I don't think that is necessarily so.You may have misunderstood my intention. Studying the plant for sure gives you understanding of nature, but it's impossible to confirm that the plant works the way you think it does without knowing everything else (or at least having some kind of theory to compare it to). — TogetherTurtle
Well, you don't need to study every other cake - merely enough similar cakes.To clarify my point a bit more, sure you would be learning of the cake, but how do you know its ingredients until you have studied every other cake and all of the ingredients you believe to be in those cakes? — TogetherTurtle
You can always confirm that the plant works the way you think it does, and broaden your view thereafter.
It's a step by step process, and with the lower steps acting as a base for the higher ones - they can't be negated. — Shamshir
Well, you don't need to study every other cake - merely enough similar cakes.
You derive matches from comparison, and study the ingredients that match.
Soon enough you should be figuring out the cake in question. — Shamshir
Then you would desire meaning. — Willyfaust
Sure, in a way. It's not completely throwing it away, but of course going up a step requires that you remove yourself from the current step.But in practice "broadening your view" tends to involve completely throwing out everything that was believed before. — TogetherTurtle
I get what you're saying - that you'd need to know all the relative factors, to understand the object.I don't think its 100% safe to say we know how plants work until we know at least think we know about everything else too. — TogetherTurtle
Sure they will. Comparing a sweet cake to a salty cake, will give insights in to cake creation.But what if the cakes you don't know about give you a completely new perspective? — TogetherTurtle
That has more to do with cuisine than cakes, though.Don't get me wrong, what we know about cakes and how we think they work is probably good enough to make them now, but I don't think it's safe to say we know everything about cakes, not until we know every cake and everything related to them. — TogetherTurtle
So you think more about what you don't have to do, as opposed to what you now can do. That's interesting. I'd like to hear what you have to say after you think about it more. — TogetherTurtle
There are many kinds of freedom. — luckswallowsall
well, probably not blindfolded. — TogetherTurtle
Sure they will. Comparing a sweet cake to a salty cake, will give insights in to cake creation.
But it won't really influence a Garash recipe, will it? — Shamshir
That has more to do with cuisine than cakes, though. — Shamshir
Freedom is choosing to grow unimpeded by others, that does not mean not being influenced by others. — Brett
Freedom is the ability to exercise any activity that doesn't impede upon anyone else's freedom. — Pelle
Why is that? Is it because you are then aware of where you can and cannot go as you set off? When you’re blindfolded, you can initially feel free - perhaps even more free than in the same position not blindfolded - but only until you wish to move or do anything. — Possibility
Like parcour, it helps to interact with everything not as an obstacle to avoid or overcome, but rather as a potential partner in achievement. This often means adjusting our plans to accommodate, even in the midst of executing them. We lose our sense of freedom when we fail to understand how a relationship has the potential for achievement from multiple perspectives. — Possibility
So there are two approaches to freedom then, one where you eliminate anything that can hurt you and then put on the blindfold, and another where you use your obstacles to get where you want to go? — TogetherTurtle
It requires us to have achieved independence and autonomy, as well as have our path to success already cleared. — Possibility
Why is the second approach ignored? — Possibility
So do you genuinely believe that the first method is realistically achievable? — Possibility
Those of us who are informed certainly do know that incompatibilist free will does not exist. — luckswallowsall
Perhaps something like this could be possible near or after the heat death of the universe (if we’re right in predicting it would happen anyway). I recall some speculation that we might be able to siphon Hawking radiation from black holes and live off of that for a while or even forever, so maybe a path to this kind of freedom would be to hold out until we can do that. Or collect all of the energy and matter in the universe and keep it in a controlled system, but assuming that the universe expands infinitely and faster than we can catch up, that might just be impossible. — TogetherTurtle
We've pulled off some pretty ridiculous things in the past that just seem normal now, so I definitely think it's possible. I wouldn't put all of my money in it ever happening though. I think it's probably ideal, but if it isn't possible, I wouldn't be too disappointed. — TogetherTurtle
I understand your reluctance to dismiss possibilities - I’ve been there. But all of science points to process as the underlying reality of our universe. This means that, despite thousands of years of denial and wishful thinking, we do NOT live in a static world. And the sooner we accept this reality and find a way to ‘roll with it’ rather than try to ‘control’ everything, the sooner we will achieve this sense of freedom we long for. To continue to believe we can put the brakes on the universe and make it first conform to our desires and then remain in that state is precisely what prevents freedom, not what contributes to it. — Possibility
we do NOT live in a static world — Possibility
Just as the word "jackass" can mean both a donkey and a fool... and I don't have to insist that it only has one meaning. — luckswallowsall
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