Philosophy is defined by its etymology (Love of wisdom). — Nickolasgaspar
He is making speculations based on his personal goals and emotional needs. This is known as religion or magical thinking. — Nickolasgaspar
I only demand a meaningful use of the method for the production of frameworks that have real intellectual value — Nickolasgaspar
Have you not realized that I'm analyzing and criticizing the concept ? The real work is done not by repeating well-known mantras that fit on bumper stickers but down in the weeds with the details. So far I'm just picking up a garden variety scientism in your posts. I say that as an old atheist who thinks that even the 'self' and 'consciousness' are inventions, pieces of technology, culture not nature. — jas0n
You start by making unfalsifiable claims like.
-" In other words, the ultimate reality is not something seen, but rather the ever-present Seer. "
-How do you know that the ultimate reality differs from the reality we can observe. What are your objective facts that lead you to that conclusion? — Nickolasgaspar
I can go on exposing all those unfounded deepities which prove my point on the pseudo philosophical nature of your statements. — Nickolasgaspar
-You keep going to the extremes. From Observation statements(almost deductive tautologies) to metaphysical presuppositions and magical claims.If you haven't looked into Popper, I encourage you to look into my other thread. Observation statements are philosophically nontrivial. Sellars also sees in his own way what Popper calls the swamp on which our knowledge is built. — jas0n
Are we on the same planet? I am criticizing the concept of the pure witness in this thread. If you can't see that, you are lost in a private dream, sir — jas0n
And what is the wise conclusion that is produced by criticizing this made up concept sir? — Nickolasgaspar
In this case it only sneaks in supernatural ideology since pure witnesses do not exist(as far as we can tell). — Nickolasgaspar
Now you are saying something, theorizing, and I think you are on to something. The 'pure witness' is a version of eternity. It is what is always there. It is like 'God' in that it makes experience possible. The mystical version offers spiritual comfort in the obvious way. 'You are really a deathless universal awareness.' The metaphysical version is part of a machinery that conquers time, allows us to discuss the form of all possible experience, provide the space where pure-exact language-independent and culture-independent meanings live, safe from the ravages of time and relativism. Kant and Husserl didn't want to only be talking only about nerdy European white dudes in this or that era. They needed the very essence of what it meant to be human and rational. And so it seems do you, with your implicitly universal notion of 'Philosophy.' As Marx might tell Stirner and that kid in the The Sixth Sense might tell Bruce Willis... the ego is a spook ! The ghostbuster is a ghost... — jas0n
-None of the above are legit philosophical ideas. They are comforting beliefs dressed up was philosopy.The mystical version offers spiritual comfort in the obvious way. 'You are really a deathless universal awareness.' The metaphysical version is part of a machinery that conquers time, allows us to discuss the form of all possible experience, provide the space where pure-exact language-independent and culture-independent meanings live, safe from the ravages of time and relativism. — jas0n
The Philosophical Method is an exercise in frustration, not the pursuit of happiness.
Making up answers and assuming things you don't know ease our anxieties so you should be skeptical of your assumptions. — Nickolasgaspar
I'd say what really matters, to me and maybe everyone, is feeling, feeling, feeling. Some philosophers have suggested that concept doesn't grab the absolute, that maybe art is better. And some religious thinkers have put feeling first. In my opinion, that's the cleanest route. Let it be called 'feeling.' Or, if it's ineffable, don't even start to argue for it. — jas0n
Reason is still king. Religion must not be a matter of feeling only. St. John's command to "try every spirit" condemns all attempts to make emotion or inspiration independent of reason. Those who thus blindly follow the inner light find it no "candle of the Lord," but an ignis fatuus; and the great mystics are well aware of this. The fact is that the tendency to separate and half-personify the different faculties—intellect, will, feeling—is a mischievous one. Our object should be so to unify our personality, that our eye may be single, and our whole body full of light. — Dean Inge, Christian Mysticism
Mysticism is not itself a philosophy, any more than it is itself a religion. On its intellectual side it has been called "formless speculation." But until speculations or intuitions have entered into the forms of our thought, they are not current coin even for the thinker. The part played by Mysticism in philosophy is parallel to the part played by it in religion. As in religion it appears in revolt against dry formalism and cold rationalism, so in philosophy it takes the field against materialism and scepticism. It is thus possible to speak of speculative Mysticism, and even to indicate certain idealistic lines of thought, which may without entire falsity be called the philosophy of Mysticism. ...The real world, according to thinkers of this school, is created by the thought and will of God, and exists in His mind. It is therefore spiritual, and above space and time, which are only the forms under which reality is set out as a process.
This is really hopeful. Questioning our presumptions is the only way we canI agree w/ the last part...or do I? I mean I always assumed I was after the truth.... — jas0n
So the idea of the pure witness is basically just...consciousness. If you want to ghost story to attack, consciousness is a good one. Religion is such an easy target these days. — jas0n
It's a concept related to one you depend on. As I went on to suggest.
You are knee-deep in metaphysical assumptions that you haven't even noticed yet.
. — jas0n
This is not true for your god like artifacts. — Nickolasgaspar
The Philosophical Method is an exercise in frustration..... — Nickolasgaspar
Making up answers and assuming things you don't know..... — Nickolasgaspar
What makes experience possible is you existing..... — Nickolasgaspar
.....start from things you don't know and you push a narrative as if it was right..... — Nickolasgaspar
.....criticizing the concept of the pure witness.....
— jas0n
(...) this made up concept....
(...) concepts that are isolated from reality don't offer wisdom....
(...)our understanding — Nickolasgaspar
The metaphysical version is part of a machinery that (...) allows us to discuss the form of all possible experience, provide the space where pure-exact language-independent and culture-independent meanings live, safe from the ravages of time and relativism.
— jas0n
-None of the above are legit philosophical ideas. — Nickolasgaspar
Without knowledge you can never be sure of how wise your conclusions are..... — Nickolasgaspar
Reason or better Logic is an essential tool for wisdom to be possible. — Nickolasgaspar
-unfortunatelly people try to address their frustration by going over those limitations. (Magical supernatural claims). Removing frustration is not part of metaphysics. Metaphysics job is to provide frameworks that can be evaluated. The end of frustration (and not always) comes after the end of this evaluation.(falsification/verification).......which disappears as soon as the limitations of it are realized. A central metaphysical idea. — Mww
those are not opposed practices. Making up answers without epistemic foundations is bad metaphysics...independent of our assumptions......serves no purpose, as opposed to making up answers and assuming things that do not contradict that which is known, which does. A central metaphysical idea. — Mww
-First of all you are promoting a red herring. We are addressing necessity. Sufficiency in the case of experiencing depends on the biological hardware......which is absolutely necessary, but not sufficient. The mere fact of existence does nothing to explain that by which experience obtains. A central metaphysical idea. — Mww
"Speculative metaphysics starts with things known, and uses that to arrive at logical arguments for that which is sufficiently explanatory in keeping with internal consistency and non-contradiction. — Mww
And in the negative, how wise would you be, to deny the validity of that made up conception, when it is impossible to express your denial without using it? — Mww
I would have worded it a little differently, but still, I submit that’s exactly what they are. — Mww
Knowledge is always contingent, from which follows the surety of conclusions is just as contingent, which makes explicit I may be wise now regarding something I know but unwise later regarding something else I know. Wisdom resides more in judgement than knowledge. — Mww
-Correct...but are you aware of a Non real world where we can not exercise them???? This is the problem with pseudo philosophy....it pollutes really good syllogisms!Exactly right. While wisdom resides in judgement, that wisdom is possible in order for it to be contained in judgement, is predicated solely on reason and logic, the real world being merely the occasion for the exercise of them. — Mww
-Obviously the dude who stated that has never studied other animals.All three of which are antecedent to knowledge, or, which is the same thing, knowledge presupposes all three of those strictly human a priori capacities. — Mww
I have a rotary phone and it's not plugged into the wall or anything but I can talk to God on it. My nurse likes to pretend I'm just imagining things, and I pretend to agree to spare her feelings, because she is scared of not being scientific. But me and God laugh together like mad when she leaves the room. — jas0n
//////////////////-I have a program written in Atari basic that allows me to copy paste claims (like yours) and accurately informs me about their truth value. — Nickolasgaspar
People confuse Chronicling with Philosophy. — Nickolasgaspar
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