Yes. The REAL ground is living bodies feel real pain. At that real level however, no one thinks of sticking a hand in boiling water because at that level no one thinks. Thinking and the moral prohibitions emerge out of these organic feelings, are effected by them; but there is no (ontological? metaphysical?) relationship. Pain feeling a certain way for triggering certain behavior is nothing like Morality. The trace relationship between REAL pain and any and all moral prohibitions is long long gone; so long gone that there is an unbridgeable gap between the REAL "reason" (I.e. REAL pain) and all of the multitudes of constructed ones. — ENOAH
Please explain this line to me like I am a first year phenomenology student. — AmadeusD
Rather, religion is the foundational determinacy of our existence, and in this, ethics is prescribed. — praxis
1. Make a qualified Cartesian move. One is not affirming the cogito as the ground for all possible affirmations. In fact, Descartes made a fundamentally bad move: there is no thinking unless there is thinking about something. So the indubitability of the cogito extends to the world of objects. — Constance
Think of the world as an event. Is perception a mirror of the world?(assume the rest of the point is included.. just don't want to clutter the reply) — Constance
it is not even remotely possible that this in my head (and this is a physicalist's science, the kind of thing we are educated to understand) reaches out to apprehend that tree out there. — Constance
that observation is part of the constitution of what is witnessed. This is a very old ide — Constance
I simply cannot even imagine anything more opaque than a brai — Constance
an honest account of what stands before me reveals the ordinary perceptual conditions of things being outside of myself, apart from me, at a distance over there, is not something that can be dismissed — Constance
Because the whole point is to understand the world, and the the world is simply given to us with these divisions and differences. — Constance
So all this critical thought — Constance
the relation between ourselves and the world to understand the "what it is" that is there — Constance
This is the phenomenological approach. E.g, you see a brain and witness a patient undergoing a fully conscious surgical procedure so the scalpel does not remove important tissue. — Constance
things turn up that were entirely unseen — Constance
If my faculties, call them, actually constitute the relation of a knowledge event, then what is the most visible feature if this? — Constance
I look at my cat, and all sorts of knowledge claims are implicit, "claims" not explicit in the looking, but are there, stabilizing the event, creating a general familiarity, and this stabilizing feature is time, and time's phenomenological analysis reveals issues about the present in the past-future dynamic of theevent of perceiving. — Constance
Long story short, the present SHOULD NOT exist, is one way to put this. — Constance
Every time I look up and take on the world in this way or that, I am informed by "the potentiality of possiblities" that my enculturated self carries with it into various environments, as when I walk into someone's kitchen and already know everything about knives, sinks, cabinets, etc. THIS is what constitutes the knowing of the world, this potentiality of possibilities that spontaneously rises to identify the world! — Constance
This presence of the world is the foundation of our existence and that of all things, and yet the perceiving of this presence is impossible. — Constance
Yet there it is, in full color and intensity, and this goes to ethics and value. See Wittgenstein's Tractatus for the inspired insight that ethics and aesthetics is transcendental. — Constance
Because they reveal something in the events of the events of our lives that is outside of the knowledge grid of our existence. — Constance
This is the foundational indeterminacy of our existence. — Constance
(the world is mystical, says Witt — Constance
This is utter garbage, sorry. There is literally nothing that be done with this line that isn't pulling it apart. — AmadeusD
I have called your bluff on Tractatus — AmadeusD
And I am sorry you wasted your money on a vacuous education in a field that has all but been abandoned. — Constance
But there "is" no trace — Constance
Very nice. The latter, corruptible. If the former is sound, that shouldn't matter. Because method is the essence.Deconstruction and religion are method and manifestation, respectively — Constance
do note that you insist on the term "organic" as a kind of bottom line to thinking about our existence. I can't really address this, for it is a kind of "scientism" by which I mean it is a borrowing from empirical science's descriptive terms to think philosophically. But science is not philosophy — Constance
The question a religion poses is whether you have faith in its *ultimate* authority. — praxis
A religion is an institution or ideology. — praxis
You seem to be ignorant to the entire world of philosophy. And a dick. — AmadeusD
Might I remind you of your juvenile intrusion into this thread?: — Constance
Did you not mention later that I was committing a non sequitur — Constance
There is no argument here, no mention of anything remotely related to the OP, not even a single thoughtful construction. — Constance
You got no more than your deserve, you inelegant ass. — Constance
Religion's answer: know that your ego is nothing. — ENOAH
Out of this ever evolving mechanism came countless manifestations--your institutions and ideologies. — ENOAH
Religions have all sorts of answers to all sorts of questions. — praxis
Out of religion came countless religions??? That doesn’t make any sense. — praxis
The question a religion poses is whether you have faith in its *ultimate* authority — praxis
It appears you linger at the "institutional" notion of religion. — ENOAH
It’s as though you and Constance insist that sex is a fetish. It is not. — praxis
you admit that your adulation of egolessness is like a fetish — praxis
I am flowing on a synthetic river, seeing the real land on both sides of me. I am not saying I can get off the river. I just think it is functional knowing that. — ENOAH
ou feel like kinship with those who see the world as you do, don’t you — praxis
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