this operation of the mind, by which we infer like effects from like causes, and vice versa, is so essential to the subsistence of all human creatures, it is not probable that it could be trusted to the fallacious deductions of our reason
Rather, he considered that quest a nihilistic aim, an attempt to stifle and freeze living becoming.
— Joshs
"a nihilistic aim"? Doesn't it sounds like a contradiction? When nihilist has aim, doesn't he stop being a nihilist? What was the reasons for him doing that? — Corvus
The first thought that occurred to me was: Why would we need a reason to believe the world exists? Reason suffers when such unreasonable demands are put on it. Such doubt only arises when reason is abstracted and treated as if it were independent from our being in the world — Fooloso4
That sounds like a statement from misunderstanding existence from motion.Maybe the Earth only turns round when we look at said evidence and is flat the rest of the time? :nerd: — Count Timothy von Icarus
Suppose that if a dog cannot tell the difference between a cat and tiger, and when he saw a tiger, if the dog chased the tiger barking thinking it was a cat, then he would be eaten fast by the tiger, and no longer exist. But the matter of fact is that, even a dog would perceive the tiger, and know the imminent danger, and run away as fast as he could hiding for his own safety.
For human beings, if you drive a car when you are not perceiving the road ahead of you, believing that it exists even if you are not perceiving it, and keep on racing away into a river, then that would be a disaster. When you don't perceive the road ahead of you, you simply say to yourself, you no longer have reason to believe there is a road ahead of you, and get out of the car, and take a taxi home. Wouldn't it be a more rational thing to do? — Corvus
My example was against your point that you would rather take a more supported and seeming option rather than a less supported and unlikely option. The OP was asking what your reasons to believe in the existence of the world are, while not perceiving it.So, your own example is an argument against your own OP. — Manuel
Anyway, the earth rotating the Sun was purely found out by the Mathematical deduction, not empirical observation.
You cannot observe the earth rotating around visually sitting on any point on the earth. :)Uhh... I'm not sure about that. Unless the proof started with:
"Let there be astronomical observations equivalent with the empirical observations we have made.... — Count Timothy von Icarus
Really? Fascinating. Thank you for your effort writing the substantial post on Nietzsche in conjunction with the topic. I have not been reading him for a while, but will get back to it sometime in the near future for sure. I think he is a great writer.Your body still perceives the world in sleep, in fact your dreams can be lead on by nouns in the real world. The fact that many a thing can stir a person from their sleep is proof that even your unconscious body KNOWS something is occurring. — Vaskane
So you are interested in questions about perception and reality in case the road or a building vanishes? Or in case animals in the jungle suddenly fail to recognise each other and get eaten? How would you demonstrate that something like this has ever happened or will happen? I think that question might be more significant than whether reality is 'really real'. — Tom Storm
The open question for man is not whether reality exists or not, but what he can make of it. If he does make something of it he can stop worrying about whether it exists or not. If he doesn't make something of it he might better worry about whether he exists or not.
Anyhow we were not talking about the pendulum at all, but the visual unobservability of the actual earth rotating round directly while being located on the earth. — Corvus
and:You cannot observe the earth rotating around visually sitting on any point on the earth. — Corvus
The Foucault pendulum shows these two statements to be wrong....the earth rotating the Sun was purely found out by the Mathematical deduction, not empirical observation. — Corvus
andThe world looks and feels flat, but there is much more evidence to support the claim that it is round, but most of the evidence we use to support this claim comes from experiments which go beyond immediate conscious perceptions.
So, your own example is an argument against your own OP. — Manuel
...it is more coherent and is better supported than the alternative of nothing existing absent us. There is more to evidence than continuous perception of a thing. — Manuel
You suddenly brought the pendulum into the discussion out of the blue saying that, I was not paying attention, and it is problem. And I was just saying, No, that is not the case, and explained the situation logically. :)As I pointed out, your philosophy protects itself against counter examples. But we can trace back the thread of this conversation. — Banno
But the OP is not about the actual existence of the world itself, but it is more about our reasoning for believing in the existence of the world. — Corvus
My belief in the existence of the old house was proved wrong. I thought to myself, well I should have no ground in believing what I am not perceiving in the world, and that is a rational and coherent way to think. — Corvus
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