Comments

  • Quantifiable Knowledge
    When scientists claim there is no god. When scientists claim they are understanding the nature of reality.emancipate

    My take on this is to separate the scientist and the philosophy they happen to have.

    In some cases, I speculate/suspect that it's critics' own scientism that makes too much of scientists' non-scientific metaphysical remarks, wants to mix 'em with/as the science. Because it wants some nonscience to function as science.
  • Quantifiable Knowledge
    Humanism can stand apart from religions without problems.Tom Storm

    :up:

    Or, let's say, without any problems that the religious world didn't also have.

    I...let religion itself speak; I constitute myself only its listener and interpreter, not its prompter. Not to invent, but to discover, “to unveil existence,” has been my sole object; to see correctly, my sole endeavour. It is not I, but religion that worships man, although religion, or rather theology, denies this; it is not I, an insignificant individual, but religion itself that says: God is man, man is God; it is not I, but religion that denies the God who is not man, but only an ens rationis, – since it makes God become man, and then constitutes this God, not distinguished from man, having a human form, human feelings, and human thoughts, the object of its worship and veneration. I have only found the key to the cipher of the Christian religion, only extricated its true meaning from the web of contradictions and delusions called theology; – but in doing so I have certainly committed a sacrilege. If therefore my work is negative, irreligious, atheistic, let it be remembered that atheism – at least in the sense of this work – is the secret of religion itself; that religion itself, not indeed on the surface, but fundamentally, not in intention or according to its own supposition, but in its heart, in its essence, believes in nothing else than the truth and divinity of human nature. — Feuerbach
    https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/feuerbach/works/essence/ec00.htm

    In other words, Christianity was an impure, implicit, & confused humanism.
  • Esotericism: Hierarchy & Knowledge


    Beware the 'Vain man' tho, also known as 'His Majesty the Baby. ' I think sometimes good manners can be misinterpreted as weakness, and that anti-social egoism can be mistaken for strength. After all, the junkie who robs his mother is 'looking out for numero uno.' It's one thing to claim a fair portion and another to squander the trust and affection of those who would otherwise be powerful allies. Like or it or not, we are terribly dependent on one another. The smart way to look out for #1 is to be a valued player on a strong team. And what exactly are the boundaries of the self? If I nurture my child, cheer up my wife, share opportunities with a friend, help a stranger start their car....is that really so obviously not looking out for #1?

    He that claims less than he deserves is small-souled...For the great-souled man is justified in despising other people—his estimates are correct; but most proud men have no good ground for their pride...It is also characteristic of the great-souled man never to ask help from others, or only with reluctance, but to render aid willingly; and to be haughty towards men of position and fortune, but courteous towards those of moderate station...He must be open both in love and in hate, since concealment shows timidity; and care more for the truth than for what people will think; and speak and act openly, since as he despises other men he is outspoken and frank, except when speaking with ironical self-depreciation, as he does to common people...He does not bear a grudge, for it is not a mark of greatness of soul to recall things against people, especially the wrongs they have done you, but rather to overlook them...Such then being the Great-souled man, the corresponding character on the side of deficiency is the Small-souled man, and on that of excess the Vain man. — Aristotle
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnanimity

    Illness, death, renunciation of enjoyment, restrictions on his own will, shall not touch him; the laws of nature and of society shall be abrogated in his favour; he shall once more really be the centre and core of creation—‘His Majesty the Baby’, as we once fancied ourselves. The child shall fulfil those wishful dreams of the parents which they never carried out—the boy shall become a great man and a hero in his father’s place, and the girl shall marry a prince as a tardy compensation for her mother. — Freud
    https://blogs.uoregon.edu/autismhistoryproject/archive/sigmund-freud-on-narcissism-1914/
  • Consciousness and The Holographic Model of Reality
    Yeah, but that was Scarlett Johansen. What if it had been Gilbert Gottfried?T Clark

    Recall tho that she was just a voice, and a voice is enough to fall in love with. Even a textstream is a enough. I know of couples who seduced/fell-for one another on sites like LiveJournal.
  • Can the philosophical mysteries be solved at all?

    I also enjoyed the Loop thesis as a myth, tho I think it got something right about personality and is rich with insights and poetic invention.
  • Can the philosophical mysteries be solved at all?
    Thanks for the link to the article by Hofstadter . I will read it tomorrow because I have just been so tired today.Jack Cummins

    Thanks from me, as well - a good read.Banno

    :up:

    Glad you enjoyed. Hof is great. I got absorbed in his I am a Strange Loop & just like his style.
  • Philosophy and Metaphysics
    Rather than answers, I come across labyrinths, knots, crosses and spirals and, of course, gigantic question marks looming in front of me...Jack Cummins
    :up:
  • Wittgenstein's Blue & Brown Books [Open Discussion]
    Herder seems relevant & perhaps close to W.

    Herder began advancing three fundamental theses in this area:

    Thought is essentially dependent on, and bounded in scope by, language—i.e., one can only think if one has a language, and one can only think what one can express linguistically.

    Meanings or concepts are—not the sorts of things, in principle autonomous of language, with which much of the philosophical tradition has equated them, e.g., the referents involved (Augustine), Platonic forms, or subjective mental ideas à la Locke or Hume, but instead—usages of words.

    Conceptualization is intimately bound up with (perceptual and affective) sensation. More precisely, Herder develops a quasi-empiricist theory of concepts that holds that sensation is the source and basis of all our concepts, but that we are able to achieve non-empirical concepts by means of metaphorical extensions from the empirical ones—so that all of our concepts ultimately depend on sensation in one way or another.
    — link

    Pretty rad for 1764.

    Herder’s theories of interpretation and translation both rest on a certain epoch-making insight of his: Whereas such eminent Enlightenment philosopher-historians as Hume and Voltaire had normally still held that, as Hume put it, “mankind are so much the same in all times and places that history informs us of nothing new or strange” (1748: section VIII, part I, 65), Herder discovered, or at least saw more clearly than anyone before him, that this was false, that peoples from different historical periods and cultures vary tremendously in their concepts, beliefs, values, (perceptual and affective) sensations, and so forth. He also recognized that similar, albeit usually less dramatic, variations occur even between individuals within a single period and culture.
    ...
    It is an implication of his thesis that all thought is essentially dependent on and bounded by language that an interpreted subject’s language is in a certain sense bound to be a reliable indicator of the nature of his thought, so that the interpreter at least need not worry that the interpreted subject might be entertaining ineffable thoughts or thoughts whose character is systematically distorted by his expression of them in language. It is an implication of Herder’s thesis that meaning consists in word-usage that interpretation essentially and fundamentally requires pinning down an interpreted subject’s word-usages, and thereby his meanings. Finally, it is an implication of Herder’s quasi-empiricist thesis concerning concepts that an interpreter’s understanding of an interpreted subject’s concepts must include some sort of recapturing of their basis in the interpreted subject’s sensations.
    — link
    I think we can/should include feelings as part of or along with 'sensations.'

    Herder proposes (prominently in This Too a Philosophy of History, for instance) that the way to bridge radical mental difference when interpreting is through Einfühlung, “feeling one’s way in”. This proposal has often been thought (for example, by Friedrich Meinecke) to mean that the interpreter should perform some sort of psychological self-projection onto texts. However, that is not Herder’s main idea here—for making it so would amount to advocating just the sort of distorting assimilation of the thought in a text to one’s own that he is above all concerned to avoid. As can be seen from This Too a Philosophy of History, what he mainly has in mind is instead an arduous process of historical-philological inquiry. .... (4) It also implies (This Too a Philosophy of History again shows) that hostility in an interpreter toward the people whom he interprets will generally distort his interpretation, and should therefore be avoided. (Herder is equally opposed to excessive identification with them for the same reason.) (5) Finally, it also implies that the interpreter should strive to develop his grasp of linguistic usage, contextual facts, and relevant sensations to the point where it achieves something like the same immediacy and automaticness that it had for a text’s original author and audience when they understood the text in light of such factors (so that it acquires for him, as it had for them, the phenomenology more of a feeling than a cognition).

    In addition, Herder insists (for example, in the Critical Forests) on a principle of holism in interpretation.
    — link
    https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/herder/#PhilLangLangThouMean
  • Wittgenstein's Blue & Brown Books [Open Discussion]

    A little more on relativism (indirectly) and what not...
    Hegel discusses human culture as the “world of self-alienated spirit”. The idea seems to be that humans in society not only interact, but that they collectively create relatively enduring cultural products (repeatable stories, stageable dramas, and so forth) within which members of that society can recognise patterns of their own communal life as so reflected. We might find intelligible the metaphor that such products “hold up a mirror to society” within which “the society can regard itself”, without thinking we are thereby committed to some supra-individual unitary mind achieving self-consciousness. Furthermore, such cultural products themselves provide conditions allowing individuals to adopt particular cognitive attitudes by appropriating their resources. Thus, for example, the capacity to adopt the type of objective viewpoint demanded by Kantian morality (discussed in the final section of Spirit)—the capacity to see things, as it were, from a detached or universal point of view—might be enabled by engaging with spirit’s “alienations” such as the myths and rituals of a religion professing a universal scope. — SEP

    I think we can include the inherited language itself as part of this 'self-alienated spirit,' as something like the ashes left behind by those who came before us. Or, we can reverse the metaphor. We are the candles and the 'spirit' (language at the basic level of 'cat' and 'dog' up to Hegelian metaphysics and beyond) is the flame that's passed from one to another. This prioritizes softwhere over hardwear, emphasizing us as profoundly social/cultural beings.

    That's the set up. This is more to the point.

    Revisionists, on the other hand, tend to see Hegel as furthering the Kantian critique into the very coherence of a conception of an in-itself reality that is beyond the limits of our theoretical (but not practical) cognition. Rather than understand absolute knowing as the achievement of some ultimate God’s-eye view of everything, the philosophical analogue to the connection with God sought in religion, post-Kantian revisionists see it as the accession to a mode of self-critical thought that has finally abandoned all non-questionable mythical givens, and which will only countenance reason-giving argument as justification. — SEP
    https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/hegel/

    I see a connection to On Certainty here. 'Absolute knowledge' is the recognition of groundlessness, 'abandonment of the mythical givens' or unquestionable buck-stops-here foundations. The 'system' (the culture as a whole) can criticize itself but only in terms of the part of itself that it's taking for granted, which seems to apply to individuals as well, little microcosms of less complexity. 'Reason-giving argument' appeals to something, leans on something, starting perhaps with the intelligibility of its signs, enacting that trust by speaking up.

    We are like sailors who on the open sea must reconstruct their ship but are never able to start afresh from the bottom. Where a beam is taken away a new one must at once be put there, and for this the rest of the ship is used as support. In this way, by using the old beams and driftwood the ship can be shaped entirely anew, but only by gradual reconstruction. — Nuerath
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neurath%27s_boat

    On the relativism issue, we can think of different cultures or just different individuals in the same culture trying to build some bridge-language between them. I doubt any two English speakers speak it exactly the same, so perhaps all communication involves 'bridge building' that's more or less difficult. Philosophers (good ones?) strive to sharpen the shared meaning space thru talking, hammering out some compromise in which all participants are recognized (ideally, if possible, which it's often not on a small scale.)
  • Esotericism: Hierarchy & Knowledge
    I must confess that I do not know what Nietzsche means by noble spirits.Fooloso4

    I consider that one that of those issues that readers could discuss forever, never settling for some exact and final articulation. We quote this or that passage, but I like to guess at that using the grandest and most golden passages in his work.

    Here's my personal view (for whatever it's worth.) I think people in general (including foolosophers like us ) are occasionally in high or grand moods that open 'noble' conceptual-poetic perspectives on existence. They are (we all are) part-time half-ass sages. Recall the times in your life when you were beyond resentment, in love with the world, magnanimous, looking at existence from the heights of that feeling or attitude. If friends are around (as they often are at such times), you want them to be there with you, stand beside you completely equal, because there's plenty to go around, and you don't even want anyone to own it. I'm an atheist but I understand to praise god (or the gods or reality or life or whatever) as maybe the 'highest' thing we do, perhaps within the beauty of friendship, trading poems that discover or amplify this beauty, even if that includes acknowledging the horror too. Foolosophy is one genre of this 'poetry' evolving historically, enjoying and reflecting on itself, perhaps improving on itself.

    I know of course that we can't live on the peaks, and that it stinks in the valleys, but I think the stuff people write (and sing and dance and draw and act and so on) can help get us back up there.
  • Quantifiable Knowledge
    all of these life lessons are different, and yet they all reveal different aspects of a fundamental set of truths.Pantagruel

    :up:

    It's like the same tune played on a horn, a tuba, a saxophone. For my money, what you are saying above is one of those fuzzy but important truths. To manifest a grasp of that truth is to happily invent a bridge-language in a friendly conversation, to want to understand and be understood more than one wants to establish 'my' pet terminology.

    'I'm OK, you're OK, but let's learn from one another to be a little more OK.'
  • Being a Man
    "being a man" has come to mean this to me:
    To be a person who conscientiously respects and cares for himself, and those whom he loves, while living as self-sufficiently as circumstances allow and always with courage & humor ...
    180 Proof

    :up:
  • Can the philosophical mysteries be solved at all?
    I like your idea of concepts as 'dried up metaphors', although it would probably offend some. I do think that some are people, including philosophers, are inclined to miss seeing that they areonly constructed models, which are only representations of 'truth'.Jack Cummins
    :up:

    Lakoff's Metaphors We Live By makes a strong case for how embodied and metaphorical our thinking is. There's also this guy: Hof
  • Wittgenstein's Blue & Brown Books [Open Discussion]
    Name calling of 'relativism' ... has been the traditional way of spitting on the work of dead philosophersmagritte

    I call it one of the two basic ways, given that...

    logic and science has made small inroads into marshaled academia to the point where relativism is becoming progressive and even cool.magritte

    The other way is calling X dogmatic, oppressive, etc.

    Does 'form of life' imply 'relativism'? Unfortunately, not quite.magritte

    To me that's a tricky one.
  • Esotericism: Hierarchy & Knowledge
    In the aphorism Nietzsche talks about "nobler spirits and tastes" and "open[ing] the ears of those whose ears are related to ours". I don't think ours is an age of nobler spirits and tastes. Wittgenstein talks about how he is at odds with the spirit of the age. It is not a matter of cracking the code but of a sympathetic attunement, of kindred spirits. And since kindred spirits are so few, they write in such a way so as to address those spirits while keeping others out.Fooloso4

    I basically agree. I do think our age has some noble spirits though.

    Texts take on a meaning of their own. But when Nietzsche and Wittgenstein talk about being understood they mean according to their own understanding.Fooloso4

    Agreed.
  • Graylingstein: Wittgenstein on Scepticism and Certainty
    I was attempting to put Wittgenstein in some context but I realize a lot of people find him profound and almost Zen. He is just too minimalist for meGregory

    I found him a bit dry at first, but then I started to get it and like it dry.
  • Can the philosophical mysteries be solved at all?
    Everything emanates from the "centre" of the cosmic circle or sphere and returns by ascending back to it. Hence the terminology of "heart". The "heart" (innermost self) of man is identical to the "heart" of God. Hence Christian and Platonic mystics use similar language.Apollodorus

    Nice. Thanks for sharing. The 'heart of man is the heart of God.' That sounds like the incarnation myth and like my experience and the goal in general. To have God's heart. As Feuerbach might remind us, God is composed from human virtues. The divine predicates are ours as much as 'His' (who's just an idea, a symbol, a picture.)

    If there was no essential identity between the two, there could be no "return" or "reunion".Apollodorus

    :up:

    Simply put, the Universal Intelligence abides in itself, proceeds out of itself in creation and reverts back into itself. Or interiorisation of consciousness.Apollodorus

    Sounds like Hegel. I can relate to it.

    But these are just intellectual or theoretical concepts.Apollodorus

    :up:

    Yeah, and I'd say concepts are something like dried-up metaphors. The vivid image is downplayed but it's a poem.
  • Can the philosophical mysteries be solved at all?


    I think you are talking from the assumption that there's just one state-of-heart (or whatever) that all the mystics use myths to express, provide ladders to. Perhaps that's so. I don't know. I haven't studied Plotinus closely but I was moved by some passages in him. I did think of him as an intense introvert, a guy inside his own imagination, lost in the ecstasy of what he found there. It might be the childhood Christian background talking, but for me forgiveness was central, of life (one time) and of death (a different time.)
  • Is 'Western Philosophy' just a misleading term for 'Philosophy'?


    Anaxarchus is new to me. I wish more of his work had been saved. IMO, the thinkers we're talking about had very 'modern'/sophisticated views, as in we haven't essentially come that far.
    I suspect that all the fundamental gut-level worldview self-role options were already there.
    Did they have their version of Dada back then?

    I am speaking of a paper flower for the buttonholes of the gentlemen who frequent the ball of masked life, the kitchen of grace, white cousins lithe or fat. — Tzara
    http://writing.upenn.edu/library/Tzara_Dada-Manifesto_1918.pdf
  • Can the philosophical mysteries be solved at all?
    in my opinion a return to a simpler, more intuitive and less "rational" terminology would be indicated.Apollodorus

    To me that just means (in a good way) myth and poetry taken as myth and poetry, that gestures unpretentiously at 'just feeling' and not 'knowledge' that's neither flesh nor fowl.
  • Can the philosophical mysteries be solved at all?
    And it is experienced when the mind is "suspended" or still, in the same way we cannot see the bottom of a lake unless the water is clear and still.Apollodorus

    That may be the case for some 'mystical' experiences, and I'm familiar with that view, but personally my experiences (two of the brightest) were like the clearing away of a storm. Terror and/or angst followed by a 'forgiveness of God.' I mean a forgiveness of reality as a whole & the enjoyment of it all as a grand music, where the ugly things are a necessary dissonance.

    I'm open to the idea of lots of different kinds of peak experiences. Why assume all 'mystics' were expressing the same thing? Might just be a family resemblance?
  • Is 'Western Philosophy' just a misleading term for 'Philosophy'?
    Most of the time people focus on the link between scepticism and the east but scepticism also is linked to (pre-socratic) Greek philosophy; Pyrrho is linked to democritan philosophy through Metrodorus of Chios and Anaxarchus of Abdera.Ying

    Cool links. I like Democritus, Epicurus, Epictetus, Pyrrho, others. I don't know enough to argue for which influence is stronger. For me the main thing would be whether it's basically the same way of thinking, whether it's universal. I suspect it is, but I am cautious speaking about the Eastern stuff. I've found what I looked at to be universal, but that's a personal judgment.
  • Is 'Western Philosophy' just a misleading term for 'Philosophy'?

    Dude, I'm linking you to public examples. A critical thinker might prefer that to some anonymous claim on a forum. I'm not making an inference but simply drawing your attention to common knowledge. As far as that kind of philosophy goes (I'm something like a pragmatist/skeptic), if you really want my take on it, you can examine some of my old comments.
  • Is 'Western Philosophy' just a misleading term for 'Philosophy'?
    I am non the wiser.Bartricks

    Here's another example.

    The Ancient Greek philosopher Pyrrho accompanied Alexander the Great in his eastern campaigns, spending about 18 months in India. Pyrrho subsequently returned to Greece and founded Pyrrhonism, a philosophy with substantial similarities with Buddhism. The Greek biographer Diogenes Laërtius explained that Pyrrho's equanimity and detachment from the world were acquired in India.[120] Pyrrho was directly influenced by Buddhism in developing his philosophy, which is based on Pyrrho's interpretation of the Buddhist three marks of existence.[121] According to Edward Conze, Pyrrhonism can be compared to Buddhist philosophy, especially the Indian Madhyamika school.[122] The Pyrrhonists' goal of ataraxia (the state of being untroubled) is a soteriological goal similar to nirvana. The Pyrrhonists promoted suspending judgm ient (epoché) about dogma (beliefs about non-evident matters) as the way to reach ataraxia. This is similar to the Buddha's refusal to answer certain metaphysical questions which he saw as non-conductive to the path of Buddhist practice and Nagarjuna's "relinquishing of all views (drsti)". Adrian Kuzminski argues for direct influence between these two systems of thought. In Pyrrhonism: How the Ancient Greeks Reinvented Buddhism[123] According to Kuzminski, both philosophies argue against assenting to any dogmatic assertions about an ultimate metaphysical reality behind our sense impressions as a tactic to reach tranquility and both also make use of logical arguments against other philosophies in order to expose their contradictions.[123] — link
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_philosophy

    both philosophies argue against assenting to any dogmatic assertions about an ultimate metaphysical reality behind our sense impressions as a tactic to reach tranquility and both also make use of logical arguments against other philosophies in order to expose their contradictions.

    This is a sophisticated expression of critical thinking, not unlike something in a very 'Western' Carnap.
  • Is 'Western Philosophy' just a misleading term for 'Philosophy'?
    Me: plumbing isn't baking.Bartricks

    Even that's a little prejudicial in favor of armchair science, though, in favor of disembodied thought, mere talking, as if we weren't perhaps primarily skillful social animals. I say: don't assume some radical discontinuity between speech skill and other skills. It's an abstraction, good for some things and bad for others.
  • Is 'Western Philosophy' just a misleading term for 'Philosophy'?

    I'm no expert on the Eastern stuff but I've dabbled and read some stuff I liked and respected. I found them to be universal. Eastern thought has been part of Western thought for a long time. Consider Schopenhauer for instance.

    Schopenhauer held a profound respect for Indian philosophy;[96] although he loved Hindu texts, he was more interested in Buddhism,[97] which he came to regard as the best religion.[94] However, his studies on Hindu and Buddhist texts were constrained by the lack of adequate literature,[98] and the latter were mostly restricted to Early Buddhism. He also claimed that he formulated most of his ideas independently,[91] and only later realized the similarities with Buddhism.[99] — link
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Schopenhauer#Education
  • Can the philosophical mysteries be solved at all?
    So, it would seem that a mind that has been “suspended” in supramental states of consciousness would be unable to communicate that experience to either itself or other minds. This is why mystics tend to use symbolic language and describe mystic experience in terms of “light”, “bliss”, “love”, etc. that can only vaguely hint at the actual experience without describing it.Apollodorus

    I can remember one peak experience in particular (on drugs , yes, with the closest friends I could have hoped for) and it was terror that turned into a flood of love with the help of myths. I am happy calling it (the 'mystical' higher experience) intense feeling at its core. I felt a torrent of love after accepting the terror of death and forgiving it, finding my 'immortal' self in others, in friends, the species. But it was 'just' feelings and myths to steer and manifest that feeling in another a medium.

    I'm just one guy, of course, but my sense is that 'knowledge' might be a misleading metaphor. Or at least 'higher mind' seems too mentalistic and conceptual to me. More like higher state of heart? But one that can't be owned. It's too simple. The words have all been said. The difference, seems to me, is the feeling that lights those words up.
  • Believing versus wanting to believe
    Why? Could you explain?baker
    Let's talk about the interpersonal aspect, peer to peer. Do I talk the other as an outsider who needs my secret? Or do I see the other as already essentially equal ? Is the sage a different kind of being, a father, or just a brother, older or younger perhaps, but some worth considering, engaging with?

    I think of folks projecting either the father or the son on others. To project the father is to hopefully sit at the knee of master. To project the son is to try to get oneself recognized as the father (corrupt/infect the youth with the Cause and its lingo.) The alternative is a wary peer-to-peer attempt to steer around both temptations, or whichever one is our default.

    If there's not a Pope or cult leader, interested parties self-organize into fuzzy hierarchies in an charisma or 'bullshit' economy of recognition-value. Philosophy too. Poets negotiating the canon.
  • Is 'Western Philosophy' just a misleading term for 'Philosophy'?
    Address the OP for christ's sake and use your own words and not quotes.Bartricks

    Saying that Western philosophy just is philosophy-in-general is misleading and perhaps arrogant or self-flattering. If you are just making the point (a good one) that philosophy is ideally an expression of universal rationality (for/of all humans), that's different.
  • Is 'Western Philosophy' just a misleading term for 'Philosophy'?


    To put out a manifesto you must want: ABC
    to fulminate against 1, 2, 3
    to fly into a rage and sharpen your wings to conquer and disseminate little abcs and big abcs, to
    sign, shout, swear, to organize prose into a form of absolute and irrefutable evidence, to prove
    your non plus ultra and maintain that novelty resembles life just as the latest-appearance of
    some whore proves the essence of God. His existence was previously proved by the
    accordion, the landscape, the wheedling word. To impose your ABC is a natural thing—
    hence deplorable. Everybody does it in the form of crystalbluffmadonna, monetary system,
    pharmaceutical product, or a bare leg advertising the ardent sterile spring. The love of
    novelty is the cross of sympathy, demonstrates a naive je m'enfoutisme, it is a transitory,
    positive sign without a cause.
    — Tzara
    http://writing.upenn.edu/library/Tzara_Dada-Manifesto_1918.pdf
  • Graylingstein: Wittgenstein on Scepticism and Certainty
    That is an oversimplification which upon analysis turns out to be falseMetaphysician Undercover

    IMV, it's all oversimplification which is (partially) false, incomplete, and vague (just like this very statement.)

    Well here again that dont apply
    But I’ve gotta use words when I talk to you.
    — Eliot

    context
  • Esotericism: Hierarchy & Knowledge
    .
    I am pretty comfortable with tentative working models based on the best evidence we have for now.Tom Storm

    :up:
    I don't know what the 'physical' is (beyond hoisting the word into this or that context) or even what exactly this 'reality' thing is supposed to be... but I trust the machines & pills to work. I show it by reaching for them.
  • Philosophy and Metaphysics
    I think Leibniz was engaged in the practice when he postulated infinitesimals. .jgill

    I like to think of a metaphor that gives life to the formalism.But 'if metaphysics is metaphorical than metaphor is metaphysical.'
  • Non-violent Communication
    accept original sin, hope for gracecsalisbury
    :up:

    Keep showing up for the jazz, forgive as you would be forgiven.
  • Non-violent Communication
    There's a violence and anger in any moral dialectic, no matter how far you zoom out. They're bad because they think they're good (and i'm good because I know I"m bad), fed through the dialectic machine, can spiral out into infinity (I'm a severely wounded veteran of that spiral.)csalisbury

    :up:

    Exactly. A string of wounds, a necklace of ideologies.
  • Is 'Western Philosophy' just a misleading term for 'Philosophy'?
    I personally like to think of philosophy in a broad manner. This makes me include novelists and musicians as providing provocative philosophical materialManuel

    :up: :up: :up:
  • Graylingstein: Wittgenstein on Scepticism and Certainty
    Wittgenstein will put his arguments in weird arrangments to make them appear more profound than they perhaps areGregory

    Let's say that you realize that a final, perfect system doesn't even make sense. Let's say that there's no particular finite set of utterances that can denote you truly, but you can only keep chopping at it from here or there with this or that hatchet. To me the profound in Witt is something like the profound in 'ordinary' life, which you feel/see or don't from moment to moment.