If one is "sublimely confident and perfectly convinced", then no further demonstration is necessary.Right, and that's exactly all I've been saying; that such knowledge is not demonstrable, even to oneself.. no matter how sublimely confident and perfectly convinced one might be that one possess such knowledge. — Janus
How can you possibly know that?? To rightly say what you're saying requires omniscience!!!!It might turn out, at death, that one was correct, if consciousness survives death,
but no one could know it in advance, and you could never know it was anything more than a lucky intuition in any case.
So the real issue is about feeling offended by other people's pride, confidence, and certainty?At least if you turned out to be wrong you'd never know, could never be proven to be wrong. I have no argument with anyone who feels so convinced they know something as to not entertain even the shadow of a doubt, provide they don't seek to impose their beliefs on others, or expect others to be convinced by their personal conviction and profession of certainty.
Oh, come on, this is false dichotomy you're operating with. Either think for yourself, or have others impose their thoughts on you. This is so impoverished!If you don't want to think freely, but would rather have other's impose their thoughts on you then you are at least free to do that. It's up to you. At least be honest and admit to yourself at least if not to others,
What a strange thing to say, your very claim undermines itself.that there is no possibility of absolute rational certainly, or certainty of any truth, even if certainty of personal conviction is possible
But just like ordinary religious people nowadays, Plato et al. didn't arrive at their certainties by doing concentration and meditation techniques, did they?
I find it more likely that they were born and raised into their religion, and then later on propped it up with fancy explanations and justifications. As is common for religious people. — baker
But when the soul inquires alone by itself, it departs into the realm of the pure, the everlasting, the immortal and the changeless, and being akin to these it dwells always with them whenever it is by itself and is not hindered, and it has rest from its wanderings and remains always the same and unchanging with the changeless, since it is in communion therewith. And this state of the soul is called wisdom (phronesis) (79d)
So he did something similar as, for example, Christian theologians did and do: Adopt a religious foundation and build on it. I see nothing special about this.However, it is important to understand that Plato did not blindly adopt the religious beliefs of Athenian society. On the contrary, he introduced a new theology with the cosmic Gods ranking above the Gods of mainstream religion, and a supreme non-personal God above the cosmic Gods. — Apollodorus
But can atheists do it in a way that will have the same positive, life-affirming results as when religious people contemplate the Forms?Plato's introduction of the Forms and, above all, the Form of the Good clearly elevates religion above personal Gods. In fact, contemplating the Forms requires no religious beliefs whatsoever. Even atheists can do that.
But what is meant by "contemplation of metaphysical realities"?And, of course, there is a strong probability that Socrates did practice some form of contemplation or meditation. It would seem strange for someone to advocate the contemplation of metaphysical realities and not practice it themselves.
But the method, the method of this absorption is not known to us! And this method is crucial for understanding what exactly it was that he was doing when "standing motionless". I can "stand motionaless" but I will have ascended to the realm of the pure as much as a mole hill. Because I don't have the method.The Symposium (220d-e) certainly relates how Socrates one morning remained standing motionless and absorbed in thoughts until next morning when he prayed to the Sun after which he went on his way, and that this was a habit of his. It is not difficult to imagine him in that state of contemplation or inner vision in which the soul has ascended to and entered the realm of the pure, the everlasting, the immortal and changeless where it dwells in communion with the realities that are like itself (see also Phaedo).
one's practice should bear some results by which to judge whether one is heading in the right direction or not. — baker
If one is "sublimely confident and perfectly convinced", then no further demonstration is necessary. — baker
It might turn out, at death, that one was correct, if consciousness survives death,
but no one could know it in advance, and you could never know it was anything more than a lucky intuition in any case.
How can you possibly know that?? To rightly say what you're saying requires omniscience!!!! — baker
Oh, come on, this is false dichotomy you're operating with. Either think for yourself, or have others impose their thoughts on you. This is so impoverished!
I myself am not much of an optimist, but even I don't believe that humans relate to eachother only in a competitive and adversary way.
To say nothing of how your view requires epistemic autonomy, which is highly problematic in and of itself. — baker
that there is no possibility of absolute rational certainly, or certainty of any truth, even if certainty of personal conviction is possible
What a strange thing to say, your very claim undermines itself. — baker
Oh, like the idea of doing yoga in order to "improve" one's "sex life" or "business negotiation skills".Of course, I agree with that, and there’s plenty of commentary on it, but what I’m resisting is the utilitarian tendency to treat everything as a means to an end. — Wayfarer
Nobody said it was. Why would/should it be?But their sublime confidence and perfect conviction is no good rational reason for anyone else to believe what they are so perfectly convinced of. — Janus
Because you have attained some higher knowledge that allows you to know such things.How could you possibly know that consciousness survives death before you have died?
It's not like there is an actual need to decide about such things! Nobody is putting a gun to your head or a knife to your throat forcing you to decide one way or another.We are discussing a particular context here; beliefs about the nature of life and death. What other alternative could there be apart from thinking about it carefully, weighing all the evidence, such as it can be, and deciding for yourself versus believing what someone else tells you because you believe they are enlightened or whatever?
You're saying, with complete rational certainty, that complete rational certainty is not possible. And you don't see a problem with that?that there is no possibility of absolute rational certainly, or certainty of any truth, even if certainty of personal conviction is possible
What a strange thing to say, your very claim undermines itself.
— baker
It's one thing to say that what I said "undermines itself" and another to fail to explain why you think that. That complete rational certainty is not possible does not entail that people cannot be absolutely convinced of anything, if they are blind, willfully or otherwise, to the fact that complete rational certainty is not possible.
So he did something similar as, for example, Christian theologians did and do: Adopt a religious foundation and build on it. I see nothing special about this. — baker
But can atheists do it in a way that will have the same positive, life-affirming results as when religious people contemplate the Forms?
My personal experience is, they can't. Without that religious foundation that had to be internalized before one's critical thinking abilities developed, contemplation of "metaphysical realities" doesn't amount to anything. — baker
But what is meant by "contemplation of metaphysical realities"?
I meditate on your precepts
and consider your ways.
Psalm 119:15 (NIV) — baker
Does it not simply mean 'to obey religious decrees' and all the "contemplation" and "reflection" are really just about bearing in mind the extent and the details of the religious decrees?
I don't think it includes contemplating the possibility that the "metaphysical realities" might not be real at all. — baker
But the method, the method of this absorption is not known to us! And this method is crucial for understanding what exactly it was that he was doing when "standing motionless". I can "stand motionaless" but I will have ascended to the realm of the pure as much as a mole hill. Because I don't have the method. — baker
In fact, then, Simmias,” said he, “the true philosophers practice dying, and death is less terrible to them than to any other men. Consider it in this way. They are in every way hostile to the body and they desire to have the soul apart by itself alone (67e)
[one must] wait quietly till it appears, preparing oneself to contemplate it, as the eye awaits the rising of the sun; and the sun rising over the horizon (from “Ocean,” the poets
say) gives itself to the eyes to see.
Many times it has happened: Lifted out of the body into myself; becoming external to all other things and self-encentered; beholding a marvellous beauty; then, more than ever, assured of community with the loftiest order; enacting the noblest life, acquiring identity with the divine; stationing within It by having attained that activity; poised above whatsoever within the Intellectual is less than the Supreme: yet, there comes the moment of descent from intellection to reasoning, and after that sojourn in the divine, I ask myself how it happens that I can now be descending, and how did the soul ever enter into my body, the soul which, even within the body, is the high thing it has shown itself to be (Enneads 4.8.1)
Here, we put aside all the learning; disciplined to this pitch, established in beauty, the quester holds knowledge still of the ground he rests on, but, suddenly, swept beyond it all by the very crest of the wave of Intellect surging beneath, he is lifted and sees, never knowing how; the vision floods the eyes with light, but it is not a light showing some other object, the light is itself the vision … With This he himself becomes identical, with that radiance whose Act is to engender Intellectual-Principle …(Ennead 6.7.36)
Because you have attained some higher knowledge that allows you to know such things. — baker
It's not like there is an actual need to decide about such things! Nobody is putting a gun to your head or a knife to your throat forcing you to decide one way or another.
Whence this need to decide about whether there is consciousness after death?? — baker
Purification turns out to be the very thing we were recently talking about in our discussion [at 64d-66a] namely parting the soul from the body as much as possible and habituating it to assembling and gathering itself from every part of the body, alone by itself, and to living alone by itself as far as it can, both now and afterwards, released from the body as if from fetters (67c-d)
If the energy of breath is meditated upon at dvadashanta [twelve-fingers distance in the heart, throat or between the eyebrows] (at the time of sleeping) one will attain mastery over one’s dreams [a form of lucid dreaming] (55)
One should concentrate on the state when sleep has not yet come, but the external awareness has disappeared (75)
Whether one is seated on a moving vehicle or whether one moves one’s body slowly, one attains a peaceful mental state [through concentration] (83)
One should direct one's gaze on space which is filled with variegated light of the Sun or of a lamp. There itself one's own essential nature will be revealed (76)
So? There is no need for such demonstration.There cannot be demonstrated to be any such higher knowledge, though. — Janus
How can you possibly know that??Even the person who purportedly has such knowledge cannot be sure (as opposed to feeling sure) that it is true knowledge.
How can you possibly know it's merely a conviction?It's a conviction that things are a certain way; if things turned out to be that way it just means that the conviction would have turned out to be in accordance with reality.
You're taking for granted a measure of uncertainty and human incapacity for knowledge. You could be overstating the case, taking for granted that humans are necessarily thusly incapable. All in all, you are making definite claims about things you yourself admit to not having certainty of.The problem is that no one could ever be sure of that being the case. Knowledge as it is normally understood is always uncertain, and consists in there being found no good reason to doubt, and that what we believe is also true. But the latter is what is always rationally uncertain.
If you wanted to be strictly accurate there is no possibility of certain knowledge that anything is the case, so really humans don't have propositional knowledge at all, they just have beliefs. That said of course within limited contexts we can be said to know things for certain, like I know I am sitting here typing on a laptop, or I know it is raining because I can see the rain falling and things getting wet.
Perhaps I need to adjust my style and be less colloquial.It's not like there is an actual need to decide about such things! Nobody is putting a gun to your head or a knife to your throat forcing you to decide one way or another.
Whence this need to decide about whether there is consciousness after death??
— baker
That's a silly comment, given what Ive been arguing.
My point is that you're presenting the matter in either-or terms, while I think that the decision as you put it forward is not even necessary. It's avoidable, much if not most of the time. For the most part, we do not actually need to decide whether what someone claims is the truth or not.I've been using that as an example; I'm not claiming the individual should decide one way or another. That's a matter of faith, of personal conviction, and up to the individual. I sometimes doubt you even read what I've written. I'm not even saying someone should not follow what some purported sage has to say; just that doing that is not an example of thinking for yourself, but rather of allowing someone else to do your thinking for you.
You are welcome. And you can have this for after dinner — Apollodorus
You're taking for granted a measure of uncertainty and human incapacity for knowledge. You could be overstating the case, taking for granted that humans are necessarily thusly incapable. All in all, you are making definite claims about things you yourself admit to not having certainty of. — baker
… and maybe moderation and justice and courage and phronesis itself are nothing but a kind of purifier. (69c)
… if we can know nothing purely in the body's company, then one of two things must be true: either knowledge is nowhere to be gained, or else it is for the dead. (66e)
“It seems to me, Socrates, as perhaps you do too, that in these matters certain knowledge is either impossible or very hard to come by in this life; but that even so, not to test what is said about them in every possible way, without leaving off till one has examined them exhaustively from every aspect, shows a very feeble spirit; on these questions one must achieve one of two things: either learn or find out how things are; or, if that's impossible, he must sail through life in the midst of danger, seizing on the best and the least refutable of human accounts, at any rate, and letting himself be carried upon it as on a raft - unless, that is, he could journey more safely and less dangerously on a more stable carrier, some divine account.” (85c-d)
We shall believe that the soul is immortal and capable of enduring all extremes of good and evil, and so we shall hold ever to the upward way and pursue righteousness with wisdom always and ever, that we may be dear to ourselves and to the Gods both here and in the hereafter (Rep. 621c)
But nothing beats those who imagine that Plato wrote books for the sole purpose of teaching ignorance and "aporia" .... :lol: — Apollodorus
For it seems shameful that, being what apparently at this moment we are, we should consider ourselves fine fellows, when we can never hold to the same views about the same questions--and those too the most vital of all--so deplorably uneducated are we! Then let us follow the guidance of the argument now made manifest, which reveals to us that this is the best way of life--to live and die in the pursuit of righteousness and all other virtues. Let us follow this, I say, inviting others to join us, not that which you believe in and commend to me, for it is worthless, dear Callicles. — Plato, Gorgias, 327d, translated by W.D. Woodhead
Nobody that I know of characterizes the unfolding of the Dialectic to be antithetical to contemplation of an ultimate reality. — Valentinus
Because, if Socrates is only pretending to be ignorant, the entire process of the Dialogues is a sham. — Valentinus
From what I see, some claim that Socrates could never have contemplated metaphysical realities (1) because he had a young son and (2) because the realities he was talking about don't exist .... — Apollodorus
The call to not accept ignorance as a final condition are the closing words of Socrates in the Gorgias — Valentinus
If Socrates is ignorant regarding the things above and the things below, namely, Forms and Hades, then nothing he says about such things can be taken at face value — Fooloso4
I challenge you to answer my question without reference to what other people might have said. — Valentinus
I fail to see on what basis you can do that when you never care to answer my questions. — Apollodorus
Plato's discursive environment simply aims to encourage readers to examine their beliefs and accept those that make most sense when placed under rational scrutiny. — Apollodorus
I can accept that some readers may see dialogues like Euthyphro as ending in "aporia", but where is the "aporia" in other works like the Republic or Laws??? — Apollodorus
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