Hegel is like all those who make ontological arguments that presume the intelligibility of the world must reflect the already existing intelligibilty of a comprehending and reasoning mind. — apokrisis
But 'synthetic a priori judgements' are possible. In other words, certain predictions can be made infallibly, on the basis of premises that don't necessarily entail that conclusion by logic alone. The mind has the ability to penetrate, to some extent, the nature of things, purely on the basis of reason alone. The whole history of science is evidence of that. — Wayfarer
But that whole debate between Schelling and Hegel, and what Emerson and Peirce make of it, bespeaks great confusion as far as I am concerned. I think on such matters I prefer Soyen Shaku,
Don't we all know what feeling is? — Janus
How do you think we would experience that other than as a feeling? It cannot be merely an idea, no? — Janus
The reality of the experience is in the reality of the feeling, isn't it? — Janus
but we don't even know what God's independent reality could mean, any more than we know what the independent reality of anything we experience could mean. — Janus
So, for you God cannot be both in and beyond our experience? — Janus
If God cannot "escape the realm of experience" then he cannot be an independent entity at all, but would remain confined to the human feeling of his presence. — Janus
If we think of God as the origin of our experience, of our very selves, then logically in that sense we need him more than he needs us. — Janus
If your previous answer was just a declaration of inability, then I'm content with that. It's enough to show that you just assume a whole lot of stuff. — Πετροκότσυφας
Right, so next time a thread like this comes up, we'd better post poems, songs and paintings instead of using phrases like "A single, infinite, eternal, primordial, free, un-grounded Being which is the emanator of existence" pretending they say something that makes sense. — Πετροκότσυφας
I don't misquote, that's what I mean by bad usage. — Πετροκότσυφας
The doctor's metaphor for birth does not merely refer to a name (birth). — Πετροκότσυφας
Your metaphor instead refers to nothing specific, it just refers to a name which you use for something you can't even describe. — Πετροκότσυφας
Apropos of nothing. — Πετροκότσυφας
I just wanted to know what you meant. So you meant emotion, right? That's how I'm reading each instance of the world "feeling" in your subsequent post, now, given your response. The definition of "feeling" is never at all clear to me, in these discussions. — Noble Dust
No, that's not true per my view. What made you think so? — Noble Dust
Because, as I've attempted to argue many times, experience is reality. Nothing escapes the realm of experience, — Noble Dust
Is an experience of blinding, unexpected sunlight a "feeling", or is it an "idea"? Or, is it something else entirely? — Noble Dust
The reality of the (emotion)? No. — Noble Dust
No; why would that follow? Why assume that "created needs creator", and yet "creator needs not created"? I see no logical series there. — Noble Dust
That's a virtue, you're lucky to have it. — Πετροκότσυφας
You're asking in good faith, assuming my bad faith. — Πετροκότσυφας
I think I do. If you think I don't point to my misunderstanding. — Πετροκότσυφας
Right. It has to do with what the metaphor refers to. The doctor's metaphor for birth does not merely refer to a name (birth). It ultimately refers to that that the name refers to. Your metaphor instead refers to nothing specific, it just refers to a name which you use for something you can't even describe. — Πετροκότσυφας
If you imply that "the etymology of words and their metaphorical changes" is related to "That means it's the structure of how we perceive the world through experience.", then feel free to clarify on it. — Πετροκότσυφας
it is being-affected, moved. — Janus
Not all feeling are emotions in the ordinary sense of the emotions we categorize: fear. anxiety, love, hate, jealousy, lust, greed and so on. — Janus
No, that's not true per my view. What made you think so?
— Noble Dust
This:
Because, as I've attempted to argue many times, experience is reality. Nothing escapes the realm of experience,
— Noble Dust — Janus
That is experience of the empirical
kind, about which we can have not only feelings but definite ideas that are determinably correct or incorrect.: we are not discussing that. — Janus
Because logically if we are created by a creator then we are dependent on that creator in an obvious way that the creator is not, purely logically speaking, dependent on us, and certainly not on any one of us; and not even ontologically dependent on us unless all events are absolutely necessary unfolding of God's nature, that is, determined. — Janus
I disagree. What is a creator without a creation? Certainly not a creator. — Noble Dust
God is known to us only as a feeling, however faint or profound. and an imagining or intuition, however vague or vivid. — Janus
How would we discuss it "under the heading of philosophy of religion" other than by thinking "about God, transcendence and the like" by following "our imaginations and the logic of whatever we can, however vaguely, imagine."? Is there another methodology separate from imagination and logic when it comes to metaphysics or philosophy of religion or whatever you want to call it, and if so what do you think it is? — Janus
yet this possibility of 'synthetic a priori judgements' tells us nothing, ontologically speaking. You say the mind "has the ability to penetrate to some extent"; how can you possibly judge the extent of the mind's penetration and what are the absolute conditions that enable it? — Janus
God is not necessarily merely a creator, though. — Janus
So his necessary existence does not logically depend on him creating anything, whereas the existence of what he creates does so depend.. — Janus
That does leave something out, namely, the idea of there being a revealed truth. — Wayfarer
I mean, aside form what is felt about it, there is a domain of discourse. — Wayfarer
The computer you’re writing that on, could never have been developed without the facility I’m referring to. — Wayfarer
What else would God be? — Noble Dust
In other words, the existence from which you are currently discursively arguing, is the painting itself. — Noble Dust
An infinite being absorbed in absolute ecstasy, for example. — Janus
In the Christian vision God creates the world from nothing at a particular time, in the sense that the world has not always existed. — Janus
God, on the other hand, has always existed, so creating on that view cannot be all there is to God. — Janus
I can't see the relevance here. We finite temporal beings try to think from the 'point of view' of an eternal infinite being. — Janus
If we simply cannot do that at all, then saying that God is either dependent upon or independent of us would be equally empty and nonsensical; as would any discourse about God at all. — Janus
So, I have a vision accompanied by a profound felling of ecstasy: — Janus
that still says nothing at all about the ontological status of the computer. — Janus
But that's nonsensical; it doesn't apply to experience, theology, or...anything else, as far as I can see. — Noble Dust
God doesn't create the world at a particular time if time itself is an aspect of the world that he created. So, in this view, God creating the world would be an emanation from eternity. I know that sounds vague, but what I mean is that God, eternally existant, would actionally express himself in such a way so as to create a reality in which time is also created as a function of said reality. — Noble Dust
I think this stunts the concept of creation. Take Tielhard's view, for example. God is an ever-evolving entity; creation, in his view, is an ever-evolving process that is part and parcel to God. — Noble Dust
I was trying to point out that we all, ultimately, think from the perspective of experience: "the painting itself". — Noble Dust
But my intuition, for what it's worth, is that God has a greater need for us than we know. — Noble Dust
as it also describes alleged historical instances and events — Wayfarer
Are you sure you know the significance of the ‘synthetic a priori’? — Wayfarer
It's basically the Hindu conception of Brahman: Satchitananda. I have said all along that theology is worked out from imagination and experience via logic. This is obviously one of the possibilities of God's infinite eternal existence that is capable of being imagined, so calling it "nonsense" won't do unless you are a logical positivist or something like that. — Janus
None of that changes the fact that God is usually conceived to have always existed whereas the world is not. Everything said about God "sounds vague" because it is vague. If God 'actionally expresses himself in such a way to create a reality" then He must be prior to that act, logically speaking, no? — Janus
I was merely trying to elaborate the logic of the Christian understanding of God as transcendent being. — Janus
Well, that is just what I have been trying to point out all along. Experience consists in being affected, in feeling. — Janus
I tend think that way too rather than the Christian way of imaging God as an utterly self-dependent transcendent being — Janus
Lol; we always end up agreeing more than we realize, you and I. — Noble Dust
Understood. I've read the Upanishads and a little of the Gita, but obviously not enough to recognize the concept; or rather, I'm still too stuck in the Western ethos to quickly notice. — Noble Dust
the painter is only a painter once a painting has been painted. — Noble Dust
I've long loved the idea. And yet I have often heard people claim that a state of permanent supreme ecstasy would become boring.Could that be true if there were no sense at all of time involved? I'd be willing to do the experiment — Janus
Oddly enough (or not?) this thread has not been much about Hegel! — Janus
The only possibility I've come up with is that it would be a totally different state of reality, existence, and experience; a state in which the question "wouldn't perfection get boring?" Is rendered meaningless. I've had glimpses of this possibility in dreams and feelings, and in art and creativity. — Noble Dust
I've long loved the idea. And yet I have often heard people claim that a state of permanent supreme ecstasy would become boring.Could that be true if there were no sense at all of time involved?
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