We cannot be held to even exist as human beings without our self identification. — Agustino
Why is an arrow of time logically necessary for freedom? Freedom could be time-less. — Agustino
A rock is not, by most account, a living being. A tree has no self-consciousness, and hence, of course, there is no self-identification. To be human means to be self-aware first and foremost, which necessarily implies self identification does it not? However, self-identification does not imply egoism, greed, lust, unbridled desire, etc. I agree that ego is the problem. But I disagree if you take the ego to be the entirety of the individual self :) . I also would state that one must love self, before loving others and that indeed, ultimately love of self just is love of others. A man with a fully developed self, is, after me, enlightened. Such a man would not shy away from dying if they must to save their loved ones for example, BUT they would still retain a sense of self. It is THEM sacrificing for their beloved, not anyone else, and they freely choose this because their good has inter-meshed with the good of the beloved.A rock or a tree manages to exist without self-identification — unenlightened
Well, concieve if you can of a human being who does not have a self. Ask yourself, what it means for such a human to exist? Concieve also, how such an existence can satisfy the nature of man.Or if you want to say that it is necessary in some way to ensoulment, in which case I'll just go quiet and let you pontificate. — unenlightened
This is wrong. The absence of entropy does NOT entail the absence of time. It's just the absence of an arrow of time. If there was no entropy, for example, I could dissolve a cube of sugar in a cup of coffee, and then reverse the process and get the sugar back out exactly as I put it in. It wouldn't mean that there is no time, only that processes are reversible - they are not necessarily headed in a certain direction (ie no arrow of time, or many different arrows of time, always changing)!No time, no change; no change, no freedom. — unenlightened
Well, concieve if you can of a human being who does not have a self. Ask yourself, what it means for such a human to exist? Concieve also, how such an existence can satisfy the nature of man. — Agustino
This is wrong. The absence of entropy does NOT entail the absence of time. It's just the absence of an arrow of time. If there was no entropy, for example, I could dissolve a cube of sugar in a cup of coffee, and then reverse the process and get the sugar back out exactly as I put it in. It wouldn't mean that there is no time, only that processes are reversible - they are not necessarily headed in a certain direction (ie no arrow of time, or many different arrows of time, always changing)! — Agustino
What is the difference between forgetting yourself and being unconscious for example? Clearly, when you are, for example, dead drunk, you are unconscious - you no longer know who you are, or even that you are. What is the difference between this, and forgetting yourself in the context of being really engaged in, for example, watching a flower? Clearly, to a certain extent you are conscious and self-aware when you watch the flower, even though you are completely at one with your activity? Is this not so?There is no problem with such a conception. Indeed it happens to most people to forget themselves from time to time. Self is a habit of thought. — unenlightened
I meant time-less in the context I had written it. Namely time-less meaning without forward moving time, without an arrow of time. To witness:Well now you're just making shit up with neither physics, the bible, nor normal use of language to support you. What happened to 'Freedom could be time-less.'? Now it could be Dr Who's timey-wimey. — unenlightened
My apologies if this confused you - I can see how it could. English is not my first language. But my point still remains. Freedom does not require an arrow of time. Do you disagree with this? If so, why?Why is an arrow of time logically necessary for freedom? Freedom could be time-less. — Agustino
What is the difference between forgetting yourself and being unconscious for example? — Agustino
Freedom does not require an arrow of time. Do you disagree with this? If so, why? — Agustino
Tentatively speaking, yes, although it is an indirect requirement, in-so-far as freedom necessitates action to manifest itself and action necessitates change.Do you agree that freedom requires the possibility of change? — unenlightened
Does time need a FIXED arrow to distinguish itself from space? Doesn't time distinguish itself from space merely by being something different, namely time?If so, then I would say it requires at least one dimension of time, distinguished from space by its arrow. — unenlightened
Agreed.That is to say, my freedom comprises something undecided , yet, that I decide. — unenlightened
Agreed. Yes, I follow what you mean. I'm just wondering now. What if you could undo somethings, but not others? Having no fixed arrow of time doesn't necessarily entail that there is no arrow at all or that you can decide every single time how to change the arrow does it?f my decision does not stick because I can go back and un-decide, then it does not seem that that adds to my freedom, but undermines it; my decisions are no longer decisive. — unenlightened
Okay I agree. It is innocent in its selfcenterdness, but there nevertheless is a selfcenterdness about it no? Also what do you mean by it "lacks knowledge of good and evil"? How do you define good and evil in this scenario?thus it is innocent in its selfcenteredness because it lacks the knowledge of good and evil. — unenlightened
I will tentatively agree with this, waiting for you to clarify the above points.Having that knowledge, the path to ending or transcending self-consciousness is steep - one has to do better. But I think one has glimpses of paradise regained from time to time. — unenlightened
Also, I may add this question: where does this leave morality then? Can the enlightened person do anything? Is anything they do moral? (I would certainly disagree with that for example - because very often I hear this argument - namely that because someone is enlightened, their actions can hurt those who are not enlightened because they do not understand, or they are too attached to their egos, and in such a case, somehow, the enlightened person is never morally responsible for the pain they cause or the pain is otherwise justified by this - for example, your favorite man J. Krishnamurti and his behavior towards Rosalind and Rajagopal).Whereas humans 'ought to know better'. I don't think this is all that heretical. Having that knowledge, the path to ending or transcending self-consciousness is steep - one has to do better. But I think one has glimpses of paradise regained from time to time. — unenlightened
Why is an arrow of time logically necessary for freedom? Freedom could be time-less. — Agustino
We can't undo anything that's done. When a decision is taken or an event occurs, it constitutes that moment in the "arrow of time." Sometimes we can "go back" in the sense of changing the world back to a similar state. One can glue the broken vase back together, but that does't undo the vase was broken.What if you could undo somethings, but not others? Having no fixed arrow of time doesn't necessarily entail that there is no arrow at all or that you can decide every single time how to change the arrow does it? — Agustino
First of all, this whole paragraph could have been avoided if you had read this:Then it would never of us, Agustino. We are not timeless. We begin, change and end. To say freedom is timeless is to put its expression outside humanity an the existing world. How could I be free to be anything or make decisions if freedom is not an expression of changing states? Moreover, how does freedom even make sense in the context of a necessary, unchanging infinite? Such an infinite has no freedom, for it is never subject to change; it never has responsibility for its presence as an existing state. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I meant time-less in the context I had written it. Namely time-less meaning without forward moving time, without an arrow of time. To witness:
Why is an arrow of time logically necessary for freedom? Freedom could be time-less.
— Agustino
My apologies if this confused you - I can see how it could. English is not my first language. But my point still remains. Freedom does not require an arrow of time. Do you disagree with this? If so, why? — Agustino
We're talking of a hypothetical scenario there, which has nothing to do with our actual world :/ You are completely mis-interpreting everything, absolutely everything in this last post of yours, it's hardly worth refuting at this point.We can't undo anything that's done. When a decision is taken or an event occurs, it constitutes that moment in the "arrow of time." Sometimes we can "go back" in the sense of changing the world back to a similar state. One can glue the broken vase back together, but that does't undo the vase was broken. — TheWillowOfDarkness
There is a fixed arrow of time, towards increasing entropy, I don't understand what nonsense you are peddling here.To be part of the changing world entails the absence of a fixed arrow because there is never some necessary state everything is heading towards. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I disagree with this conclusion. I think original sin serves to remind us that control over the world is not in our power - we should rather focus on our characters, and even there, control is often outside of our control.We consider ourselves and our world fallen, to the point where it is not worth anything, where it deserves to be cast into the fiery pit for eternity, for merely having this "limited" which did not produce the perfect outcome. — TheWillowOfDarkness
There is a fixed arrow of time, towards increasing entropy, I don't understand what nonsense you are peddling here. — Agustino
I never claimed they could have timeless freedom with such a meaning as you use it here. I simply held that "before the fall" (if we can even talk of such a time), the world did not have an arrow of time towards ever increasing entropy. But nevertheless, change was possible, just that the arrow of time wasn't fixed. Again this is metaphorical and we are exiting the scope of the doctrine of original sin. The doctrine simply accounts for how the world is - for the fact it has a fixed arrow of time towards ever increasing entropy. However, alternative worlds can be imagined, where no such permanently fixed arrow of time exists.Do you not realise how this renders your "hypothetical" with the exact problem I described? How are you going to get humans outside the fixed arrow of time towards towards increasing entropy, such that they can have this "timeless freedom" where there is no change or movement in time? Even "hypothetically" humans can't ever express such freedom. It's a contradiction. We are always finite states stuck on the ever running treadmill of time. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I agree with a large part of your post. However, I would say, with the Stoics, that the one thing we do have control over is our own character, and our own moral life. That we do have control over. And that, not our external circumstances, are what we should aim to perfect. In fact, no good and evil exist apart from moral good and evil, for which we are solely in control. — Agustino
I disagree with this conclusion. I think original sin serves to remind us that control over the world is not in our power - we should rather focus on our characters, and even there, control is often outside of our control. — Agustino
I did say in that thread, in the beginning of it (http://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/213/on-wittgensteins-quietism-and-the-possibility-of-philosophical-certainty/p1) that reason requires custom in order to be able to make inductive inferences, and I maintained that they are not valid because of reason, but because of custom. Custom is the arbiter in this case. And I still maintain the same thing, (although you are right that my position has become more elaborate) because we learn to reason by following customs. From the previous thread:That's funny; I seem to remember arguing against your position that inductively inferred beliefs are never rational, that, on the contrary, they are rational insofar as they are based on all we have to go on, namely the regularity of our experiences, and the consequent existential fact that we have no good reason to doubt such things as, for example, the sun will rise tomorrow or that entropy is a universal principle, and I also seem to remember you persisting to disagree with these arguments, that you are now appearing to put forward yourself.
Of course, there is nothing wrong with changing your mind, but you should be prepared to admit it... — John
I will say that because people have died in the past, I believe that people will die in the future, but this is not a deductively valid reasoning, and induction itself is not rationally valid - — Agustino
So yes. The regularity of our experiences is something we arrive at by custom, not by reason, and therefore everything that follows from it is not justified by pure reason alone. If you want to merge the two and call them reason then I am okay with that, because it's just the way what we actually call reason develops. It develops through custom. We learn to reason through tradition.↪John There can be an arbiter. Custom. ;)
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↪Agustino So you think custom is a worthy guide as to what to think; is that a conclusion based on a process of reasoning or is it merely a blind following of custom?
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↪John Experience. As Hume showed, it's not reasonable because it's not reasonable to expect that the future will be like the past just because the present has so far been like the past — Agustino
By custom and experience. Not by reason.Firstly, I wouldn't agree that the regularity of our experience is something that "we arrive at (purely) by custom". To argue that would be to claim that our experiences are entirely constructed by custom (i.e. culture). — John
Yes, all that I claim(ed) is that inductive reasoning cannot be rationally justified. Rather it is justified by experience and custom.Also, in our previous exchange I certainly didn't claim that inductive reason is equivalent to deductive reason, wherein the conclusion follows form the premises. — John
It's a habit John, which is useful to us - which seems to reflect the world. That's why it is derived by custom and experience. It SEEMS to reflect the operations of the world.Most of the time, when we say we have reason to believe something it is not because what we say we have reason to believe is a logical entailment, but because we have no reason not to believe (and thus more reason to believe than not to believe), that what has been regularly observed will continue to be observed in the future. Of course this does not mean that we may be certain by any means. — John
By custom and experience. Not by reason. — Agustino
That's why it is derived by custom and experience. It SEEMS to reflect the operations of the world. — Agustino
We don't start out by reasoning, reasoning is a faculty we gradually build up, which helps pull us out of our initial ignorance. Custom and traditions are what allows us to learn to reason - to become rational beings. There have been cases historically - of people growing amongst animals - those people did not have language, nor were they rational, or open to rational deliberation of any kind. Reason is something that is community built, although, once built, it achieves independence from the community/custom to a certain degree (and this is where I partly disagree with Hume).I think that's where we diverge Agustino, I think the regularity of experience, and indeed custom itself are, at least partially, always already matters of reason. — John
Yes it does. But there's a difference between stating the world IS like this, and the world appears like this. I say the world appears like this, although I am also quite close to certainty that it is like this.Here again we diverge: I would say it does "reflect the operations of the world" or at least it reflects the operations of all the things we have observed. — John
Does time need a FIXED arrow to distinguish itself from space? Doesn't time distinguish itself from space merely by being something different, namely time? — Agustino
thus it is innocent in its selfcenteredness because it lacks the knowledge of good and evil.
— unenlightened
Okay I agree. It is innocent in its selfcenterdness, but there nevertheless is a selfcenterdness about it no? Also what do you mean by it "lacks knowledge of good and evil"? How do you define good and evil in this scenario? — Agustino
where does this leave morality then? Can the enlightened person do anything? Is anything they do moral? (I would certainly disagree with that for example - because very often I hear this argument - namely that because someone is enlightened, their actions can hurt those who are not enlightened because they do not understand, or they are too attached to their egos, and in such a case, somehow, the enlightened person is never morally responsible for the pain they cause or the pain is otherwise justified by this - for example, your favorite man J. Krishnamurti and his behavior towards Rosalind and Rajagopal). — Agustino
As Spinoza would gladly tell you about this, there is no opinion more absurd than this. Read his penultimate (I think it is) proposition. Just because you cannot make the world perfect it does not follow that you should make it even more imperfect and fallen. Just because you cannot eat good food for the rest of your life, does not mean that you should prefer to eat poisons when you can eat good food.And this is what make original sin laughable as analysis of our ethics and worth of the world. It removes ethical responsibility from our immediate actions. We have no worth in our own moral life because we can't make the world perfect. No matter what we do, the world occupies the same fallen state. Why does it matter if I do good in my own life? Myself and the world are still fallen to the point of absolute worthlessness. The fact that actions are finite becomes lost. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Who said we obsess because it is terrible? Is that what I am suggesting? Where?We lose perspective on what matters in the context of of any action. Instead of worrying about whether a finite action we take will make the world better or worse (or both), we obsess it it all terrible because we can't act to make the world perfect. Your reading of the Stoics is still carrying this mistake here. — TheWillowOfDarkness
We should aim for perfection, even if we miss it, we will land among the stars ;)We should never aim for "perfect" because we don't have the power to create it, even in our own lives. The very idea of "perfection" is dubious because it entails the obliteration of anything that doesn't meet a precise standard — TheWillowOfDarkness
Nope, I wouldn't. Each individual has the freedom to do and behave as they wish so long as they do not bring harm to the larger community (for the simple reason that moral excellence presupposes individual freedom). That individual X is promiscuous isn't a problem to society (it's a problem to himself I would argue, but he has to deal with it - we don't punish people for over-eating, which is also immoral and harmful to themselves). What is a problem is when promiscuity becomes a STANDARD or NORM to society. What I would do is take measures which discourage promiscuity from every becoming a main-stream, majority position. This doesn't mean outlawing it. It means, for example, denying abortions to people who aren't in committed relationships. This contains promiscuity and prevents it from spreading through society. We must protect individual liberties, while not allowing them to undermine the larger society.I mean what are you going to do with all those immoral promiscuous people? Would you wipe them out or lock them up to save society form their immorality if you had the power? Lock them out of economic means and social relationships to serve as an example for everyone else? — TheWillowOfDarkness
Maybe it drags you away from the finite. Maybe it makes you obsessed with how "perfection" is not met. It certainly doesn't have that effect on me.Original sin drags us away from our own responsibility for the finite. It turns away from the actions we are responsible for, distracting us with lamenting the world is not perfect. We become so obsessed with "perfection" and how it is not being met, that we forget ethical responsibility to ourselves and others in the finite moments of our lives. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Exactly.Of course none of this is possible (or at least can be demonstrated to be possible) in the absence of language. — John
I agree :D - practically speaking our positions are identical.There is a logical difference between stating that the world is like this and stating that the world appears like this. But that's just like saying there is a logical difference between saying that the sun appears to rise each day and saying that the sun rises each day. I think it's a difference that makes no difference. There is no coherent way of saying that things by and large appear to be regular, but that they might not 'really' be regular. — John
Fair enough.I don't want to speculate how God could have created things differently or has done in a wider universe that we might call heaven/hell. — unenlightened
I agree.In this world, freedom is built in by the openness of the future and our participation in its unfolding form. — unenlightened
Again, fair enough.Now I don't think that God created the garden of Eden as another world with different rules. — unenlightened
Me too, I take it as man being responsible for the so called punishment, not God.So I take the story of the fall not to be about God literally punishing man for disobedience by deliberately fucking up His own creation. — unenlightened
I largely agree.The counterfactuals of could be, will be, ought to be and was constitute the psychological 'world' to which we have exiled ourselves — unenlightened
Why do you consider regret and shame necessarily psychologically harmful? I can see situations where they are harmful - where they impede living in the present, and keep one stuck thinking about impossibilities, blaming themselves, etc. But I can also see situations where they are helpful. For example, I can regret insulting my mother, but that doesn't mean I blame myself for it, or never forgive myself for doing it, or continuously think how bad a person I must be. It's simply something that allows to orient myself IN THE MOMENT to behave better towards my mother. The fact I regret it motivates me, and orients me towards the good as it were. I can also regret hurting someone who I simply don't have the chance at the moment to behave better towards. For example, I regret leaving my first girlfriend in the way I did. Does that mean I obsess about it and think how bad a person I must be? No, not at all. I never think about it in fact, except for purposes of discussion and teaching, like this one. But it does help me - it helps me to orient myself in the way I behave NOW with people I care about, and also let's me know that I have learned something from my previous mistakes. In fact, I feel more confident because I have learned from my mistakes, and am determining to do better now :) . If I could remedy them, I would. Granted that I can't, then I just learn from them. To regret them, in this circumstance, means simply to realise they were mistakes, and be determined to live better today.Thus animals do not have regret or shame, and their lives, though finite, are psychologically timeless. — unenlightened
Oh yes, indeed:are psychologically timeless. They live in the present and so there is no death in their life, though there is an end. — unenlightened
Indeed - but the so called harm does you more good than bad in the end. I'm referring to harm which doesn't actually do you any good. I accept your desires not to discuss Krishnamurti here though.I won't discuss Krishnamurti here, but my dentist sometimes hurts me because he needs to - I need him to. — unenlightened
To what degree is someone enlightened if they are also no moral though? Does it not contradict what we mean to refer to by enlightenment? Surely we don't mean enlightenment to be mere presence of mind and mental strength. There's something more to it - it has to do with compassion, and understanding of others.I think it is sufficiently rare and unfathomable that we do not need to worry about what the enlightened man's relation to morality might be. — unenlightened
I think it was good he overturned the tables - he was simply doing justice, and justice is good - albeit divine justice, not human.Jesus overturned the tables in the temple; I will not say that he had an off day, nor that it was a necessary hurt. — unenlightened
Indeed!Rather I will consider his teaching and try and make sense of that as one who is not enlightened. — unenlightened
Why do you consider regret and shame necessarily psychologically harmful? — Agustino
Then we are in entire agreement on this.don't. I would say they are part of a powerful system of thought that has the potential to increase freedom as compared to other animals. Compare it with money - another construction of the mind. Money is a fantastically powerful means of cooperation that connects people right across the world. As a medium of cooperation is is unrivalled, but unfortunately folks get lost in it, and seek to accumulate it, when its use is in the flow. And then it becomes divisive not cooperative.
Human thought in general is a fantastic tool for creative living, but a lousy prison to live in. Think carefully, think hard, but don't let thought be the world, or you become isolated and lonely in your own head. — unenlightened
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