How does this follow? What does being determinate or objective have to do with (1) being finite, and (2) being immanent? — Agustino
But in what sense is this the case? Hearing for example is also another dimension of experience compared to seeing. Why isn't one of these transcendent then? — Agustino
Okay so if the transcendent doesn't refer to something that is ontologically separate, in what way, again, is it transcendent? And what notion of transcendence are you employing? The Cartesian one, or? — Agustino
Wayfarer apparently couldn't handle it, so it seems he has decided to leave the forums. Let's see if your philosophy is weak coal or strong diamond! — Agustino
Okay so you mean it has crisp, as opposed to vague existence. Definite and stable properties can be determined about it right?Being determinate or objective means it is a phenomenon that be intersubjectively determined to be this or that. — John
So finitude has to do with whether something is crisp instead of vague?Phenomana which can be determined to be this or that are finite — John
So I take it that transcendent experiences don't involve the senses?they are also immanent to sensory experience. — John
But what if the vision is caused by God through worldly means such as altering the activity of the brain?If a vision is caused by God though, for example, then the cause of the vision is not of this world, that is, it is a transcendent, not an immanent cause. Of course if there is no God then there are no transcendent causes. — John
Well obviously because God is the world in this case isn't He? If so, then God is reality, and everything is immanent in God - God isn't in anyway transcendent.If this world is an expression of spirit, of God, then God is within everything, and everything is within God. There is no separation, but God does not appear in the world, and hence is not a finite, determinate, objective, immanent phenomenon. — John
Why mate, it's true, he said it himself! >:OBTW, Agustino, you are soooo full of shit.
:-}
. — John
Well obviously because God is the world in this case isn't He? — Agustino
No, God is not the world. The world is in God. God is not exhausted by the world. So, in a sense God is both immanent and transcendent, as you would expect. It is not the case that there is no transcendence, but it is the case that there is no (ultimately real) separation. — John
The world is in God. — John
By virtue of the accepted meanings of the words 'nothung' and 'everythung' — John
This means that God acts in the world, has effects in the world. Okay?Such a God is a worldy actor. — TheWillowOfDarkness
This means that even someone who is having a beatific vision, even that person is just having an experience. It is true that it is a different kind of experience, but it occurs via the mechanisms that exist in the world - his brain and senses, and is thus part of his more general experience.Indeed, any vision can only be wordly because the caused state (the vision) is someone's experience. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Without the persons brain, eyes, etc. there is no such vision possible.Without worldly mechanism (the experience which is the vision), there are no visions. — TheWillowOfDarkness
The nature of God was mentioned before. God acts in the world.It's the nature of God which discounts the transcendent. — TheWillowOfDarkness
As Spinoza showed, for two things to be able to affect each other, they must be of the same Substance, and hence are part of the same existence - and necessarily so.If God does something to the world, God is worldly — TheWillowOfDarkness
If God does not act in the world, then there is no God - because what sense would it have to say something exists if it can never be encountered or related with in the world?On the other hand if God eshews the finite, then God is nothing, an infinite that does not exist or act-- an immanent substance only. — TheWillowOfDarkness
So God either acts in the world (in which case God is IN the world) or God doesn't act in the world (in which case God isn't in the world, and therefore doesn't exist)The twin nature of being both worldy and beyond the world is a contradiction and incohrent. — TheWillowOfDarkness
The notion of transcendence as you use it is incoherent for the above reasons. Happy?To suggest a transcendent God is to tell falsehoods about God. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Where else do you think they could be taking place? :sbut the idea that experiences of those events take place in the world is assumed to be correct just because the experience is of the events and the events are in the world. — John
What does this mean?We know what it means to say that events and things are worldly. — John
Okay. Think by analogy. For me to touch you, I need to be physical, made of atoms just as you are, correct? If I'm not physical, how can I touch or interact with you? We need to be of the same substance to interact. So if God acts in the world, he must be of the same substance as the world. This substance is what we frequently use the word "world" for, and so God must be in this substance.The crux seems to be the claim that if God acts in the world ( which is itself questionable, and needs to be precisely explained as to what it could mean) then God must be "worldly". Even if the notion that God acts in the world were accepted what does it mean to say that God is "worldly"? We know what it means to say that events and things are worldly. — John
I'm not saying it would be impossible, I'm saying it is incoherent. How would we make sense of that? I can make sense of touching you for example, because we're both physical and made of the same substance - atoms - hence we can interact. That's what it means to be of the same substance - being capable of interacting. So if God isn't of the same substance, and is thus incapable of interacting with us, in what sense does he even exist? If I tell you that there exists this teapot, but you can't find it anywhere in the universe, and you can't ever interact with it in any way, shape or form, what's the difference between this teapot, and a non-existant one?And again, even if it were accepted that God is worldly if God acts in the world, what is the actual argument for that conclusion? It is nothing more than another 'argument from definition'. Otherwise show why it would be impossible for an agent who is not 'in the world' in the sense that objects and events are to effect changes int world. — John
What comments made you believe this?I refer to Willow's as a woman, because I have come to believe due to comments she has made — John
But for a very long time at the other forum he or she never had an avatar.her avatar that she is a woman. — John
I'm not sure if Willow is either a man or a woman. I refer to Willow as a him more often than otherwise because he/she never indicated otherwise, and because that's the first term that comes to mind when I speak with someone whom I don't know more about on the internet.I have noticed that you have several times referred to Willow's as "he". What makes you think Willow is a man? — John
Where else do you think they could be taking place? :s — Agustino
What does this mean? — Agustino
Okay. Think by analogy. For me to touch you, I need to be physical, made of atoms just as you are, correct? If I'm not physical, how can I touch or interact with you? We need to be of the same substance to interact. So if God acts in the world, he must be of the same substance as the world. This substance is what we frequently use the word "world" for, and so God must be in this substance. — Agustino
I'm not saying it would be impossible, I'm saying it is incoherent. How would we make sense of that? I can make sense of touching you for example, because we're both physical and made of the same substance - atoms - hence we can interact. That's what it means to be of the same substance - being capable of interacting. So if God isn't of the same substance, and is thus incapable of interacting with us, in what sense does he even exist? — Agustino
I'm not sure if Willow is either a man or a woman. I refer to Willow as a him more often than otherwise because he/she never indicated otherwise, and because that's the first term that comes to mind when I speak with someone whom I don't know more about on the internet. — Agustino
... NoSo, you are saying God is "made of atoms"? :s — John
We are always already outside of experience. We're thrown into the world, as Heidegger says.Can you explain what it would mean for an event to take place "outside experience"? — John
No - you can touch me because we're made of the same substance - whatever that substance is, whether it is material or not.To say that we are "made of atoms" is just one among many other ways of thinking about our constitutions. We don't actually understand touching in terms of atoms at all, I can touch you because we both experience ourselves as embodied, material beings, whatever our "ultimate constitutions" might be. The every notion of embodiment and materiality comes from our experience, and so do all the scientific understandings of physicality. — John
I am starting to find this Kantian/Hegelian view more and more incoherent day by day. It seems to me that thought (and hence experience) presupposes an external world to even get started.I didn't say that experiences "take place" any where else, did I? Events take place, do experiences of events take place (in the sense of 'have a precise location')? Or is it not rather that events take place within experience. Can you explain what it would mean for an event to take place "outside experience"? What if the world just is experience, including let's say, God's experience. Then events would take place in experience and the world would be within experience. Experience is not an object or an event 'in the world'. — John
Read Part I of Spinoza's Ethics - this is made abundantly clear by him. — Agustino
We are always already outside of experience. We're thrown into the world, as Heidegger says. — Agustino
No - you can touch me because we're made of the same substance - whatever that substance is, whether it is material or not. — Agustino
I am starting to find this Kantian/Hegelian view more and more incoherent day by day. It seems to me that thought (and hence experience) presupposes an external world to even get started. — Agustino
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