But Peircean semiotics gave a credible model of being as pure naked spontaneity. It supplies a mathematical, hence scientific, image. That gives a better purchase on the issue than a poetic description. The poetic view already presumes an experiencer as part of the equation - the story of this vague nothingness that is beyond any determinate somethingness. — apokrisis
yet it is still "something" — darthbarracuda
Most prominently in his magum opus Being and Time. — darthbarracuda
This describes relative nothing, which is similar to, as you say, the hyper-thingness of God in Aquinas. God is not a thing, and so "nothing," but not non-existent either and so not absolutely nothing. — Thorongil
I have never heard of relative nothing apart from in this discussion. — darthbarracuda
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