No relative point of view can give a complete view of what reality is.Farther away in space and it doesn't even exist.
Farther away in time, back or forward, and it also doesn't even exist. — hope
Ok you win. Independent of any observer, the earth is round enough in my opinion. G'day — Yohan
Which point of view is more objective.
The microscopic or macroscopic.
Far enough a way the earth looks like a shapeless blip
Closer, like a sphere
Closer, flat
Closer, neither flat nor curved exactly
How can you escape subjectivity? If there is no observer, which of the above perspectives would be true? — Yohan
It's probably the same motivation as "religious philosophy": fear of reality (onto/vera-phobia). — 180 Proof
It's probably the same motivation as "religious philosophy": fear of reality (onto/vera-phobia). — 180 Proof
No doubt a 'first world problem'. How sublimating and bourgeois ... (vide Zapffe)Bored with reality is more like it. — TheMadFool
No doubt a 'first world problem'. How sublimating and bourgeois ... (vide Zapffe) — 180 Proof
As for 'fear of reality', that's (almost) a cognitive bias, artifact of an enlarged forebrain that makes awareness of mortality inescapable and pressing. — 180 Proof
"Boredom", as you say, merely sublimates our congenital onto/vera-phobia by way of socialized distractions which include occasional, prolonged intervals during which distractions themselves seem interminably tedious and routine. Ennui (like anomie & acedia) belongs to the decadence / idleness of "overdevelopment" and is, therefore, a kind of learned helplessness, IMO, rather than a biological trait / reflex like fear. — 180 Proof
I don't understand the question.Do you suppose there's anything interesting going on with extreme sports vis-a-vis what I said about chimps, self-awareness and thanatophobia? — TheMadFool
I don't understand the question. — 180 Proof
. . . extreme sports enthusiasts essentially downplaying the value of life (death's ok). In one case you turn off metacognition (lose self-awareness) to make death less painful and in the other case you devalue metacognition by taking wild risks. — TheMadFool
It's more complicated than you might think — jgill
Many possible reasons of course but one that interests me is it amounts to negating one's life and survival instinct which is, in a way, rejecting your sense of self-awareness. — TheMadFool
feeling of control and freedom, and continuous physical flow. — jgill
As flies to wanton boys are we to the gods;
They kill us for their sport. — Gloucester (King Lear)
Perhaps there are others here who have engaged in activities where "negating one's life . . ." They might add an interesting dimension to this discussion. — jgill
feeling of control and freedom, and continuous physical flow. — jgill
:rofl: — TheMadFool
Yes.Flat Earthers — SteveMinjares
Yeah.Alien Conspiracy Theorists
This too.Lost Atlantis
Obviously.Paranormal investigators
Yes.And my favorite Big Foot hunters
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/577241 :mask:I believe the OP is looking to uncover/analyze a particular mindset that's, in a sense, susceptible to what in the current epistemic climate can be described as bizarre beliefs — Agent Smith
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