We philosophizers don't, wrong question. Rather "the whole" – universe – might be described as (the) observable, expanding, unbounded debris-field of exploding or colliding stars, galaxies-devouring super-massive black holes, extreme radiations, gravity waves, nebulae, micro-meteorites, dust, percolating vacua & intergalactic voids wherein all observers are part(icipant)s. Possibly there is no defined, or defineable, "whole", just an encompassing expanse infinite in all directions, and what's quaintly called "universe", or kosmos, is just an ocean-wave on the ocean of xaos (Hesiod) (or an infinite mode of attributes of eternal substance ~Spinoza). How do deep sea fish "define" the whole of the sea? :zip:How do you define the "whole" when the act of defining is intrinsically restrictive/reductive? — Benj96
the real (e.g. existence) encompasses reasoning (e.g. naturalism); therefore, reasoning cannot encompass (i.e. causally explain) the real — 180 Proof, excerpt from profile
How do you define the "whole" when the act of defining is intrinsically restrictive/reductive? — Benj96
The more remote from self something (anything - a heavenly body, a cosmic event, a concept, a very big number) is, the less clear its definition in our minds — Vera Mont
The universe, or everything, is a mere nebulous idea that barely registers on my consciousness. — Vera Mont
It begs the question, is it even possible to delve into that level understanding? — Benj96
Or is it so incomprehensible that it is innately and permanently shrouded in mystery, a mystery we may never solve. — Benj96
And if there is no God but rather a set of physical laws, we no less crave to define them and their relationship to all things. — Benj96
Maybe reality is only a personal interpretation and nothing more. — Benj96
Besides, we prefer to call reality incomprehensible rather than admit the limits of our comprehension. — Vera Mont
Daedalus was busy inventing flight; intellectual, practical and spiritual quests used to walk hand-in-hand. — Vera Mont
We only feel as if we were each a center of the universe. — Vera Mont
There are planets, my dreams, evolution, the toilet flush, hair loss, hopes, elementary particles, and even unicorns on the far side of the moon, to mention only a few examples. The principle that the world does not exist entails that everything else exists.
So the everything is the container of all containers in which things can be said to exist—but this means it doesn’t make sense to say that this super-container itself exists, because it’s the condition of all existence. But that is a definition, which is what you’re looking for. — Jamal
Its very refreshing to converse with a rigorous and measured philosopher like yourself. How you qualify your responses has depth, insight and challenge. These are the discussions i'm here for. — Benj96
We continue putting one foot in front of the other through the darkness while providing our own light.Now, how do we proceed as humanity with that in mind? — Benj96
Tell ourselves more probative stories which also challenge us to go on in spite of the not-All.If we cannot approach any clear grasp of the whole, if our reasoning capacity innately falls short of the true nature of things due to being a subset of it, what ought we do?
Maybe. I'd be happier just understanding better all that we already know.Do we persist in understanding more?
On the proverbial death bed. :death: :flower:Where is the cut-off of futility where there little point in trying to delve deeper, know more?
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