"Life" might be nothing more than an ongoing, self-esteeming story certain ephemeral, coprophagic arrangements of matter are telling themselves. :flower: — 180 Proof
They see in essentially the same way as we do. To see non-dually would mean to entirely lack the ability to distinguish anything. A tree, for instance, couldn’t be distinguished from the ground or the sky or any part of its surroundings. There could be no tree/not-tree duality, right? — praxis
I don't think it is accurate to assume that if someone has no experience of the numinous they are not interested in what people think it is. — Tom Storm
Just briefly, what do you mean by practice or incentive? — Tom Storm
Ok. I don't think I have any idea of the numinous but I get your general point. I suppose I wonder how long does one sit in this 'letting go-ness' and where does it take you? Are you suggesting perhaps some kind of meditative experience with some eventual form of enlightenment?
This notion that - all experience is, primordially, prior to subject and object and all the linguistically generated dualities that flow on from that - seems to be arrived at through conscious judgment and rationality. — Tom Storm
Nice. — Banno
Being wedded to the view that duality is sin and non-duality is virtue is extremely dualistic, and unrealistic, isn’t it? The best we can do is merely reduce anxiety by quieting our minds. To see non-dually is to not see at all. — praxis
Maybe I have you wrong but isn't this the kind of dogmatic position you were speaking against earlier? What do you mean by seeing the world non-dually? Do you mean holding a monist ontology like idealism? — Tom Storm
The problem is that some assumptions lead us toward understanding, while others lead us toward misunderstanding. Since understanding is what is desired over misunderstanding, it is appropriate to say that some assumptions are correct and others incorrect. — Metaphysician Undercover
Obviously a big call, but what I have in mind is very like what is described by avidya, in Eastern philosophy - it’s usually translated as ignorance, but I think something like spiritual blindness is more apt. It’s kind of like ‘sin’ albeit more cognitive than volitional - that ‘we don’t see the world aright’. (I’ve long thought that the fact that it became entangled with dogma about sin is one of the things that prevents us from seeing it.) Hey I know that’s bound to be controversial but I can’t help but see it like that. — Wayfarer
Philosophy delivers only contextual truths, and there are as many possible assumptions to begin from as there are philosophies. — Janus
Isn’t that cultural relativism? I know it’s very difficult to adjudicate betweeen the thousands of systems of ideas out there but some must resonate, and some decision must be made as to which. — Wayfarer
I wouldn't say that the calculation performed by a computer was material, even though it is the result of a physical process. Indeed, it seems to me to be rather misleading. — Ludwig V
But going back to the rock interacting with the tree, I would like to at least ask the question how it is that physical properties obtain without perception. What is it that interaction between non-perceiving objects is like? And you see, this IS where this direct/indirect/ideal becomes kind of "personal" for those who care about metaphysical theories. As I said before, I think informs the perceiving interactions. — schopenhauer1
That is to say, the human, bat, and slug are experiencing a "real" tree, but each one "constructs" (and there is the indirect) the tree differently. — schopenhauer1
I don’t think it’s a contradiction but I’m unwilling to work out exactly why it isn’t. The main point is that what you call a transformative process of liberation, others would call a purely negative effort to clear up some deep confusions. Getting our house in order so we can all get on with whatever it is that we already, with no input from philosophy, regard as important in our social and spiritual lives. It is in this sense that some critics have labelled him as basically conservative.
I think they’re pretty much right but I also think Wittgenstein is great. — Jamal
As I understand it, his deep project was about the meaning of being, so wouldn’t that entail an “understanding of how things can come to be as they are”? — Jamal
I think it can be coherently argued that the principle problem of philosophy is precisely learning to perceive truly. This does not only apply to the hypothetical tree, apple, or coffee cup which is the perennial stand-in for ‘the world’. If you go back to the beginning of philosophy (with Parmenides and the Eleatics) the understanding of how things can come to be as they are is the fundamental question. I *think* this is what Heidegger was attempting to revive with his question of ‘the meaning of being’. — Wayfarer
Correct, though if I was a good realist, I’d add in evolutionary fit regarding why this empirical world and not a bats, or a slug, let alone interaction without animal perception. — schopenhauer1
I have two modes that I haven’t quite been able to reconcile. One is my Anglo mode, in which I’m a plain-speaking direct realist, and the other is my sort of phenomenological, sort of Marxian, quite traditional, wannabe Hegelian mode, in which philosophy has ambitions as grand as you’ve set out here. From the latter point of view, Wittgenstein’s statement that philosophy “leaves everything as it is” is an abomination. — Jamal
But this is trivially true regardless of one's metaphysics. — Janus
Oh, that's good. Shoudl save plenty of paper, then. — Banno
Realism holds that the sentence "the tree has leaves" is about the tree, and not about the perception of the tree, or our beliefs about the tree, or any other relation between ourselves and the tree. That the tree has leaves is true if and only if the tree has leaves, regardless of what we perceive or believe. — Banno
Got it. Well, I think his idea of "immediate intuitions" are "unmediated" awareness of sensory input, it's not necessarily an accurate picture of the external world. — schopenhauer1
I think it’s more that he is reacting to the equally incoherent claim that we don’t perceive things “as they (really) are”. — Jamal
And yet they strut and prance as if their naivete were in fact sharp insight. That is what is most objectionable. — hypericin
The central claim of direct or naive realism is that we perceive things "as the are". Apples look red because that's really how apples look. This is called naive because I think we all start from there, we intuitively take this for granted as children. In some people this perspective is never abandoned, and they try to buttress this unchallenged intuition with philosophical arguments. — hypericin
It would be wrong to interpret him as saying that we just see things in our heads. — Jamal
Kant was a direct realist. The external world is the “empirically real” and the tree is an empirical object that we experience “immediately”. See the “Refutation of Idealism”. — Jamal
Yours is pretty ordinary at the moment. — Banno
Does the camera, producing the photo, directly perceive the tree? — bongo fury
Pfff. — Banno
All philosophy is word play. — Banno
But that's not the same as being arbitrary — Ludwig V
One reason I like to post here is to see criticism of what I think. — Art48
So, substance is a theoretical construct; it's something we assume to exist as the bearer of properties. But we don't directly experience substance.
Of course, we don't directly experience protons, quarks, etc. either so maybe the phrase "just a word" is unjustified. — Art48
Common sense may say that “Substance is Just a Word” is a deepity. I want to argue it is not: that in a substantial sense (pun intended), substance is just a word. — Art48
If nothing is left, then substance is indeed just a word, a word that refers to nothing in the real world. “Substance” becomes a linguistic shorthand for a set of properties: red, sweet, of a certain shape, mass, etc. Therefore, it’s a word, no more. — Art48
So, the difference is in the mode of existence of both apple’s properties, not in some imaginary substance which one apple possesses and the other does not. — Art48
I'm sorry, I'm not ready to venture on articulating general criteria. It's a very complex topic and I have never seen anything more helpful than very general remarks.
Do you have something specific in mind? — Ludwig V
The universe/world/moon/whatever is a featureless, undifferentiated and meaningless aggregation of matter-energy which is only differentiated into separate objects, with features and locations - which comes into being - in the mind of the observer. — Wayfarer
Particles are easy to envisage - look at a pinch of salt, or a handful of sand. The original atom was indivisible, the model of atoms and the void a binary comprising absolute existents and absolute non-existence. Very simple. The modern landscape is considerably more layered than that. — Wayfarer
But it has a specific function and serves an essential purpose just as much as a pen does if not more so.
As I say I still think the no design position is equally as speculative as the design position and also unfalsifiable. — Andrew4Handel
Also the recent explosion of human technology in a short period shows that what is said to take millions of years to evolve can be created in a few years with intelligence. — Andrew4Handel
A computer has numerous purposes and not one specific purpose and apparently unlimited potential. A pen can be used to sign a check, write a novel or draw a picture or to scratch an itch. — Andrew4Handel
The no design position to me is more of an interpretation than anything falsifiable. We know the heart has a function because when it fails you get very sick or die. — Andrew4Handel
