I am merely pointing out that they can't yield falsifiable or verifiable knowledge in the sense that logic, math and science can. — Janus
That seeing things how they are has soteriological benefits — Wayfarer
I don't have any problem with people having faiths of various kinds, provided they see, and admit, that it is faith. — Janus
As I have said the case with science, logic and the empirical is different, because the corroboration can be achieved with an unbiased observer. — Janus
Krishnamurti, you may recall, always rejected any idea of 'spiritual authority'. Yet it was always him on the podium, speaking. I suppose you could say, he had no authority beyond that of 'pointing out', but he was always pointing out something that most of us don't see, otherwise there would have been nothing to say. — Wayfarer
This is a pointless response — Janus
You misunderstand. My suggestion is that we approach religion in the same way as we should do philosophy, by abandoning all our ideologies, beliefs, hopes, dreams, theories and views and other useless baggage at the door — FrancisRay
I am going a little out of bounds of the norm by coming here unsolicited. — TLCD1996
This is because you are caught up in naive realism — FrancisRay
But I cannot understand your fatalism — Chris1952Engineer
My argument with Wayferer is just that he won't admit the difference I am pointing to, insofar as he wants to claims that religious experience yields inter-subjectively determinable knowledge, and yet is unable to say how that could be possible. — Janus
Yes. I'm saying there's no need for this situation. Most people do not approach religion and philosophy as I suggest, so trouble follows. — FrancisRay
What I'm arguing is simply that, unlike mathematics, logic and the empirical sciences, where conclusions may be drawn and tested, no rational, that is testable, conclusions can be drawn from religious or peak experiences. — Janus
Yes, my grandfather had Parkinson's and increasingly severe dementia over a period of 15 years — jamalrob
I hope you find a way to deal with it, even if it involves defining waves out of existence. — jamalrob
I also seek the right attitudes for dealing with these things, but for me, metaphysics doesn't help. — jamalrob
Regarding my own death, often I think I would like to be a fighter to the bitter end, like your mother — jamalrob
think we can interpret this as saying that it's precisely the patterns that can be said to significantly exist, rather than matter without form. — jamalrob
I think you need to have greater faith in the "Silent Majority", the Philosophy of science and technological progress. — Chris1952Engineer
Or simply the advances just slows down — ssu
Let's instead take seriously the position that people and waves and other such composite objects don't exist, that patterns in general don't exist. — jamalrob
Does it then follow that people don't die? — jamalrob
Surely what follows is that dying describes the destruction of a pattern — jamalrob
If this is right, then there is little comfort in knowing that nothing has ceased to exist — jamalrob
Nobody says that only things with mass exist, I don't think — jamalrob
Because it's the wave that I observed, that I loved, that was part of my world, and that is gone. I don't give a shit about the water and energy. You see the problem? — jamalrob
It is the universal cause of existence while itself existing not, for it is beyond all being’ (from his book On the Divine Names). This might seem like nonsense — FrancisRay
No, I really do think your definition of existence is wrong, and obviously so, and I don't think it's a popular view either in philosophy or on the street. — jamalrob
but a man named Schleiermacher (as a member of a "group of Romantics") was noted for his insistence that religion be defined not be its texts, but on a feeling; a universal feeling of intimate oneness with the universe. — TLCD1996
My experience is that starting debates or arguments gets you bad looks, or you may be approached about the issue later; depending on one's relationship to the community, they may be asked to leave. — TLCD1996
You asked what was misleading and I’ve shown it — praxis
So you agree that forms and patterns are the same thing, but you've said that forms of energy or matter can be destroyed, after saying that patterns cannot. — jamalrob
Anyway, to my knowledge there is no such philosophical position on existence as the one you mention. — jamalrob
My nitpicking is to try and make things clear and coherent — jamalrob
If by "we" you mean philosophers, yes sure, but when I said "we" I meant people, and people value more than mere thought. — jamalrob
Yes. The message is not the thing. It's just the message. The word 'elephant' is not an elephant. I don't think there's any reason for this issue to cause problems. — FrancisRay
We learn that it's a good idea to investigate the world with logic and experience and not just speculate or buy into someone else's ideas — FrancisRay
So the only way for humans is to find a way to live with it — Skeptic
I don't think so. — jamalrob
So according to you, it is not just matter and energy that exist, but matter and energy that has taken various forms, e.g., water? — jamalrob
What is the difference between a form and a pattern? What makes a water molecule different from a wave, such that one exists and the other doesn't? — jamalrob
You've mentioned "our definition" of existence a couple of times now, but this is far from a settled question in philosophy, and you haven't been explicit about it. — jamalrob
Why would anyone agree with a scheme in which matter and energy cannot be destroyed, but molecules can, but waves and people can't? — jamalrob
Anyway, let's say that we cannot die and waves cannot be destroyed. Where does that leave us? — jamalrob
What we value, in fact what we're actually talking about when we talk about death, destruction, and even existence, is the patterns. All you've done is redefine them. — jamalrob
It means that in any given time in human society will be a significant number of people without wisdom and there is not way to avoid that (at least, without losing human nature) — Skeptic
Oneness is always the core message — FrancisRay
But things that exist cannot be destroyed either, as you stated — jamalrob
But you did claim that patterns are created, when you said that a wave was "a pattern created by energy applied to water". But surely something that can be created can be destroyed, no? — jamalrob
So it needs to be found somehow — EnPassant
So I cannot be destroyed because I'm not the kind of thing that cannot be destroyed? — jamalrob
They don't have to be people associated with philosophy — WISDOMfromPO-MO