↪Reformed Nihilist The critique of spirituality rarely touches on 'feelings' or 'emotions'. For me this realm of emotions underlies everything, even rationality: a rational argument is only as good as its premisses, which are at bottom emotional. Mood is the way we are in the world. — mcdoodle
I think one needs to be wary of quoting Wittgenstein as if he might agree with an anti-spiritual stance. He was very interested in religion although a non-believer. He wrote of ethics as 'Supernatural', and he didn't mean by this to write it off, but rather to say that as with aesthetics, which he bracketed with ethics, something other than 'natural' criteria apply. — mcdoodle
Nowhere here did I equate these. — Noble Dust
In whatever way and through whatever means a cognition may related to objects, that through which it relates immediately to them, and at which all thought as a means is directed as an end, is intuition. — Kant
Why did you delete the rest of our quips in this exchange when you split this thread? It looks like you made it sound as if I was complimenting your atheism and leaving it basically at that, without the finer (and funnier) shades we both insinuated in the parts you deleted. What gives? — Noble Dust
Edit: Are you proposing that you know that you're correct by the sort of intuition that Kant proposed? He was speaking about how we apprehend objects.
In whatever way and through whatever means a cognition may related to objects, that through which it relates immediately to them, and at which all thought as a means is directed as an end, is intuition.
— Kant — Reformed Nihilist
Similar to that, but in relation to things like meaning, morality, and the underlying principles of why we bother to have discussions, in place of "objects" in what Kant says here. — Noble Dust
To the degree that you are defining intuition, you are defining it in such a way that assumes your worldview, where there is no physical or cultural intermediaries between a person and "things like meaning, morality, and the underlying principles of why we bother to have discussions". — Reformed Nihilist
Intuition structures all thought; logic is structured on intuition; creativity is structured on intuition, emotion, even, is structured on it. Intuition is the connective tissue that connects a human faculty to experience. Or, since you like definitions:
Intuition: the underlying human faculty that connects other human faculties to experience. — Noble Dust
You're defining your argument into being correct, by making up your own definitions for words. That doesn't even reach the threshold of having an idea. — Reformed Nihilist
based on a conception of the world that others don't share with you, — Reformed Nihilist
never mentioning that you are using the word unconventionally — Reformed Nihilist
Do you not see a problem there? — Reformed Nihilist
No, this was my definition of intuition in this argument: — Noble Dust
In regards to Kant, I said my idea was similar, which it is. — Noble Dust
Give me a break. Philosophy is a process of having ideas, and giving them shape, by way of words. Kant gave a definition to intuition in your quote. Other philosophers give other definitions. I give mine. — Noble Dust
The problem here is your gross misreading and charicature of what I'm saying. — Noble Dust
Apple: It nourishes us. It was Eve's folly. It is both the genus and product of the orchard. Apples taste good.
Apple: The round fruit of a tree of the rose family, which typically has thin red or green skin and crisp flesh. — Reformed Nihilist
I think you're giving yourself too much credit here. Kant wasn't just spitballing his metaphysics. He developed a complete, succinct, and clearly defined, and well reasoned model of metaphysics that displayed intellectual rigour and care for clarity and precision. His notion of intuition was part of that entire model. — Reformed Nihilist
Are you willing to even consider that you don't actually have...real ideas, — Reformed Nihilist
Which tells you more about the apple? — Noble Dust
Maybe I am. I'm developing my own system of thought, and the role of intuition is part of my ideas. It's an incomplete system. Part of the process for me is spitballing on this forum; it sharpens my ideas, challenges them, and brings more clarity. I began this discussion with you in relation to spirituality, and intuition came up when we reached the impasse that you were insisting that I use rationality as you were doing, with relation to spirituality, which I refused to do. I then proceeded to challenge you as to why rationality should be the tool we use here, which you never addressed, and instead insisted on focusing on what I mean by intuition, and here we are. — Noble Dust
Why would anyone be willing to consider such an insult? — Noble Dust
Why do you consider having two hypotheses valuable? Why do you consider Kant's well reasoned models as admirable? — Noble Dust
Why do you consider a dictionary definition of a word valuable, and presumably assume it to be more valuable than a descriptive definition? — Noble Dust
Why do you assume that it's worthwhile to talk about spirituality despite your lack of belief in it? Why do you consider it worthwhile to try to point out, not only the holes in my argument, but your belief that I have no argument at all? Why do you consider honest responses to be important within discussion? Why do you think it's important to consider the logical implications of dualism before adopting it? Why do you consider empirical standpoints as being important to take? Why do you think making a distinction between self-delusion and good answers is important? — Noble Dust
That's the dualist definition I am familiar with and understand clearly. It is the most common use of the term by those who ascribe to a religion. I am asking about what the term means by those who don't necessarily ascribe to, or are unwilling to commit to, that sort of dualism. — Reformed Nihilist
A conceptual polarity is not an indication of ontological dualism. On the contrary, a polarity pretty much eliminates the possibility of dualism (e.g., there is no "dualism" between North and South -- these are not two different and incommunicable substances). — Mariner
The body, or matter, can clearly exist without spirit (we call that a corpse, or an object) and we can also conceive of the spirit existing without the body (Life's a dream, brain in vat, matrix, evil demon). The notion of polarity just isn't consistent with our conception of the body and the mind. — Reformed Nihilist
What we can 'conceive of' is fairly irrelevant to the problem at hand -- that of understanding what is spirituality and materiality. — Mariner
The fact is that both spirit and matter are conjoined in our experience. And it is from that fact that we must proceed in order to apprehend what spirituality (and materiality) means. — Mariner
I pointed out that they don't actually fit coherently into the framework you suggested, and gave you a reason why. — Reformed Nihilist
How is that a fact? — Reformed Nihilist
I think you mean that is your premise. — Reformed Nihilist
You are essentially saying that the spirit exists, therefore the spirit exists. — Reformed Nihilist
unless you have an approach that includes starting from some shared point of agreement and reasoning outward from there. — Reformed Nihilist
So, if I am reading you correctly, the shared point of agreement in my experience is that I have experiences? — Reformed Nihilist
...when Wittgenstein risked his life in battle day after day, he found solace in Tolstoy’s version of the Gospels: hence his prayer ‘May God enlighten me’. — Wayfarer
I'm not sure what you mean when you say that a premise is emotional. I suspect that this is a false dichotomy between reason and emotion. Reason is a thing we do. Emotion is a way we are. — Reformed Nihilist
I tend to regard W's silence ('that of which we cannot speak...') as apophatic - being circumspect in the face of a mystery, rather than (with positivism) declaring metaphysics simply meaningless — Wayfarer
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