This is close to the heart of the matter. The question is about the reality of concepts. According to (old school) realism, it is the mind's ability to understand universals that is the basis for rational judgement; that is what is meant by 'intelligibility'; and universals are real, not simply 'in the mind'. That is what leads to all of the conundrums about 'where they are', and the sense in which they can be said to exist. Nowadays we say that what exists is 'out there somewhere'; which illustrates how we can only conceive of things that exist within space-time. Whereas, universals precede space-time. — Wayfarer
The view I favour is that universals are actually inherent in the structure of reality - they're not simply concepts, because they're predictive of features of reality that otherwise we couldn't know. — Wayfarer
I don't understand what you're saying here. Perhaps you could explain. As far as I understand, a sign is created, and therefore there must be a subject prior to the existence of the sign, such that it is impossible for the subject to be a sign. — Metaphysician Undercover
Satisfaction and serenity is never sustained as all context-dependent moments die. The longing for death is nostalgia for the before birth (pace Cioran). — schopenhauer1
But the there there of pessimism is trying to get at real of the position we find ourselves in. You would like pessimists to realize some "truth" of the skepticism. — schopenhauer1
Where you will assert that you "won" by this repartee of ideas "proves" it is truth-tools, I will claim that I "won" when you live the very restless/survival life that pessimism describes. — schopenhauer1
Where I disagree is that despite these "shadows" of language terms and neologisms, there is a sort of truth behind it that is being conveyed, — schopenhauer1
So the problem of induction isn't really a problem. If we couldn't doubt, how could we say we believed? — apokrisis
My question, specifically, is the unreasonable association of morality and reason. To me the expression ''good reason'' is proof of the morality-reason connection. Yet, when we apply rationality to morality all we get is confusion.
What's the problem here? Could it be that morality is irrational? Goodness is associated with foolishness e.g. a young person is described as naive or innocent (unaware of the Big Bad World). — TheMadFool
Reason is key to survival and look at all the scientific truths we've discovered using rationality. — TheMadFool
And we have quantum theory to tell us that radioactive decay is an intrinsically independent process. — apokrisis
So in principle, the "clock of the universe" could speed up or slow down and we couldn't notice it. But it is the fact itself that we couldn't notice a difference that then means there ain't anything to worry about - except people's metaphysical hankering for externalist accounts of reality. — apokrisis
I don't see how you get "I am mostly us" out of this. Yes, it's true that we are influenced by language and other human beings, but we are also influenced by everything else around us, and each person is a unique individual. — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore you must say "I am part of us". And by doing this you give logical priority to the individual "I". This logical priority is established because reason proceeds from the more certain toward the lesser certain. — Metaphysician Undercover
Taking two faulty rulers to countercheck each other doesn't solve the problem of whether we have the right measurement. — TheMadFool
Since 1967, the International System of Units (SI) has defined the second as the duration of 9192631770 cycles of radiation corresponding to the transition between two energy levels of the caesium-133 atom. In 1997, the International Committee for Weights and Measures (CIPM) added that the preceding definition refers to a caesium atom at rest at a temperature of 0 K.[15] — wiki
The paradox in a nutshell: We must always have a good reason for anything but there's no good reason to be good. — TheMadFool
This seems problematic (for me) because how do we know the vibrations of the atom used to define a second is regular? To me the only way we can decide this is by using another process or phenomenon we know to be regular but then how do we know that particular process or phenomenon is regular? And so on... — TheMadFool
I don't read Hegel as asserting that being is a "pure thing"; rather it is no-thing. This is Hegel's preemption of Heidegger's ontological difference. I also believe Hegel is concerned with the "what-it-is" of being, but rather with unravelling the logic of the concept of being. That-it-is is a given; Hegel would echo Spinoza in declaring that there is no possibility that there could be nothing. Being is no-thing, ( insofar as we cannot say anything really determinate about it) but it obviously is not nothing at all.
I would say that being is certainly not an abstraction for Hegel. In a way Hegel's notion of being equates with his idea of spirit. the world of beings is the dialectical manifestation of spirit. — Janus
Being, pure being, without any further determination. In its indeterminate immediacy it is equal only to itself. It is also not unequal relatively to an other; it has no diversity within itself nor any with a reference outwards. It would not be held fast in its purity if it contained any determination or content which could be distinguished in it or by which it could be distinguished from an other. It is pure indeterminateness and emptiness. There is nothing to be intuited in it, if one can speak here of intuiting; or, it is only this pure intuiting itself. Just as little is anything to be thought in it, or it is equally only this empty thinking. Being, the indeterminate immediate, is in fact nothing, and neither more nor less than nothing.
Nothing, pure nothing: it is simply equality with itself, complete emptiness, absence of all determination and content — undifferentiatedness in itself. In so far as intuiting or thinking can be mentioned here, it counts as a distinction whether something or nothing is intuited or thought. To intuit or think nothing has, therefore, a meaning; both are distinguished and thus nothing is (exists) in our intuiting or thinking; or rather it is empty intuition and thought itself, and the same empty intuition or thought as pure being. Nothing is, therefore, the same determination, or rather absence of determination, and thus altogether the same as, pure being
— Hegel
I don't agree that the subject is the world for Wittgenstein. — Janus
Here it can be seen that solipsism, when its implications are followed
out strictly, coincides with pure realism. The self of solipsism shrinks to
a point without extension, and there remains the reality co-ordinated with
it.
Thus there really is a sense in which philosophy can talk about the
self in a non-psychological way. What brings the self into philosophy is
the fact that 'the world is my world'. The philosophical self is not the
human being, not the human body, or the human soul, with which psychology
deals, but rather the metaphysical subject, the limit of the world--not a
part of it.
— W
So too at death the world does not alter, but comes to an end. — W
It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it
exists.
To view the world sub specie aeterni is to view it as a whole--a
limited whole. Feeling the world as a limited whole--it is this that is
mystical. — W
When the answer cannot be put into words, neither can the question be
put into words. The riddle does not exist. If a question can be framed at
all, it is also possible to answer it.
Scepticism is not irrefutable, but obviously nonsensical, when it
tries to raise doubts where no questions can be asked. For doubt can exist
only where a question exists, a question only where an answer exists, and
an answer only where something can be said. — W
There are, indeed, things that cannot be put into words. They make
themselves manifest. They are what is mystical. — W
I think he refers here to the world as experienced. He was no solipsist.
In any case I disagree that we experience the world or that we experience ourselves as being my world. We undergo affects, which we experience as events, people, places, things and so on; along with emotions, thoughts and desires that are occasioned by our experience of these. We think of this as my life, in which we are engaged with these things, the totality of which we think of as my world. But the shared inter-subjective world is always already externalized insofar as it is objectivized as a world of events and objects that are publicly available to experience. — Janus
All is fictions upon fictions. Truths are just tools. — schopenhauer1
The rationalizating (for me) is our understanding of the situation. — t0m
Right, there is nothing to behold outside of conceptualizations- pragmatist/post-modern stance — schopenhauer1
Language games come out of it, not the other way around. Your liquid turns back to ice :p. — schopenhauer1
I'm not hip to all of Heidegger's (plethora of) neologisms. Please enlighten me of the "they" versus whatever other dichotomy he thought up. — schopenhauer1
But the point I am trying to make is the mere description is revealing some forces going on internally behind the scenes- even if it simply capturing it in mere description. There is a reference there. There is a there there. Not all is liquid that melts. Thus the structure holds. — schopenhauer1
I know by actively debating this you are trying to prove your point- it is just a contest of language games trying to subsume the other language. We will both walk away thinking that our language games have indeed won out. We will both say that despite your rhetoric, my argument was self-evident in what was said. Mine because your lived-life will thus prove it, yours because this little repartee of back and forth proves that it's all just truth-tools. — schopenhauer1
But you have to eat. Word games or not. Calculations cause things to happen. Calculations are based on axioms that can lead to elaborate maths. Things can be communicated clearly and with little metaphor. Of course, we are talking existential truths, which indeed does allow for a large dose of such things as metaphor, intuition, feeling, and a kind of aesthetic intuition. However, as long as the languages can be translatable to common language in a certain way, there are ways to make some sense of people's preferred metaphors. — schopenhauer1
As Hegel pointed out pure being or substance must be thought to be akin to nothingness (no-thing-ness) or your (and Anaximander's) Apeiron. — Janus
Being, pure being, without any further determination. In its indeterminate immediacy it is equal only to itself. It is also not unequal relatively to an other; it has no diversity within itself nor any with a reference outwards. It would not be held fast in its purity if it contained any determination or content which could be distinguished in it or by which it could be distinguished from an other. It is pure indeterminateness and emptiness. There is nothing to be intuited in it, if one can speak here of intuiting; or, it is only this pure intuiting itself. Just as little is anything to be thought in it, or it is equally only this empty thinking. Being, the indeterminate immediate, is in fact nothing, and neither more nor less than nothing. — Hegel
Through us the world is for us, (where 'world' is taken to denote 'the collection of things and their relations); the world is always already externalized, it is never my living experience, but merely a conceptualization. — Janus
here’s a very deep problem with the way the understanding of Descartes’ ‘res cogitans’ developed. It literally means ‘thinking substance’ and that is the way it has become understood. I guess ectoplasm is pretty near the mark. But it’s all a colossal mistake, a category error, a misreading. The philosophical term ‘substantia’ is not ‘substance’ as we understand it, but ‘that in which attributes inhere’. It was the Latin translation of the term ‘ouisia’, which is nearer to ‘being’ than ‘stuff’ — Wayfarer
So conceding the epistemic argument that perception is not direct, does not mean we can’t turn around and have directness as our epistemic ambition. Not all subjectivism has to be equal. — apokrisis
But you are stressing the subjective tree - the one that appears to us even in our dreams. It is tree-ness in all the ways we could possibly imagine. — apokrisis
And the concern here is with the objective tree, the mind-independent tree, the Kantian tree-in-itself. — apokrisis
This is where those peddling Wittgensteinian quietism are being disingenuous. — apokrisis
The language game tree is the social tree, the one that appears to a community of minds connected by a web of linguistic relations. There is a right way of speaking about trees because there is a social level of subjectivity or semiosis. — apokrisis
But then the Witti-ites smuggle in their realist claims under the language game smokescreen. Scratch them and you find they believe that makes perception direct. The language game tree is the objective tree - being now defined in terms of the limit of the speakable. — apokrisis
This faith does not formulate itself—it simply lives, and so guards itself against formulae... It is only on the theory that no word is to be taken literally that this anti-realist is able to speak at all. Set down among Hindus he would have made use of the concepts of Sankhya,[7] and among Chinese he would have employed those of Lao-tse[8]—and in neither case would it have made any difference to him.—With a little freedom in the use of words, one might actually call Jesus a “free spirit”[9]—he cares nothing for what is established: the word killeth,[10] whatever is established killeth. The idea of “life” as an experience, as he alone conceives it, stands opposed to his mind to every sort of word, formula, law, belief and dogma. He speaks only of inner things: “life” or “truth” or “light” is his word for the innermost—in his sight everything else, the whole of reality, all nature, even language, has significance only as sign, as allegory. — N
So I'm not really convinced of this ironism. — schopenhauer1
Procreation is the definition of a decision that affects another. — schopenhauer1
Irony does not erase suffering. I see irony as more a literary tool. It has little impetus outside provoking a humorous response from a reader in a literary/artistic setting. It is a rather impotent in its employ in real life — schopenhauer1
Ironist (n. Ironism) (from Greek: eiron, eironeia), a term coined by Richard Rorty, describes someone who fulfills three conditions:
She has radical and continuing doubts about the final vocabulary she currently uses, because she has been impressed by other vocabularies, vocabularies taken as final by people or books she has encountered;
She realizes that argument phrased in her present vocabulary can neither underwrite nor dissolve these doubts;
Insofar as she philosophizes about her situation, she does not think that her vocabulary is closer to reality than others, that it is in touch with a power not herself.
— Richard Rorty, Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989, p.73
— Wiki
The best rationalization, but the one closest to understanding our situation. Everything is interpretation, but I think there are ones that hit more closer to the truth. — schopenhauer1
It has an air of hipness and coolness, it gives you perhaps a persona of lithe story-maker, but it lacks the depth of the human condition. — schopenhauer1
Indeed. 'Everyday Dasein' is lived by the 'they.' Only the top-layer is sophisticatedly non-contingent.And as you admitted, not all is contingent. — schopenhauer1
I agree in a sense that you can posit your point of view, but you cannot make it a law. — schopenhauer1
Well, your little parenthesis here kind of negates your previous liquid stance. — schopenhauer1
What is “familiarly known” is not properly known, just for the reason that it is “familiar”. When engaged in the process of knowing, it is the commonest form of self-deception, and a deception of other people as well, to assume something to be familiar, and give assent to it on that very account. Knowledge of that sort, with all its talk, never gets from the spot, but has no idea that this is the case. Subject and object, and so on, God, nature, understanding, sensibility, etc., are uncritically presupposed as familiar and something valid, and become fixed points from which to start and to which to return. The process of knowing flits between these secure points, and in consequence goes on merely along the surface.
...
Analysis of an idea, as it used to be carried out, did in fact consist in nothing else than doing away with its character of familiarity.
— Hegel
The life of mind is not one that shuns death, and keeps clear of destruction; it endures death and in death maintains its being. It only wins to its truth when it finds itself utterly torn asunder. — Hegel
Of course, my rhetoric in this setting is going to be ramped up here more than in everyday life, as it is a philosophy forum where views like this can be tested, contested, and argued about endlessly. — schopenhauer1
I don't think this characterization negates the pessimist's stance, it's just descriptive. Okay, the pessimist is the clarion call, providing the Promethean tragic knowledge. So what if that is what is going on? Does that affect the message? It's just that this Promethean message is closer to what is going on ;). The other Prometheans are just false prophets :p. — schopenhauer1
How does the rebel revel in his ironic teasing, if everyone embraces the ironic teasing as a truism? — schopenhauer1
you are entertained by trying to thwart other philosophies with irony ;) — schopenhauer1
This isn't an argument so much as a poetic description of perhaps our situation. — schopenhauer1
In what sense would our sensations be exhaustive of the tree? — apokrisis
They have to maintain themselves, entertain themselves, all the while encountering negative interactions along the way. Why create these circumstances of dealing with, producing, and consuming for this new person? Sentimentality of life doesn't seem to justify this at all. — schopenhauer1
You were forced into the duties of daily life or into the decision to kill yourself. That is a fact. Thus the alternative to antinatlism is creating this situation for a new person, and then having all the post-facto sentimental gymnastics (like the ones you are using, including Nietzschean style equivocating). — schopenhauer1
Birth forces the need for contingent worldviews, so yet again necessity of life's circumstances bypasses your idea of contingency. We disagree, not all is contingent. — schopenhauer1
Also, I just had to provide this quote. It is probably the most pessimistically searing ones, I've read, and I've read a lot of them. — schopenhauer1
hould you conclude that life is objectionable or that nothing matters–do not waste our time with your nonsense. We are on our way to the future, and the philosophically disheartening or the emotionally impaired are not going to hinder our progress. — Thomas Ligotti
If you cannot say something positive, or at least equivocal, keep it to yourself. Pessimists and depressives need not apply for a position in the enterprise of life. You have two choices: Start thinking the way God and your society want you to think or be forsaken by all. The decision is yours, since your are a free agent who can choose to rejoin our fabricated world or stubbornly insist on…what? That we should mollycoddle non-positive thinkers like you or rethink how the whole world transacts its business? That we should start over from scratch? — Thomas Ligotti
Lighten up or leave us alone. you will never get us to give up our hopes. you will never get us to wake up from our dreams. — Thomas Ligotti
The fact that we have to cope to begin with is the problem. — schopenhauer1
Anchoring is the "fixation of points within, or construction of walls around, the liquid fray of consciousness".[3] The anchoring mechanism provides individuals a value or an ideal that allows them to focus their attentions in a consistent manner. Zapffe also applied the anchoring principle to society, and stated "God, the Church, the State, morality, fate, the laws of life, the people, the future"[3] are all examples of collective primary anchoring firmaments. — schopenhauer1
Sublimation is the refocusing of energy away from negative outlets, toward positive ones. The individuals distance themselves and look at their existence from an aesthetic point of view (e.g., writers, poets, painters). Zapffe himself pointed out that his produced works were the product of sublimation. — schopenhauer1
Ones who say that life's contingent and structural harms are real, and thus life itself is no good. However, they have their happy little coping strategies — schopenhauer1
You used the word accepting. — schopenhauer1
I think that in the strictest sense, meaning is defined as "what is meant". — Metaphysician Undercover
This implies interpretation. I believe it is important to keep these two senses separate, and not to equivocate, because the first requires an author, the second does not. So in the second sense, things have meaning to me which I do not believe have an author. Also, in communication there is often a difference between what is meant by the author, and what it means to me, due to difficulties in expressing, and difficulties in interpreting. — Metaphysician Undercover
I do not think that "the individual" is an abstraction. I believe it is a logical principle posited for the sake of intelligibility, i.e.it is necessary to assume individuals in order to understand reality. — Metaphysician Undercover
The unit is the basis for all mathematics — Metaphysician Undercover
There’s resistance to the claim that this physical world consists of just abstract logical facts, but the un-defined-ness of “real” “existent”, and even “is”, should help to undermine that need for belief in the material world’s objective solidity, for a world of “is” instead of a world of “if “ …when there’s even something iffy about “is”. — Michael Ossipoff
When I point out that no physical experiment shows that this physical world is other than a complex logical system, they’ll always answer that that means I’m proposing an unfalsifiable proposition. But the abstract logical facts, and complex systems of them, are inevitable, and could be “falsified” if someone could falsify their logical support. — Michael Ossipoff
The animal (including humans) is unitary, and the separation into body and “Mind” is only in the mind of philosophers of mind. …as is the resulting “Hard-Problem-Of-Consciousness”.
. — Michael Ossipoff
Of course animals (including humans) are purposefully-responsive devices. …more complex than a mousetrap, thermostat or refrigetrator-lightswitch, and also differing from them by having been designed by natural-selection. …but still, in principle, purposefully-responsive devices like a mousetrap.
. — Michael Ossipoff
I seem to remember reading something about “concern” being central to a living-being. That sounds like “Will”, and the built-in purpose of a purposefully-responsive device. But it was long time ago.
.
…and something about a being-in-a-world. I’ve been saying that, even though we and our experience (or will) are primary, I don’t think that there’s something called Consciousness that can be there before and without embodiment in a world. We the experiencer, an animal, are part of (even if the primary part of) the possibility-world that is the setting for our life-experience possibility-story. — Michael Ossipoff
Yep, in terms of our purposes, and all as that if-then network. Scientificism has it all wrong metaphysically, putting all the emphasis and priority on fictitious objectively-existent things. — Michael Ossipoff
Ok, that’s true, and, in general, it’s necessary to find out that our inner conceptual narrative about description, naming and evaluation gets in the way of actual experience.
.
Also, I should add that one thing that contributes to gratitude for benevolence is when someone finds out about the goodness of what metaphysics says.
.
I find that the metaphysics that I’ve been talking about implies an openness, looseness and lightness. That’s at least partly what I mean by the goodness of what is. — Michael Ossipoff
That is why, for example, values nowadays are almost always understood through the prism of Darwinism, i.e. as being in service to survival. There is no objective good, beyond the pragmatic and utilitarian. — Wayfarer
Cartesian anxiety, as characterized in that passage, is just one species of ontological anxiety. In whatever flavor it happens to afflict us, ontological anxiety gives rise to a sort of hope that the anxiety will be cured by a corresponding ontological certainty. It won't cure the illness to shift hope from one object to another, from "science" to "metaphysics", from "evidence" to "revelation". Cure the thing at its root: Relieve the anxiety without any appeal to vain hope or bad faith. — Cabbage Farmer
By speaking about them, we bring these particular phenomena to the attention of others. This way of informing other minds about circumstantially private experiences indicates the public character of subjectivity. — Cabbage Farmer
To all appearances, we acquire knowledge about the world noninferentially on the basis of introspection, no less than we acquire knowledge about the world noninferentially on the basis of exteroception. Introspective and exteroceptive awareness are two sources of empirical evidence and two bases of empirical judgment. According to our nature, we coordinate sights with sights, sights with sounds, and exteroception with proprioception, interoception, and introspection. The prima facie synthesis that comes to each of us whether he wants it or not, may be extended by rigorous empirical investigation and by modest accounts of the results of investigation in keeping with the balance of appearances, in the manner of Gassendi. Or that natural synthesis may be extended any way you please, jumbled by carelessness and leniency, distorted by fantasies and legends, bloated by hopes and fears. — Cabbage Farmer
If you've given any reasons for thinking that religious and aesthetic beliefs are not "understandable as being able to be inter-subjectively assessed in terms of "correctness', as empirical beliefs are", then I have not caught wind of those reasons. It seems to me you have yet to clear up the meaning of the claim, and I'm not sure what in your comments counts as a reason to support that claim. — Cabbage Farmer
This faith does not formulate itself—it simply lives, and so guards itself against formulae. To be sure, the accident of environment, of educational background gives prominence to concepts of a certain sort: in primitive Christianity one finds only concepts of a Judaeo-Semitic character (—that of eating and drinking at the last supper belongs to this category—an idea which, like everything else Jewish, has been badly mauled by the church). But let us be careful not to see in all this anything more than symbolical language, semantics[6] an opportunity to speak in parables. It is only on the theory that no work is to be taken literally that this anti-realist is able to speak at all. Set down among Hindus he would have made use of the concepts of Sankhya,[7] and among Chinese he would have employed those of Lao-tse[8]—and in neither case would it have made any difference to him.—With a little freedom in the use of words, one might actually call Jesus a “free spirit”[9]—he cares nothing for what is established: the word killeth,[10] whatever is established killeth. The idea of “life” as an experience, as he alone conceives it, stands opposed to his mind to every sort of word, formula, law, belief and dogma. He speaks only of inner things: “life” or “truth” or “light” is his word for the innermost—in his sight everything else, the whole of reality, all nature, even language, has significance only as sign, as allegory. — N
...[M]oreover this virtuosity of an ironical artistic life apprehends itself as a divine creative genius for which anything and everything is only an unsubstantial creature, to which the creator, knowing himself to be disengaged and free from everything, is not bound, because he is just as able to destroy it as to create it. In that case, he who has reached this standpoint of divine genius looks down from his high rank on all other men, for they are pronounced dull and limited, inasmuch as law, morals, etc., still count for them as fixed, essential, and obligatory. — H
On atheism, it seems me, we are just animals, and anything goes. You don't try to read morality into the animal world. — cincPhil
Do you apprehend at least a loose set of objective moral values, such as love, freedom, equality, tolerance, etc? Now, what if society as a whole decided to replace them with greed, narcissism, bigotry, and malice? Does that mean that those things are good? In what possible world is malice good? Don't some values seem necessary, like love for example? — cincPhil
I insisted that Apokrisis has this turned around, what constrains interpretation is the habits of the individual who is interpreting. In relation to interpretation, the words are just a passive thing being interpreted, and the interpretation depends on how the individual recognizes them. So all constraints on interpretation must be in the mind of the interpreter.
Apokrisis turns final cause around, such that it is not associated with the will and intent of the individual, but it is supposed to be the function of some phantom being, called "society", as if society has its own intentions and thereby constrains individuals to do what it wills. — Metaphysician Undercover
I find this so very hard to understand. Antigonish. — Banno
It's not a public object and yet it is something. Antigonish. Words summon phantoms into conversation, like what it is like to be a bat, or what it is like to read this thread. — Banno
In what way is the something that it is like different from the perfectly public exercise of reading the post? — Banno
Why is it "greater" to know, love, and be powerful, than not? — Thorongil
So why do we need to create more socially-constructed selves to view the world and run around restlessly? There is none. It is creating more doing socially-constructed selves for the sake of it. This is aggressive absurdity that has to be enacted through incarnation of yet another individual who has to take the mantle of living an aggressively absurd life of instrumental doing. — schopenhauer1
Ah, but somethings can never die into contingency and will stay necessary. — schopenhauer1
Rather than being a lithe spirit floating on the content of this or that belief system, what is it that is going on with the human condition at its root. — schopenhauer1
I always said my pessimism was an aesthetic one. It is seeing an image of the structure of the world and finding consolation somehow in understanding this. There is no embracing the absurd (pace Camus) or Eternal Return (pace Nietzsche). — schopenhauer1
The goal-seeking, restless nature is there, whether you have the aesthetic view of it or not. It still happens, even if people cannot see it or interpret it like that. That is where we probably differ. You don't have to recognize it for yourself for it to be happening, to be a truth if you will. — schopenhauer1
But that is just naming - "A something". it tells us nothing about it, does nothing to it or about it... — Banno
Indeed, it looks to me like reification. Is it the same "something" the second, third or forth time I read it?
Then is it a something at all? — Banno
But what is this thing which is called "information", which is supposed to be somehow independent from the act of informing? is it just the form itself, or is it something other than the form? — Metaphysician Undercover
Is there even such a thing as the meaning of the sentence? I doubt it. There is only what we do with the sentence. — Banno
Ok, thanks for clarifying that. Of course that’s Atheism. I don't criticize someone else's position--to each their own. …and you aren’t one of those preachy or evangelistic Atheists, who comprise most Atheists. — Michael Ossipoff
But I suggest that conditional grammar is at least as accurate a description of our physical world. A world of “if”, rather than “is”. — Michael Ossipoff
Because “Real”, “Existent” , and “Is” aren’t philosophically-defined, I suggest that there isn’t really a meaningful issue between Realism and Anti-Realism. Neither is absolutely right or wrong.
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So I refer to a complex system of inter-referring inevitable abstract logical if-then facts about hypotheticals that is an individual “life-experience possibility-story”. …of which there are infinitely-many.
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I say that, for us, it’s most meaningful to speak of us and our experience as being metaphysically-primary.
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You’re in a life because there’s a life-experience possibility-story that’s about you. ,,,about someone just like you, with your basic subconscious attributes, inclinations, feelings etc. …about you. You’re the protagonist in that story.
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It certainly empirically makes sense for us to define the metaphysical world based on our experience, because, for one thing, everything that we know about this physical world comes to us from our experience. That’s what there directly observably metaphysically is, for us. It’s reasonable, natural and right for us to speak from our own empirical point of view.
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Nisargadatta said that we didn’t make our world, but we make it relevant.
. — Michael Ossipoff
Sometimes the famous philosophers say things that confirm or agree with what I’m saying, as when Wittgenstein was quoted as saying that there are no things, only facts.
.
And, if they say something that I disagree with (as Tippler and Tegmark have), then I want to comment on that difference too.
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For me the "divine" only makes sense as feeling, as a mode of being alive. I do think this mode is supported by the "right" kind of thinking, but "feeling is first."
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Certainly, though my impression of good intent behind what is, benevolence above metaphysics, is an impression, with nothing to do with logic or argument. But it’s an impression that I don’t doubt.
. — Michael Ossipoff