the entire story of ethics and the self, rides on the simpler notion of causality. — TheMadFool
Perhaps we have a self but it isn't much if it is not in a relationship to something. The ever changing river is the relationship between us and the world. That seems to be what the self is. — EnPassant
eternity is not some infinite succession of moments, but rather the absence of time — Constance
t's my supicion, well-founded or not (you be the judge), that the entire story of ethics and the self, rides on the simpler notion of causality. An event takes place and instincitvely we seek a cause. This desire to pin down a cause transforms into an ethical dimension while the cause itself is rendered by the mind into a self. — TheMadFool
Physical time is a physical object just like a chair or table except it has an extra dimension. If physical objects disappear so will physical time. An analogy would be an oak tree and the molecules that make it. If the molecules that make it dissolve into atoms, the oak tree will evaporate and disappear. — EnPassant
time is not "out there" but in here, experience. Einstein knew this very well having read Kant when he was 13 or so. — Constance
There may be something in this. But it ignores the essence of ethics: pain and pleasure, suffering and bliss. This may fit into a causal matrix in our general affairs, but they are not mere causal events, reducible to the principle of sufficient cause. I mean, that screaming pain from a spear in your kidney, how can causality explain this? It is, after all, that pain which is the essence of the ethical prohibition NOT to inflict it on others, or yourself. All ethics has this feature: no pain, pleasure (of some kind or another) at stake, then no ethics! — Constance
It seems that the self is bound up with consciousness. We are only a self in terms of consciousness which is our relationship with the world. — EnPassant
there are periods (between lives) that we're not conscious — TheMadFool
Can you be sure we are not conscious in these times? We are conscious in dreams but don't generally remember. — EnPassant
It seems to me that there are many kinds of time. The most obvious is physical time. Another is mental time. Also mathematical time. Mathematics IS time of we define time as the relationship between objects in 'space'. There can be mathematical objects in abstract spaces. Logic is also time. Any order is time of one kind or another. — EnPassant
That brings us to the question of whether there is an objective source 'out there' that maps into our consciousness. — EnPassant
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