Then I certainly don't have a "perfect life" nor a "beautiful wife", for physical beauty would not be sufficient to make her a beautiful wife.Ah, would that be so even if your wife prostitutes herself but she is beautiful or your family — TimeLine
Well I'm not sure about this. Say my family loves me because of my money-making ability. Is that not part of me as well? What the trouble would be in that case is simply a problem of their lack of virtue - lack of loyalty to be more specific. If, for some reason, I can no longer make money - they leave me or no longer love me. So the issue isn't that they shouldn't like my money-making ability (for that is also part of who I am) - but rather that I desire them to be virtuous. It's their lack of character that I dislike, not the fact that they like me for a variety of reasons including my money-making ability.only "love" you for things other than who you really are? — TimeLine
If happiness is merely an externalisation or a quantitative multiplicity that represents spatial influences and that quantifies the very fibre of our existence, then what is real or authentic? You say you would not have a perfect life or a beautiful wife because you desire virtue and it is virtue that is beautiful, but I have witnessed virtue mocked and the immoral praised as long as this immoral adequately fits within the social requisites. Virtue is a form in that the concept itself has transcended to a qualitative multiplicity where experience is shaped away from the socially habituated toward the realm of moral consciousness and where temporality is no longer treated spatially. Moral consciousness and not the master-slave morality is what makes us human rather than objects.Then I certainly don't have a "perfect life" nor a "beautiful wife", for physical beauty would not be sufficient to make her a beautiful wife. — Agustino
I agree. Life is a mixture of pragmatism and love. A family without love is at best an army - that is if it hasn't also lost the other pillar holding them together, virtue. However, a loving family without pragmatism (and discipline) is like a ship with a hole in the bottom. For lack of better words, a family thrives when the "male" - "female" tension is maintained, and there exists mutual respect between them (and this respect is born of the understanding of the family's dynamics). Love is needed - but love cannot reach the point of annihilating discipline. Discipline is also needed - but it cannot reach the point of extinguishing the flame of love. Most houses crumble because the partners don't adequately maintain this tension, and each seeks to impose their will over the other - for example one partner imposes their discipline to the point that family life becomes like an empty and lonely desert, held together only by mutual hopes and fears. Or one partner imposes their love to the point that the family loses direction, and becomes a victim to the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune :PA house is just an object without genuine love — TimeLine
I have as well, but so what? I witness virtue mocked more frequently than I hear it praised in fact. Dogs will go on barking, and those lacking character will go on mocking virtue, and those foolish will go on cutting the very branch on which they're sitting. But I don't want to be like any of them - for the one thing that is impossible to lose unless you surrender it is dignity. Society - modern society at least - has a corrosive effect on virtue due to the mechanisms of peer pressure that it employs almost in its every move.but I have witnessed virtue mocked and the immoral praised as long as this immoral adequately fits within the social requisites — TimeLine
I agree.Moral consciousness and not the master-slave morality is what makes us human rather than objects. — TimeLine
Happiness in and by itself (without virtue) is unstable - it quickly degrades into unhappiness. Now virtue isn't a guarantee for happiness today or tomorrow - it's only a guarantee for happiness in the very long run (which may be even longer than your own life). But happiness is a certain outcome of virtue - regardless of how far into the future it lies. Whereas happiness without virtue is always uncertain and can never satisfy our need for perfect happiness.If happiness is merely an externalisation or a quantitative multiplicity that represents spatial influences and that quantifies the very fibre of our existence, then what is real or authentic? — TimeLine
Well I think I missed you too :P There's few on these boards like you with insight to talk to about really significant matters (I love that your philosophy is always practical and practically oriented), if you can believe it, I'm busy here quibbling about matters such as whether 2 is a subset of 1 >:OI missed you. — TimeLine
It depends on your view as to whether a community is a collection of individuals or whether it is subject to the sum of its own parts, where as you suggest there is a subsistence of an un-manipulated ‘utopian’ society that enables the group to mirror justice without being subject to time? Can this cohesive homogeneity be sustained without an evolutionary dynamic and radical unpredictability affecting the flux and dynamics of continuity and discontinuity as though the second law of thermodynamics is merely a misnomer? The heterogeneity of society cannot be separated into a continuous picture and this radical unpredictability is the very impediment of a perfect social design - hence Nazism - and any impediment to something successful requires its elimination. — TimeLine
Sorry if I'm taking this sentence out of context, but this rather large claim perhaps needs more explaining before i can begin to accept it. Sure, some hardy people can live in the woods, off the grid and alone, and be quite happy. That is quite admirable. Our basic survival skills "in the wild/nature" have gotten flabby, at least for most of us. But humans don't come right out of the womb ready to run, swim, and hunt like some other animals. Some clan/tribe/community is needed, as well for the transmission of knowledge. I think you would agree with that, at the least.Thus the reason why we desire the community in the first place is to avoid our true nature — TimeLine
I do, however, agree that there exists a possibility to reach an authentic unity but only when the individual has transcended to this existentiality and conscious awareness and only amongst others of the same mental state whereby they exercise this freedom together. Human rights and liberal democracy is as close as we could get to this but even so the traps of capitalism and globalisation far outweigh the good and to denote those who dismiss all that is wrong in this world deserve the cringeworthy title of being a part of the 'herd'. — TimeLine
This is the same point I've made before that there is a tension between the individual and society (or the family) which has to be maintained for the well-being of both.But the point he makes is that a species that goes against the laws of nature might exist for a time, but even a thousand years is an evolutionally short amount of time. And to go against nature is (to borrow Agustino's phrase) to saw off the branch they are sitting on. Individuals are needed to devise alternate ideas, but without the support and action of the majority/collective, even the brightest ideas will wither on the vine. — 0 thru 9
If someone who lives in the midst of Christianity enters, with knowledge of the true idea of God, the house of the true God, and prays, but prays in untruth, and if someone lives in an idolatrous land but prays with all the passion of infinity, although his eyes are resting on the image of an idol - where, then, is there more truth?
[...]
The one prays in truth to God although he is worshipping an idol; the other prays in untruth to the true God and is therefore worshipping an idol — S. Kierkegaard
For if, because power is not given, the hand is free from the murder of a man, is the heart of the murderer forsooth therefore clean from sin? Or if she be chaste, whom one unchaste wishes to commit adultery with, hath he on that account failed to commit adultery with her in his heart? Or if the harlot be not found in the brothel, doth he, who seeks her, on that account fail to commit fornication in his heart? Or if time and place be wanting to one who wishes to hurt his neighbor by a lie, hath he on that account failed already to speak false witness with his inner mouth? Or if anyone fearing men, dare not utter aloud blasphemy with tongue of flesh, is he on this account guiltless of this crime, who saith in his heart, 'there is no God'? Thus all the other evil deeds of men, which no motion of the body performs, of which no sense of the body is conscious, have their own secret criminals, who are also polluted by consent alone in thought, that is, by evil words of the inner mouth — St. Augustine
Ah sorry old horse, I haven't been in a forum for a while. What I meant is that your proposition of a truly functioning community fails to consider time and evolutionary dynamics where we cannot separate heterogeneity as though the community could be a continuous picture, something that is only possible when we eliminate the 'individual'. This possibility of the community being continuously the same picture is what Nazism attempted to employ hence why it is dangerous. This is the thermodynamics of humanity, as it were, the entropy prohibits the reversal of the arrow of time or that systems are irreversable and that chaos increases by a perpetual motion that is unpredictable. Whenever we move to a direction of cohesiveness or equilibrium, individuality disintergrates because it is individual consciousness that is causally the root of our chaos - if you take away consciousness, we would have no language and thus be nothing but animals, but we would reach an equilibrium with nature. In a social setting, we become slaves or mindless drones.Thanks for your reply. I would say a community is both a collection of individuals AND a whole greater than the sum of its parts, like light can be described as both a particule and a wave. But as the saying goes, five severed fingers do not make a hand. Not sure though that I quite grasped the rest of what you were saying in this quote. I don't want to assume. Can you rephrase it or dumb it down a shade? (as Homer Simpson says). — 0 thru 9
No one is saying run off into the wilderness; I am not going to take off all my clothes and wander around the bush bare breasted for the rest of my life as even that defies our state of nature as we are "beings" in a world, but Aldous Huxley knows that those who have reached a state of existentiality or of an independent consciousness amongst a community of clones is impossible that we will be inevitably banished to live in isolation. As Augustino said, happiness is only possible when we lead a virtuous life that is only possible with an independent moral consciousness and this is best achieved in a reciprocal, communicative environment amongst people as we are in a spatial world and it is through society that we can transcend to become aware of our individuality.Sorry if I'm taking this sentence out of context, but this rather large claim perhaps needs more explaining before i can begin to accept it. Sure, some hardy people can live in the woods, off the grid and alone, and be quite happy. That is quite admirable. Our basic survival skills "in the wild/nature" have gotten flabby, at least for most of us. But humans don't come right out of the womb ready to run, swim, and hunt like some other animals. Some clan/tribe/community is needed, as well for the transmission of knowledge. I think you would agree with that, at the least. — 0 thru 9
Spot on, which is why we protest in our own way despite the collective that eventually I may pave the way for someone in the next generation who will be better than me who will pave the way and so on. A tree grows. Marx was incorrect when he purported an immediacy in this change through revolution, though with our current conditions and the impact we are having environmentally, it would seem that choice is becoming limited. I still refuse to give in and consistently push myself to understand my place in this world.It held the tribes together, and was an expression of the laws of nature. The laws of nature being that which is observed to foster and continue life, both within and among the species. But that may be a little off the topic, as interesting as i may find it. But the point he makes is that a species that goes against the laws of nature might exist for a time, but even a thousand years is an evolutionally short amount of time. And to go against nature is (to borrow Agustino's phrase) to saw off the branch they are sitting on. Individuals are needed to devise alternate ideas, but without the support and action of the majority/collective, even the brightest ideas will wither on the vine. — 0 thru 9
It is good to be back, almost symbolic as I overcome certain things one step at a time. As said by Schopenhauer, "I believe that if a woman succeeds in withdrawing from the mass, or rather raising herself from above the mass, she grows ceaselessly and more than a man.”Well I think I missed you too :P There's few on these boards like you with insight to talk to about really significant matters (I love that your philosophy is always practical and practically oriented), if you can believe it, I'm busy here quibbling about matters such as whether 2 is a subset of 1 — Agustino
(Y)It is good to be back, almost symbolic as I overcome certain things one step at a time. As said by Schopenhauer, "I believe that if a woman succeeds in withdrawing from the mass, or rather raising herself from above the mass, she grows ceaselessly and more than a man.” — TimeLine
>:OQuibbling is the fun bit >:) — TimeLine
Capitalism is like the man who at night goes and throes stones breaking the windows of his neighbours' houses, and in the morning comes in to repair them :-OThe sophistication of capitalism is quite frightening whereby these so-called 'individuals' in their expensive clothing and cosmetics are now taking selfies in the bush and marketing people to go back to nature and be natural - all artificially, almost as a trick that ascertaining what is authentic is becoming close to impossible. This is what needs to end. — TimeLine
Yes I agree. Capitalism doesn't want you to be virtuous because virtuous people don't need much so you can't sell to them. But those governed by fear, lust and the other vices - they are very easy to sell to so long as you present a product which can "solve" whatever problem you have artificially created in them. That is why capitalism is tied with democracy - it requires the levelling down that can only be achieved in a democracy. The evolution of say - morality - in the last 50 years is dictated solely by capitalism. People generally have whatever morality they do today, largely because this morality is the most conducive to commerce. For example - we admire diversity and globalisation only because their existence means more markets and more business. We are more benevolent and compassionate not because we are becoming better human beings ("We're no longer in the Middle Ages!") but because this sells. Being compassionate means we produce for people in Africa. We get money from governments in order to buy vaccines and the like, and so on.massive egotistical capitalist culture that prohibits any self-reflective contemplation and this consciousness of our finitude — TimeLine
Can I be a person of significance if someone doesn't give me that significance (or I don't give it to myself)? In what sense is it even possible to talk of significance except to an actor who has feelings?person with significance. — TheWillowOfDarkness
A person who matters to who? Mattering is a value judgement. You can't say I matter, except by pointing to who I matter to. Maybe I matter to you because you're a kind-hearted person. Still - it's with reference to somebody.object which produces value or a person who matters — TheWillowOfDarkness
All this says something about the person evaluating me, and not about myself. If they are good people they will evaluate me as an individual who matters. If they aren't, then they won't. In fact, this is even Kant's notion that he argues about with regards to always maintaining your self-respect - never falling below your own principles. In that case it's about you mattering to yourself - caring about your own self.Are you only understood to be an image which produces value? Or do people grasp you as an individual, a logical and ethical subject that matters in-themselves? — TheWillowOfDarkness
A person who matters to who? — Agustino
In fact, this is even Kant's notion that he argues about with regards to always maintaining your self-respect - never falling below your own principles. — Agustino
This is the same point I've made before that there is a tension between the individual and society (or the family) which has to be maintained for the well-being of both.
However, it seems to me that TimeLine is fundamentally right that the individual must have "transcended to this existentiality and conscious awareness and only amongst others of the same mental state whereby they exercise this freedom together" - otherwise it becomes impossible to maintain this underlying tension. Morality cannot be a matter that the collective decides on - morality always is and must always be the relationship of an individual with reality, and the collective cannot be an individual. So whatever the collective decides on, it will be at best a replica of authentic morality and a replica is dead. — Agustino
Now, once the individual has "transcended to this existentiality and conscious awareness" he returns to society - why? Because all people thirst for community and love, especially those who are close to their own hearts. And what is the problem of the return? That the individual is now taken to be mad by the herd - thus the desire transforms into being "only amongst others of the same mental state whereby they exercise this freedom together" - Why? Because returning to the community, the individual finds he has no real freedom. Real freedom isn't merely being theoretically capable to undertake X or Y action - that's freedom only in a negative sense. The actions that the individual wants to undertake cannot be undertaken because he finds no people willing to collaborate. So freedom in community is useless unless we can "exercise this freedom" - then it becomes positive freedom. Hence the thirst for reforming society - at least if not possible at the macro level, then at least at the smaller levels - friends, family, etc. — Agustino
And globalism tears down the fabric of local communities, and increases the space between people - leading ultimately to a scenario where each person becomes an island unto themselves. — Agustino
Increasing the ease of movement combined with encouraging displacement of people for material gain leads to extending the social fabric, in the same way that physical space itself extends. Just as physical space extending causes the space between planets, galaxies, etc. to grow so too this phenomenon of globalisation causes the space between people to grow - both physical space and psychological space. For example, what happens with a couple when one of them wants to move countries, and the other one doesn't? They break up most often. What happens when a family member goes to work in a different country? He loses contact and connection with the rest of his family over time. Globalism is equivalent to social instability and social chaos, especially among people who lack virtue and go after the carrot mindlessly. We're witnessing what is the equivalent of the Big Rip in physics, in our own societies.Yes, yes, yes. That is exactly what i was getting at in a roundabout way. (Though "globalism" may not be the only term one could use, it will do nicely. And for the term "communities", I would define that as "communities of life", so as to extend it to include more than humans alone, since we do not exist in a vacuum. But that is simply my wording preference.) — 0 thru 9
Ah sorry old horse, I haven't been in a forum for a while. What I meant is that your proposition of a truly functioning community fails to consider time and evolutionary dynamics where we cannot separate heterogeneity as though the community could be a continuous picture, something that is only possible when we eliminate the 'individual'. This possibility of the community being continuously the same picture is what Nazism attempted to employ hence why it is dangerous. This is the thermodynamics of humanity, as it were, the entropy prohibits the reversal of the arrow of time or that systems are irreversable and that chaos increases by a perpetual motion that is unpredictable. Whenever we move to a direction of cohesiveness or equilibrium, individuality disintergrates because it is individual consciousness that is causally the root of our chaos - if you take away consciousness, we would have no language and thus be nothing but animals, but we would reach an equilibrium with nature. In a social setting, we become slaves or mindless drones.
In order to maintain individuality and form this true community, it requires consciousness of this consciousness as it were; if society is a collection of individuals, we need to ascertain what an 'individual' is first and thus it returns us back to my original argument, which is the reason why the initial conversation was about authenticity and an independent moral consciousness. We could reach this equilibrium with nature because we consciously choose to do so as we transcend our destructive unpredictability and return back to our state of nature as we become aware of ourselves and others. — TimeLine
Spot on, which is why we protest in our own way despite the collective that eventually I may pave the way for someone in the next generation who will be better than me who will pave the way and so on. A tree grows. Marx was incorrect when he purported an immediacy in this change through revolution, though with our current conditions and the impact we are having environmentally, it would seem that choice is becoming limited. I still refuse to give in and consistently push myself to understand my place in this world. — TimeLine
If we take out the forcibly and if we create the right atmosphere that will enable society to assume that they are a collection of individuals when they really blindly follow in masses, they will no longer be conflicted with the master-slave power struggle and so there is no risk of raising a consciousness to fight against oppression. As I said in another post, take Anderson' concept of Imagined Communities and the idea of nationalism, whereby people have fabricated a union to this whole that though there may exist severe inequalities, violence and exploitation even at the most deplorable level, adherents to this imagined concept will nevertheless defend it tooth and nail despite. The depth of the human capacity to delude itself is markedly clear, so much so that our very own consciousness, what is supposed to be a part of our mind, cognition and self, appears to be so distant from our reach that knowing our own identity, who we really are, is entrenched with the ego-boosting that enlarges our false sense of self and image that who they are is barely recognisable.Considering as you mentioned "time and evolutionary dynamics" concerning heterogeneity, diversity, and similar ideas; of course that is an intrinsic part of both nature and society. Any organized attempt to forcibly "homogenize" a nation or people is bound to be a repressive power-grab on the part of the leaders, no matter what high-minded ideology they may spout. It seems that when one person (or one small group of people) trys to grab the reigns and fashion society in their image, it goes sour quickly -imho. I quoted Daniel Quinn in a previous post; and he has many ideas about evolution. One of which may be relevant here is his idea about the strength of an ecosystem, and the natural diversity that evolution gave it. Its diversity is its strength because that how it grew. Quinn writes that when humans try to eliminate all plants and animals that are not human food or other product, it eventually destroys the very place we are living. Taking the Taoist method of looking to nature to provide humans some clues as how to live in some kind of sustainable manner, that critical need of diversity for evolution could be applied to human civilization, i believe. It is difficult to go into all possible scenarios, but the general idea of how evolution occurs is the point. But i am no evolutionary scientist... or not even a social scientist. Or nutty professor! — 0 thru 9
All of this is subject to debate, of course. However, and as I imagine you would agree... impatience, blame, and rage are a volatile brew, one not to be chugged before speaking (or even thinking) about what possibly needs to be changed or improved. This brew may be a tempting and powerful concoction, but it rockets things in the wrong direction and tends to self-destruct. We are have a right to our feelings, of course. The inevitable confusion, anger, sadness, weariness, loneliness, etc. are hopefully counterbalanced by more pleasant emotions so we all can feel inspired to continue. If the evolution of the natural world is helped along by continuous and varied mutations, then perhaps the idea of "civilization" may mutate into something that works more consistently for the greater majority of the community of life. — 0 thru 9
What is the nature of the Self and what are its boundaries, within the constraints of this mortal existence and leaving aside for the moment questions of the afterlife? — 0 thru 9
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