he one fine point here, made by Aristotle in his definition of "quantity" in Metaphysics Delta, is that there are no actual numbers independent of counting and measuring operations. — Dfpolis
I can't find this - could you quote the specific text you're thinking of there?
— Andrew M
1020a "'Quantity' means that which is divisible into constituent parts, each or every one of which is by nature some one individual thing. Thus plurality, if it is numerically calculable, is a kind of quantity; and so is magnitude, if it is measurable." — Dfpolis
OK, but the usage in the analogy is other than your usage, so it doesn't actually explain your claimed convention. In the analogy there is a God who imposes law and order on nature, through His free will choices, but in your usage there are laws inherent in matter, with no free will act involved. — Metaphysician Undercover
You are saying that Newtonian laws of physics were broken down by human intentions, — Metaphysician Undercover
That's why I insist that "laws of nature" ought not be used. It fosters deception through equivocation. — Metaphysician Undercover
But we do not need to perturb the "laws of nature" to have free will, if we properly expose, and represent "laws of nature". — Metaphysician Undercover
But if there are no such laws inherent in matter, as the concept of "matter" is normally understood, then matter is free to be moved according to infinite possibilities. — Metaphysician Undercover
participating in the laws which move matter, rather than by overruling, or perturbing the laws. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you describe a human being as a unity of "physical" and "intentional" aspects, then you have distinguished these two parts as distinct. — Metaphysician Undercover
If the "principle of action" inheres within, then we must identify which distinct part it inheres within, the physical or the intentional. — Metaphysician Undercover
If it inheres within the physical part, as you claim — Metaphysician Undercover
Why not just place the principle of action in the intentional part, such that it can exercise freedom over the indeterminate physical part, thus allowing for freedom of will? — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you recognize that a law is a form? — Metaphysician Undercover
how can you say that all forms are immaterial, yet also reject the notion that there are laws extrinsic to matter. — Metaphysician Undercover
the law describes either what is or what ought to be — Metaphysician Undercover
To say that God, as the creator of physical existence is not temporally prior to physical existence, is simply false. — Metaphysician Undercover
Placing laws (Forms) as inherent within matter is clearly materialist. — Metaphysician Undercover
How do you support an immaterial aspect of reality when you have already stipulated that the part of reality which some assert to be immaterial, i.e. laws and Forms, inhere within matter? — Metaphysician Undercover
...we are inhabiting a world whose existence is independent of our perceptions of it, and that the commonality of our perceptions is due to that and the constitutional characteristics we all share. — Janus
It as absolutely absurd to think that without consciousness there still exists anything. Consciousness is uncreated. — Blue Lux
You think that a rock, which cannot act, therefore does not exist? — Pattern-chaser
No, rocks scatter light, gravitate, resist imposed forces, etc., so thy exist. — Dfpolis
My idea, as you can see, is that consciousness does not really belong to the individual existence of man but to his community or herd nature; — Blue Lux
our thoughts themselves are constantly overruled by the character of consciousness--by the genius of the species--dominating them--and translated back into herd perspective. — Blue Lux
All our actions are at bottom incomparably personal, unique, endlessly individual, there is no doubt; but as soon as we translated them into consciousness, they no longer seem so — Blue Lux
the nature of animal consciousness is such that the world we can be conscious of is only a world of surfaces and signs — Blue Lux
We simply have no organ for knowing, for truth, we know (or believe or imagine) just as much may be useful in the interests of the human herd, — Blue Lux
For something to be a sign, for it to signify, all that is required is that it has meaning. — Metaphysician Undercover
we can recognize that a thing is a sign, without having any idea of what it signifies — Metaphysician Undercover
For example, when I hear people speaking a foreign language I recognize the sound as meaningful without having any idea of the meaning. — Metaphysician Undercover
And, I can say things without clearly knowing what I am saying. So there is no need that the sign be either formal or instrumental in order to be a sign. especially when that which is signified is vague and unclear. Hence ambiguity is very real. — Metaphysician Undercover
I have a problem with this, because if awareness were one and communal I would be aware of every other persons experience and they of mine. I am not. I am directly aware only of my interactions with the world -- of myself standing as a subject to the objects I encounter. — Dfpolis
I do not find my thoughts "constantly overruled by ... the genius of the species." I often find myself at odds with the thinking of others and with anything that could pass for a "herd mentality." Nor am I alone in thinking that, at times, I am "a voice crying in the wilderness."
Rather than my thoughts being "overruled by the character of consciousness," I find them informed "by the character of consciousness" -- as I become aware of some aspect of reality apparently missed by others. And, again, I do not find myself alone in this. Each person has their own standpoint and subjectivity -- giving rise to their own, unique subject-object relationships. — Dfpolis
I do not find this in my experience. Perhaps you can provide an example to help me see what you see — Dfpolis
What would be immaterial? — Blue Lux
I can deny the existence of immaterial realities and still not accept the notion that consciousness or being is the result of interactions of matter or the material. — Blue Lux
But they don't act! Rock are passive; actions are, er, active. — Pattern-chaser
Thinking in relation to others changes the authenticity of your own meaning into its herd analogue. — Blue Lux
This will to a lack of ambiguity and a demonstration of human life that attains the value of absolute or normal or conventional is that which boxes the human into a construction of their own lives as not with reference to their own subjective feelings and meanings but with regard to everything they are not, which is all that is communicable — Blue Lux
I am gay. My thoughts about my life, if this was fifty years ago, would be overruled by the genius of the species, — Blue Lux
I love someone. When I communicate this... This love that is 'mine' becomes just another relationship. When I create something significant to me, I communicate it to the world, consciousness delivers me over to the herd mentality where I have to be intelligible by others, which is not guaranteed, and thus what I have created loses in a very real sense its meaning, because its meaning can not be apprehended by everyone. — Blue Lux
Mystical experiences are at base experiences. They are not different than ant other experience. — Blue Lux
"Thinking in relation to others" is the inescapable foundation of successful communication. If you have not already, you will find that I'm quite able to maintain my own, authentic position while communicating with others. I think you are capable of the same. — Dfpolis
Yes, there are people who twist themselves into knots to "fit in," but they are rather low on the path to satisfy Maslow's heirarchy of needs or growth in Fowler's stages of faith. There is certainly nothing "universal" here. — Dfpolis
Only if you let it. If you know history, you know that many have stood proud of their orientation. Of course there have been, and are, social pressures and even criminal penalties, but many found ways to work around these while continuing to be authentic to themselves. — Dfpolis
"There is no "having to be intelligible to others." — Dfpolis
If there really were a single consciousness, everyone would value and devalue the same things — Dfpolis
Most mystical experiences convey no information. They do not reduce what is possible. They open us to new possibility. Mystical experience shows us that it is possible to achieve the unity that we long for in love — Dfpolis
But I just don't see the world from that perspective. I don't see the world at all.
I am, rather, the 'seeing' of the world. — Blue Lux
It is not, obviously, a construction of my own mind and obviously has a being of its own, but this being is very different than the being of consciousness, and therefore both are, though seemingly incommensurable, in a striking connection and relationality. — Blue Lux
But you are more than merely "the 'seeing' of the world", no? Are you not also the feeling of yourself? — Janus
That would be impossible because the tree is not consciousness. — Blue Lux
I am not the feeling of myself, because myself cannot be felt. But I am also feeling itself. I am transphenomenal experiencing. — Blue Lux
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