I think Schopenhauer too optimistic. There is no blissful escape. But more interestingly, the fact that there are schools of thought regarding "escaping from life's suffering/Suffering (western/Eastern sense of the word), is telling about life in the first place and should be a warning about putting more people into it in the first place. — schopenhauer1
I was not aiming for a pessimistic characterization of human life in toto, but rather in general. I think some individuals can accept their mortality and find peace and be sensible enough to be overall happy with their life onon Earth; I know I am. — Janus
Others are able to have unshakeable faith in eternal life, or in the possibility of progress towards enlightenment. I don't claim those things can be logically or empirically justified, but that doesn't seem to matter to some. Others, perhaps a majority, don't seem to be interested in thinking about such things at all. I don't draw any conclusions or make any judgements about such matters: I am agnostic. — Janus
But there’s no use denying the fact that we exist in the first place. — Quixodian
A coherent response to the human condition amounts to more than regret for being part of it. — Quixodian
I know the question I have for Schopenhauer - if will is blind, and the origin of everything, then how to account for mind? In Neoplatonism, nous is seen as a universal, but Schopenhauer seems to expunge it of actual intelligence, leaving only ‘striving’ or ‘energy’. So where in his scheme to mind/nous/intelligence originate? — Quixodian
Lame-duck sauce response, but at least it's not snide. That is to say, it really didn't address much of what I wrote. — schopenhauer1
Eek. You think I am simply "judging people" like procreation is a fashion trend that I find repulsive? You negate the very reason for the judgement (and not the 'judging'- there is a difference). — schopenhauer1
That which I didn't address was off-topic in this thread, and I have no interest in going over you anti-natalism arguments again. — Janus
Did I say you are judging people? I understand you are against procreation, and you are entitled to your opinion. I know all the arguments, and I am not convinced by them. Not everyone must think as you do. — Janus
I've told you before that I have never had a desire to reproduce, but I don't sit in judgement on those who do. — Janus
You said,
I've told you before that I have never had a desire to reproduce, but I don't sit in judgement on those who do. — schopenhauer1
I understood this thread to be about whether we can know the nature of the in-itself — Janus
Does that sentence state that you sit in judgement on procreators? Do you sit in judgement on them? — Janus
But there’s no use denying the fact that we exist in the first place.
— Quixodian
Oddly enough, isn't that the kind of thing the ascetics question? Bundle theory and all that. — schopenhauer1
That being said, you can't just talk about this stuff in isolation. Schop's ideas were a system infused with pessimism. The Thing Itself is ultimately striving nature of existence — schopenhauer1
It seemed to imply you don't judge procreation, people, but I do.. Like I was judging someone's clothes or trying to make someone feel bad or something else of a negative connotation of how "judging others" is used. — schopenhauer1
The OP says nothing about Schopenhauer's pessimism. The fact that Schopenhauer thinks we can know something about the thing in itself by introspection, that i it is blind will or striving, says nothing at all about whether the thing in itself is good, bad or neutral. — Janus
All I can think about that is that your experience must be very different than mine. I love life and have never regreted being born. If I could choose to come back again and again I would. — Janus
The compendium contained additions and interpolations by the translator from a variety of sources (including Yogācāra Buddhism). In any case, the key point as always is that the illusory realm of māyā is ‘seen through’ by the liberated ‘mukti’. — Quixodian
If instead of saying ‘the thing in itself’, you were to say ‘the world as it is in itself’ or ‘reality as it is in itself’ or even ‘reality as it truly is’, I think it would convey the gist better. In Buddhist philosophy, one of the attributes of the Buddha is ‘yathābhūtaṃ’ which means ‘to see the world as it truly is’. — Quixodian
If instead of saying ‘the thing in itself’, you were to say ‘the world as it is in itself’ or ‘reality as it is in itself’ or even ‘reality as it truly is’, I think it would convey the gist better. — Quixodian
If we discussed Kant's notion of Transcendental Idealism and then I ventured into his ideas that surround that, I believe I would be justified. — schopenhauer1
You know the arguments, you said. They have nothing to do with personal preferences. Personal preferences should not be the determinate for what others should have to endure. — schopenhauer1
When Kant said that the thing in itself causes phenomena, he knew already that he placed causality within phenomena; so it's only by analogy that we speak of Will's action. There is no "why" to pure will. — Gregory
I don't think so. Kant was no anti-natalist afaik (although he failed to procreate afaik). I see Kant's project as determining the limits of reason to make way for faith. he didn't want to, couldn't, say what the thing in itself is. — Janus
Anyway, it has everything to do with personal preferences, or if nothing to do with personal preference then people will do as they are determined to do and that's the end of it, and I am not going to be drawn any further into these futile under-determined arguments. — Janus
That this meant something like a mystical/spiritual thing, can always be questioned and never proven. — schopenhauer1
But in western culture, a hard and fast division has emerged between what is categorized as faith and what is categorized as scientific knowledge. There’s nothing corresponding to ‘jñāna’ in our lexicon, so all that can be said (usually dismissively) is that it’s something ‘spiritual or mystical’. — Quixodian
The stages and states of realization can be verified inter-subjectively. — Quixodian
The way I look at there is direct observation which can be personally inter-experentially and publicly intersubjectevly confirmed. — Janus
I am not an Empiricist philosopher... — Janus
Then there are beliefs about what cannot be confirmed by observation, mathematics or logic; that is those things we take just on faith. — Janus
the inter-subjective verification that operates in empirical observations, mathematical proofs and logic — Janus
And I don't intend to mount one. — Quixodian
Which is what is generally regarded as empiricism. You commonly cite that position in these arguments, yet when you're challenged on it, you deny it: — Quixodian
You're appealing to sense-experience, empirical observation, or whatever you want to call it. At least be clear about that. — Quixodian
But if you then associate 'taking on faith' with religion, then you fall back on the faith/reason dichotomy which is writ large in our culture and which I say which leads to stereotyping. I think the way you're evaluating it is like this: that Buddhism is a religion; religion is not something that can be validated empirically; therefore it's a matter of faith. — Quixodian
For example, a skilled musician may have a deep understanding of how to play a complex piece of music which they can't explain, but only enact. — Quixodian
Notice how generally any assertion of 'higher knowledge' (Jñāna) is categorised as 'mystical' or 'spiritual', which kicks it into the long grass, so to speak. But really in those cultures to which it is endogenous, such an understanding is quite prosaic. There is a cultural milieu in which it is intelligible, navigable and communicable. Precisely what our culture is lacking. — Quixodian
You're appealing to sense-experience, empirical observation, or whatever you want to call it. At least be clear about that.
— Quixodian
I am not appealing to anything, rather I'm just saying that what is usually counted as knowable in the intersubjective sense is what is confirmable by publicly available observations, mathematics or logic — Janus
For example, you apparently think enlightenment is intersubjectively confirmable: well, a great number of people thought and still think Osho was enlightened, but I bet you think he was a fraud. How do you establish the truth in cases like that, eh? How do you know Gotama was enlightened? The authority of tradition? — Janus
how acupuncture really works is not known — Janus
the fact that other cultures have their different faiths and beliefs does not entail that those faiths and beliefs are true or not true. We simply don't and cannot know, because they are not susceptible of publicly available evidence. — Janus
intellectual honesty demands that it be acknowledged that the belief is not grounded on empirical evidence, mathematics or logic, the only methods we have for intersubjective demonstration or proof. — Janus
What do you think about "something from nothing" in terms of physics? — Gregory
KRAUSS: That's exactly right. Empty space is a boiling, bubbling brew of virtual particles that pop in and out of existence in a time scale so short that you can't even measure them. Now, that sounds of course like counting angels on the head of a pin; if you can't measure them, then it doesn't sound like it's science, but in fact you can't measure them directly.
But we can measure their effects indirectly. These particles that are popping in and out of existence actually affect the properties of atoms and nuclei and actually are responsible for most of the mass inside your body. And in fact, really one of the things that motivated this book was the most profound discovery in recent times, and you even alluded to it in the last segment, the discovery that most of the energy of the universe actually resides in empty space.
You take space, get rid of all the particles, all the radiation, and it actually carries energy, and that notion that in fact empty space - once you allow gravity into the game, what seems impossible is possible. It sounds like it would violate the conservation of energy for you to start with nothing and end up with lots of stuff, but the great thing about gravity is it's a little trickier.
Gravity allows positive energy and negative energy, and out of nothing you can create positive energy particles, and as long as a gravitational attraction produces enough negative energy, the sum of their energy can be zero. And in fact when we look out at the universe and try and measure its total energy, we come up with zero.
I like to think of it as the difference between, say, a savvy stockbroker and an embezzler. The savvy stockbroker will buy stocks on margin with more money than they have, and as long as they get that money back in there before anyone notices, and in fact if the stocks go up, they end with money where they didn't have any before, whereas the embezzler, of course, is discovered.
Well, the universe is a savvy stockbroker. It can borrow energy, and if there's no gravity, it gets rid of it back before anyone notices. But if gravity is there, it can actually create stuff where there was none before. And you can actually create enough stuff to account for everything we see in the universe.
But, you know, it's more than that because some people would say, and I've had this discussion with theologians and others, well, you know, just empty space isn't nothing. You know, there's space. How did the space get there? But the amazing thing is, once you apply in fact quantum mechanics to gravity, as you were beginning to allude again in the last segment, then it's possible, in fact it's implied, that space itself can be created where there was nothing before, that literally whole universes can pop out of nothing by the laws of quantum mechanics.
And in fact the question why is there something rather than nothing then becomes sort of trite because nothing is unstable. It will always produce something. The more interesting or surprising question might be why is there nothing. But of course if we ask that question, well, we wouldn't be here if that was true. — NPR Interview with Lawrence Krauss
You're appealing to empiricism, even if you say you're not. It is not an accusation, it's a description. — Quixodian
Consider the provenance of the word 'enlightenment' that is used in respect of Eastern religious practices. — Quixodian
I perfectly agree that as a consequence, there are lot of bogus gurus and enlightenment scams in the marketplace. There are many traps, pitfalls and delusions associated with the entire quest. — Quixodian
It's nevertheless claimable under Medicare. — Quixodian
But the subject can be and has been rigourously investigated, so there are those who can and do know. There's a 'mindfulness training centre' at Oxford, for heaven's sake. This is an epistemological question - the question of whether the subject has a factual core, or whether it's simply conjecture, custom, or pious belief. — Quixodian
Intellectual honesty demands no such thing. It requires that this assertion is also culturally-situated and conditioned. It is what our culture takes as a criterion for 'valid knowledge' - as I already said. — Quixodian
What do you think about "something from nothing" in terms of physics?
— Gregory
I don't think much of it. There have been ideas from people like Lawrence Krauss 'A Universe from Nothing that posits just that. — schopenhauer1
The particular, eternally persisting, elementary physical stuff of the world, according to the standard presentations of relativistic quantum field theories, consists (unsurprisingly) of relativistic quantum fields. And the fundamental laws of this theory take the form of rules concerning which arrangements of those fields are physically possible and which aren’t, and rules connecting the arrangements of those fields at later times to their arrangements at earlier times, and so on — and they have nothing whatsoever to say on the subject of where those fields came from, or of why the world should have consisted of the particular kinds of fields it does, or of why it should have consisted of fields at all, or of why there should have been a world in the first place. Period. Case closed. End of story. — David Albert
I guess it ought to be mentioned, quite apart from the question of whether anything Krauss says turns out to be true or false, that the whole business of approaching the struggle with religion as if it were a card game, or a horse race, or some kind of battle of wits, just feels all wrong — or it does, at any rate, to me. When I was growing up, where I was growing up, there was a critique of religion according to which religion was cruel, and a lie, and a mechanism of enslavement, and something full of loathing and contempt for everything essentially human. Maybe that was true and maybe it wasn’t, but it had to do with important things — it had to do, that is, with history, and with suffering, and with the hope of a better world — and it seems like a pity, and more than a pity, and worse than a pity, with all that in the back of one’s head, to think that all that gets offered to us now, by guys like these, in books like this, is the pale, small, silly, nerdy accusation that religion is, I don’t know, dumb.
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