Exactly, this is your role and mission and life. It is beautiful having something to be related to.I have felt the shaman archetype to be central to my life, the idea of healing oneself and others. — Jack Cummins
I see it as very questionable if any 'experts' try to define a correct way of seeing. — Jack Cummins
It makes me wonder about the whole nature of the symbolic within building design and the imagery underlying traditions, including the esoteric. — Jack Cummins
I don't know much more than that... — unenlightened
The whole way in which sexual fantasies and dark fantasy is interesting. One area of possible discussion would be the way in which fantasies of hatred develop and manifest in life.
However, I am not saying I see the internet as all bad because I am so pleased to have found this site. Prior to finding it, I did not have much chance for philosophical discussion
with a certain amount of humour what does it mean to be a 'real' philosopher? — Jack Cummins
So, we could say that we are all social actors. The internet gives opportunity for people to create identities different from the ones they live in daily life. The majority of people do use the same names they live by. Also, most people don't include their photo. I am taking a certain risk because I am not anonymous and my photo is included and, there are a few others who do so too. — Jack Cummins
Perhaps that my life is a bit impoverished, but I do hope that the experiences of interaction on this site will help my confidence for activities in life. I don't want to just lead a virtual life. — Jack Cummins
Do not worry! We are here to speak and share our ideas :100:I won't get into the discussion of being a real philosopher on this thread because I just couldn't resist the temptation to create a thread on it. — Jack Cummins
Sorrowfully, I think this only works in Kids or Young minds because when you get older you start losing the ability of dream/having fantasies. — javi2541997
I'm not sure musical composers or choreographers are fantasizing as much as 'thinking'. — Bitter Crank
You mean we're not all jacked-in to The Matrix already? :scream:
(Btw, I've yet to experience VR with the improvisational fidelity and depth of feeling of any fantasy, so they're not comparable as far I'm concerned. Like I've been arguing about with one of my nephews for over a decade now: video "RPGs" are like jack-off porn in comparison to the immersive sex of tabletop RPGs (at least, back in my day), or like playing "Guitar Hero" compared to playing guitar).
NB: "Experience machine" = lobotomy plus a continuous 24/7 morphine drip ... — 180 Proof
Or VR will be "R (reality)" for VL (virtual lives).Since it's quite obvious that people prefer their fantasies to real life, it's likely that VR will, at some point, give R (reality) a good run for its money. — TheMadFool
Or VR will be "R (reality)" for VL (virtual lives). — 180 Proof
I think it's deeper than that: if the experiential fidelity of VR is indistinguishable from R, then isn't it reasonable for one to prefer the – in principle – "programmable & replayable" experience (VR)? And wouldn't this preference also belong to "the truth of" one's life story?It appears that this distinction - the fantasy/VR world, complete with objects and characters vs the life story of the person in the fantasy/VR world - is of great significance if only because it reveals how people are concerned not with the truth of their life stories but with how good the "graphics" of their fantasy/VR world is. — TheMadFool
I think it's deeper than that: if the experiential fidelity of VR is indistinguishable from R, then isn't it reasonable for one to prefer the – in principle – "programmable & replayable" experience (VR)? And wouldn't this preference also belong to "the truth of" one's life story? — 180 Proof
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