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:up:This immanentist agrees. — 180 Proof
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IIRC, Husserl begins as a mathematician ... I imagine Spinoza, like Epicurus, would "take" thinking – reflective inquiry/practice – impersonally. — 180 Proof
180 Proof
... or minimally egoic (e.g. Laozi's wu wei, Epicurus' aponia, Pyrrho's epochē, Spinoza's scientia intuitiva, Nietzsche's amor fati, Zapffe-Camus' absurd, Rosset's cruelty ...)So there's an existential decision to live in a beautifully impersonal way, which I understand as maximally social. — plaque flag
How about you – second person plural – such as Buber's Ich-Du (or even Dao)?I want to be us and not just me.
à la Meillassoux / Brassier! :fire:I want to strive heroically against my own petty finitude, toward the relative infinity of Feuerbach's species-essence.
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... or minimally egoic (e.g. Laozi's wu wei, Epicurus' aponia, Pyrrho's epochē, Spinoza's scientia intuitiva, Nietzsche's amor fati, Zapffe-Camus' absurd, Rosset's cruelty ...) — 180 Proof
:up:How about you – second person plural – such as Buber's Ich-Du (or even Dao)? — 180 Proof
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Maps are not "far from" models yet neither are equivalent to the territory as (sub)personal – existential – biases would have us believe (re: folk psychology). — 180 Proof
Joshs
I agree, but we don't want to smooth out the actual personal subject too much, because rationality seems to be normative on the personal level. I can disagree with you but not with myself — plaque flag
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If we take a page from self-consistency theory in psychology, we can say that the self is a continual achievement of the construing of events, and among the most important event is one’s own self-reflections. — Joshs
Thus the self is no more internally integral than the events the person is able to construe intelligibly. Examples of a disordered self include emotional distress. Emotions such as guilt, threat and anxiety can represents situations which put into question the coherence of our core sense of self. — Joshs
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