Popper takes a similar view of learning as eliminative of error in his perspective of scientific realism."we never learn by getting things right, we only learn by getting things wrong" — Antidote
What "kind" of thought do you imagine understanding to be? — Antidote
If thought were the natural outcome or effect, brought on by confusion, then the more you think, the more confused you will get. — Antidote
Understanding is mixed with thought mainly because of our confusion. — Antidote
So, if your arguement held true, those spiritual masters who claim the importance of "no thought" would not attain understanding, because they are without thought - again, not so. — Antidote
Here's a challenge: give me some example, something specific, about which you think a person might gain understanding without thought. — Artemis
As I follow this, understanding brings something into thought, so is a synthesizing function, not entirely thought, and not merely thought. And in some cases, thinking can impede understanding (examples were given, Zeigarnik effect).the moment of initial understanding also interrupts the process and creates thought. — Antidote
I haven't met a "spiritual master" yet who's impressed me much with his or her "understanding." I've read several books by so-called "spiritual masters" that have very much put me in doubt of their level of insight, to be perfectly honest. — Artemis
If your entire counter argument boils down to "you're confused," then it's not only weirdly presumptive, it's pointless. Confused how, why, and about what exactly? — Artemis
the problem with theories that want to do away with thought in favor of some "other" kind of understanding is that they fail to give any coherent theory. — Artemis
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.