b) (the future) We often think at least on the west part of the world that after your life comes to a inevitable end we will transcend to a heaven/hell and all the others variations of it or in some cases we think that once that we die our consciousness will be stuck in a dark loop of dark and nothing, but what we fail to observe is that nothing is nothing it is not a feeling of some sort, but indeed the absence of everything is the defition of "not being", is a substential part of being, the other side of the coin. We would never understand/feel/experience "Being" if there was not "not being". — Filipe
That is absolute true, the very necessity of trying to understand the end is a symptom of fear of it but because we are above anything curious of nature, death is a undetailable subject to discuss... and the understanding of it may bring some comfort to such delicade creatures as we are. — Filipe
But I am not talking about dying, but about death in itself. — Filipe
Patterns are real, but they don't exist. — Jake
t's not clear to me why you would say that. I think a good definition of existence is Peirce's, which states that something exists if it can affect other things. I see patterns as fitting that bill. — Janus
A pattern no weight, no mass, which we typically define as a state of non-existence. — Jake
When does the glass of water you're drinking become you? — Jake
You said that a wave is a pattern, and a wave certainly has weight and mass and can affect things. — Janus
we neglect, deny and run from "not being". — Filipe
-- @CaZaNOxIt therefore seems to be a better conceptualization that biological entities want to live than that they "concioussly" fear death and therefore "flee" in to trying to stay alive based on their thoughts.
-@czaharThis line doesn't make sense. How could "not being" be our original form? The very fact that there is a form to talk about implies something exists and therefore implies being.
Yes, but things only exist in forms. — Janus
So before we assume that "things only exist in forms" we might first attempt to prove that things and forms actually exist in the real world beyond our minds. — Jake
It seems obvious that this can never be proven, and that it is an ill-formed question; but it also seems self-evident that the things (patterns or energy vectors or whatever) which appear to us as concrete things are not dependent upon us for their existence and do not cease to exist when we are not perceiving them. So, where does this leave us? — Janus
Look at it another way: what is the point of asking a question which cannot be answered or even coherently asked? — Janus
And also what relevance could such a question have to what we have been discussing, which is "what could count as the logical or semantic difference between 'being real' and 'existing'"? — Janus
The concept of "thing" assumes and requires a division between one thing and another thing. Does such a division exist in the real world? — Jake
The "existence" of "things" is dependent upon boundaries between one thing and another. — Jake
In the world beyond our minds everything is real, and nothing exists, in the sense of being a separate "thing". — Jake
I think your view of philosophy and philosophies, thought and thinking, is overly simplistic. — Janus
Fact: All philosophies are made of thought.
Fact: Psychologically, all human beings are made of thought.
Premise: Given that all philosophers and all philosophies are made of thought, the nature of thought should be the focus of our investigations. — Jake
This is too "simplistic" for most "philosophers". Not complex and sophisticated and fancy enough. Not enough ego and career inflation opportunities. — Jake
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