how you phrased that)the gift of a problem to future generations. — Valentinus
There must be a degree of weakness in those, too, that light themselves a fire because the night is chilly.There must be a degree of weakness of mind allowed for describing those who believe in the supernatural. — Razorback kitten
Is that so? I tend to be suspicious of anyone who claims to know "the truth" in an absolute sense.Because religion offers the only answers other than the truth — Razorback kitten
Well, in that case, I freely admit that I'm one of those who can't handle it.the truth (that there is no reason for us being here and it's simply lights out). Some people can't handle that reality, regardless of intelligence. — Razorback kitten