Such skepticism based on mere imaginable possibilities seem toothless and irrelevant to me. I see a dog in the room, I have no cogent reason to doubt its existence. And that is exactly why I say that where there is no possibility of genuine, as opposed to merely feigned, doubt, then speaking in terms of belief is inapt. — Janus
The key thing about this limit to logically justified certainty is that it opens the mind sufficiently for things as a Buddhist enlightenment to occur. If not for this the true nature of reality would always be dismissed out-of-hand as ridiculously implausible and never even cross the mind as a remote possibility. — PL Olcott
...someone said all knowledge requires belief, both of which I for sure, and ↪Janus apparently, reject.
————- — Mww
I personally prefer to think in terms of direct awareness, knowledge and belief all being quite distinct and independent of one another. — Janus
I don't believe anything in the propositional sense is known in the kinds of altered states of consciousness people refer to as "enlightenment". But such altered states are a kind of knowledge: a kind of familiarity or know-how. — Janus
there seemed to me in your explanation, a reluctance to go a certain distance as far as truth being an illusion/invention — ENOAH
Or are you reluctant to ascribe to N. a more absolute abandonment of truth in human existential/phenomenal experience because, for e.g. he's so ambiguous and that would be pinpointing him to an extreme; or, it sounds like nihilism, etc.? — ENOAH
I'm interested in seeing if people who are comfortable with N. would be comfortable saying that from a Nietzschean perspective Heidegger's Dasein, throwness, ready at hand, etc. etc. etc., though brilliant and functional, is also, in the end, illusion, and seeing, actually inaccessible by means of the illusion, — ENOAH
As for "exaggerations," I'm not sure I see them that way, which is the "why" of my queries here. — ENOAH
Your rejection is based upon a conception of experience that cannot include language acquisition. Your responses thus far have been full of strawmen and red herring. — creativesoul
So, if I say "I know the alphabet, I know that the FTP site exists, ...", all that is only a belief, that is, it's only my opinion, something I'm simply convicted about. Well, it's a fact and I can prove it anytime.Knowledge is only belief.
— Chet Hawkins — Janus
also see truth there with the illusion. — Fire Ologist
see truth dashed to pieces — Fire Ologist
how could something present itself as an illusion to me, if I couldn’t see that it was not real, not truth? — Fire Ologist
knowing anything, be it illusion or not, seems both impossible and already accomplished at the same time. We are dealing in living paradoxes… — Fire Ologist
He describes both, and tells us what is true and what is not true about them both. — Fire Ologist
We should not seek the truth as if to follow a shepherd, we must make it. — Fire Ologist
maybe we should avoid the concept, we are smarter to jettison it from discourse… — Fire Ologist
still, in order to say all that or to tear down any dogma, as I said, Nietzsche had to be as dogmatic about these things as anyone else. — Fire Ologist
If there is one thing I know, it is that I know nothing — Fire Ologist
think Heidegger put things in a more classically logical, more metaphysical way, and all of this might be dismissible as facade to Nietzsche. — Fire Ologist
I wonder what you think of where I see the the truth of it all, how illusion is only illusion in the eyes of something who knows truth, or simultaneously, truth is only truth in the eyes of something seeing illusion; how the presence of either one, brings the presence of both together. — Fire Ologist
“direct awareness” - the present becoming of experience.. Thrown there, in motion, with it. It immediately presents an object to a subject; but it can also just be seen as just the subjective experiencing…, becoming in the moment - direct awareness. — Fire Ologist
Is the truth
1. The now buried source of the illusion, displaced by the illusion but lingering?
2. Is it dissolved in the illusion such that they are indistinguishable?
3. Or, is it literally obliterated by the illusion as implied below?
4. Something else? — ENOAH
logic (specifically, the requirement of a not that, to reflect a this), is the illusion. — ENOAH
It is our truth, and not The Truth, even our authentic-ized self. — ENOAH
Dogma thinks it can circumvent belief by dictating. But even Dogma is in constant motion, only vacuous becoming and only temporarily settled upon. — ENOAH
I think opposites, paradoxes, contradiction, difference, are also constructed fictions existing, bearing meaning, and qualifying as truths, only in becoming. In Reality, Being, there is not only no dichotomy, there is no inquiry, no focus, no concern whatsoever about Truth/No Truth. There is no logos. There is only presence being [that Truth...added here only for our benefit] — ENOAH
But is direct awareness taking place in becoming? Does it involve subject/object? There might be a more direct awareness in becoming. But the one which excites me, and which paradoxically is pointless to discuss, as you suggested earlier, is a "return" to the aware-ing Being, finally just being, liberated from becoming. — ENOAH
Kant, he saw that knowledge was cut off from the objects it sought to know — Fire Ologist
first illusion, where our man-made conventions called “knowing” (which knows nothing of the thing in itself) is now called truth - an illusion built on a forgotten illusion, all because people like Aristotle — Fire Ologist
he admitted the “truth” was less valuable then the knowledge of it as illusion. — Fire Ologist
Nicewhen we forget this first, we start to use words like “truth” where I think you put the capital T. — Fire Ologist
There is no dichotomy in reality? I disagree. I am the dichotomy in reality. When you say one thing, it immediately holds everything else in the balance, — Fire Ologist
The act of throwing all truth away has truth in it! I — Fire Ologist
And, I think that's our folly, or even fall. Maybe N. didn't go this far, and I accept that. But then, I would humbly assert he stopped short. I assure you I am not religious in any conventional sense, but I wonder if humans did "fall from grace," the grace of nature when we also "forgot" that nature "creates" being, and our becoming never arrives at being, but only at more becoming in its vacuous construction of vacuous time.But with the becoming, things come to be in the becoming. — Fire Ologist
where I've settled is ultimately absurd, trapped by a paradox of its own creation.Or else we wouldn’t know what we can’t know. — Fire Ologist
You have to get an “ing” word in there, breathing life into the more stagnant sounding “direct awareness”. — Fire Ologist
This one, I stubbornly grapple with. I cannot let go of my admittedly radical view that "when you say," period, you are already in that which displaces reality, what we've loosely desginated as N. illusion. In reality, not only no dichotomy, but no say. — ENOAH
Ok yes. That might be a subtlty I'm missing. That's where I'm going to direct my thinking!Once saying is, things are said. Once things are said, dichotomy blossoms. — Fire Ologist
You are about to put food in the bowl. The cat knows that. That is a proposition. — Banno
The object of your cat's belief is presumably the imminent full bowl. — Banno
I agree that it comes down to which should be thought the best way of talking about it, since there is no empirical fact of the matter to be found. I personally prefer to think in terms of direct awareness, knowledge and belief all being quite distinct and independent of one another. — Janus
We’re talking belief/knowledge... — Mww
but the OP asks if knowledge is merely belief. Apparently, it's implying that the difference between knowing and believing is empirical verification or rational justification. And so, we argue about shades of truth. :smile: — Gnomon
My claim was that knowledge is existentially dependent on belief(knowledge requires belief). — creativesoul
The examples you give are not abstract True/False beliefs, but internal mental states (memories ; representations) that we rely on to make our way in the real world. Do those representations depend on a reliable understanding (belief) of how the world works? I suppose that depends on how broadly you define "knowledge" and "belief". As I said, we philosophers argue about nit-picky shades of meaning. :smile:All knowledge requires belief.
— ENOAH
That's true, but the OP asks if knowledge is merely belief. Apparently, it's implying that the difference between knowing and believing is empirical verification or rational justification. And so, we argue about shades of truth. :smile: — Gnomon
I question whether all knowledge does require belief. I know how to ride a bike, plane a board, paint a picture, write a poem, play the piano and so on, and I don't see how any of that requires belief. — Janus
do you have any illustrative examples? — flannel jesus
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