If by apt you mean the most irreparably destructive and philosophically regressive force of the last 2000 years, then sure. — "StreetlightX
We are sensate bodies long before we are inference-mongering, reflexive intellects. — StreetlightX
As someone who believes in the primacy of the aesthetic as a grounds for knowledge, modelling relations constitute a highly constrained - that is, particular - form of knowledge, — StreetlightX
You frequently treat my posts with loathing and disdain. What I am advocating is not venomous, it's not regressive or any of the other negative epiphets you describe it with. I don't want to get into a slanging match - if you have a founded criticism of my views then I would be open to it- but I really think it is simply prejudice. — Wayfarer
Check out something like Mark Johnston's The Meaning of the Body or Maxine Sheets-Johnston's The Roots of Thinking[/]i. Deleuze and Levinas have also written some wonderful things about this, but I would not expect that'd you'd ever read them. — StreetlightX
I can honestly think of no more morally repugnant and irresponsible idea than the notion that "nature doesn't contain its own cause." Have you ever once stopped for a moment to think about the implications of this idea? Can you imagine a more repressive statement for the affirmation of the status quo? The divine right of kings, which held humanity down in the shitter for so long, is nothing less than this idea. The idea that women are inferior, that sex is dirty, that the body is base, that manual labour is valuable, that white people are better than the rest of the world, all these ideas and more have found their basis in the awful, disgusting notion that 'nature doesn't contain it's own cause'. It's vile, a repudiation of any possible happiness other than what is mandated by some extra-natural Idea which would, if it could, make the world itself disappear so as to be frozen in the image of of Timeless Beautiful Utopia where no actual things ever happen. It's a hateful, inhuman idea. — StreetlightX
I can honestly think of no more morally repugnant and irresponsible idea than the notion that "nature doesn't contain its own cause." Have you ever once stopped for a moment to think about the implications of this idea? Can you imagine a more repressive statement for the affirmation of the status quo? — StreetlightX
If I may: I don't disagree with this, but I think there's another side to the story, which is that materialism has not--at least not so many have noticed--managed to correct "the chief defect of all hitherto existing materialism". Actually existing materialism demonstrates all the faults that Wayfarer criticizes: it is crudely reductionist, it erases meaning, and it renders human beings as passive billiard balls rather than as active agents--thus it is just as supportive of the status quo as the philosophico-religious tradition you rightly rail against. — jamalrob
You're reading many things into my posts that I never say. Any religious philosophy would say that 'nature doesn't contain it's own cause' (although, perhaps oddly, I'm not actually advocating theism). It's simply an observation about the limitations of naturalism, as such: that the things, entities, forces, forms of energy, which can be counted, quantified and measured, don't account for the order of nature; that the 'order of nature' is something different to 'the nature of order'. And from that, you get 'the divine right of kings' and repression of women? — Wayfarer
We fail to understand our lives — WillowOfDarkness
The materialist reductionist is only dealing with the hangover of the immaterialist reductionist. Their inability to take consciousness seriously is because they've brought with them the idea of "the cause outside nature." The reason they deny consciousness is becasue they think it's impossible for a cause of consciousness to be within nature. In there minds, they have to exclude consciousness for material causality to make any sense. Like the immaterialist, they are too busy caught up in the worship of the order "consciousness is outside the material" to understand the world that's in front of them. — TheWillowOfDarkness
What is evidently real may not be what is really real. — jamalrob
And the same would then go for Moby Dick and the mind: they exist, but they are nothing but their material parts (and processes?). — jamalrob
and see how the focus on the Ideal has came at the price of women, of manual labour, of the entire realm of the aesthetic - on basically the underprivileged and anyone who isn't a well off white dude. — StreetlightX
Nothing is caused by abstract entities. — TheWillowOfDarkness
These things are not 'political appropriations' - they're written right into the fabric of those philosophies. — StreetlightX
When someone says "this limited, tiny sphere of being is what I think matters more than anything else' (be it spirit or molecules or God), then by definition everything else is of a lesser value. — StreetlightX
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