Yes, that's what law school is for, to train you as a lawyer.Really? — TimeLine
The statement you quoted is a logical conditional, so I'm not sure what you mean. And I'm neither a lunatic, nor screaming, I'm just asking you a few questions, which you seem to be purposefully avoiding.Apparently, you know everything and are not just some screaming lunatic. — TimeLine
Yes, that's what law school is for, to train you as a lawyer. — Agustino
And I'm neither a lunatic, nor screaming, I'm just asking you a few questions. — Agustino
No no, it totally isn't, I guess it's there to train you to be a plumber... :-}Is it? — TimeLine
What are the harsh and nasty things I've said to you?Re-read your ridiculous posts; if you had an ounce of reason, you would see through what I was writing to ascertain the point of transcendental idealism but you are too arrogant and in your agitation and aggression say harsh and nasty things to people who are simply having a discussion. — TimeLine
First off, in a thread, especially one where I have been an active participant, I can address whatever post I want, and so can you. So yeah, your post may not have been addressed to me, but if it bullshit it is my right to call it so.I am talking to someone else, not you, and I am trying to talk as simple as I can. — TimeLine
Look stop trying to play the victim. How was I vicious? You consider it vicious if someone tells you that your writing makes no sense? You don't know what vicious is then.your viciousness is uncalled for. — TimeLine
No that's another fantasy of yours maybe, but I most certainly don't. I've seen you post in a couple of other threads today, and I don't even know what you've posted there, as I don't follow those threads. But yes, when you do cross my path, then if I think you're saying nonsense, I am entitled to call it out. That's what a forum and free discussion is about. So far you haven't addressed my challenges, and instead prefer to play the victim as if I did I don't know what to you. Pff. Grow up.you stalk my every post and say the same thing over and over and over — TimeLine
Well, what exactly are we talking about here? A metaphor or a category error? If it's just a metaphor, and is acknowledged to be nothing more than a metaphor, then I have no issue with it. Although I think that one should make that clear from the start. I don't want to be drawn into an absurd position like arguing that the world is not a stage because it isn't a raised platform in a theater. I'm not here for poetry. — Sapientia
Freedom and empathy enables one to transcend the illusions of subjective self-interest that we project to the external world. We decide reality as it subjectively appears to us so the actual activity of this experience is merely the cognition between the relationship of objects.
Space and time are its pure forms, sensation in general, its matter
— Kant, A43/B60
There is no substance to this experience because the uniformity of space and time is not merely the materially causal relationships between things; it involves an understanding of the metaphysical expressions dependent on intuitions because consciousness and by extension people are not mere things and therefore can transcend the material. So two people who have gone beyond this propensity attain the necessary cognitive conditions to form a dialectic that expose these illusions; they can 'see' the phenomenon of one another.
That condition itself, the ability to be free from the illusions caused by this subjective self-interest, is only possible through love (conscience/empathy/moral consciousness). Love is intuitive rather than logical, it involves a 'leap of faith' so to speak just as one has faith in God. God is perfection, the perfect Good, the representation of grace and love that as we seek God through this faith or intuition, we seek this perfection that we of course will never reach, but the process of reaching out to God - to love God - enables the clarity that subjective self-interest blinds us from, thus God is love. — TimeLine
You called it a category error, not me. — T Clark
As for "nothing more than a metaphor," all human ideas about the world are metaphors. — T Clark
As for personification, it seems to me it is both an idea and an automatic, unconscious projection of internal experiences onto the world. I saw a fascinating story on 60 minutes. It showed psychologists interacting with babies as young as 2 or 3 months. The babies already showed an understanding of agency and responsibility in others, even non-human others, i.e. stuffed animals.
I'm not a psychologist or cognitive scientist, so I don't want to overstep my expertise. — T Clark
What? Maybe in some sense other than what I'm getting at. I'm contrasting metaphorical with literal, and making it clear that I'm only interested in the latter. I want to understand the world as it really is. I do not want to hear people wax poetic about it. I want to get to the truth of the matter. I do not want to lose sight of it as it is clouded with anthropomorphic projections. — Sapientia
That's making it more about the subject than the subject matter. My main focus is on whether what has been said about the world is true or false, not on why people think in this way about the world. — Sapientia
Even realists or literalists, or whatever you want to call yourself, should recognize there is no direct experience of "the world as it really is," that can be put into words. There never has been, never will be, and can never be direct apprehension of so-called objective reality. We are left to run it through the sieve of human perception, explanation, interpretation, definition, and comprehension. — T Clark
When you say "I'm contrasting metaphorical with literal, and making it clear that I'm only interested in the latter," is it your position that personification as it relates to people is somehow a literal expression of what is in the world? — T Clark
Personification is a human act. It is not inherent in the universe. — T Clark
Given that, humans are likely to use it in ways you don't find acceptable. — T Clark
Again - that's not a reflection of how things are, it is a reflection of how you see things. — T Clark
The subject you and I have been discussing is whether or not it is defensible to personify the world. As I've tried to say above, it is no more or less defensible than personifying my brother or my aunt. — T Clark
The question is, is it useful. I say yes. — T Clark
That's debatable, but even if so, there's no need to go overboard. It isn't anything goes. — Sapientia
I find it hard to make sense of that question, so I'm not going to attempt to answer it. My point was simply that when it comes to the question of whether or not the world is a person, I'm only interested in the literal truth. — Sapientia
That's absurd, as anyone can see. Merely saying so won't do. What's your argument? Unless you're talking in terms of artistic expression or what makes you feel good or something like that, which is something that I'm not at all interested in in this discussion, as I've tried to make clear, then you don't have a leg to stand on. — Sapientia
Of course it's debatable. I don't know what the rest of that statement means. — T Clark
Human beings are animals. Mammals. Homo Sapiens. Physical objects. Their personhood is not inherent in them, it is projected onto them by someone. As I've said, that projection is something humans do before they are old enough to conceptualize what a person really is. Before they have any words. In that sense, a person is not "literally" a person. — T Clark
Well, not everyone can see that it's absurd. — T Clark
I haven't merely said so, I've made an argument, which you haven't bought. — T Clark
It is my position that someone's personhood is a projection of someone else's internal experience of their own selfhood onto another. — T Clark
Whereas you seem to believe that someone's personhood is a much a part of them as their fingernails, capillaries, and skin cells. That it has some sort of independent reality. That sounds like Platonic idealism to me. — T Clark
It means that there's a standard for such explanations to either meet or fail to meet. My standard rules out category errors, for example. — Sapientia
That's their problem. — Sapientia
I don't recall seeing what I'd call an argument. Maybe it was implicit in what you said, and I missed it. — Sapientia
Human beings are animals. Mammals. Homo Sapiens. Physical objects. Their personhood is not inherent in them, it is projected onto them by someone. As I've said, that projection is something humans do before they are old enough to conceptualize what a person really is. Before they have any words. In that sense, a person is not "literally" a person. — T Clark
My view is common sense realism. Whether or not someone is a person is a question of whether someone has the qualities of personhood. We could argue over the finer details of what that consists in, but if you allow for ants, rocks, space, planets, the world, etc., then you've abandoned common sense and drifted of into fantasy. — Sapientia
You say "it's a category error."
I say "no it's not, and here's why not." — T Clark
You say "That's absurd, as anyone can see."
I say "Well, not everyone can see that it's absurd." I wrote that because I don't think that it's absurd and I am a member of the class "anyone." — T Clark
Your statement is clearly wrong. Why is that my problem? — T Clark
Is it your position that the following is not an argument? — T Clark
By the definition above, calling your position "common sense" is not an argument and doesn't really mean anything. — T Clark
This is what I had mentioned previously, where I said these 'dimensions' can collide - that is an awareness - but the conditions are very unique, almost as difficult as the conditions required for a star to be born because cognitively one required an awareness or consciousness of reality as it is, not as we imagine it to be, only possible when one freely chooses to transcend the collective consciousness (socially speaking). They thus become conscious of the collective to become a part of it and when they meet another of the same frame of mind, the dimensions can 'collide'. But the right conditions, so you need to be careful whether you are merely projecting the idea that you have emotionally connected or whether you actually have because empathy kindles our conscience and is the source our ability to sense-experience the external world authentically rather than imaginatively. This is the same for when you say God is the centre of your psyche, because then you become God and that is yet another ego-projection. Rather, it is through God that you can understand reality and God is love.
I like the way you think, by the way. It is very similar to me, albeit mine is a bit more rationally applied. Perhaps because I am drug and alcohol free... :-O
The question is really as to whether nature is merely a brute existence or if intentionality (telos) is behind its workings. Empirically speaking we simply don't know, and I don't believe we ever can know by means of purely rational or empirical enquiry. There doesn't seem to be any imaginable way we could know by those means.
— John
On the other hand the subjective evidence for intentionality, human and otherwise, and causality, is individual experience; we may be utterly convinced by the evidence of our own experience. But our experience can never qualify as overwhelmingly convincing evidence for another person.
I believe I'm understanding what you're saying about ego projecting. Is it really me connecting to a dimension of reality or is my ego masking a reality that unconsciously fulfills its needs (relationships, empathy, etc..)? I feel like the two can be distinguished through having a solid understanding of the self - or, contrarily and more commonly, inappropriately confused in those that don't. — stonedthoughtsofnature
However, there are many people with spiritual beliefs. I think one thing that separates a lot of them from me is that I'm willing to take it one step further to see if my..."spiritual experiences" are projections of the self or tangible experiences of something, be it a god or something different, that transcends reality. — stonedthoughtsofnature
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