In Plato's Phaedrus, Socrates uses the maxim "know thyself" as his explanation to Phaedrus to explain why he has no time for the attempts to rationally explain mythology or other far flung topics. Socrates says, "But I have no leisure for them at all; and the reason, my friend, is this: I am not yet able, as the Delphic inscription has it, to know myself; so it seems to me ridiculous, when I do not yet know that, to investigate irrelevant things." — Wikipedia
Jenny Holzer seems to have fully grasped the meaning of Temet Nosce - to know/understand others, one needs to first know/understand oneself.Knowing yourself lets you understand others. — Jenny Holzer (artist)
Therefore, Yajnavalkya says to Maitreyi, “Nobody loves anything for its own sake.” All love is love of the Self, in the pure spiritual sense. Not this self or that self, myself or yourself, itself—this kind of self is not the point. It is the universal Self that is actually pulling you in some form, and you are not able to catch the point. There is an illusion that is presented to the sense organs, and under the impression—due to the delusion—you go to the object thinking that it is beautiful, that it is necessary, that it is meaningful. There is no meaning in anything in this world except the meaning of the Selfhood of that object. — Brihadaranyaka
That means, self-awareness must precede other-awareness. That's the correct/preferred/recommended sequence for awareness (self-awareness first, other-awareness second). However, the current understanding of consciousness (self & other awareness and more) is that other-awareness preceded self-awareness: humans and a few other animals that are/seem to be self-aware evolved very late in life's history given the evidence available to us. — TheMadFool
How can you know yourself? — Prishon
Who are you? — Prishon
who am i? same as Odysseus (homo viator) told the cyclops, "Nobody" ...
Therefore, Yajnavalkya says to Maitreyi, “Nobody loves anything for its own sake.” All love is love of the Self, in the pure spiritual sense. Not this self or that self, myself or yourself, itself - this kind of self is not the point. It is the universal Self that is actually pulling you in some form, and you are not able to catch the point. There is an illusion that is presented to the sense organs, and under the impression — Brihadaranyaka
You were right Smith, you were always right. — Mr. Anderson
But isn't being conscious in itself the awareness of consciousness? — Hermeticus
interconnected — Jack Cummins
other minds. — Jack Cummins
Life's raison d'être is to copy itself; there's no statement stronger than "copy ME" to express self-love. Nothing is then more important than ME and to ensure my existence I want to copy myself! — TheMadFool
Why do you think that thats the reason we live?. Sounds circular. Copy me? :smile: — Prishon
mirrors can be a source of joy and horror. — Jack Cummins
Especially the second one is "nice"!
The reason for living? Ooof! In any case not to pass on genes or memes, like modern science says (embodied by people as R. Dawkins, who see people as a vessel for selfish genes........???). I think life itself is the reason. What's life itself? Magic! — Prishon
Life for life's sake; all else (philosophy, love, honor, beauty, etc.) is an illusion! We've seen through the ruse, eh? — TheMadFool
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.