At least it does not coincide with Camus'. As I said, the absurd is above all a feeling. I sometimes feel like Camus. But not always. I'm not sure about your idea of absurd.Really, I have my very own version of the absurdity of life? What's yours then? — TheMadFool
I wonder how general the idea of Camusian absurdity is. Does it encompass all desires? — TheMadFool
Well, you do read your Bible. But in reading your Bible so closely you collide with the fact that you are not reading the Bible at all. You're reading a translation. And that is the problem. — tim wood
Our faith in Christ was/is/probably will be based on a certain set of miracles Christ performed — TheMadFool
I agree.I find it not so hard to understand the difference between in and of. There is the faith OF Christ as possessed and revealed by him culminating in his Resurrection and the faith IN Christ which Paul internalized — Tliusin
Thanks for the clarification although the meaninglessness of Sisyphus' task seems to be the condition that the rock rolls down on every occasion - the futility of his effort is what Sisyphus' meaningless existence is about, no? — TheMadFool
As for the absurdity of life, it only is so if one seeks some kind of higher purpose understood in the sense of being a significant part of, having a role in, something "bigger" than yourself. — TheMadFool
In your example faith (belief without justification) is caused (motivation) by habit. In this example habit is the cause, faith is the effect.I'm only drawing your attention to the possible fact that what you see as faith-based beliefs may not actually be that - they could simply be habits learned through repetition in — TheMadFool
What prevents you or me or anyone from assuming things, anything at all - propositions, theories, whatnot? — TheMadFool
Does consistency in itself justify, is it a measure of, truth? — TheMadFool
Can I not choose i.e. assume one of them to be true even though I have absolutely no rationale to do so? — TheMadFool
What exactly is your point? — TheMadFool
I don't know how to respond to this or if I can whether it'll be good enough to lessen our burden. — TheMadFool
I have no reason to think that, generally speaking, those who believe in a violent or compassionate god have other different reasons than their belief in that god. Another thing is that you think their beliefs are confusing or that they are at odds with the idea of a god that you believe in. But that is another matter. We are now discussing what is the base of those beliefs that you can think are confusing or wrong. Or not.It looks like it's not true that the various categories you mentioned above actually believe in the thing they're supposed to — TheMadFool
What prevents them from spilling over into other domains like life and living it? — TheMadFool
Last I heard there's no end insofar as "to question our principles" is concerned. Munchhausen trilemma? — TheMadFool
faith isn't all that popular. — TheMadFool
Axioms, by definition, lack reasons for belief. — TheMadFool
Meaningless only in the sense that one wasn't conferred to you by, you know, a "higher power" whatever that means to you. — TheMadFool
I did not know that about Dostoevsky — The Questioning Bookworm
On the contrary, everyone knew that in his pious heart the liberating Tsar was making common cause with his people. Everyone waited with emotion and hope that the tsar would express his will, that his voice would be heard, while we, retired to our corners, rejoiced that the great Russian people had justified their immense and eternal hope that they had placed in him. (Diary of a Writer, 1877)
The virtue of the Russian woman is submission to her husband at all costs. (Diary of a Writer, August 1880).
If someone could prove to me that Christ is out of the truth, and if the truth really excluded Christ, I would prefer to stay with Christ and not with the truth. (Letter to Mrs. Fonvizina, 20 Feb. 1854).
But the Jews refused the correction and remained in all their former narrowness and inflexibility, and therefore instead of pan- humanness have turned into the enemies of humanity. (Letter to Yulia Abaza, June 1880)
Ah, Dostoevsky, my favorite. I agree with your insights here on both of these philosophers. — The Questioning Bookworm
Why is it "because" in both cases? I — TheMadFool
Rational: you decide to buy in a shop because it sells the same products at a better price than another.What are these? — TheMadFool
If one belief is more reasonable than another, it ceases to be faith by definition. Faith consists in believing for the sake of it, even in what is absurd, as Paul of Tarsus said --he should know what he was talking about.It might be totally reasonable to assume, on faith, certain truths and, theories — TheMadFool
Every position, whether it is "religious, political, philosophical" or otherwise, begins and relies on some founding axiom or inherent principle, whether or not one wishes to use the word "faith" or otherwise". — IvoryBlackBishop
Isn't that a tautology? — TheMadFool
I'm more inclined to think faith is a mode of belief acquisition but it's no secret that it has emotional underpinnings. — TheMadFool
What does "fae" mean? Fairy?No one, including philosophers and other breeds of thinkers from the world of science and other fields, will ever undertake anything worthwhile if fae doesn't have a stake in it whatever that may be. — TheMadFool
But then why did you refer to Pyrrho as a "joke"? To my knowledge, Pyrrho is all about uncertainty, expressible mathematically as confidence levels regarding the conclusions of arguments with values less than 100%. — TheMadFool
Are you absolutely certain? Between 0% and 100%, what is the level of your certainty in the statement you just made? — TheMadFool
Agreed but is there a kind of justification that guarantees with absolute certainty the truth of anything, anything at all? — TheMadFool
I suspect this thread is what happens when one's diet is solely tertiary texts. — Banno
The statement is not hidden (in Foucault's sense) — Number2018
Indeed, Foucault gives a very particular meaning to "visible" and "hidden". I don't think your interpretation makes much sense. Rather, you have to read this:For example, in "The will to power," the discursive formation of various verbal performances of ''sexuality'' is not hidden nor visible. — Number2018
Although the statement cannot be hidden, it is not visible either; it is
not presented to the perception as the manifest bearer of its limits and
characteristics. It requires a certain change of viewpoint and attitude to be
recognized and examined in itself Perhaps it is like the over-familiar that
constantly eludes one; those familiar transparencies, which, although they
conceal nothing in their density, are nevertheless not entirely clear. The
enunciative level emerges in its very proximity. (AoK:110)
The primary criterion for the existence of ‘the statement in itself” is the manifestation of its repetition, or, more precisely, its inherent variation. — Number2018
Does Foucault succeed in avoiding a pure metaphysical founding of the statement existence? — Number2018
And how his method is different from an empirical contextual analysis? — Number2018
I am abolishing all interiority in that exterior that is so indifferent to my life, and so neutral, that it makes no distinction between my life and my death — Number2018
Are these quotes from Focuault or your interpretation?It is disclosed, and found out under the chosen phrases and prepositions, behind their ''natural'' meaning and logic. Therefore, the 'initial' meaning becomes transformed. — Number2018
I suppose if one factors in Pyrrhonism, every belief is faith-based in way or another. The only difference then between faith-based beliefs and justified beliefs is in spirit and not in letter, if that makes any sense? — TheMadFool
Another reason: the 'signifying' structure of language (Iangage) always
refers back to something else; objects are designated by it; meaning is in
tended by it; the subject is referred back to it by a number of signs even if
he is not himself present in them. Language always seems to be inhabited
by the other, the elsewhere, the distant; it is hollowed by absence. Is it not
the locus in which something other than itself appears, does not its own
existence seem to be dissipated in this function? But if one wishes to des
cribe the enunciative level, one must consider that existence itself;
question language, not in the direction to which it refers, but in the
dimension that gives it; ignore its power to designate, to name, to show, to
reveal, to be the place of meaning or truth, and, instead, turn one's
attention to the moment - which is at once solidified, caught up in the
play of the 'signifier' and the 'signified' - that determines its unique and
limited existence. In the examination of language, one must suspend, not
only the point of view of the 'signified' (we are used to this by now), but
also that of the 'signifier', and so reveal the fact that, here and there, in
relation to possible domains of objects and subjects, in relation to other
possible formulations and re-uses, there is language. (AoK:111)
A system must be understood as a set of relationships that are maintained and transformed independently of the things that link them together. It has been shown, for example, that Roman, Scandinavian and Celtic myths make very different gods and heroes appear, but that the organisation that links them, their hierarchies, their rivalries, their betrayals, their contracts, their adventures obeyed (in cultures that ignored each other) a single system. Recent discoveries in prehistoric times also show that a systematic organisation presides over the arrangement of the figures drawn on the walls of the caves. In biology, it is known that in the chromosomal material are encoded, as a coded message, all the genetic indications that will allow the development of the future being. Lacan's importance lies in the fact that he showed that it is the structures, the language system itself - and not the subject - that speak through the discourse of the patient and the symptoms of his neurosis. Before any human existence, before any human thought, there would already be a knowledge, a system that we rediscovered (Michel Foucault. Interview with Madeleine Chapsal : La Quinzaine littéraire, No. 5, 16 May 1966, pp. 14-15) Translation is mine.
This seems to contradict this:This 'means’ that we should avoid doing this: for Foucault, there is no ‘natural context’ that could ‘throw light on to statement’s meaning.’ — Number2018
Lastly, what we have called 'discursive practice' can now be defined
more precisely. (...)it is a body of anonymous, historical rules, always determined
in the time and space that have defined a given period, and for a given
social, economic, geographical, or linguistic area, the conditions of
operation of the enunciative function. (AoK, III, 3: 117)
the statement is neither visible nor hidden. — Number2018
Generally speaking, one can say that a sentence or a
proposition - even when isolated, even divorced from the natural context
that could throw light on to its meaning, even freed or cut off from all the
elements to which, implicitly or not, it refers - always remains a sentence
or a proposition and can always be recognized as such .
On the other hand, the enunciative function - and this shows that it is
not simply a construction of previously existing elements - cannot
operate on a sentence or proposition in isolation. It is not enough to say a
sentence, it is not even enough to say it in a particular relation to a field of
objects or in a particular relation to a subject, for a statement to exist: it
must be related to a whole adjacent field . (AoK: 97)
a primordial generative function that does not depend on external factors. — Number2018
It was not just about the contextuality of meaning. — Number2018
There is no statement that does not presuppose others; there is no statement that is not surrounded by a field of coexistences, effects of series and succession, a
distribution of functions and roles. — Number2018
What seems to me a little limited in the analysis of Strawson, Searle, etc. [Wittgenstein, Austin], is that they are strategy analyses of a discourse that is made around a cup of tea, in an Oxford salon, which are interesting strategy games, but which seem to me to be profoundly limited. The problem would be if you can't study strategy in a more real context, within practices that are different from salon conversations. Personal translation from the Spanish edition.
They do not determine a structure or a system; any rule applied is primarily determined by a current enunciative context and, simultaneously, changes this context. — Number2018
One can see in any case that the description of this enunciative level
can be performed neither by a formal analysis, nor by a semantic investiga-
tion, nor by verification, but by the analysis of the relations between the
statement and the spaces of differentiation , in which the statement itself
reveals the differences. (Wittgenstein, Ibid, p. 92)
It seems to me post modernism wants to root language and knowledge in biology and culture, which might put too much pressure on Wittgenstein's position for it to hold. — Gregory
It seems to me post modernism wants to root language and knowledge in biology and culture, which might put too much pressure on Wittgenstein's position for it to hold. — Gregory
The referential of the statement forms the place, the condition, the field of emergence, the authority to differentiate between individuals or objects, states of things and relations that are brought into play by the statement itself; it defines the possibilities of appearance and delimitation of that which gives meaning to the sentence, a value as truth to the proposition. It is this group that characterizes the enunciative level of the formulation. (Foucault: Ibid, p. 91)
That's like being against motherhood. No one actually believes it, it's what folk say to get attention. — Banno
Is he talking about Wittgenstein? I think so. — Pneumenon
One can see in any case that the description of this enunciative level
can be performed neither by a formal analysis, nor by a semantic investiga-
tion, nor by verification, but by the analysis of the relations between the
statement and the spaces of differentiation , in which the statement itself
reveals the differences. (Wittgenstein, Ibid, p. 92)
What do you think? Is his sceptical argument valid? And is it sound? — Humelover
“The first proposition he [Hume] advances is that all our ideas,
or weak perceptions, are derivedfrom our impressions, or strong perceptions, and that we
can never think of anythingwhich we have not seen without us, or felt in our own minds.
This proposition seems tobe equivalent to that which Mr. Locke has taken such pains to
establish, viz. that no ideasare innate”. (Cursive by Hume)
“By all that has been said the reader will easily perceive that the philosophy contained in
this book is very sceptical, and tends to give us a notion of the imperfections and narrow
limits of human understanding. Almost all reasoning is there reduced to experience; and
the belief, which attends experience, is explained to be nothing but a peculiar sentiment,
or lively conception produced by habit. Nor is this all; when we believe anything of exter
nal existence, or suppose an object to exist a moment after it is no longer perceived, this
belief is nothing but a sentiment of the same kind. Our author insists upon several other
sceptical topics; and upon the whole concludes that we assent to our faculties, and employ
our reason, only because we cannot help it. Philosophy would render us entirely Pyrrho-
nian, were not nature too strong for it”. — Hume's Abstract, #6 y #27
- Seeing that we are probably at the beginning of this capitalist expansion, where do you believe it is heading in the future (near or distance)?
- Do you view it as inevitable or is it something that is possible correctable (provided it actually needs correction)? — Mayor of Simpleton
A sick person is only worth when he produces profits for the health industry. In the medieval cities there were mortuaries ("atriums") where the terminally ill were deposited and left to die. (This is not mentioned in Wikipedia ). Old people homes have become "atriums" to eternity now. Arguing with people who deny that "uneconomic" measures are the solution to the coronavirus pandemic, I have heard more than once: "But they don't die from the coronavirus, but because they were sick". In other words, a double reason to let them die: they were old and they were sick.If this were indeed the case, why would such a notion of 'earned/deserved' not bleed over to health issues... making illness also earned/deserved? — Mayor of Simpleton
Business sells us dreams: nostalgia, triumph (sexual and economic), security, feeling of power... And it actively associates them with brands. Now, football teams, T-shirts, food are not football teams, T-shirts or food, they are BRANDS. And there are a lot of fans who are able to spend their money and energy to buy an all-terrain vehicle, a mobile phone or trainers that they don't need. And if you tell him that he is making a fool of himself, he will hate you for the rest of his life, because he doesn't buy things anymore, but BRANDS. Heard over the loudspeaker of a supermarket: "If you like brands, we have..." Read in Murakami's novels: all the characters can be identified by the brands of clothes they wear, the car they drive...I also believe that business has been actively marketing nostalgia. — Mayor of Simpleton
The "gillets jaunes" are not very important. They are the classic outbreaks of social dissatisfaction that can only be expressed by irrational and ephemeral violence. Before they were "anarchists", "Black Block", etc. I think we should look more at the dominant trends that have nothing "left" about them. They are essentially conformists. And I say this with regret because we need a more consistent rebellion.examples like: Mouvement des gilets jaunes - 'yellow vests' - — Mayor of Simpleton
The "gillets jaunes" are not very important. They are the classic outbreaks of social dissatisfaction that can only be expressed by irrational and ephemeral violence. Before they were "anarchists", "Black Block", etc. Scarecrows. I think we should look more at the dominant trends that have nothing "left" about them. They are essentially conformists. And I say this with regret because we need a more consistent rebellion.I always wished to categorize myself as being somewhat apolitical, but that sort of position seems no longer and option. — Mayor of Simpleton
It seems to me that Sinclair Lewis was a better social critic than a novelist, but that also has its merit. (I found the dissection of deep America in Main Street very impressive). I haven't read Babbit, but it will have to be done, I suppose.Go ahead, old man! The world if yours!”
— Babbit — Mayor of Simpleton
What was my contribution and value to the greater good of humanity?' — Mayor of Simpleton
Funny thing here is that we totally agree, yet differ in many aspects. Quite curious... — Mayor of Simpleton