Pantagruel         
         
Vera Mont         
         
jgill         
         And if reality can be merely real, can something else can be more than real? — Pantagruel
Tom Storm         
         in which an experience is thought to be enhanced through the benefit of some predisposing information as to its supposed sublimity. — Pantagruel
Wayfarer         
         And if reality can be merely real, can something else can be more than real? — Pantagruel
Pantagruel         
         
Pantagruel         
         It all has to do with expectations. Reality stays the same, but a heightened sense of reality occurs at times. No, there's nothing "more real". — jgill
Pantagruel         
         Within this realm there is no ultimate satisfaction or peace to be found, because all is perishing, transient and ultimately empty. — Wayfarer
Agent Smith         
         
Pantagruel         
         
Wayfarer         
         And if reality can be merely real, can something else can be more than real? — Pantagruel
Agent Smith         
         My take is that (in the context of consciousness which I take to be a definitive feature of what is in question) necessarily there exists some greatest thinking thing. Ergo that thing is by definition God (without attaching any further implications or speculations as to the nature of that thing, which, based it would be invalid for inferior beings to do anyway). — Pantagruel
Agent Smith         
         
Tom Storm         
         The abundance and beauty of the variety of tropes, metonomy, synechdoche, prosopoeia, metaphor, and the way they all blend and merge seamlessly and effortlessly into one another. If anything is more than real, for me, this is. — Pantagruel
Pantagruel         
         
Pantagruel         
         It must be quite disheartening for philosophers to hear someone say "This? This is merely real!" — Agent Smith
Pantagruel         
         
SophistiCat         
         One of the more interesting themes that I find recurring in Proust is the way in which an experience is thought to be enhanced through the benefit of some predisposing information as to its supposed sublimity. — Pantagruel
Janus         
         One of the more interesting themes that I find recurring in Proust is the way in which an experience is thought to be enhanced through the benefit of some predisposing information as to its supposed sublimity. Often, however, the actual experience comes up wanting, as the trivialities of the moment intrude upon the "merely real." And if reality can be merely real, can something else can be more than real? — Pantagruel
1. God is that than which nothing greater can be conceived.
2. If god is not real then God is not that than which nothing greater can be conceived.
Ergo,
3. God is (merely) real. — Agent Smith
Pantagruel         
         I think it's just a matter of a shift in consciousness. The "merely real" is the sublime, when "the trivialities of the moment" do not intrude upon it, or in other words, are not seen as trivial. — Janus
Pantagruel         
         What was the Balbec passage that you were thinking about? — SophistiCat
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