It simply goes against logic. — ssu
Are you you suggesting that all mental activities are just neuronal events and that mental causation is illusory? That's what Jaegwon Kim has said (he says mental causation would imply overdetermination). This is possible, of course, since theories in philosophy of mind are all conjectural. I'd just say that I consider Tse's theory more compelling because it jives with the intuition that mental causation is real. — Relativist
Just sitting in Zazen is Enlightenment. "Ordinary mind," is bodily aware-ing "freed" from the displacement of projecting mind.
That's what I took Janus to mean. And that's why Schopenhauer "failed" when he misapplied some of the projections to the Will (given that the Will, for him, is ultimate reality) — ENOAH
Ok, and I see this position commonly in various forms. I respect it and desire it. But why? Why is it that "object" referenced as noumena necessarily (if that's what you're
saying) exist beyond thought? And they must, you already accept we cannot know their form. So we are speculating about both their existence and form. We might as well resign ourselves to the fact that idea is as far as we go. If there is a reality it is utterly other than any idea we have. — ENOAH
I understand. What are the real things in themselves? Are they just that? Real? Is it plural, as you suggested?
If we "designate" the idea of God as noumenal because we cannot know God, is then God, independent of our knowing, Real? And would that apply to all so called noumena?
Is the real not utterly inaccessible to knowledge, and that's why Kant was "right" to keep his distance? — ENOAH
Yes, I was agreeing, and hinting that this necessary conclusion is my problem with Schopenhauer, whether he meant it or not. But I can't believe he fully meant it. Not judging his genius. Obviously. More his context, historical, and otherwise. — ENOAH
I'm just interested in your take on this. Same with my second "reply". I agree with you, insofar as the word fits; more like, you're enlightening me to more perspectives — ENOAH
But Kant, who completely and irresponsibly neglected the issue for which the terms φαινομένα and νοούμενα were already in use, then took possession of the terms as if they were stray and ownerless, and used them as designations of things in themselves and their appearances.
Or is it utterly absent and there is only will and Representation, and will is not a being but a drive? — ENOAH
But you nevertheless contribute to what that future will be. — Relativist
On the other hand, compatibilism is consistent with PAFP: the principle of alternative FUTURE possibilities - and that's what you describe. — Relativist
And those things that we cause were the product of our mental processes, influenced by our genetic and psychological make-up. — Relativist
I was addressing your "thesis" that everyone who lived before modern optics must have been a naive realist. — Leontiskos
It seems that, by and large, the ancient and medieval philosophers were naive realists even if they believed in the reality of a higher realm. — Janus
They could be realists who don't believe in the tangible quality of ultimate reality. — L'éléphant
There is no way that can be equated with naive realism. — Wayfarer
Not the trees, not the animals, not the planets -- but "stuff". — L'éléphant
There is this weird myth that pre-modern philosophers were naive realists, or even a backwards projection of positivist notions of "objectivity," on to them. I don't think this could be further from the truth. How the nature of the knowing subject affects knowledge is an area of considerable focus in medieval thought. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Accordingly, it's not well suited for metaphysical and epistemological problems, and it's confusing when applied in this way. — Metaphysician Undercover
Anyone who understands what feelings and thoughts are understands this. — Leontiskos
What you mean to say is—simplifying even further to highlight the tautology—people do (moral) things because they believe they should do (moral) things. This doesn't say anything at all. It certainly doesn't amount to a moral theory. — Leontiskos
"epistemology is like chess" (↪Janus). — Leontiskos
I think we can only know what experience, and reflection on the nature of experience tells us. We can also elaborate and extrapolate from formal rule-based systems like logic, mathematics, chess, Go etc. — Janus
Normative does not equate to imperative. — Janus
in the world, the "material basis" of ethics and religion is excatly to the point. But as a metaphysical thesis that posits the most basic thinking in ontology, material being it is most misleading, for even at best, it is just a functional place holder for general references. At worst, it is entirely vacuous, for one can never witness "material being" since being is not A being. — Constance
No, I prefer to keep with reality. What is THERE, evident to our sight, and makes the strongest claim to the Real? I'd say a death by a thousand cuts qualifies, or being in love, or Hagen Dasz, a close second. — Constance
This is a metaphysical question and the classification takes us into far less solid analytical territory, at least at first. — Constance
But being is not A being. It is not here and there, but rather here and there are "in" being. — Constance
We are, in the most basic way to put, existence itself, not a localized thing. — Constance
Observe and think, only here, we have withdrawn from empirical categories because the question is not an empirical one. Nor is it about the analyticity of logic. It is about the analyticity of existence. — Constance
Not at all intersted in ancient thinking, though the ancients themselves are quite interesting. — Constance
Yet I know my knowing this is through the general, the historicity of coffee cups, cups in general, drinking vessels and on and on. The apprehension of THIS coffee cup is through this language that understands things, not through any direct apprehension of the object. — Constance
The first sentence seems to rely on peer pressure for bindingness; the third sentence seems to rely on the idea that the consensus of a large enough sample of human opinion will tend to be correct (I forget the name which is often given to this idea). The problem with consensus-based views is that consensus is not in itself a truthmaker. The claim that consensus is a truthmaker for moral propositions therefore requires additional explanation. — Leontiskos
Suffering is presence-in-the-world, while material substance altogether lacks presence, yet the latter rules modern ontology. Patently absurd. No, the real belongs to value, greater or lesser, it is the very foundation of meaning. — Constance
Of course there would not be pain without awareness of it. We live to some extent at least, conscious lives. It is very difficult to consciously eliminate intense physical pain from consciousness; we need physical intervention to achieve that. We need analgesics and anesthetics to eliminate pain.I agree. The point is, what IS it? — Constance
The world has to be first defined. — Constance
But go a step further into Kant, where Hegel got it. The universal is part of the structure of language's logic. — Constance
Just because you cannot imagine it, does not make it impossible right? — Philosophim
So it is imaginable then. And an eternal existence can still be empirical, so then it seems logical there could be one. — Philosophim
The essential attributes of the idea of a guarantor of objective moral good must be universality, eternality and thus transcendence.
— Janus
Why? Can you prove that then more than your opinion? — Philosophim
So you can see the standards your arguments need to be raised to to counter the OP. — Philosophim
Where is your proof that an objective moral good could not possibly be an empirical existent? — Philosophim
Finally, it doesn't matter whether the existence is transcendent, empirical, etc. If it exists, it exists. — Philosophim
But so far, you have not presented anything pertinent against the actual argument, just an opinion. — Philosophim
So then we're back to the point where my points remain unchallenged. — Philosophim
Given his "fundamental question", maybe Constance has not considered (e.g.) Spinoza's conatus. — 180 Proof
But ask a more fundamental question: why do we "care"? — Constance
this passes by a very important primordiality of our existence which is at the root of ethics and religion: caring. — Constance
Caring's existential counterpart, the experience itself of the elation, the sad disappointment, the humiliation you mention above, it is this Wittgenstein could not find "in the world". — Constance
I mean, horrible pain is momentous existentially! — Constance
