Having gained more knowledge over the years, I think there must always be another for "being", because something can only know what it interacts with. — Philosophim
I'm still trying to understand why it matters at all what anyone's understanding of being is. What does it can it do for us? — Tom Storm
Still -- so what? It helps make sense of the world, of people in the world, of the beliefs, values, choices, and behavior of these people -- up to and including those in power, who control humanity's future and fate. I think capitalism, for example, can ultimately be seen as an outgrowth of this long philosophical (ontological) tradition. — Xtrix
In saying that such questions are ill-formed, I'm pointing out that they do not ask anything; or at least if it does mean something, the answer will be a list of things. — Banno
What is being, with a small "b"? In my book, it's, very loosely speaking, properties: An apple is red; the apple, being red, is red.
What is Being, with an uppercase "B"? Being includes, in addition to being (properties) that which possesses said properties. The red apple is Being. — TheMadFool
It is very hard to have a discussion when the words are used in different ways. 'Being' and 'existence' are often used confused with each other. It has to do with the difference between the 'presence' or something as opposed to nothing which I call 'existence'. It is also known as necessary existence. Being is evolved and contingent. It is more than existence because it is evolved. Existence is the void, the no-thing. No-thing is no created thing as opposed to nothingness which is non existence. — EnPassant
It makes sense...in a weird way. — TheMadFool
I prefer "being" rather than "existence," although I do use both occasionally. To say being is eternal or has other properties is a mistake, in my view. It's one interpretation, yes, but is confusing being with a being (with an entity). — Xtrix
If existence is eternal then what do you mean by beginning? If existence simply is then what could its properties be? Without time, how can existence evolve into anything else?In the beginning there is existence. Existence is not a property of anything, it simply is, eternally. It is what is. Existence has properties. — EnPassant
The positive, necessary existence that is. The uncreated void which is existence. — EnPassant
That's the problem right there. How does Parmenides distinguish what must necessarily be, given the distinction he makes between Being and being, a "something" devoid of any and all properties that just is, no more no less, and nothing? — TheMadFool
Now what's the difference between an invisible, incorporeal, floating dragon who spits heatless fire and no dragon at all? — Carl Sagan (The Demon-Haunted World)
Yes, indeed! We need to work on the definition of "exist" and "existence". Wanna give it a shot — TheMadFool
OK. But I still find the question/subject ambiguous, since you did not agree with my "What does 'being' mean?" interpretation ...I only capitalized "Being" because it's in the title. — Xtrix
:grin: I have the habit to clarify my thoughs as better as possible in the first place so thet there are the least possible misundestandings and doubts about them. What I have added after a first description are attributes of "being".You describe being as "apparency," as truth and fact, as persisting in time and agreed to be "real." There's a lot there to unpack! — Xtrix
No, not at all! It is that which apparently is real, etc. My stress was on the word "apparency", since the beginning. It seems that dispite of all the things I said, I have not said enough to clarify that! :grin: APPARENCY: "The quality or state of being apparent". APPARENT: "Appearing as actual to the eye or mind. (Both from Merriam-Webster)So being is that which is real, true, factual? — Xtrix
Right. Although I would use the word "substances"; it's too restrictive.It sounds to me like what you're describing are substances with properties which we may agree upon — Xtrix
I said that the statement "This tree is big", contains two "is"es, existences: 1) There is a tree (it is implied) and 2) it is big. (1) refers to the existence of the tree itself and (2) to an attribute of the tree, which has its own existence, in a different context: "is big", implies that there exist trees that are big and/or that the attribute "big" itself has its own existence, in general.when you say "This tree is big," or "My name is Alkis," what we're asking about is the "is." — Xtrix
Why would you give the "thumbs-up" to the voice of ignorance? — Janus
That's a bit private-language, isn't it - that there is a what it is like for me for that thing to be a pencil... or some such nonsense.
As if he were to say that the private meaning of "Pencil" changes as the pencil goes blunt with use.
But there isn't a private meaning. There's only your asking to borrow my sharpener — Banno
Wittgenstein did not make use always personal. Quite the opposite. Use is inherently social. — Banno
And who can forget this perfectly unambiguous statement: The Fuhrer himself and he alone is German reality and its law, today and for the future — Ciceronianus
So how does examining 'being' accomplish so much? Can you provide an applied example? — Tom Storm
Being for Heidegger (Of Being and Time) is the meaningful presence of something. Ontical aspect here is that there is something concretely, there is some concrete being, and ontological aspect is the Being of that being, which gives sense to that being so that it can manifest as something. Being is the transcendental dimension that makes particular empirical beings possible — waarala
Temporality is a kind of a pure becoming or nothingness only that the moment of present produces certain stability or persistence or actual beingness to it. Selfhood is not possible without the presence. If temporality were pure becoming there would be no presence at all, only past and future? — waarala
Everybody knows the basics facts , his declaration of allegiance to Hitler , etc. that you’re simply regurgitating. — Joshs
Mahon O’BrienIn summary, what we find in this first volume of Heidegger’s Black Notebooks to be translated into English is an angry, disillusioned philosopher who tirelessly laments the cultural, political and spiritual destitution of his day. He sees little hope for the university, for philosophy, for the German people, or for the world in general. We are left with a picture of a spiteful, petty man whose professional and political ambitions had been severely dented, and who felt the slights all the more keenly owing to a rather unrestrained Messianic complex.
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