 TiredThinker
TiredThinker         
          Joshs
Joshs         
         Has anyone here ever wondered if there is anything more real than this life? Maybe even thought that there had to be something more real? — TiredThinker
 TiredThinker
TiredThinker         
          jgill
jgill         
          Wayfarer
Wayfarer         
          TiredThinker
TiredThinker         
          Agent Smith
Agent Smith         
          180 Proof
180 Proof         
         Describe what you mean by "more" – "more real (than) reality".... more real than this life?
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.. something more real?
... a more real reality. — TiredThinker
Please elaborate in your own words (i.e. translate in sum from your sources into ordinary language, no links). Thanks.... ‘degrees of reality’.
... ‘great chain of being’, — Wayfarer
Transcendent values (e.g. "the good" "the true" & "the beautiful")?... a vertical dimension which provides the scale along that which is better and best is conceived.
Like Deleuze's (Spinozist) plane of immanence?... a valueless flatland.
 Manuel
Manuel         
          TiredThinker
TiredThinker         
          TiredThinker
TiredThinker         
          Wayfarer
Wayfarer         
         Please elaborate in your words — 180 Proof
Spinoza titled his 'transcendence-free metaphysics' the Ethics, which is anything but "valueless". — 180 Proof
The problem is that people normally desire “perishable things” which “can be reduced to these three headings: riches, honour, and sensual pleasure” (idem: para.3&9). As these things are “perishable”, they cannot afford lasting happiness; in fact, they worsen our existential situation, since their acquisition more often than not requires compromising behaviour and their consumptions makes us even more dependent on perishable goods. “But love towards a thing eternal and infinite feeds the mind with joy alone, unmixed with any sadness.” (Idem: para.10) Thus, in his mature masterpiece, the Ethics, Spinoza finds lasting happiness only in the “intellectual love of God”, which is the mystical, non-dual vision of the single “Substance” (ousia, Being) underlying everything and everyone.
 Manuel
Manuel         
          180 Proof
180 Proof         
          TiredThinker
TiredThinker         
          Manuel
Manuel         
          Wayfarer
Wayfarer         
         What about this "vertical dimension" in contrast to "a valueless flatland"? Tell me what you mean by these phrases. — 180 Proof
 180 Proof
180 Proof         
         I don't think so. Amor dei intellectualis is in what understanding (scientia inutiva) of substance (natura naturans) consists – wholly rational, impersonal and immanent (non-transcendent). The other term for this praxis – it's not a "goal" (re: Hadot) – is what Spinoza calls "blessedness". Read that most radical of anti-woo books, Wayf, the Tractatus Theologico-Politicus (TTP) for critical context to his Ethics (E).I suppose you could find, in Spinoza, recommendations for the way in which the 'amor dei intellectualis' could be sought or cultivated, and alternatively the kinds of things which would thwart its relisation. — Wayfarer
More than objective – also, not yet falsified or soundly judged.For moderns, only what is objective is taken seriously.
If by "higher degree of reality" you mean transcendent (re (neo)Platonic forms, universals, essences, emanations...), such a notion merely begs the question (e.g. infinite regress) and fallaciously reifies abstractions. 'Natural goodness', as Philippa Foot, says is the immanent "source of the ethics" for natural beings – pursuing what is good for ((our) natural species') thriving and avoiding / reducing what is not good for ((our) natural species') thriving. A modern formulation of fundamental insight shared by Laozi, Kǒngzǐ, Buddha, Hillel the Elder, Epicurus-Lucretius, Diogenes the Kynic, Seneca-Epictetus, ... Spinoza, et al.But the general idea is that there are degrees of reality, such the higher degree of reality is what 'the philosopher' aspires to and which is therefore the ultimate source of ethics.
 Wayfarer
Wayfarer         
         A modern formulation of fundamental insight shared by Laozi, Buddha, Hillel the Elder, Epicurus, Diogenes the Kynic, Epictetus, ... Spinoza, et al. — 180 Proof
 Wayfarer
Wayfarer         
          john27
john27         
          TiredThinker
TiredThinker         
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