I think "ambitious" is commonly defined as having a desire for fame, wealth, power, prestige, achievement, etc., in other words for things which make a person impressive, notable to others and influential over others. Ancient Stoicism expressly condemned that desire. — Ciceronianus
I was acknowledging Baker's answer to my response. I wasn't aware that respect meant that I had to be in total agreement too. — Tom Storm
I certainly understand how people might view optimism in a complex world like ours as requiring a profound or robust framework to hold it up. — Tom Storm
Thanks for your response. I respect this. :up: — Tom Storm
I'd love to see these modern-day stoics (and the old ones, too, actually) cope with some real problems, like poverty on the verge of homelessness or grave illness, or both.
— baker
I don’t see how your sadistic appetite is relevant to our little chat.
— praxis
*sigh*
When evaluating something that is proposed as a coping strategy, one has to test it to see how it performs under pressure. — baker
Read the god damn thread and keep up with the discussion, instead of me having to repeat to you everything over and over and reply to everything to you specifically. — baker
Normally, when Buddhists talk of emptiness, they mean it in the Mahayana sense ("nothing has any inherent existence or nature"). But that's not what it means in Theravada
I'd love to see these modern-day stoics (and the old ones, too, actually) cope with some real problems, like poverty on the verge of homelessness or grave illness, or both. — baker
That's in roundabout how the Stoic feels about himself, except that his reference frame isn't the powerful tribe, but Nature, the Divine.
— baker
Why would that be necessary to practice stoicism?
— praxis
Because otherwise, you're just a poor sod in the gutter repeating some silly self-help soundbites to himself. — baker
Shakespeare also incorporated a lot from Stoicism... — Shawn
Abortion is awful! — PatriciaCollins
This really isn't rocket science. But yes, modern-day people tend to lack a sense of proper pride and dignity, so they can't relate to those who have them. — baker
Drop political correctness for a moment and try to envision yourself as a powerful member of a powerful tribe. Can you do it? — baker
That's in roundabout how the Stoic feels about himself, except that his reference frame isn't the powerful tribe, but Nature, the Divine. — baker
They [modern-day stoics] have abandoned the metaphysical underpinnings of Stoicism, which, however, are of vital importance for contextualizing Stoic ethics, making them actionable, without too much difficulty and regret. — baker
Do you think that it's true that the stoic attains inner calm or peace through apathy? — Shawn
Why is this so hard for you to understand? — Pop
Xuit is an ungrounded variable mental construct: Objects are arbitrarily deemed to be xuit. Xuit’s only necessary distinction from ordinary objects is the extra deemed xuit information. Xuit can be anything the xuitist thinks of, but this is limited by their consciousness. — “Alter-Pop”
Completely in character, Pop completely ignores the fact.
— praxis
:roll: For the tenth time, and it is the first paragraph of the definition.
Proof of the definition:
1. Art is an ungrounded variable mental construct: Objects are arbitrarily deemed to be art. Art’s only necessary distinction from ordinary objects is the extra deemed art information. Art can be anything the artist thinks of, but this is limited by their consciousness.
— Pop — Pop
For what reasons would that person deem one object to be art and the other object not art ?
— RussellA
Ha, ha. This is something you would have to ask the person deeming one object art, and the other one not. But there would be reasons, or in other words something about their state of mind or thinking ( consciousness ) would result in such an action. Because consciousness is "integrated information", the choices people make are congruous with their general state of mind, so when they make the choice that something is art this is an aspect of their general mind activity, and in an ideal setting we should be able to infer a lot of their mind activity from the clues provided in what they choose as their art. — Pop
This would not have been possible in Jane Austin's England. If you hung a piece of rubbish on your wall - you would be carted off to the nut house. You could only hang ideal landscapes, or if you could afford it portraits.
…
My point is that consciousness evolves both collectively and individually and art reflects this. — Pop
the fevered media treatment unlike the world has ever seen, peering into every facet of his life. — NOS4A2
This emergent understanding of information was critical to this definition of art. Wit could not find something singular that all art is, and in his time information was something one exchanged with the neighbors over the back fence. We now know definitively that all art is information - since information is fundamental. The only question that then remains for art is - information about what? And the obvious answer is consciousness. The term consciousness captures the mind activity that leads to the creation of art, and how the art is limited only by the consciousness that creates it - which when we look at art across cultures, and through the ages, seems so obvious. To me at least - :lol: - but it has the consequence of ruffling feathers, since we all know exactly what art is! - right? — Pop
talk about complex transmissions of information may be true, as the actuarial tables are true — Constance
life and death qualitatively has nothing whatsoever to do with actuarial tables — Constance
This is why your announcement that art in information offends others here. — Constance
They think art is profound, religious, or deeply meaningful. — Constance
My trouble, as I read through this, is that it is entirely a quantifiable analysis. Aesthetics is not quantifiable, or it is (in some hedonic scheme), but this is not the point; the point is, quantifying is altogether absent of the quality, and aesthetics is all about quality. All talk about complex transmissions of information may be true, as the actuarial tables are true for people selling insurance, and no one can say such tables are false, or wrong. They're not. But then, life and death qualitatively has nothing whatsoever to do with actuarial tables. This is why your announcement that art in information offends others here. They think art is profound, religious, or deeply meaningful. Others look to the meanings in play, how truth connects to images, how images are iconographic reflections of the self; and so on. — Constance
I will not tolerate histrionic whinging and whining, or backhanded derision without reciprocating. — Pop
Your mate did not understand what a scientific definition of art even means. It means that the definition is relevant for all art ever made, regardless of culture, from the furthest past, to the most distant future. — Pop
Claiming that art is an expression of consciousness in no way contradicts aestheticism.
— praxis
I don't wish to say that art is not aesthetic, plainly it is. However all experience is aesthetic, so to focus on aesthetics as the defining feature that separates art from everything else is an error. — Pop
So art is information about the artist's consciousness (hopefully you understand consciousness a little more broadly by now). — Pop
Yes art is aesthetic … You can not, and you have not put forward any arguments or propositions that define art in terms of aesthetics — Pop
… most pertinent element of all art - that it is information about consciousness. This makes all art meaningful, as an expression of consciousness, regardless of anybody's personal preferences or motives, or understanding. — Pop
I too remember the post where we said we were discussing actual policy. — StreetlightX
conservatives like punishing women (cf. Texas) — StreetlightX
