Not a bad explanation. And interesting OP, too. — Apollodorus
But do we do that before or after we learn how to drink, how to be a farmer, and how to be a bad emperor? — Apollodorus
I may have missed a spot here and there! — TheMadFool
And what about why? — Apollodorus
2. Why does God exist?
We must know how to prove/disprove God exists. — TheMadFool
A sophist's notion of 'wisdom' – a syllabus of self-help nostroms. :yawn: — 180 Proof
Interesting but besides the point. Daily living, as I point out, (structurally) provides glimpses – epiphanies – of not existing (via ineluctable gaps in awareness and memories). For me these are enough. — 180 Proof
Any fact you can think of – concrete, not abstract – is finite, always can change or cease to be. Thinking is also a fact (not the contents which are merely abstract but the activity or process) which can cease to be. This a priori contingency enables thinking of counterfactuals and alternative scenarios, plans of action and predictions. One can think of oneself not thinking or, in principle, the nonexistence (nonbeing) of thinking insofar as the activity of thought itself is contingent (i.e. can cease to be). — 180 Proof
More updates
The Unthinking-Suffering Equivalence
1. If in pain, not thinking (too painful to think)
2. If not thinking, in pain (people dislike being called a fool)
Ergo,
3. Pain = Not thinking (1, 2 logical equivalence)
Ergo,
4. Maximum pain (hell) = Thinking impossible (pesudo-nonexistence)
Ergo,
5. If we were/are capable of thinking but we didn't (before birth and after death), it could be said that we were in hell (before birth) and we'll go back to hell (after death). — TheMadFool
The State, the Church, the Corporation — Xtrix
The reason we find nothing problematic - I think - is because we are knowledgeable creatures as a matter of our constitution. We can categorize, make sense of, measure, compare, contemplate, appreciate, contextualize, discern, wonder about, etc. We just can't help it.
So imagining a "state" in which we can do none of these things at all goes against our nature (while being awake, at least), hence the agony. — Manuel
But there is a silver lining. While we are afraid of death, I think that if we try to apply fear, worry, anxiety, pain and all the bad things in life to the "state before" birth, none apply. Not even boredom. How bored were you before you were born? Huh? — Manuel
oxygen deprivation — Jack Cummins
near death experiences — Jack Cummins
Parisians not knowing the dying — Corvus
watched a dying — unenlightened
I felt a unsettling coldness in my heart but this isn't important. — TheMadFool
I've frequently pointed out that I see no good reason to think the "time after" life ceases will be different than the "time before" life began. I was nothing and will be nothing, same state. — Manuel
What did your face look like before your parents were born? — Wikipedia
So also, your mind cannot conceive of dreamless sleep. :P (Our use of language is annoying.) — Nils Loc
So what's your angle for a better, war-free world? How do you do it? What are your thoughts? — DrOlsnesLea
Si vis pacem, para bellum (if you want peace, prepare for war). — Publius Flavius Vegetius Renatus
What a sheltered life you lead! Have you never killed, or come across a corpse, or watched a dying? And to pre-empt the most obvious response, one gets the idea of oneself from seeing other people; if there were no others, one would not be able to imagine otherness, and one would be the world. The ideas of life and death both arise from experience of (m)others. — unenlightened
To All
We can conceive of body death. Just imagine yourself as a decaying corpse in a coffin 6 feet underground with a headstone jutting out of the earth. We can also try Sam Harris' what's wrong with this picture? (the nonexistent/dead you is missing) technique.
We can't concieve of mind death. What is it that we can think of as absent from a given mental image of the world? what is it that can be lying in a grave? What is it that mind can say with an acceptable level of confidence is missing/ended/extinguished upon death. The body? No! Then what? — TheMadFool
This is a bit silly. I cannot experience tomorrow, I cannot experience what is over the horizon, I cannot experience what is in the next room. Most of what we talk about is what we cannot or do not experience. "Conceiving is what we do instead of experiencing. — unenlightened
How does a person experience dementia? presumably he finds himself learning about things that he has good reason to believe he has previously forgotten. But how does he classify an experience as being of something forgotten? Whatever the experiential criteria, perhaps an avid learner should consider dementia to be the ultimate learning experience. — sime
it hasn't any meaning — unenlightened
Whenever ( :chin: ) I encounter these words [infinity, nothing] and others of its ilk (so-called unknownables) my mind actually draws a blank. Thanks for the update (I see myslef as a computer, in need of broadband and the latest "updates". I hope you don't hold that against me. It's not a choice.)
Anyway, an analogy seems to be the first port of call :point: Tesseract. Just like 4D objects (inconceivable so they say) cast 3D shadows, these shadows being more mind-friendly, unknowables too should/could have shadows that our minds can, in a sense, grasp. — TheMadFool
There is nothing one has failed to do except to notice the knot in the language. — unenlightened
Don't you mean we can't experience mind death — Nils Loc
dreamless sleep — Jack Cummins
Deep sleep — Nils Loc
There are people in Paris observing the Eiffel tower, who are not observing the computer monitor you are observing; in other words, your computer monitor doesn't exist as far as Parisians are concerned.
And so presumably according to Sam Harris, he has given you a glimpse as to what the non-existence of your monitor is. — sime
Imagining own death seem just imagining only which has no real significance again in one's real life apart from having some nightmares? — Corvus
Whenever ( :chin: ) I encounter these words [infinity, nothing] and others of its ilk (so-called unknownables) my mind actually draws a blank. Thanks for the update (I see myslef as a computer, in need of broadband and the latest "updates". I hope you don't hold that against me. It's not a choice.)
Anyway, an analogy seems to be the first port of call :point: Tesseract. Just like 4D objects (inconceivable so they say) cast 3D shadows, these shadows being more mind-friendly, unknowables too should/could have shadows that our minds can, in a sense, grasp. — TheMadFool
Sure it's a waste ... But do you really think that I am going to ponder on something that a Mad Fool tells me? — Alkis Piskas
Unconsciousness — 180 Proof
Forgetting — 180 Proof
Thinking 'the contingency of thinking' (Brassier). — 180 Proof
One can also try conceive the times and world before one's birth — Corvus
I've been thinking about how the gap between amateur and professional philosophy could be better bridged — Pfhorrest
This happens to me all the time. The answer is usually "No.", but occasionally, "No, thank you, I want to laze." — unenlightened
The brain (I don't know about mind) ABSOLUTELY gains in mass and volume just as with any other organ. Stuff (blood, chemicals, nutrients, etc, etc,) go in and out of the brain constantly. The only dispute is how appreciable/measurable the changes are. The brain consumes energy (chemical/biological) in its functionality. Therefore, at different times it has different energy levels. — BrianW
No general method for the solution of questions in the theory of probabilities can be established which does not explicitly recognise, not only the special numerical bases of the science, but also those universal laws of thought which are the basis of all reasoning, and which, whatever they may be as to their essence, are at least mathematical as to their form. — George Boole
Not really, I’m saying that homosexuality and incest are morally equivalent unless certain practical considerations such as the risk of pregnancy are mentioned. Saying that something is equivalent isn’t the same as saying something is identical. For example, 10 dimes are monetarily equivalent to a dollar bill but they are obviously not the same thing as a dollar bill. I don’t think it matters who you have sex with unless someone can mention some kind of a practical reason for why you maybe shouldn’t have sex with a particular person. — TheHedoMinimalist
if it’s enthusiastic consent then I don’t think it matters much either way — TheHedoMinimalist
Thank you for that answer. My mind draws a blank too, but isn't this blank necasserily something? I must be getting confused in the language.
As for the second part of your answer, that seems to be similar to Kants idea that the 'thing in itself', that which lies beyond appearances, is recognised indirectly through appearances.
Should I just be satisfied with the unknown being these blanks, and leave it at that? — Aidan buk
I gave you two examples to show you that words do not determine one's experience(s). I can give you a lot more, but I don't see the point. As I can see, you ignored them. So that's it for me. — Alkis Piskas
eternity, nothingness — Aidan buk
Of course words enrich one's world — Alkis Piskas
In other words vocab is a good index of the richness of a life. — TheMadFool
if it’s enthusiastic consent then I don’t think it matters much either way. — TheHedoMinimalist
You mean the mind can create a world beyond the world in itself? Yes indeed! And if you accept that every consciousness is unique in the absolute sense, then you might also accept that every world view is also unique in the absolute sense, which might make you wonder what the world is, given we live in slightly different ones, depending upon our consciousness. :chin: FYI — Pop
This sounds unfortunate. One's world (reality) consists much more than words (language). It also contains images, sounds, feelings, experiences, ... In fact, one's world gets limited only when one tries to put it in words. This is what we mean when we say "I can't explain it in words ..."
Be your own "Wittgenstein" and let him be himself! :) — Alkis Piskas
The Unicorn can exist physically as patterns of matter and energy ( information ) in your mind, just like all other thoughts, as neuroplasticity would suggest. — Pop
The (mind)ing is what the brain does. The brain is physical. However else it might be conceived of, it follows that (mind)ing can also be conceived of as physical. Like digestion, seeing, dancing, respirating ... physical processes (activities), not things. (Mind)ing is a verb, not a noun. — 180 Proof