What properties of the individual cultures led to this different treatment? — khaled
The points you make about there not being an 'objective reality' in these cultures is kind of true, but none of their exponents would necessarily speak about it in those terms. — Wayfarer
As far as I understand it, to say that objective reality doesn't exist would be admitting to the existence of yet another duality/concept that being "objectivity vs subjectivity" and Taoism, Zen and Buddhism do not admit of the independent existence of any concept and so their exponents would rather follow a more "Socrates like" approach and try to break down any conception their students may have making sure not to establish the conceptions of "objective vs subjective" in the process. — khaled
"Right" in the way they use it means "gets you closer to Nirvana" not "morally right" — khaled
Not ‘objective’. If it were objective science could discover it. — Wayfarer
Yes and then Nirvana would be that objective reality — leo
I'm using "objective" in the sense what really exists beyond appearances, are you guys simply referring to "what people agree on"? — leo
Nirvana isn't a reality it's a state of mind so idk what this is supposed to mean. If I told you "do this to cure coughing" I don't think it makes sense to say "so the medicine is the objective reality" or "so the state without coughing is the objective reality". There is nothing objective or holy about the medicine, it just works. — khaled
What does "beyond appearances" mean? I was using it to mean: "Is the case no matter what the human mind thinks of it" in other words: "is a fact" — khaled
Reaching that state can be seen as reaching some absolute place that exists beyond death, so it's more than a temporary subjective state of mind provoked by some medicine. — leo
Whereas in relativism there is nothing beyond the shadows. — leo
regardless of appearances. — leo
they all share the theme of there not being an "objective" reality — khaled
Here's how relativism is characterized: "There is no universal, objective truth according to relativism; rather each point of view has its own truth".
You say "if it were objective science could discover it", but even scientific laws cannot be said to be universal truth because of the problem of induction.
So what's your definition of objective? And why would you consider for instance dharma to not be objective? — leo
The "not beyond death" part is a literal reading of karma. Another one is "death and rebirth" from moment to moment, just refers to change. — khaled
But other than that, it still makes no sense to me to say x MENTAL STATE = Objective reality. They're not the same type of thing. It's a type mismatch like saying "the color red is the objective reality". — khaled
Are you saying that the state of mind exists despite us acquiring it or not? — khaled
I don't think this is true. I think relativism is more like "you can't tell if there is something beyond the shadows so you only have the shadows to work with" — khaled
I still don't get what this means — khaled
Is there evidence that they didn't mean it literally? — leo
See it that way: if as long as you haven't reached Nirvana you keep getting reincarnated when you die, but once you reach Nirvana you stay there and stop getting reincarnated, then Nirvana does not reduce to a mental state, it's a place beyond the material world. — leo
But in order to be relativists I believe they necessarily assume that there is something beyond the shadows (otherwise again they would be solipsists, believing that other humans don't experience anything).
So if they believe there is something beyond the shadows, don't they have to believe in some objective reality (as in things existing beyond their own mind)? — leo
But then Buddhism cannot be characterized as relativist, otherwise it wouldn't claim that there exists a state (Nirvana) that people can reach, no? — leo
"this a state I've reached, here is how I have reached it, but I make no guarantee that this state exists for you or that you can reach it" — leo
I’ve always had a good feeling forZen Buddhism and always found it very elusive. But my feeling is that they do believe there is an objective reality — Brett
Ok I'll go with the literal interpretaion for this paragraph. Now your saying x PLACE = Objective Reality. Still I don't think those are the same type of thing. If I told you "If you climb the top of this mountain you will be safe from the predators that roam the bottom" you wouldn't say "So the top of the mountain is objective reality". I just don't get how you are relating "objective reality" to any of this — khaled
So... Did you just say that in order for someone to be a realtivist he has to believe in some kind of objective reality? — khaled
If that means they believe in objective reality to you then how can one ever be a relativist? — khaled
Just saying "The case is X" doesn't automatically disqualify you form being a relativist. Saying Nirvana exists doesn't disqualify you from being a relativist. — khaled
First as regards to Buddhism: there are many canonical statements in Buddhist texts to the effect that 'those dharmas which I [the Buddha] see are profound, deep, difficult to fathom, perceivable only by the wise'. So the reason I say they're not "objective" is because anything of that nature requires, in some sense, a first-person commitment or insight, which is not amenable to the arms-length, third-party methods of 'the objective sciences'. — Wayfarer
But the point about Buddhism and other forms of contemplative spirituality, is that they emphasise the 'path of practice' i.e. the cultivation of practices that give rise to the insight, that enable the practitioner to validate the truth which they teach. And in that sense they are sometimes called 'the sacred sciences' (scientia sacra), as it is understood that practitioners will indeed discover the same states and insights as those who have traversed that path before them. So in a sense they're 'objective', but in a very qualified sense. — Wayfarer
Platonism made an explicit distinction between 'true knowledge' and 'mere opinion' - but the grounds for that distinction is barely visible in Western culture today. Or rather - the form it has taken is that 'true knowledge' is really only afforded by science, hence the emphasis on 'objectivity'. — Wayfarer
But the scientific method brackets out the first-person perspective and many qualitative issues - issues of value. That is what results in 'relativism', which is that what is true is only 'true for me', or 'true for you', or 'true according to Western culture’ - along with the absence of any sense of there being an over-arching truth, a capital-T Truth. — Wayfarer
you consider that there are things that exist beyond your experiences, so you consider that there is an objective reality. The alternative is to think that other beings reduce to your experiences, that they don’t have experiences of their own and don’t exist when you don’t have experiences of them, which is solipsism. — leo
but if you believe other beings can experience it then you believe in an objective reality. — leo
Yes, otherwise how can there be relativism if there aren’t other points of view beyond our own? — leo
any point of view is inherently more true than any other. So for instance a relativist wouldn’t say that there exists a state (Nirvana) that everyone can access, the relativist would say I’ve seen that I can access this state but I don’t know whether others can — leo
while presumably a relativist would claim no such thing. — leo
If in Buddhism everyone can attain Nirvana in principle then this can be a common goal of all people, so this isn’t relativism in which no such common goal exists. — leo
Ok sure, I agree with you using that definition but by that definition one is either a solipsist or believes in objective reality. There is no room for anything else. — khaled
Why would believing others can share the same experience mean one is not a relativist? I don't see the points as related. So if I believe that if you stub your toe you will experience pain that automatically means I'm not a relativist — khaled
How does this relate to what I asked? — khaled
Why would thinking that there is no point of view more true than any other amount to not being able to say "You can feel x by doing y" — khaled
Again, I have no idea why you think this is the case — khaled
Buddhism never says "You should attain Nirvana" so it's not a common goal, it offers a solution to suffering if you want to take it in the same way that a doctor may write a book about how to improve eyesight but that doesn't mean everyone must have 20/20 vision. — khaled
the methods of the “objective sciences” fundamentally involve only first-person observations, and it takes first-person commitment or insight to gain wisdom about the world that way, — leo
Buddhists pretend to know something that is True beyond themselves, so they cannot be relativists. — leo
How do you know they’re pretending? — Wayfarer
You say that, and I might agree, but I’m sure most scientific realists would not. As far as they’re concerned, the first person perspective is completely bracketed off. — Wayfarer
Furthermore, I think scientists themselves are generally very tolerant of alternative points of view. However the culture which puts science into the place formerly assigned to religion, as ‘arbiter of what is real’, is intolerant of anyone who doesn’t share its assumptions. But that is not the fault of science. — Wayfarer
How do you know they’re pretending? — Wayfarer
That culture of intolerance is spread in great part by many scientists themselves — leo
The problem is never with science or scientists, it’s with treating science as a religion, by the likes of Dawkins. — Wayfarer
When it comes to scientific matters who better to listen to than the experts, just as with any other profession? — Janus
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