Then your best action would have been to ignore what I wrote, but you wanted to be all snooty and stuff. Just as your best response now will be to ignore this post. I'm curious whether you can do that. — T Clark
Again, my comment was sincere and responsive. I believe the things I wrote and they contradict some of what you put in your OP. I don't see how you can consider that baiting. You set out some assumptions for the discussion. I commented that I don't think some of them are valid. — T Clark
So, what you're saying is that you don't have a good response to my respectful and responsive comment so you'll ignore it. — T Clark
I'm looking forward to finding out if I am doing it correctly. — T Clark
There are a lot of people here on the forum who think it is self-evident that everyone lives a life as described by Thoreau - full of quiet desperation. I keep having to tell them that it isn't true for all of us. It's not true of me and others here and in the world in general. Some of the things you have listed as ways of forgetting - sex, knowledge, and friendship (what you call affiliations) in particular - are not that at all. They can be a necessary part of a full satisfying life. Appreciation of music, visual art, literature, movies, and television can also belong in that group. And philosophy. Aesthetics is not some special, wonderful way of escaping our despair. It is, as are the other members of the group I've described, a way of increasing our self-awareness. — T Clark
Works of great art (he describes his idea of great art in detail), — schopenhauer1
is usually the answer to this — I like sushi
[reply="skyblack;569147"
If only you knew what a joke you've been!
Shoo, joke. — hypericin
:lol: :lol: :lol:
Calm down tough guy! — hypericin
I know you are but what am I?
— skyblack
Well played, sir! — hypericin
Good riddance, Dunning Kruger! — hypericin
But then, your post doesn't really state any reasoning or argument
— skyblack
It does, if you weren't so wrapped up in your own variety of idiocy you might see it.
I'll try once more:
You claim:
"Emotions are involuntary since they are under the jurisdiction of biology."
Your argument seems to be:
If X is "under the jurisdiction of biology" (whatever this means), X is involuntary.
Emotions are "under the jurisdiction of biology"
Therefore emotions are involuntary.
I presented three bodily functions, all of which presumably fall under "the jurisdiction of biology":
Motion of the hand: High degree of volitional control.
Blood pressure, or to use a more obvious example, breathing: patrial and limited volitional control
Secretion of the spleen: no volitional control.
Demonstrating that the relationship you propose is false. There is no apparent relation at all between "the jurisdiction of biology" and degree of volition.
BTW I read the post where you
"perhaps proved"
— skyblack
this claim. — hypericin
My hand is under the "jurisdiction of biology" and I have control of it. So is my spleen, and I have no control. And so is my heart rate and.blood pressure, and I have a degree of control.
"Jurisdiction of biology" does not seem to be the relevant distinction here — hypericin
Are you not your body? So be it. You can always pretend and say you are not your body, but you will forever be unable to reveal your true self, in any case. — NOS4A2
I am my body. — NOS4A2
If you identify with the biology, though, you would be under your own jurisdiction. Self-tyranny is a paradox. — NOS4A2
I think therefore I am. Isn't that all we can know? — Down The Rabbit Hole
Antisocial, free-riders are outnumbered over 8-to-1 by eusocial, cooperators; otherwise, h sapiens would not have achieved any viable social arrangements larger than hunter-gather familial clans. Easily understood and lived by most – just not all – of us for at least a hundred millennia. — 180 Proof