Nevertheless, 'dharma' is both 'duty' and also 'law'. In other words, it's not simply an individual prerogative or obligation, but is inherent in the natural order (the original root being 'what upholds' or 'holds together'). — Wayfarer
If you'd read the OP, you could not have failed to observe that this, your sense of purpose here, is not the topic, and so without relevance. — tim wood
And in passing since you claimed earlier that there could be no propose before purpose, I assume you also would hold that there can be no hearts until there was a heart. — tim wood
But let's try these: is God constrained in any way? Is He real? My point being that in belief in an idea, you can have what you want. But not in any reality. — tim wood
I think "purpose (in itself)" corresponds to Spinoza's conatus: everything necessarily persists in its being.The questions here are, then, what is purpose (in itself), where does it come from, what is its ground? — tim wood
Being (or life) is the (or an) end-in-itself like song dance music (i.e. rhythm/melody for rhythm's/melody's sake).Or, what exactly gives it all meaning, makes it all worthwhile?
On a good day, if I do something, it is for a reason. If my effort is successful, it might be said I had achieved my purpose in doing it. In this sense purpose like a work order or chore or task, a thing to be done. So I may need to do my laundry and in accordance, set about getting my wife to do it. And to be sure, most of this done without any great reflection on my part.About ol’ Sydney’s last act: where/how does he fit into your notions of purpose with it? — Mww
Agreed.We have duties and obligations, responsibilities and debts - all different, each resulting from a set of circumstances that are partly given (of the environment and a condition of survival) — Vera Mont
And to me, this the interesting part. In the first, one is driven, but in the second is one also the driver? That is, choosing for oneself how, when, why, and by what to be driven? And some of these no doubt rules and principles, but these seem passive/reactive, whereas purpose seems more active. And these also seeming to have a permanent or at least enduring quality, in that they don't apply particularly, but are instead general and give rise to particular self-direction.and partly undertaken by the subject for his or her own reasons. — Vera Mont
But let's try these: is God constrained in any way? Is He real? My point being that in belief in an idea, you can have what you want. But not in any reality.
— tim wood
How is this relevant? In reality, sometimes you get what you want, sometimes you do not. In what way do you believe that the constraints placed on human beings are related to the constraints placed on God, if there are any? — Metaphysician Undercover
Given, to be sure. But isn't there some aspect of yourself not merely given, but chosen and self-legislated? Maybe this way, that rules and principles are adopted by us - for our purpose here those by reason - and being themselves more magisterial than instrumental, arouse purpose which orders and directs action?I think "purpose (in itself)" corresponds to Spinoza's conatus: everything necessarily persists in its being.
"It comes from" nature naturing.
"Its ground" is reality. — 180 Proof
I understand the criticism. My effort here is not any sort of creation, but rather a looking to see what is there - on the working assumption that there is something there to see. The structure of the inquiry being, is-it, what-is-it, what-kind-of-a-thing-is-it, genus/species, quiddities; and the tools being the simple "why" and "what."This is reductive reification. — Fooloso4
The underlying necessity is the same: to keep living. The layer on top of that is: to live well. The first one is much the same for every being; the second diverges. The particular requirements for a good life differ from species to species; the desires we hope will improve our life* varies by individual.In the first, one is driven, but in the second is one also the driver? — tim wood
...on the working assumption that there is something there to see. — tim wood
Thus if you always play the king's gambit, and I always chose vanilla, we can ask if in any way these are related, the "always" being the clue. And if related, presumably in some way by the "always," then there is a subject that might be pursued without any reification risked. — tim wood
The underlying necessity is the same: to keep living. The layer on top of that is: to live well. The first one is much the same for every being; the second diverges. The particular requirements for a good life differ from species to species; the desires we hope will improve our life* varies by individual.
So, there are root, long term, permanent aims that require small daily action to keep going, each one of which is proposed, planned and executed with purpose — Vera Mont
You seem to have covered this comprehensively. I'll add a top layer, to live ethically and morally - I think the two words mean the same thing, but both in case someone thinks they mean different things. A distinction that while the "lower" levels might be described as transactional, this top layer is not.The underlying necessity is the same: to keep living. The layer on top of that is: to live well. — Vera Mont
My reasons for always playing the king's gambit may have nothing to do with why you always choose vanilla. Would you ask if what I sometimes do is related to what you sometimes do? — Fooloso4
I attempted to. That's why I didn't say 'just live'; I said 'keep living'. In order to choose any goals or aims, one must be vital enough to choose. One must perform the basic actions entailed in survival; these are the minimum requirement.I think we need to make a distinction between ‘just living’ and perpetuating a particular way of living. — Joshs
I thought it was the organism that survives that survives and inevitably perishes. Obviously, both of those events take place in a an environment. Nothing abstract about that.Organisms don’t just live, they continually enact a specific normative pattern of interaction with an environment. It is this normative pattern that survives or perishes, not simply being alive as an abstract concept. — Joshs
That sounds to me like a hyperbolic description of a simple matter: be born, live, eat, eliminate, rest, want things, procreate (or not) die. There is no meaning to being what it is over time: it already is and has no choice about what it is.To keep living as a body doesn’t capture what is relevant to the specific aims of a living system. It is these aims which are synonymous with what it means for it to continue to be what it is over time. — Joshs
We tend to cling tenaciously to the very concrete fact of being alive. But beyond that, or overlayed on that, are all the short-terms goals of making our lives good, each according to his or her notion of good.We live for the sake of our norms , not for the sake of an abstract notion of life. — Joshs
I'll add a top layer, to live ethically and morally - I think the two words mean the same thing, but both in case someone thinks they mean different things. A distinction that while the "lower" levels might be described as transactional, this top layer is not. — tim wood
I'm open to adding as many layers as Maslow, or even subdividing them into more layers. But your meaning of 'transactional' eludes me. It seems to me the base layer - once an organism is no longer dependent on its parents - consists largely of transactions with the environment, while the upper ones require transactions with other conscious organisms.A distinction that while the "lower" levels might be described as transactional, this top layer is not. — tim wood
n order to choose any goals or aims, one must be vital enough to choose. One must perform the basic actions entailed in survival; these are the minimum requirement — Vera Mont
That sounds to me like a hyperbolic description of a simple matter: be born, live, eat, eliminate, rest, want things, procreate (or not) die. There is no meaning to being what it is over time: it already is and has no choice about what it is — Vera Mont
It's not the gambit or the vanilla, it's the always. — tim wood
Why should what I always do and what you always do be related in any way other than this being what we always do? — Fooloso4
Would you ask if what I sometimes do is related to what you sometimes do? — Fooloso4
The structure of the inquiry being, is-it, what-is-it, what-kind-of-a-thing-is-it, genus/species, quiddities; and the tools being the simple "why" and "what." — tim wood
The questions here are, then, what is purpose (in itself), where does it come from, what is its ground? Or, what exactly gives it all meaning, makes it all worthwhile? — tim wood
Oh yes, but I think all those other "aspects of yourself" are derivatives from what you asked about in the OP: "purpose (in itself)" – and not just mere "instrumental" (i.e. utilitarian/aspirational) purposes.Given, to be sure. But isn't there some aspect of yourself not merely given, but chosen and self-legislated? — tim wood
I recognize I have a standing purpose of never being in a position of not having clean clothes. Call it rule. — tim wood
I think maybe, to prove our resolution - to the authority (human or divine), to our fellow acolytes, and to ourselves. An absolute commitment is unconditional; if you want to be sure and to demonstrate that you won't renege, you have to make sure that you can't renege. Once the steering wheel is off, all further decisions are out of you hands; no longer your responsibility.How is this kind of commitment different from other choices we make and why do we do it? — Srap Tasmaner
I'll try one more time: is God constrained in any way? Is He real? My point being that in belief in an idea, you can have what you want. But not in any reality. — tim wood
On a good day, if I do something, it is for a reason. If my effort is successful, it might be said I had achieved my purpose in doing it. In this sense purpose like a work order or chore or task, a thing to be done. — tim wood
Jumping off a tall building would do it.For an individual, how do you make a commitment to yourself you can't back out of? — Srap Tasmaner
Jumping off a tall building would do it. — Vera Mont
For lesser commitments, you don't; there is always the possibility of failing, chickening out or changing your mind. — Vera Mont
Between the idea
And the reality
Between the motion
And the act
Falls the Shadow
Thank you.God has to be real, — Metaphysician Undercover
Once choice is gone, then not really a commitment any more, it seems to me, but instead a having been committed. I confess my original OP thoughts about "purpose" have been thoroughly poked with forks. I thought I had it nailed down, but very apparently not. I see purpose (now) as a settled state of mind beyond ordinary questioning about something significant, that serves to inform action or other beliefs, though flexible, if need be. I may have a rule about clean clothes, but if on a day lacking them, I won't go naked.Such a commitment, that's beyond our reach to go back on it, is what you're reaching for with "purpose". Is that close? — Srap Tasmaner
My own view is that the "outside" is often a convenient fiction, even excuse; that it comes from within and that the active agent is simply the individual himself.If that's the right analysis, that might explain why people are inclined to say that purpose comes from outside (from God, Nature, Aristotle, Darwin, whatever): either way you experience it as not up to you. — Srap Tasmaner
In as much as removing the steering doesn't make sense (to me), there can be only speculation. And that as to what might make sense, given the lack of it. Edit: added: That is, removing the steering wheel not only means the car is no longer under control, but that it may be instantly out of control. One or other might make sense, but it's hard to see how they both together do.But it does raise a question: what is this capacity to remove the steering wheel? How is this kind of commitment different from other choices we make and why do we do it? To what end? — Srap Tasmaner
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