Was he a revolutionary? Or a lunatic? — frank
All ‘truths’ are mere appearances which emerge out of value systems. — Joshs
Only in the latter case can there be no truth toward which we can approach. And this latter option wherein there is no ubiquitous reality of anything needs some explaining if it is to be taken seriously. — javra
He certainly was laughing at something.
“It is no more than a moral prejudice that the truth is worth more than appearance; in fact, it is the world's most poorly proven assumption.”
“The world with which we are concerned is false, i.e., is not fact but fable and approximation on the basis of a meager sum of observations; it is "in flux," as something in a state of becoming, as a falsehood always changing but never getting near the truth: for--there is no "truth" (Nietzsche 1901/1967 Will to Power) — Joshs
At this point, I think what's needed is an awakening similar to a religious conversion in the sense of a complete change in perspective, and one that has to be reached on a global scale.
— Xtrix
What we really DO NOT NEED are religious awakenings, mantras that repeated as pseudo-religious chants without much if any thought given to what actually is said. Keep religion away. These problems will not be solved by faith based strategies, on the contrary! — ssu
What will it take to eradicate nuclear weapons and reduce greenhouse gas emissions to zero? (To name only two.)
— Xtrix
Starting with those.
So what is the problem you have with volcanoes erupting or natural forest fires? Just look at what you write and consider it taken literally.
Zero emissions.
All greenhouse gas emissions. — ssu
I guess I committed a crime tonight when I warmed the water front sauna with couple pieces of wood. — ssu
in any case, you're just changing the subject. I never once said there needs to be a "single universal perspective."
— Xtrix
No, I think your statement below articulates what I had in mind more clearly than ‘single universal perspective’.
it proves that some perspectives are WRONG. Yes, I do believe in truth
— Xtrix — Joshs
First of all, this is a very large minority. — Joshs
Secondly, believing the opposition is simply ‘brainwashed’ rather than operating from an entirely different frame of understanding than yours will keep you tied up in knots. — Joshs
“Who mentioned anything about a "single universal perspective"? You're arguing against self-created phantoms.”
Assuming that those who disagree with you on this issue are brainwashed pre-supposes that facts can be separated from perspectives and values. — Joshs
My point is that there will never be precise agreement , nor does there need to be, on what exactly the ‘particular problem’ is. — Joshs
Humans are notoriously awful at predicting the future. At least I can’t think of anyone who got it right. — NOS4A2
can't see a way we survive unless there's wide-scale awareness and prioritization of this particular problem.
— Xtrix
One could make the same argument about World war 1, World war 2 and the Cold war. People make accommodations to alien cultures ( peace treaties) and adjustments to perceived threats from within their own way of seeing the world , not by melding into a single universal perspective. — Joshs
Not only will we never get these communities to ‘awaken’ to the same understanding on any issue , we shouldn’t consider it a desirable goal. — Joshs
Congratz you've resorted to a Ad hominem fallacy. — Tiberiusmoon
So wouldn't you need fundamental information/context in order to answer it?
But a question has no answer at the beginning, the answer is the sum of the question not the other way round, don't you see? — Tiberiusmoon
But there's no way around it: we stop burning fossil fuels or we die
— Xtrix
We're probably going to die then. North America has like 200 years worth of coal to burn. — frank
For me, the leading problem is one of values held and aspired toward by the majority of humans inhabiting this earth: both those in power and those who grant them their power. — javra
He found , however, that chemicals alone do not determine imagination. In his autobiography he recounted the story of trying to turn on Jack Kerouac and Arthur Koestler, only to be disappointed by their underwhelming reaction to the lsd experience. — Joshs
Okay so what answer tells you more about multiplication?
=12 =12 — Tiberiusmoon
As you just said, that information is required of the question itself, the answer is the outcome of logic piecing it together like a puzzle.
The fundamental knowledge of a answer is the question because that is what makes the question. — Tiberiusmoon
Well that actually drove some of the 60's counter-culture. You may not recall the Whole Earth Catalog, but it was very much about that. Another set of books that deeply influenced me back then were Theodore Roszak's books, Making of a Counter Culture and Where the Wasteland Ends. Many of the sixties idealists were deeply into those ideas, but they were always very niche in their appeal. Maybe their time will come, too. It should! (Actually, have a look at some of the essays on David Loy's site, https://www.davidloy.org/articles.html - his writings on ecological economics are really good. ) — Wayfarer
Maybe Heidegger was right: "Only a god can save us."
— Xtrix
Or Kurtzweil + Brin: Only a "singularity" can "uplift" us. — 180 Proof
I should resist. I'm done. There's no hope. I've explained - from philosophical justification through to the specific technologies that need to be applied, how we might agree to do what's necessary to a prosperous and sustainable future, and been ignored. — counterpunch
Back in the day we used to call this class consciousness. Now I guess it's got to be translated into some ephemeral existential stuff to gain traction. — StreetlightX
I think the kind of awakening that is needed, is a realignment of culture so that material acquisition is not the only aim of existence.
— Wayfarer
I've explained why this is wrong. It leads to authoritarian government imposing poverty forever after for the sake of sustainability. — counterpunch
If you will read the post slowly, you might catch the point of putting "problem" in quotes. Here's a hint : every generation has faced the same general "problem". — Gnomon
There's pretty widespread recognition of the problem. China is building nuclear power plants, which is what we all should be doing. — frank
But I think the kind of awakening that is needed, is a realignment of culture so that material acquisition is not the only aim of existence. And that will take an enormous change. — Wayfarer
I just think people generally lack perspective, and get locked into one way of thinking , a little understanding goes a long way and psychedelics or a nig bag of weed can help with that. — DingoJones
What will it take to solve these problems? What will it take to eradicate nuclear weapons and reduce greenhouse gas emissions to zero?
— Xtrix
Good question.
I think what can be said for sure is that communism can't be the answer. Environmental pollution was appalling in the Soviet Union and continues to be a huge problem in China which is ruled by the Communist Party.
Capitalism also seems to create some problems. — Apollodorus
I suspect that the very real problem of social alienation is the biggest culprit here, preventing people from seeing how masses can change laws to attain a more just future. — Manuel
The only thing that seems to me plausible is to have people focus on one concrete project related to these issues, say, closing one pipeline or reducing the budget of the military a little in a certain project. — Manuel
Now, after years of promoting the meme of Global Warming -- which at first was misunderstood as only a matter of temperature -- the "problem" of Ecological Climate Change is widespread in the western world. But still, we look around and think : "why haven't we yet reached the promised peak of the tipping point, that heralds a New Awakening". — Gnomon
If it happens, it will absorb all existing frameworks into itself, as Christianity did. — frank
But the countervailing forces are also extremely powerful. The so-called conservative movement in the USA is deeply rooted in unawareness and psychopathology. But Western culture is also fundamentally resistant to the kinds of changes that are needed. It's a very complex problem, but one of the things that Western consumer culture is really good at, is making life comfortable for those who are lucky enough to be part of it. That also tends to mitigate against change. — Wayfarer
I often feel as though there will be either a catastrophic change, or a huge shakeup, in the near future, due to our colliding with resource shortages and environmental change. But then, my father, in the 1970's, thought that by year 2000 the world was bound to be gripped by Malthusian problems and there would be global famine, and he was wrong about that. So I don't know. But I think the kind of awakening that is needed, is a realignment of culture so that material acquisition is not the only aim of existence. And that will take an enormous change. — Wayfarer
Force feed a pile of magic mushrooms to the worlds leaders and elite classes. The problems will resolve. — DingoJones
When we're not discovering "fundamental knowledge," but still asking basic questions, is that not philosophy? What's fundamental knowledge anyway? For that matter, what's knowledge?
Are the last two questions "philosophy" or not?
— Xtrix
Logically speaking; questions are the fundamental knowledge of answers pieced together with logic and context, because a question will tell you more about the subject than the answer. — Tiberiusmoon
“ Mathematical knowledge is regarded as the one way of apprehending beings which can always be certain of the secure possession of the being of the beings which it apprehends. Whatever has the kind of being adequate to the being accessible in mathematical knowledge is in the true sense. This being is what always is what it is. Thus what can be shown to have the character of constantly remaining, as remanens capax mutationem, constitutes the true being of beings which can be experienced in the world. What enduringly remains truly is. This is the sort of thing that mathematics knows. What mathematics makes accessible in beings constitutes their being. Thus the being of the "world" is, so to speak, dictated to it in terms of a definite idea of being which is embedded in the concept of substantiality and in terms of an idea of knowledge which cognizes beings in this way. Descartes does not allow the kind of being of innerworldly beings to present itself, but rather prescribes to the world, so to speak, its "true" being on the basis of an idea of being (being = constant objective presence) the source of which has not been revealed and the justification of which has not been demonstrated. Thus it is not primarily his dependence upon a science, mathematics, which just happens to be especially esteemed, that determines his
ontology of the world, rather his ontology is determined by a basic ontological orientation toward being as constant objective presence, which mathematical knowledge is exceptionally well suited to grasp.* In this way Descartes explicitly switches over philosophically from the development of traditional ontology to modem mathematical physics and its transcendental
foundations.” (Being and Time) — Joshs
Philosophy is the name given to the attempt of describing the guiding principles of one's life. — Book273
Philosophy is the development of self-aware thought and it's communication — Cheshire
Whatever possessed you to revive this, a year after its demise? Always an interesting topic, but still....
Addendum:
Scrolling back to gather groundwork, I see it is your thread. Which serves as the best reason there is for reviving it. My bad....sorry. — Mww
Philosophy is the discovery of fundamental knowledge — Tiberiusmoon
In an if-then relationship, the antecedent is sufficient for the consequent, and the consequent is necessary for the antecedent. So when one says "if I am conscious then I exist" (implied by saying "I am conscious therefore I exist"), one is saying that existence is necessary for consciousness. If you were to reverse it, and say "I exist therefore I am conscious", you would be saying that consciousness is necessary for existence, and that existence is sufficient for consciousness, i.e. that everything that exists necessarily must ("first") be conscious. Which seems the opposite of what you're aiming for, and what Descartes was saying, i.e. that everything that is conscious necessarily must ("first") exist. — Pfhorrest
So are there 3 positions?
1) being is source
2) being is knowledge
3) being is something else — Gregory
the "I think, therefore I am" should be inverted. (...) What I'm saying there is that the "sum" is even more primordial than "thought," and thus the Cogito should be inverted in that sense. I didn't mean to imply everything that "is" is a conscious, thinking being.
— Xtrix
Not sure Rene would go for that; it is my understanding that he intended the “I” of “...therefore I am” to be necessarily conditioned by the “cogito”. In other words, they are mutually dependent, same subject, different predicates kinda thing. The “I” that thinks is not the cause of the “I” that is, and the “I” that is is not an effect of the “I” that thinks. The “I” that thinks is the very same as the “I” that is. — Mww
what we can "know" with our senses, with empirical data, is all that can be known
— Xtrix
Not an advocate of a priori knowledge, huh? Are we to maintain that it is impossible to know anything that isn’t first perceived? — Mww
just as a hammer can be thought of as a wooden stick with a metal piece on the end of it, weighing a certain amount and of a certain dimension or having other properties, but isn't thought of such when we're absorbed in the activity of hammering, likewise the world isn't simply "material."
— Xtrix
Does that mean for Heidegger the world is more than material, that it is at least material? Is a material thing something that has a countable duration i. time and an extension in space? Does Heidegger accept this description and only want to remind us that the subjective aspect contributes such notions as usefulness to what an object is? How are duration and extension derived? Do they presuppose some basis on which to measure duration and extension, that is , some feature that remains constant and self-identical such that it can be counted? — Joshs
To my eyes Heidegger's ontic is dualistic (me and a hammer) but his ontology is not so — Gregory
If you have more on how Dasein understands itself as not separate from matter but not lost in the ocean of matter i'd be interested. — Gregory
What type of being does Man understand? The material world? — Gregory
Also, do you believe Heidegger is saying more than Aristotle and Augustine in putting time in the soul of Dasein? — Gregory
I read it more as: Man, who understands being, is time.
— Xtrix
I like where this is going. Is man time or being? — Gregory
But any human willing can be torn asunder. The only thing that can't be torn asunder is matter which can't be created or destroyed. So care would be the substance of the world which holds us in existence and allows us to care, love, and will. That's where I'm at at this point in the discussion. — Gregory
You’re absolutely correct. Heidegger does not view Dasein from the vantage of a subject-object binary. If one instead speaks of self and world, then Dasein belongs to both poles. — Joshs
Yes, but how has Heidegger radicalized the concept of time so that it can be understood as heedful circumspective relevance? Why can’t we help caring about the world? Temporality is at the heart of Husserl’s model also but Care doesn’t apply to his approach. Why not? Because the structure of temporality for Heidegger describes an intimacy between past present and future missing from Husserl. Care is this intimate pragmatic relevance, this for-the-sake-of which orients all experience with respect to the immediate past. — Joshs
