The full potential of the brain and the soul is not realized. — macrosoft
In a good way, you kind of remind me of my cat. You push lots of buttons to see what happens. She pushes objects around with a sort of focus and curiosity. — macrosoft
I try to be an original philosopher, synthesizing and paraphrasing everything that seems great. On an 'existential' level, I have no choice. I react to being thrown into this particular life. On a creative level, I just really like pulling phrases out of my soul, especially when I can sketch the forest. There's just some kind of reliable pleasure in grasping the essence of situations conceptually/metaphorically. — macrosoft
You might say that I like philosophy to include the concerns of existentialism. — macrosoft
Understanding obtains when one assigns meanings to objects, actions or events in a way that is coherent and consistent — Terrapin Station
Yeah, I'd say that of course the external world exists. My point is maybe that it doesn't exist as a theoretical object. — macrosoft
I just mean that though likes can be called preferences, that word sounds unnecessarily neutral. "Likes" more fully expresses their positive nature. — Michael Ossipoff
I don't check to see if I have hands before I reach for my coffee. — macrosoft
Firstly, unless we have possessive desires, there are too many apostrophes in the title. — Banno
They are there like a dark background for the most part. — macrosoft
If you mean that all the facts are entangled in a system, then that is my cup of tea. — macrosoft
I'm not even saying I disagree, but what is a fact for you? Merely offering the phrase out of context doesn't say much. This is my tedious meaning holism. To figure out what that sentence means to you, I have to get to know you. By all means, tell me how it exists for you in context. — macrosoft
I mean "preferences" is true, but it doesn't sound like as much fun. — Michael Ossipoff
To me it's not particularly useful to say that the world is the totality of facts. Or its useful for one particular purpose. I think roughly that Wittgenstein was annoyed at people being scientistic about religion and art, and that that was part of his goal, to reveal the mystery by clearing out the confusion. — macrosoft
but ultimately it comes down to likes. — Michael Ossipoff
That's one of the small number of things Wittgenstein said that I agree with. ;-)' — Terrapin Station
Some people think that meaning is llterally "embedded" in objective stuff. For one, I'd guess that you're familiar with Putnam's work on meaning, no? — Terrapin Station
My understanding of humans includes that they will die without water and feel pretty bad on the way to that thirsty grave. It also includes the idea that humans can individually become fixated on objects or ideas that leave others cold. One man will die for what another considers a joke or a bore. — macrosoft
Oh, I agree with that, roughly or sufficiently. I think it's pretty much always possible to qualify, qualify, qualify --but not always appropriate, else we'd never finish one thing and start another. — macrosoft
The first brief answer that occurs to me is to quote Kentucky Buddhist Ken Keyes...his statement that we have likes, which needn't be called "wants" or "needs".
That's the short version, and you asked for a very brief concise statement. — Michael Ossipoff
Perhaps. But if I'm honest, I'm not getting a clear picture of your perspective. — macrosoft
