Yes. Lapses or gaps in my memory inform my conceptions of my own nonexistence.In that case, did you mean that you conceive non existence via unconsciousness and forgetting? — Corvus
Not when one is nonexistent. One exists and glimpses nonexistence – we sleep one-third of our lives, we forget much (even forget that we've forgotten), we experience everything changing as things known and unknown cease to exist, and, also, encounter histories of times before one was born, even before h. sapiens or life itself existed. Conceivable signs or indicators, though not themselves experiences, of nonexistence.I am not sure if non existence is ever conceivable.
Yes. Lapses or gaps in my memory inform my conceptions of my own nonexistence. — 180 Proof
Not when one is nonexistent. One exists and glimpses nonexistence – we sleep one-third of our lives, we forget much (even forget that we've forgotten), we experience everything changing as things known and unknown cease to exist, and, also, encointer histories of times before one was born, even before h. sapiens or life itself existed. Conceivable signs or indicators, though not themselves experiences, of nonexistence. — 180 Proof
Hume even said "One cannot find one's own ideas of self', because what one ever perceives is just a bundle of perceptions of the external objects. — Corvus
On the contrary. A gap in memories (i.e. forgetting) or in an object like a donut hole, thus conceivable and, as a conception, memorable.Memory is always memory about objects or situations or others which are different from the owner of the memories. Forgetting and having gaps in between memories cannot glimpse one's own non-existence. — Corvus
Good job! Hume's 'bundle theory' conceives of the non-self, or nonexistence of ourselves as selves. I'll add that to my list.Hume even said "One cannot find one's own ideas of self', because what one ever perceives is just a bundle of perceptions of the external objects.
Apparently, just as one conceives of future events, numbers, vagueness or holes.How can one conceive non-existence when nothing is present?
I feel that death is only significant to the one who is facing one, or had lived and died. It is a personal historical event only meaningful the dead himself. — Corvus
Any fact you can think of – concrete, not abstract – is finite, always can change or cease to be. Thinking is also a fact (not the contents which are merely abstract but the activity or process) which can cease to be. This a priori contingency enables thinking of counterfactuals and alternative scenarios, plans of action and predictions. One can think of oneself not thinking or, in principle, the nonexistence (nonbeing) of thinking insofar as the activity of thought itself is contingent (i.e. can cease to be). — 180 Proof
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The Unthinking-Suffering Equivalence
1. If in pain, not thinking (too painful to think)
2. If not thinking, in pain (people dislike being called a fool)
Ergo,
3. Pain = Not thinking (1, 2 logical equivalence)
Ergo,
4. Maximum pain (hell) = Thinking impossible (pesudo-nonexistence)
Ergo,
5. If we were/are capable of thinking but we didn't (before birth and after death), it could be said that we were in hell (before birth) and we'll go back to hell (after death). — TheMadFool
Interesting but besides the point. Daily living, as I point out, (structurally) provides glimpses – epiphanies – of not existing (via ineluctable gaps in awareness and memories). For me these are enough. — 180 Proof
But he refers to himself many times, while denying its existence.
At the same time, one's conception is distorted when one applies knowledge to non-existence, which has no knowledge. — Manuel
At the same time, one's conception is distorted when one applies knowledge to non-existence, which has no knowledge. But we an idea of it in dreamless sleep, or thinking about non-existence before birth. It's vague, but we have it. — Manuel
On the contrary. A gap in memories (i.e. forgetting) in an object like a donut hole, thus conceivable and, as a conception, memorable. — 180 Proof
If I understand that correctly, it is exactly wrong; the opposite of what is the case. Being dead is not something you will live through or experience, not part of your life; so it can have no significance for you. It's significance is in those left behind. It is not meaningful to the dead.
But I must have misunderstood you; I can't see how you could get this so wrong. — Banno
On the contrary. A gap in memories (i.e. forgetting) in an object like a donut hole, thus conceivable and, as a conception, memorable. — 180 Proof
Actually I was paraphrasing Wittgenstein. Perhaps you ought read him. — Banno
Think it through. I wasn't quoting from an article when I wrote that. It's an analogy not a theory. If it does not make sense to you, Corvus, then tease out and clarify why. Otherwise, consider it, or don't. — 180 Proof
If you can't think it through yourself, then documentary corroboration is just a appeal to authority (or popularity) anyway, and therefore you may learn something without ever understanding it. In this case, apparently, you don't understand my analogy in the context of this topic and, instead of trying to think it through you're searching for a supporting citation like an answer to a multiple-guess exam. Whether or not my analogy makes sense, Corvus, you'll never know unless you think it through in context for yourself. — 180 Proof
I see. Whatever, man. :sweat: — 180 Proof
None of your tedious objections to my analogy hold up under scrutiny nor add much to the topic. Sorry this simple discussion has sailed so far over your head. Have a good one, Corvus. — 180 Proof
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