I don't fully get it but even I can tell something isn't right about the post — Darkneos
In a world stripped of concepts, there is no existence as existence is itself a concept. Therefore, a fundamental prerequisite for existence is the existence of concepts. Concepts however cannot exist without a conceiving entity. Therefore, existence requires consciousness
In a world stripped of concepts, there is no existence as existence is itself a concept. Therefore, a fundamental prerequisite for existence is the existence of concepts. Concepts however cannot exist without a conceiving entity. Therefore, existence requires consciousness.
The concept of a chair is a concept. It does not follow that a chair is a concept. And in fact a chair is not a concept. We can do things with chairs that we cannot do with concepts. We can't sit on a concept, for example. That is a crucial difference between chairs and concepts — Cuthbert
Wherever we would be sitting, it would not be on a concept. If we had no concepts we might still have somewhere to sit - as a hamster might sit somewhere, for example. Earthquakes can throw chairs around and they don't have the concept of a chair. The post you quoted has some interesting thoughts in it. I pointed out one of the things that is not quite in order. You suspected there was at least one. So there it is, for what it's worth. — Cuthbert
:fire: :up:The concept of existence is a concept. It does not follow that existence is a concept. We can say things about concepts that we may not be able to say about existence. For example, without conceivers there are no concepts. It does not follow that without conceivers there is no existence. — Cuthbert
We couldn't use the concept 'sitting' if we had no concepts. But we could sit if we had no concepts (hamster example). And we do have concepts. So what is left is (a) sitting and (b) concepts. And the difference between them. And the OP still contains the identified mistake. And it still contains some things of value, despite that mistake. — Cuthbert
The concept of existence is a concept. It does not follow that existence is a concept. — Cuthbert
But without existence as a concept how would it still exist?
Sorry I'm just trying to wrap my head around your point. — Darkneos
Closer to what you're proposing. Yes, you can imagine an empty universe, but that is still an imaginative act on your part. The subject is still implicit there, as the subject who is imagining. So you can't imagine a world with no subject. — Wayfarer
No, we can not use the word ‘sit’ to refer to a doing without concepts, or without some other organized framework of interrelationality ( sensori-motor schemas of movement and perception). — Joshs
So, without further heating, a hot cup of coffee does not become a cold cup of coffee? — 180 Proof
A philosophical understanding is possible if we try to conceive it as provisional, limited, conditioned, imperfect, rather than ultimate. — Angelo Cannata
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