I disagree. I think seeking to proscribe the manner and scope of a discussion is bad form - which is why I brought attention to it. I have nothing to say about making peace with politically correct activists, but I can at least explain why I despise them - which is, in my view, a positive contribution to the overall discussion. — counterpunch
I'm going to completely ignore your appeal against taking sides; and acknowledge from the outset that I am vehemently opposed to political correctness. — counterpunch
We start with some basic axioms, and then to differing degrees of success, end up with intricate systems that we then apply to practical situations. But the axioms themselves are not susceptible to proof, it seems. — Philguy
that would make radicalization a positive feedback loop. — FlaccidDoor
That seems pretty bad though, since that would make radicalization a positive feedback loop. — FlaccidDoor
With everything we have read and still reading and still being written to be read, why do humans cannot grasp the idea of humanity. Is it our ignorance? Lack of process? or we are built in such a way that we do understand but we cannot be understood? — RBS
I'm quitting the discussion until I can think of something substantive — TheMadFool
To help me understand this, I replace 'being' with 'substance'. — Amity
Our body as a container consisting of mere flesh and bones ( substance ) doesn't cut it.
To work, to be all we can be, we need our brain with mind, or spirit (non-substance).
To perceive, to think, to connect to others. To maintain the bodily functions together with the mind.
Some might be able to do this naturally, others need guidance. We are complex. — Amity
I hope to be given feedback to this and my earlier post re the wei wu wei story. — Amity
The paradox: the existing definition of nothing is self-contradictory. — TheMadFool
The original symbol for zero, 0, came from the hole in the middle seat of a dhow, where the mast was put for the sail. It was by virtue of that hole, where nothing is, that the mast can be put, which makes it possible for the dhow to sail. That is very similar to what the verse you quoted says. I kinda get it intuitively. — Wayfarer
It was just another way to look at it. That’s all. There are so many different translations of the TTC into English because of the relational and structural differences between alphanumerical and pictorial languages. — Possibility
But I won’t explore this approach further - there doesn’t seem to be much interest in it here... — Possibility
Thoughts: sadly this is one of the most common tools or practices used by governors. When the people is ignorant it is easier to convince them with fake news. If it were possible probably they would remove all pillars of philosophy and thinking. Sometimes it looks like the State and government are enemies of knowledge. This is why it is impossible to find happiness. — javi2541997
So my conversations centered around trying to pry into the inner workings of the other, which while not quite explosive, may have been just as uncomfortable. — FlaccidDoor
How about you? — FlaccidDoor
Is a difference in language an accurate way to perceive this divide? — FlaccidDoor
Before going further along my line of thought, I would like to ask if it seems like complete blather or is there a point of departure where it made some sense and then stopped making sense. — Valentinus
A method is being promoted that often sounds like a rejection of all method. — Valentinus
The purpose of this post is to encourage some sort of discussion about moral responsibility and free will, — ToothyMaw
I think this is a Western interpretation of the text. We find in the text what we’re looking for, I suppose. But I’m intrigued by the interpretations here that attribute relations of affect, value and morality where it doesn’t seem to exist in the traditional Chinese concepts themselves. — Possibility
So it reads more like this:
In caring for the state and governing its people, understanding our capabilities without acting in that capacity is uncertain - such is our relation to the Tao. How does this affect us? Does it hold us back from making decisions? Do we focus on attributing any apparent capability only to ourselves? Are we capable of governing without certainty in this regard? — Possibility
Who recognize that a reasonable discussion cannot take place without some preliminary aids being set out. I.e., he is asked to clarify his own usages. — tim wood
It seems to me that people switch the idea of the body and soul unknowingly. Soul is identity and maybe we can never know our own for sure but as Paul says in the Bible, we have no certainty in anything. I think everyone is either male or female in their true inner identity, but the body is not our direct identity. The body is us but we are not our body. If we are to say that the heights of our soul is beyond gender, then it is only the lower parts that feel gender identity and the person could never say what he is except as an example of God (genderless).
Are we to see gender disphoria as part of a social institution or it is part of people's spiritual lives? The priests of old who catrated themselves may have drawn the gender disphoric into their flocks — Gregory
What you say is wise and useful TC. I like the present time too, but I have met very few people in my extended circle who do. — Tom Storm
Politically, aesthetically and emotionally, no one seems to much like the present time, no one seems to praise the modern and most folk seem afraid of the post-modern and the future. People seem to be going for pre-modernism. — Tom Storm
Appreciate seeing the whole Verse or Chapter as it is called in the Philip Ivanhoe translation. — Amity
The interaction between ying (echo, answer, response) and pò (broken, expose the truth of) as internal aspects of our relation to the Tao, to me reflects Feldman Barrett’s proposed interaction between a constructed conceptual (‘spiritual’) reality and a constructed interocepted (‘bodily’) reality in an ongoing dialectic that manifests and refines consciousness. — Possibility
The verse in its entirety seems to outline the uncertainty in our relation to the Tao. — Possibility
In D.C. Lau's version of verse 10, he makes a reference to how the Heavenly Gate is described in Zhuangzi that may interest the ongoing discussion of being and non-being: — Valentinus
It's one of the most opaque and difficult issues in all Eastern studies, however, so don't think it can be easily understood. — Wayfarer
The whole story of his ascent to the role of Patriach pivots around a poem he writes on the temple wall about exactly this point. — Wayfarer
'Darkness' is a symbol of the 'divine darkness', the unknowable-yet-known nature of the ground of being. There's a school or movement called Dark Zen which is also reminiscent of these verses. — Wayfarer
Some philosophers say we are still living in modernity, for some we are in post-modernity, some say we never modern. — Warren
Modernity is characterised by the idea of progress, trust in science, confidence in civilized values, the idea of destiny. — Wayfarer
I have a rather ambitious theory that this forced ‘disconnect’ is unnecessary - that we can strive to understand the mental processes in relation to our actions and vice versa, and develop a scientifically sound methodology that enables us to consciously align our conceptual and sensory realities, rendering oneness with the Tao an effortlessly intellect-driven process. For me, the key to that is affect. — Possibility
Have you ever experienced a moment when you have felt 'at one' with the world. You felt at peace.
I have and wanted to capture that essence in a bottle so I could take it out and sniff later.
To regain a sense of balance. Most of the time, I swing about...if you know what I mean... — Amity
I think you might be misinterpreting me here - I’m not saying to practise wu wei is to avoid fame and fortune - I’m saying in a modern, Western context ‘greatness’ suggests fame and fortune, but I think this aspect of greatness is more likely to elude those who practise wu wei particularly in a modern, Western setting. — Possibility
Well, I don’t see it as gut feeling - that still implies conscious intention, and I think you’ve been clear about its absence here in your interpretation. I agree that non-rational is more accurate than irrational, and I also agree that action without reflection still takes what we know into account. I don’t think I suggested otherwise with what I wrote. — Possibility
This runs counter to earlier verses in the TTC that suggest a clearer understanding of the Tao is achieved when we are free from desire (affect). Why would Lao Tzu encourage action that can never be determined free from desire? — Possibility
