You should at least try to show where I demonstrate a lack of understanding — praxis
We don't know with any kind of certainty that the logical outcome is eventual chaos. — ChatteringMonkey
Even if that would be the eventual outcome of "the process of knowledge accumulation", knowledge is not a singular thing. Some types may be dangerous, some not so much etc... — ChatteringMonkey
And even if we were to assume that such a general conclusion can be meaningful, it doesn't follow that this should be the only perspective a human being living here and now should take. — ChatteringMonkey
I believe what you are describing is called "the technological singularity". https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technological_singularity — Philosophim
The technological singularity—also, simply, the singularity[1]—is a hypothetical point in time at which technological growth becomes uncontrollable and irreversible, resulting in unforeseeable changes to human civilization
On my side, I was/am interested in getting continuously enough scientific knowledge (thru my experiments and analyses after graduation) to just gain my daily bread — KerimF
If only you could be so frugal with what bounces around in your head. But please, you were going to show there I demonstrate a lack of understanding. — praxis
So show where I demonstrate a lack understanding. — praxis
Cute caricature that shows how your mind works. The crazy thing is that the only thing I’d doing in this topic is committing the cardinal sin of arguing that Buddhism is a religion — praxis
Claiming that I don’t understand the issues rather than addressing my points — praxis
There is no such thing as unconditional love. It does not exist — Konkai
I see no attempt by you to understand the issues. — FrancisRay
I cannot see the point of your approach — FrancisRay
clearly it prevents you from learning anything — FrancisRay
That is the core of the topic, after all — praxis
Whinny ad hominem attacks — praxis
In a word, to gotcha! — praxis
What criteria could exclude the act of wanting from everything else? — TheMadFool
I'm very curious about what factors lead to how a person thinks — Aristotle21
Why doesn't everyone that has the least criticism of society go and live somewhere else? — unenlightened
This is just like 100% wrong. — frank
I think you should write to Reagan and tell him this arms race has to stop! — frank
When Lao Tsu is asked how he knows the truth about origins and creation he replies, 'I look inside myself and see'. He says nothing about looking 'out there' in the world — FrancisRay
If the source of 'binary distinctions (the categories of thought) is thought itself, the very nature of thought, then thought is the source of distinctions and divisions in the world. This is mysticism. The idea is that Reality is undivided and free of all distinctions but thought chops it up into subjects and objects, here and there, this and that. — FrancisRay
This chopping-up or symmetry-breaking would create the words of life and death. Buddhism would be a way to re-unify life and death by revealing the underlying state common to both. — FrancisRay
I think you're proving that all that is required for Buddhist philosophy is clear thinking, or enlightened common sense. — FrancisRay
He is saying the metaphysics does not endorse a positive result, which is a fact well-known to most philosophers. It is just that most cannot make sense of this fact. Mysticism allows us to make sense of it and thus understand philosophy. — FrancisRay
"The Truth" lies just beyond the symbolic realm. It's right there in front of our face at all times. — FrancisRay
On what grounds do you make this claim? — FrancisRay
This is what Nagarjuna proves — FrancisRay
If the source of binary thinking is thought itself (and not the binary world 'out there') then the source of the world 'out there' is thought. . — FrancisRay
Yes. It is not possible to think without using the categories of thought, which are binary. You're making many good Buddhist arguments — FrancisRay
Yes. Hence Buddhism is rather more than just calming the mind. — FrancisRay
The point was not to critique anyone’s habits but to point out that if the religious were actually motivated by what they claim to be motivated by, some form of salvation, then they would behave accordingly — praxis
For a practitioner discursive philosophy is not important, but for anyone else it is the only way to work out where the truth lies — FrancisRay
So thought is important and unimportant, necessary and unnecessary. Lau Tsu tells us 'True words seem paradoxical' and this is what Nagarjuna proves in logic.We-are and are-not, says Heraclitus, and this dual-aspect view is what we need to understand for a grasp of what Buddhism is about. We have to go beyond the binary yes-no, on-off kind of thinking that causes Western metaphysics to be useless, and it's not an easy trick to learn. — FrancisRay
If you want to take this 'no-thought' route then Zen practice would be just the ticket. But this profoundly simple practice is justified in philosophy by Nagarjuna's not-so-simple logic. — FrancisRay
To a Buddhist your paragraph is a muddle of misconceptions. What you call the real world would be unreal. What makes you say it is real? Realism causes nothing but paradoxes and contradictions in metaphysics, which suggest it is false. — FrancisRay
I realise you want to throw philosophy away, but God gave us a brain and we may as well use it. — FrancisRay
Not to take this antidote is to risk believeing all sorts of nonsense. — FrancisRay
I suspect your low view of philosophy — FrancisRay
Simply put, we need to learn how to think skillfully. — TLCD1996
Complete non sequitur. — praxis
Other than that, I endorse everything TLCD1996 has said above (with the caveat that his username sounds like a bus license plate :-) ). — Wayfarer
The perfection is not "out there", that's the thing. Even though we get our ideals and guidance from "out there", it's all "in here". — TLCD1996
You say there's pros and cons, the Buddha says yes: and therefore it's unsatisfactory, and one ought to abandon that for something more refined, to the point where "happiness" and "suffering" are both transcended — TLCD1996
Having faulty thought content can cause suffering by putting us into conflict with the world or even ourselves. — TLCD1996
But thoughts are not easy to tame — TLCD1996
You claimed that a practitioner would know what Buddhism (a religion) is. My point was that religious followers are notoriously often mislead. — praxis
Your comment relates to the commonplace dogmatic kind of monotheism but is not relevant where a religion is the search for truth. — FrancisRay
Put another way, what if the psychic nutrition we seek can be found in the experience of observation itself, and is thus not dependent upon any insights which may or may not arise as a result of that experience? — FrancisRay
I'm not sure I understand this question. — FrancisRay
Certainly the question 'Who is observing?' would be vital since it comes down to 'Who am I?'. — FrancisRay
Yes. yes, yes. Spot on! You say you know little of Buddhism and yet you say nothing but sensible things about it. — FrancisRay
Mysticism asks us to investigate who is doing the looking. Basically the idea is to discover that we are not body or mind. — FrancisRay