Even bored out of our skulls, we are constantly re-characterizing what time is. Even when we are most burdened by time unchanging, we are exhibiting its being change. — Gary M Washburn
Existentialism seems illogical — SteveMinjares
I suspect that the first music made by early humans was improv. — Tom Storm
The fact of the matter is there is no validity in experience and there is no truth in logic. We cannot validly derive anything from experience without appealing to the rational, and logical extensions are only valid or invalid, there is no truth in logic. — Gary M Washburn
this simply elides the dependence between reason and experience. Pretending it all happens by some ineffable means, so long as we make no effort to understand it, doesn't make it invulnerable to inquiry. T — Gary M Washburn
it's not what you think you are, but what you know you do not deserve to be that determines the worth of your ideas. — Gary M Washburn
unity" "concordance"! Listen to yourself! These are quantifiers! Worth is qualifying. Meaning is qualification. Language is its intimation. We resort to quantifiers because because reason is reductive. The only way to reach the synthetic term is the exhaustion of analysis. — Gary M Washburn
It is precisely through our effort to be consistent that all terms change — Gary M Washburn
A second language is never the same, and multilingual people are notoriously inarticulate. — Gary M Washburn
The aim is not to stop change but to move through change more aggressively, consistently , to embrace the new fluidly. — Joshs
The aim is not to stop change but to move through change more aggressively, consistently , to embrace the new fluidly. — Joshs
For what reason? — Tom Storm
If the paradigms of reason just don't quite cut it, isn't difference more "primordial"? And if so, contrariety is more foundational than contradiction. That is, we are more potently contrary to the inadequacies of reason if we discover that contrariety in contrariety to each other. In doing so we become a community in contrariety. But, naturally, that community only extends in dissipation of the moment of it, its worth is lost, and we are set upon a new dialectic of reduction and intimation. That is, we may never agree, but the terms of our discourse fully emerge — Gary M Washburn
it's an argument that serves as long as all are in agreement... — Gary M Washburn
Don't recall ever finding anything pertinent in Nabokov. — Gary M Washburn
The world around us will never be the same from one moment to the next. — Joshs
So my referring to aggressive experiential change is another way of conveying the idea of richly intimate change, for instance in flow experiences. If the balance of novelty and familiarity is too skewed in the direction of novelty, then in fact one cannot change , because one cannot even fully absorb what one is encountering. A fog of chaotic , confused incidentals doesn’t amount to much substantive experience at all. — Joshs
The world around us will never be the same from one moment to the next.
— Joshs
I've never found this to be particularly true to my experience. But I don't live in Afghanistan... — Tom Storm
It sounds like you are essentially saying, go with the flow but with some qualifier? — Tom Storm
No, Nabokov was no influence. Sorry if that troubles you, but there it is... — Gary M Washburn
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