Just because we can do something does not mean we can understand it...
— synthesis
...then you mean something curious by "understand". One checks that a child understands addition by having them add various numbers; one checks that someone understands the road rules by watching their driving.
...since every "thing" that exists in the Universe is (technically) unique, how can more than one of anything exist?
— synthesis
More fumbling with words. Are you claiming not to know how to add 1+1? That's hardly going to improve your standing. — Banno
I know what you're trying to say. To me it seems like you're focussing too much on impermanence and should rather be explaining non-duality or transcendence to us. — praxis
But it 's not impossible. We do understand reality. You, for example, understand how to write in English on a web forum. — Banno
What is so difficult about observing or understanding impermanence? It seems extraordinarily simple to me. It is also * * * dare I say it * * * an intellection. — praxis
That's pivotal here. The discussion of truth in the OP is set as if it were an analysis, but isn't.
It's statements that are true or false. Synthesis appeals to a different thing, Truth. inventing a dichotomy between relative and absolute; then complains that one cannot talk about the absolute, while all along talking about it.
So as Pop points out, the dichotomy collapses on itself. — Banno
I understand what you mean but for me, without being exposed to a certain quality of ideas including a sense of scale and relativity that allowed me to experience human meaning and purpose within universal meaning and purpose, I'd be dead now and a sacrifice to alcohol.. — Nikolas
Every death is a tragedy, but intelligent and thoughtful people need to be able to hold two ideas in their minds: One, that the deaths are bad; and two, that in many cases they have been politicized. — fishfry
I just found a quote which I thought perhaps is useful for reflection, by an author called Bruno Scattolin:
'Truth is relative, reality is absolute. But as you are plunged into the world of relativism you can only have a partial perception of reality.'
So, what this is suggesting is that it is not that there is no absolute, but that we are locked into a particular limitation of perspective, in space and time, and one's whole cultural and personal embodiment. — Jack Cummins
There can be only ONE Absolute. The Absolute is NOW. While existence within NOW is a process. We can become aware of a quality of reality within creation above Plato's divided line that is beyond our sensory limitations. We can call it mystical but it still may be logical
Do you agree with the four cognitive states described by Plato?
noesis (immediate intuition, apprehension, or mental 'seeing' of principles)
dianoia (discursive thought)
pistis (belief or confidence)
eikasia (delusion or sheer conjecture)
Secularism is limited to discursive thought while noesis experiences intuition. As a creature within creation serving the process of existence, noesis is the limit of our intellect. NOW IS while the process of existence and its relative states all takes place within NOW. — Nikolas
He who knows, does not speak. He who speaks, does not know. — Laozi
It may be the goal of spirituality but it’s certainty not the goal of religion. If it were the goal of religion then it would all be geared towards that end, but it’s not. Even in a relatively austere tradition like zen it’s not. — praxis
There are some who have experienced the inner vertical direction beginning at the relative level and concluding at the Absolute and some who are not yet able if it exists. The Absolute is beyond our sensory limitations but can be experienced by noesis or a higher form of intellect. Plato's Ladder of Love is good example. It begins at the animal level and concludes as a "form" and part of the eternal unchanging beyond. Contemplating the ladder allows us to experience this inner vertical direction which connects the relative with the Absolute. — Nikolas
All things knowable (intellectual) are relative. These things that exist intellectually are constantly changing, exist in time, therefore their relative nature.
I think that's where you lose me a bit because this takes far more rigor to prove than what you have stated. Moreso, I think there are knowable things that are absolute, like math for instance, and since you said all my one example fails your argument. — Humean316
You speak of two forms of truth, relative and absolute. I am not sure that it can be divided so distinctly and think that there may be a whole spectrum of possibilities. Also, in thinking about the idea of the inevitable, I think that this is a word chosen by the mystics. The problem with this for philosophy is that we are trying to get to the whole where we can grasp to explain everything in words. — Jack Cummins
However, one of the problems with this is that there are levels of reality which are beyond us in the epistemological sense. Obviously, I don't think that we should make excuses for ourselves, but our brains and perceptual apparatus may not have the capability. Plato's idea of the Forms behind the cave of shadows was one round it, but I am sure that the whole idea of Forms is open for debate. — Jack Cummins
Perhaps the way forward in the current paradigm is in the realm of quantum dimensionality. Nevertheless, even then, this is the territory of the mystics, although most people seem to just stand back in awe of quantum physics. Perhaps that is because it is seen as mystique as opposed to mystical, because people feel blinded by the knowledge and language of the new physics. — Jack Cummins
If all truth is relative, then so is absolute truth. So all truth is relative - end of story? — Pop
... that which exist outside of our intellect (The Absolute).
The absolute [ ... ] is unknowable, unchangeable, and exists outside of time.
— synthesis
Which is it? The "intellect" and "time" are not the same, the latter is definitely "outside of" the former (insofar as "our intellect" is itself temporal).
And how does one even know that there is an X given that it is "unknowable"? — 180 Proof
But what is consider as absolute to you, it is so relative for me. — javi2541997
It's trying and failing to understand that leads to the mystery. — T Clark
Keep in mind that the TTC is written in ancient Chinese. Apparently even Chinese speakers have trouble understanding it. — T Clark
I think you will find what all these destructive groups share, is exclusive group identity, and that is the more likely culprit, rather than groups themselves. — Tzeentch
I don't think the health care system would mind you doing that, they just won't pay you for it.
I don't begrudge you your principles or your life. It just seems like you would have a bit more understanding and sympathy for how hard it is to live your life outside the system as it is. Especially given that you work in health care, one of the professions most involving large institutions and bureaucracy. — T Clark
Can you describe how you live your life to minimize their omnipresence/omnipotence. — T Clark
Can you describe how you live your life to minimize their omnipresence/omnipotence. — T Clark
So, do you live in the wilderness and obtain all your food by growing, hunting, and fishing? If no, where do you get your food? Your money - work, inheritance, government? Your home? Medical care? You live in a complex society. We are all group people. How are you any different? Could you live on your own without any other people? Without all the infrastructure that keeps things moving? — T Clark
Ok. If you were to go step by step through the 1970s, how would you describe how we got to fiat money? — frank
We now know the US was planning to blow up the Middle East to get oil flowing. The Saudis backed down and were forced to send all oil profits to NY banks. This led to massive investment in Latin American countries which were eventually forced to end all social welfare programs and open their societies to foreign exploitation rather than default on their loans. — frank
Well, I know there is a Post-Keyensian explanation for it. I think they'd say that if you'd had taxed the money out of the economy, then prices would fall.
But a huge aspect of that problem was the oil cartels messing with the price of oil.
I guess you'd have to be more specific. — Dharmi
Yes because we the humans have proven for centuries that we cannot live in the wild (neither freedom) without an order. The different scenario would be a chaos. — javi2541997
A single person invented the nuclear bomb. — Outlander