Meaning, then, that it - whatever it is - is true? Or that the criteria of truth in this case is simply that the individual holds it so? — tim wood
question seems to be, Is something-we-don't-know-what-it-is more important - and we don't know what that means although we've asked more than once - than, than what? Something? Something in particular? Anything? Everything? Nothing? — tim wood
How does "real" understanding differ from understanding? What do you imagine understanding to be? And what does it mean to "perceive" understanding? Until you're 1) clear on usage and 2) stop using loaded language, you're being incoherent.
If you have any point to make, now is the time to make it. — tim wood
I keep asking you for clarity because I do not know either what you mean or what your words mean. You ignore the request but keep using the words - and that's abusive. And I strongly suspect you do not know what they mean either. What do you suppose truth is? And what would a subjective truth be? — tim wood
don't know about "such an" experience. And I have noted that experience and understanding are not the same thing. By abstraction, I mean that on one side, understanding is a thing-in-itself, on the other, about something that it itself is not. In this latter sense an abstraction. "Metaphysical phenomenon" I take to be incoherent word-salad - unless you can educate. — tim wood
Understanding I take to be a species of translation. Experience can inform the accuracy of the translation, and inasmuch as understanding is both an itself and an abstraction, it seems to me the granularity of the experience can add - data, if you will - to understanding. — tim wood
This question in this context is both incoherent and abusive. Get back on the path. — tim wood
and the uses to which I put that understanding.
— tim wood — 3017amen
Like I have certain interests and concerns (I value my friendships, I enjoy Japanese literature, and I have certain political views about society) What difference would be done to that if someone or something has an opinion on what I should do with my life, unless I was blackmailed into it. It's like as if someone's parents told their kids what to be when they grow up, why should you care about what they say? — Saphsin
Having experiences is just having experiences - understanding something different. Indeed, practice is that people who have had experiences often go to people who have not had those experiences in an effort to try to understand them. And this just the words. We'll get further faster and more directly if you get to the substance. — tim wood
You, not me. Clearly and obviously it all depends on lots of things, here undetermined. — tim wood
Or in the alternative, you must be thinking that someone else's truth and/or understanding is just as important to them, as it is likewise to you. So help me out, which is it? Can both be true?
— 3017amen
Meaningless question, or at least unanswerable, until the terms are nailed down on all corners. And, sometimes. — tim wood
By application and process. — tim wood
What do you mean by more important? If you're the building inspector for a town and I'm some clown who thinks he can plumb and do the electrical work in his own home himself - not actually knowing code or even how - then yes, your understanding is more important than mine. Is that what you meant? — tim wood
Yes, and the uses to which I put that understanding. — tim wood
The difference lies in what I (can) make of it. — tim wood
The difference lies in what I (can) make of it. — tim wood
Define your terms, as it sits I have no idea what you mean. — tim wood
Subordination to what? — tim wood
The difference lies in what I (can) make of it. — tim wood
Or have you already told us it's unreason. — tim wood
There is lived experience, events and agency involved. As such a theist is engaged in real/lived events, things inaccessible to the intellect, or intellectual analysis, because this analysis is limited, as the intellect is limited. — Punshhh
So your faith extends to the market. — Banno
But, people who like to call themselves atheists realize they are outclassed by agnostic arguments...and resort to that petty stuff.
Theists and atheists both are "believers." Theists acknowledge that they are...and revel in it. Atheists pretend they are not...and have to live the lie.
Kind of amusing to watch...especially when you egg them on and see them squirm. — Frank Apisa
Is fundamental logic instinctual to organic cognition as a function for processing certain types of spontaneous causality? To what extent is logical structure infused into the domain of phenomenal perception? — Enrique
Admitting you are depressed isn't that different from saying that you have a kind of physical wound, of course, people are going to recommend that you get it treated or offer you aid. Depression isn't an intellectual position, it's a mental illness that nobody would choose for themselves and someone in this state of mind either has ideas helping to cause their depression (which is bad) or has ideas shaped by their depression.
That's the issue with illnesses that affect the mind, it is disrupting one's thoughts and interfering with one's ability to think clearly. — Judaka
So for starters, 3017, read Epicurus (or Lucretius) and Sextus Empiricus. Read Hobbes and Spinoza too. And maybe, in more contemporary terms, Feuerbach, Deleuze, Dennett, Haack, Stenger, Deutsch, Metzinger, Rovelli, and Meillassoux (or, as I prefer, Brassier). That is, if you want to understand something of what I understand and thereby how I can, with sufficiently strong warrant, claim that theism is not true. (Of course, historical & scientific literacy as well as varieties of entheogenic experiences (i.e. ecstatic techniques) also help.) You make it quite clear, however, that understanding (let alone knowledge) isn't what you're after, 3017. :shade: — 180 Proof
The argument is that businessmen may do more than just maximise profit. The counterargument, that they cannot fix inflation, does not follow. — Banno
Oh yes, that's really insightful. I say selfish not as a moral condemnation, because it comes very often from trauma, childhood trauma often. It's just a simple fact that might sound more acceptable if I put it thus: only love is a reason to live. — unenlightened
Btw, call me "scientific materialist" and I'll answer to that every time. — 180 Proof
...and that question again displays your muddling of grammar and ontology.
5 — Banno
So even Anselm is to be rehabilitated... — Banno
It's really important for you that god shows up somewhere in creation, — Banno
Isn't that already presupposed in your sentence (regardless of whatever span of time)?
Also, there couldn't have been a time when there wasn't anything, since there would at least have been time (check B Rundle). — jorndoe
So are sensations and emotions part of the "truth" of the universe? Are they metaphysical, like String theory with its mathematical context? — jgill
Dennet is another example of difficult reading. I got stuck with his book and left it. In my opinion, it's not worth the effort. But I made the effort with Sartre. Why? — David Mo
The difference between the two is that the metaphysical ideas can not be proved whatsoever. — Eremit
Economies are insanely complicated, so we must take many variables for granted and creat core ideas, such as that individuals are always maximizing, which in turn may even be wrong. — Alejandro
summary there should be no "economist" that hasn't first started their own business that isn't a consultancy. — Gitonga
Argument from authority: series of witnesses traced back to an original prophet with ultimate credibility.
Argument from emotion: I believe in x, because I feel that it's true.
Argument from self-evidency: look around you, it's just plain obvious.
Argument from experience: just talk to X, and you'll hear an answer. — Spigot