Being is definite existence. — apokrisis
Existence is a sum over histories. — apokrisis
But what is existence? — darthbarracuda
But what is existence? — darthbarracuda
Existence is a sum over histories. But a sum over histories is an entity, or a series of entities. I want to know what the being of this series is. — darthbarracuda
What I'm trying to hammer in is that every time science explains existence in terms of entities, it fails to capture the metaphysical distinction between being and Being. — darthbarracuda
Being is not a "thing", it is not measured but is a necessary condition for something to even be able to be measured. Thus there is a difference between "four feet long" and "being four feet long." — darthbarracuda
As to the difference between being and Being, you yourself make it sound pretty semiotic - the difference between a sign and the thing-in-itself. — apokrisis
The signs sums up what matters to us about our relation with it. So beyond that begins all we don’t need to care about. It becomes the possible differences not making a difference. — apokrisis
What is this "our" and "it"? — schopenhauer1
The separation of the observer from the whatever by the semiotic formation of an umwelt. — apokrisis
someconfiguration of habitual signs. — apokrisis
Try thinking about all this triadically rather than dyadically. It may then click into place. — apokrisis
It's true he doesn't try to explain how the quantum foam came to be and so forth, — Greta
it was just a game... — Greta
Look at how Richard Dawkins sums it up in his afterword: “Even the last remaining trump card of the theologian, ‘Why is there something rather than nothing?,’ shrivels up before your eyes as you read these pages. If ‘On the Origin of Species’ was biology’s deadliest blow to supernaturalism, we may come to see ‘A Universe From Nothing’ as the equivalent from cosmology. The title means exactly what it says. And what it says is devastating.”
In a curious way, I think your dualism is convincing you that any such talk of the self - as just the emergent fact of a continually adapting neurocognitive point of view - must be talk of some “thing-in-itself self”. Beyond the play of habitual signification - the realm of the phenomenal - there must be the noumenal self. The soul, the spirit, the will. The force behind the scenes that gives selfhood a sturdy dualistic reality. — apokrisis
You can’t be content with a theory of mind that is merely one of semiotic emergence, no matter how hierarchically complex the tale. — apokrisis
A triadic paradigm has the extra dimension to see that hierarchical complexity in a holistic fashion. It can see emergence because it can see development - the change from the vague to the crisp. — apokrisis
Not seeing your slippery slope to panpsychism. Only seeing that you don’t get pansemiosis. — apokrisis
.The question of Being - that there is something rather than nothing - is a special question that cannot be approached conventionally through the use of profane instruments or observation tout court.
.That the universe came from nothing, or creation ex nihilo, is prima facie, absurd.
.That the universe "came" into being seems to imply, from the semantics, that it came from or entered into somewhere or something that existed before. Before there was light, there was darkness - but this darkness is not "nothing". There must have already been something, a "firstness", "primary being", or some such eternal substance that holds up the rest of the architecture of existence as the foundations hold up a building, or the canvas displays the paint.
..
First there is the "there is". It is not a being but Being itself, an infinite, eternal, all-encompassing and penetrating reality. We know this because we ourselves are fundamentally an emanation from this mysterious primordiality.
.When we ask, did the universe come from nothing?, I have to wonder if we aren't confusing words.
.Precisely, nothing cannot be positively defined, for otherwise it would be something. The "nothing" is the primal Being, the darkness surrounding the light. Creation and annihilation are akin to dawn and dusk. Take away all the light, all the beings, and there is still the ominous Being, hiding and lurking in the background; that eternal ennui of awareness without content, endless striving.
.In my mystical and esoteric moments I am drawn to the idea that what we call the world is a temporary dream in an endless sleep; that consciousness is an insomnia in a population of dreamers, or a momentary divorce from the unconscious deep.
.The idealist/panpsychist undertones are clear.
.The entire world could end and there would still be this original Being. Strip the world of everything, including the world itself and there still is the "there is". There is, and there always will be. If existence is a story…
.…, then it ends where it begins in the eternal return to this original and fundamental reality.
Doesn't change presuppose something that changes? Isn't this something more fundamental than the changes that it undergoes? — Aaron R
I think you cannot see the problem outside of its parts. There is still a leftover- what the phenomena is in itself. There is something that is internal going on. I'm looking for green and you are giving the components without the feeling. What is even more of a blindspot of your philosophy is that your own philosophy leads to panpsychism. — schopenhauer1
Also panpsychism would seem to consist in the claim that everything has a mind, which seems to make little sense.Whitehead's panexperientialism, on the other hand, seems to make much more sense. For Whitehead nature just is what is experienced, not just by humans, but experienced by any and all entities. The electron experiences the binding force of the nucleus, the hillside experiences the erosive power of the wind and rain, that kind of sense of experience. So, I think Whitehead would say that the interpretant is also the experient, at all levels in nature. but this has nothing necessarily to do with "having a mind'. — Janus
How could a living, running, intentional model of the world - a model which includes a model of “ourself” - fail to feel like something? — apokrisis
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