If anything, rather than a Paradox, I think this nicely showcases the validity of the Four Noble Truths. — Hermeticus
It's not exactly maya that induces dukkha, rather than the attachment to that illusion. Maya can be a hindrance to truth and to renouncement of desire - but it doesn't have to be. The illusion is neither good nor bad, it's what you make of it. Some are bound by it, while others find truth precisely through - or because of - that illusion. — Hermeticus
So where’s the paradox? — khaled
I thought Socrates' antipathy towards democracy was no secret. If memory serves, he was more in favor of wise kings. The so-called Philosopher King was a notion he invented and his student Plato developed further.
— TheMadFool
In Plato’s Gorgias, Callicles suggests that society should be ruled by intelligent and courageous men irrespective of other virtues like self-control and righteousness, and invites Socrates to join his group.
Socrates replies by inviting Callicles to join him in his belief in righteousness and divine judgement in the afterlife:
And I invite all other men likewise, to the best of my power, and you particularly I invite in return, to this life and this contest, which I say is worth all other contests on this earth; and I make it a reproach to you, that you will not be able to deliver yourself when your trial comes and the judgement of which I told you just now (Gorg. 526e).
The concept of philosopher-king has been much misunderstood. I think the idea was to train philosophers to rule wisely. This is what it really boils down to, wise and just rule, in accordance with the established standards of ethical conduct based on the four virtues (self-control, courage, prudence, and righteousness), etc., and a proper legal system.
But you are right, it may be described as a utopian vision and it is doubtful that Socrates and Plato intended to implement everything exactly as discussed in the Republic. Still, Greek rulers tended to be more democratic that those of Persia or Egypt, for example. — Apollodorus
underplay — Jack Cummins
Great quotes. Particularly love the reference to Russell, he's correct — Manuel
I think that poetry, or poesis, is a different way of viewing the world — Jack Cummins
painting In words — Jack Cummins
touch and grasp higher, 'truths' as well — Jack Cummins
seeing their ideas as objective is questionable — Jack Cummins
To put it differently, why do almost all think that Einstein (inherent determinism) was wrong and Bohr (inherent probability) was right? — Prishon
"how can the universe have experienced infinity, that's what's implied, to get to this point (the here and now)"
I get your point. If you roll time backwards (which is the same as reversing all velocities of the particles in it though you might counter that this doesnt reverse expansion) it all comes together again. In the future it all matter ends up accelerating away from each other to infinity. Cant there be processes like this following up one another? BB- to infinity-BB-to infinity, etc. No bound in time or space. — DeScheleSchilder
A poet is a beautician - enhances beauty and conceals ugliness.
— TheMadFool
You've been reading the wrong poets, mate. — Janus
How does pattern recognition happen?
— unenlightened
Perception & Memory
1. Perceive A, parts & whole. Record in memory
2. Perceive B, parts & whole. Cross-check perception of A with memory of A. Match! Pattern. No match! No pattern.
— TheMadFool
But you left out the rest of the question.
How does the immune system recognise the breakdown products of cell death? How does a computer learn to play Go, and come up with a strategy that had not been known to humans?
— unenlightened
Are you saying that computers and enzymes have perceptions and memories? — unenlightened
Then why there is a problem backwards, in the past? — DeScheleSchilder
Infinity backwards into the past, however, boggles the mind; how can the universe have experienced infinity, that's what's implied, to get to this point (the here and now)? — TheMadFool
I am not quite so dismissive. Banno, for instance, knows what rhetorical devices are and he isn’t naively employing them. And the bashing of religion to the glory of science isn’t confined to one generation or another, but dignified restraint is certainly on the wane. — Ennui Elucidator
It looks like science is both the disease and the cure, thr former confirmed but the latter pending.
— TheMadFool
And in the mean time we have vaccination, air conditioning, interweb stuff, pain relief, surgery, vehicles. And fewer intestinal parasites.
I don't mind a bit of science. — Banno
And yet when we try to talk of religion we hear how science gives us keyboards and religion gives us the Taliban. Being aware that everything has its good and bad doesn’t mean that otherwise intelligent people won’t dramaticize in order to make it clear that they don’t like something. — Ennui Elucidator
DO you think we would be able to get out of this mess without science? One can't jump of the rollercoaster after it starts. — Banno
It's tedious. — Banno
Blaming science for climate change is ridiculous. — Banno
You could be right. However, if we are to judge Athenian democracy by the way they conducted their trials, with juries bought by the likes of Anytus, etc., then maybe Socrates had a point.
But I’m not sure Socrates was quite as “undemocratic” as he might seem. My impression is that what he and Plato really attempted to do was to bring some order to the confused society and culture they lived in, and this implied some religious and political reforms. How undemocratic these were is of course debatable. — Apollodorus
But then, no one alive has ever been dead. How do you know it, without ever having been dead? — Corvus
Infinitesimals are funny things. What about velocity, dx/dt (is there mathJax here?)? You think its a real physical quantity? — Prishon
How, then, could the information be physical? — Wayfarer
Sorry couldn't quite make link between the pen drawing its own end, and a living being conceiving its' own death. :) — Corvus
The term minimalism is also used to describe a trend in design and architecture, wherein the subject is reduced to its necessary elements. — Wikipedia
Prishon likey likey this! Prishon glad to hear! Prishon WTF? Shut up now! I think you are right. I haven't read the guy but I dont think he manages to tickle me. Whats in a name? Everything: Wit like stone...Prishon say me li... Prishon shut the fuck up! — Prishon
My bad for the misunderstanding apparent. Religion, insofar as what I said earlier matters, stands for what seems to be missing in non-religious worldviews - that yearning to be part of something bigger as some like to put it. The closest such concepts free of religious baggage I can find are ecological movements and Niel deGrasse Tyson's Comsic Perspective.
— TheMadFool
Yearning to be part of something bigger? Dunno bout them but Prishon donot wanna be part of bigger thing. Prishon wonders how all to be came!
Neil deGrasse free of religious bagage? His whole being IS the bagage he must carry everyday like a burden... like Jesus had to carry that Godd":$#d cross of his!
Sorry for noticing a spelling mistake, but is deGrasse comsic? Sick about his own com? — Prishon
...and we were so close... — Banno
And your point is –? — 180 Proof
Read Witty's PI, Fool (at least the first half of it). — 180 Proof
"Strangers"? I'm not following you. — 180 Proof
Don't mistake silence for absence. The secular world if full of nods and winks towards what we might call the numinous. The difference is not making claims to knowledge.
Puts me in mind of the Dave Allan joke:
The Pope and an atheist are having a discussion...
and it slowly gets more and more heated until eventually the Pope can't take it anymore and he says to the atheist - "You are like a man who is blindfolded, in a dark room who is looking for a black cat that isn't there."
The atheist laughs and says - "With all due respect, we sound awfully similar. You are like a man who is blindfolded, in a dark room who is looking for a black cat that isn't there but the difference is you think you've found it. — Banno
Read the opening of PI where he explicitly rejects "the more widely held" (Adamic / Augustinian) "essence of words" and thereby investigates 'usage-meaning' instead. "Use" is the broad alternative to the very narrow scope of "essence" and is not "auxiliary" as far as Witty is concerned. — 180 Proof