Haglund
So if tomorrow we call the sun "horse," it won't change that bright ball in the sky. — Xtrix
Angelo Cannata
Haglund
Haglund
Angelo Cannata
Haglund
Angelo Cannata
Haglund
Wayfarer
An elementary particle stays an elementary particle eternally. — Haglund
Whilst simultaneously appreciating the appalling nature of such thought systems, perhaps? — Tom Storm
Haglund
Not. You're talking about atoms, 'indivisible particles', but there are none. Nowadays a particle is an excitation of a field. — Wayfarer
Angelo Cannata
Angelo Cannata
Metaphysician Undercover
Can't we think about being without the limitations of the human condition? A transcendental state can set us free from these limitations. The static whole of the transient, transgressive, changing, differentiating, or becoming nature of subjective being can be experienced as a solid, static, transcendental state of eternal, infinite, and objective, absolute essence, dissolving all distinctions, boundaries, perspective, and diversity in still unity. — Haglund
Mww
bongo fury
I do not say mind is physical or non-physical. — Jackson
Haglund
No, this is exactly what we cannot do. We must respect the fact that thinking about anything, is, by its very nature something limited by the human condition. So it is absolutely impossible to "think about being without the limitations of the human condition". "Thinking" is fundamentally limited by the human condition therefore these limitations inhere within the thinking. So if we want to take the perspective of some sort of disembodied being, we are not even talking about "thinking" anymore, nor would this disembodied being be properly called an "intellect", as "intellect" is attributed to a thinking human being. We can't even properly call it a "being" — Metaphysician Undercover
Haglund
Angelo Cannata
Mikie
That's why I think it is wrong considering change as being. — Angelo Cannata
Angelo Cannata
Jackson
For example? — bongo fury
Jackson
Saying “change is something” is a human conceptualization, which is, metaphisics. As such, it is exposed to criticism. It is humanly impossible to guarantee that our reasonings are true and correct: we never know if tomorrow we might discover an error in our reasoning. So, you have no way to guarantee that your statement “change is something” is true or correct; this applies all the same to the consequence that you think you can get: “therefore change is”. — Angelo Cannata
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