3. Knowledge (the holy grail of philosophy, excluding those philosophers who think aporia is more their thing) — Agent Smith
happiness — javi2541997
In Pyrrhonism aporia is intentionally induced as a means of producing ataraxia. — Wikiepedia
Achieving ataraxia is a common goal for Pyrrhonism, Epicureanism, and Stoicism, but the role and value of ataraxia within each philosophy varies in accordance with their philosophical theories.
How that's achieved is a mystery to me! Like I said, aporia is not exactly my idea of fun! — Agent Smith
On balance, it's more painful than pleasurable, and I don't quite see how that's a description of equanimity, tranquility (ataraxia). — Agent Smith
It's etymological roots are impassable passage — Agent Smith
Aporia is somehow supposed to (magically?) lead us directly to the doorstep of Epicurus (re: hedonism). How that's achieved is a mystery to me! Like I said, aporia is not exactly my idea of fun! — Agent Smith
Reasoning encounters a point beyond which it cannot go. A point at which we are confronted by our ignorance without a way to move past it to truth and knowledge. — Fooloso4
The limits of reason is a common theme. How one responds to that may differ. I don't think there is anything equivalent to enlightenment through surrender in Plato or Aristotle. — Fooloso4
I find myself constantly in a state of aporia; I sometimes feel that I'm aporia manifested in the physical plane as a person, that's how utterly bewildering the world, the universe, is to me. — Agent Smith
Reasoning encounters a point beyond which it cannot go. — Fooloso4
Plato's dialogues typically end in aporia. — Fooloso4
It is an inquiry and examination into how best to live knowing that we do not know what is best. — Fooloso4
Zen practice — T Clark
That is associated with the 'negative way' of contemplative meditation - self-emptying or putting aside all discursive thought and reasoning. — Wayfarer
The wise fool is ignorant, yes, but s/he is, at the same time, much the wiser for it. — Agent Smith
That's the million dollar question insofar as philosophers of mind are concerned! I mentioned the so-called Mu/Wu mind state in Zen. Do you have any comments on that? — Agent Smith
While, in effect, the route to happiness is completely different. — god must be atheist
And collectively, as a society, we have surpassed the Greek culture collectively as a society in wisdom. — god must be atheist
We may still marvel at Euclid — Cuthbert
They also didn't engender the scientific revolution. — Wayfarer
There's a biblical saying that the wisdom of God is folly to the world ('For the wisdom of this world is foolishness with God.') It has been interpreted to support crass anti-intellectualism by fundamentalism but I think the meaning is more subtle than that. The figure of the 'stupid wise man' is a cross-cultural meme, often appearing as a vagabond or itinerant wanderer, turning up in stories as seeming fools who in the end reveal their wisdom through some deed or gesture. (It's even echoed in the Lennon McCartney song The Fool on the Hill.) — Wayfarer
Zen is often depicted in popular culture as easy-going and spontaneous. In its original cultural setting it's an arduous path. Yes, it is possible to get some insights into such states, sometimes they even arise spontaneously, but in practice Zen requires considerable discipline and commitment. It bears some similarity to what is called 'flow', attaining a sense of complete unity with what you're engaged in, but I think there's a lot more to it in that in the Zen context. (One of the first books I read about it was the well-known D T Suzuki book The Zen Doctrine of No-mind.) — Wayfarer
Gnosis has a more specific meaning than knowledge. Actually there's really nothing that maps against gnosis in secular culture - perhaps advanced knowledge of scientific principles might be comparable, but gnosis is an existential discipline, not a third-person objective science. You can possess extraordinary degrees of knowledge about a lot of subjects whilst still not obtaining gnosis. It is usually understood to be understanding the factors that bind you to ignorance but again there's nothing that really maps against that in secular Western culture. — Wayfarer
Bafflement may be frustrating, but it can also be stimulating . . . . for those with a curious mind. :joke:I find myself constantly in a state of aporia; I sometimes feel that I'm aporia manifested in the physical plane as a person, that's how utterly bewildering the world, the universe, is to me. — Agent Smith
But there's another set of meanings altogether, which is communicated in classics such as 'the cloud of unknowing'. That is associated with the 'negative way' of contemplative meditation - self-emptying or putting aside all discursive thought and reasoning. There are elements of that in the Socratic attitude but it is not something that ought to be over-emphasised. You also find that in Taoism - 'he that knows it, knows it not, he that knows it not, knows it'. — Wayfarer
I have been saying, without really thinking it through, that the experience of God is the evidence for God. — T Clark
Without wanting to be glib, I have no doubt that members of Islamic State and the KKK have had experiences of God which help form their beliefs and actions. — Tom Storm
I think this is a fairly widely held view - the evidence is embodied in the experience. My reservations with this as a crass naturalist, is what counts as experience of god? Without wanting to be glib, I have no doubt that members of Islamic State and the KKK have had experiences of God which help form their beliefs and actions. — Tom Storm
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