That's why in Chan Buddhism there is the namarupa - mind-body. — Agustino
There are many different logical arguments given in the words of the Buddha and subsequent commentaries to prove the existence of past and future lives. In brief, they come down to four points: the logic that things are preceded by things of a similar type, the logic that things are preceded by a substantial cause, the logic that the mind has gained familiarity with things in the past, and the logic of having gained experience of things in the past.
Ultimately all these arguments are based on the idea that the nature of the mind, its clarity and awareness, must have clarity and awareness as its substantial cause. It cannot have any other entity such as an inanimate object as its substantial cause. This is self-evident. 1 — H H The Dalai Lama
Right, but this sounds more like neutral monism (much like Spinoza and Schopenhauer) rather than substance dualism or Platonic/Aristotelian hylomorphism. Neutral monism is very popular today in the West.Buddhists will generally say that body and mind are two aspects of a whole, but what that 'whole' is, is an open question, in my opinion, as it is neither body nor mind. — Wayfarer
Yeah, but this doesn't have much import to me, the same way that Schopenhauer's argument for immortality doesn't have much import. To say that consciousness continues which will experience "I and mine" isn't t say that I continue in any shape or form (unless I identify myself with that consciousness which says "I and mine"). Also what you're putting down here as the Buddhist view isn't the view of all forms of Buddhism. What is meant by many through reincarnation is that your thought patterns, desires, tendencies, atoms and the like reincarnate - the Five Skandhas. This can be a very materialist doctrine in itself, as much as it can be spiritual. Depends what you consider your "self" ;) .Anyway, from the viewpoint of Buddhism, many modern people are 'Cārvāka', i.e. materialists, because they believe that with the death of the body, the elements return to the earth, etc, and there are no karmic consequences ('fruit of action') which is of course not the Buddhist view. However Buddhism also doesn't believe there is a sub-stratum or enduring kernel of consciousness which migrates from life to life, rather that the causes which give rise to a given life, will give rise to another life in future, which will experience itself as 'I and mine', up until the point where all identification with, and attachment to, the causes of rebirth cease. — Wayfarer
That's simply reifying ape behaviour into a concept. — Banno
It is difficult to provide non-circular definitions because all things are immanent within experience. So our whole conceptual puzzle will, in the end, be circular. It is impossible to create a non-circular but complete philosophical account of reality.What sort of thing is a concept, apart from what shows in behaviour? — Banno
...the concrete term "wrench." — Hanover
It is difficult to provide non-circular definitions because all things are immanent within experience. So our whole conceptual puzzle will, in the end, be circular. It is impossible to create a non-circular but complete philosophical account of reality. — Agustino
That's crap. As if we never do things with words. We don't just experience, we act. Language is not so passive, nor solipsistic.Language is nothing else but the identification of patterns between sounds and other experiences. — Agustino
The nature of our mental lives, makes it impossible for us to inquire about the nature of others’ mental experiences, it is a private sphere, sealed off from outer examination. With this said, and holding in mind the fact that according to Dualists, the mind is totally distinct, and unrelated to the body, one stumbles upon some pretty strange conclusions that seem to inevitably follow. — rickyk95
Does a wrench ever come to exist in a fashion that isn't dependent on a linguistic culture? The argument has to work both ways here.
You are treating the wrench as an example of a material object. They are just things to be found in the world. Even if communities of plumbers never existed, a chimp might stumble on to one growing on the wrench tree, the one right next to the banana tree, or some such.
So the knowledge which manifests "real wrenches" is a product of linguistic habit. It is a social constraint that is imposed on material reality. There is a particular job to be done. And look! (melt...twist...hammer...shape.) Here is the right kind of tool to do it.
Hence the reality of the "wrench" is conceptual as much as it is material. Words do more than merely signify - point or refer. They are causal.
Clearly chimps are also conceptual creatures. They can fashion sticks in the right shape to fish termites out of a mound. The trick can be based from old to young by a natural inclination to watch and imitate. So chimps also can "know" - form concepts with consequences.
Conception is not dependent on language. But it is crucial to allow for the fact that humans fill their worlds with linguistically-dependent objects. And these - because they depend on (semiotically) higher order concepts - are always being rolled out in arguments to prove points about "theories of truth" which they can't in fact prove.
Once a wrench becomes a brute fact of the world, a mere material state of affairs, then we are into unvarnished realism and all the usual confusion that entails.
The mind becomes cut away from the existence of the object in question. And the resulting naive realism in fact turns into the very dualism it was pretending to leave behind. — apokrisis
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