'the union of knower and known'. — Wayfarer
It is interpreted very differently in different cultures — Wayfarer
But exhausting the spirit trying to illuminate the unity of things without knowing that they are all the same is called “three in the morning.” What do I mean by “three in the morning”? When the monkey trainer was passing out nuts he said, “You get three in the morning and four at night.” The monkeys were all angry. “All right,” he said, “you get four in the morning and three at night.” The monkeys were all pleased. With no loss in name or substance, he made use of their joy and anger because he went along with them. So the sage harmonizes people with right and wrong and rests them on Heaven’s wheel. This is called walking two roads.
If we’re already one, can I say it? But since I’ve just said we’re one, can I not say it? The unity and my saying it make two. The two and their unity make three. — Fooloso4
In scholastic philosophy, the union of knower and known is seen as the process of assimilation which is foundational for the Thomist view of truth, where knowledge is seen as the conformity between the intellect (the knower) and the reality (the known). — Wayfarer
But the key point is the falling away of the sense of separateness or otherness which characterises the egological attitude. — Wayfarer
(Daodejing, Book One, Chapter One)Named, it is the mother of the myriad creatures.
We are in need of our monkey trainers. — Fooloso4
He gets this from Aristotle. — Fooloso4
We are in need of our monkey trainers. — Fooloso4
Aquinas is a representative of the philosophia perennis. — Wayfarer
something fundamental to the human condition — Wayfarer
Science is a process of selective limitation.
— Pantagruel
Please clarify. Examples would be helpful. — 180 Proof
↪Pantagruel Sounds a lot like Adorno's Hegelianism. — Jamal
Scientists study the effects that they are able to cause. — Pantagruel
When scientists measure the acceleration of gravity by letting a ball fall, did they cause that effect? — Lionino
but, besides the change, the effect we investigate also has a cause in the outside world. Science investigates that cause too. — Lionino
↪Lionino Well, I guess be careful not to reference yourself then? :sweat: — Vaskane
More to the point, science investigates that with respect to the chosen dimensions of the change, which was what I was emphasizing. Science is always an abstract and in some sense restricted perspective on what it knows (since it formalizes the abstraction process) to be a more comprehensive reality. So science should always be skeptically self-aware (at which point it becomes history, and finally philosophy, if you follow Collingwood's reasoning). — Pantagruel
Honestly, I can't make sense of what is written here. We have several polysemic words strung together in three sentences, so there are potentially several meanings in what you said, and I can't tell which one it is that you intended.
If you recommend me a reading (that is not a whole book chapter), I would be able to understand it better. — Lionino
I know I was being facetiou — Vaskane
I'm sorry that polysemy is proving such a challenge — Pantagruel
To suppose that one word, in whatever context it appears, ought to mean one thing and no more, argues not an exceptionally high standard of logical accuracy but an exceptional ignorance as to the nature of language — Pantagruel
The phenomena which form the basis of the operations of science — Pantagruel
exceed the dimensions — Pantagruel
scientific study — Pantagruel
It's a similar argument to Nietzsche's — Vaskane
I.e. the poverty of (e.g. Collingwood's) quasi-Hegelian caricature of both history and science.If we wish to study a thing, we are bound to select certain aspects of it., It is not possible for us to observe or to describe a whole piece of the world, or a whole piece of nature; in fact, not even the smallest whole piece may be so described, since all description is necessarily selective. — Karl Popper, The Poverty of Historicism
I.e. the poverty of (e.g. Collingwood's) quasi-Hegelian caricature of both history and science. — 180 Proof
'Challenging beliefs' is what a site dedicated to philosophy terms dialectic. "Your true colors" are quite evident: mere dogma (of an unthinking pedant). I welcome all challenges to my ideas (in order to learn) which you are obviously too insecure (or vapid) to handle. Maybe you'd feel less threatened, Pantagruel, on sites like Reddit or X (Twitter). :sparkle:I'm not here to [think] challenge your beliefs. — Pantagruel
I welcome all challenges to my ideas — 180 Proof
What are the dimensions of these phenomenons? Surely you don't mean length and width and depth, which is the typical meaning of dimesnion. — Lionino
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