Unfashionable sense for the cogniscenti, my friend. — 180 Proof
And those who were seen dancing were thought to be insane by those who couldn't hear the music. — Wikipedia
"Do or do not, there is no try." — 180 Proof
Void is non-orientation (non-asymmetrical). Randomness is incompressibility (non-asymmetrical). Complementary ways of describing the non-asymmetrical (asymmetry-free) state-of-affairs. — 180 Proof
2. Paradoxical pity: Y lacks something X has but X wastes that something, whatever it is. For instance, X is a talented singer but Y can't carry a tune in a wheel barrow but...X has no interest in music at all. In this case, Y pities X for X is, in a sense, no different from Y; it's as if X couldn't sing even if faer life depended on it and that's exactly how Y perceives faerself. — TheMadFool
No! Try not. Do, or do not. There is no try. — Yoda
Mathematics is the language with which God has written the universe. — Galileo Galilei
Everything that can be counted does not necessarily count; everything that counts cannot necessarily be counted. — Albert Einstein
"void" equated with "randomness" — 180 Proof
That is actually the standard argument against “race realism” (i.e. the argument that race is a social construct): none of the usual racial categories map onto biological reality, because if they did all Native Americans would be “Asians”, all such “Asians” would be the same race as Caucasians, and there would be a ton of different African races on par with them, or else if you tried to treat all Africans as one race, all humans would belong to that race — Pfhorrest
God is something beyond logic and pure reason — 3017amen
God moves in a mysterious way — William Cowper
It happens all the time. Ideas have their own life, they hybridize all the time. — Olivier5
That seems explained by the anthropic principle: we could have evolved only in a world where the laws have been stable for a long time. — litewave
Solomonoff induction seems to show that this is very unlikely. — litewave
So, take a deep breath, strap yourselves in because the so-called laws of nature (the order/ the pattern) could devolve into utter chaos at any time. — TheMadFool
Some of the church fathers were trained as philosophers, eg St Augustine. So perhaps a bit of both. It is clear to me that monotheism responded to a demand for metaphysical clarity - it could not have been so successful without a certain predisposition to its message among Roman empire citizens (and other folks). — Olivier5
1. Neither. Order is just a "slower-to-dissipate" aspect-zone of chaos to which observers belong and, therefore, they are interested in enough – have time enough – to map, model and foolosophize about. — 180 Proof
Order is stages/phases in chaos — TheMadFool
Ramon Llull (1232–1315) wrote a Liber Chaos, in which he identifies Chaos as the primal form or matter created by God. Swiss alchemist Paracelsus (1493–1541) uses chaos synonymously with "classical element" (because the primeval chaos is imagined as a formless congestion of all elements) — Wikipedia
Chaos has been linked with the term abyss / tohu wa-bohu of Genesis 1:2. The term may refer to a state of non-being prior to creation or to a formless state. — Wikipedia
Pherecydes of Syros (fl. 6th century BC) interprets chaos as water, like something formless that can be differentiated — Wikipedia
Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the spirit of God was hovering over the waters.
— Genesis 1:2, New International Version — Wikipedia
The words tohu and bohu also occur in parallel in Isaiah 34:11, which the King James Version translates with the words "confusion" and "emptiness". — Wikipedia
Chaos (Ancient Greek: χάος, romanized: kháos) refers to the void state preceding the creation of the universe or cosmos in the Greek creation myths — Wikipedia
slower-to-dissipate" aspect-zone of chaos to which observers belong. — 180 Proof
2. "Peace, that glorious moment in time when everyone stops and reloads." ~Thomas Jefferson — 180 Proof
3. Zebras are black(?) — 180 Proof
Like everything, there were pros and cons with Christianity. It was more universal, less warmongering than national or city-bound religions like the Greeks' or the Jews', but also (I guess) stifling for creativity. You had to tow the one line of the one god. — Olivier5
"And those who were seen dancing were thought to be insane by those who could not hear the music." ~F.N. — 180 Proof
Good question. I believe that after losing Constantinople (the "New Rome") and being overrun by the Turks, the next blow was Western European Enlightenment that eventually made many turn to science instead of philosophy, after which nationalism and "modernity" took over and led the struggle for independence into a new era and new weltanschauung. There are still pockets of authentic Hellenistic philosophy and spirituality, that may one day lead to a national revival. But for the most part it's all down to politics and the corrosive influence of English-based global culture spreading through the news, entertainment, and social media just like everywhere else in the world. — Apollodorus
I think irrespective of the light of reason, that we are storytelling beings. Now that you prod me a bit, that other way of seeing might relate to the meaning which we invest in the word. Those are not 'reasonable', in the sense that they are disinterested an 'objective'. — Tobias
Summer Solstice is upon us, Fool. Days of reason get shorter from here on, with longer nights to leisurely loiter looking up at other stars. Remember, though, even at night the sun still shines brightly, so bright in fact that by its invisible light we're able to see in the dark, even the dim twinkling of impossibly distant, long dead stars... :fire: — 180 Proof
But would you care to explain what you mean? — Tobias
Reason is a certain way of seeing the world — Tobias
By the way, one of the reasons why Platonism was so successful was that Hellenistic philosophy and culture in general stretched from the Italic peninsula (Magna Graecia) and North Africa all the way to Northwest India and it was very cosmopolitan. Many Platonist philosophers were Romans, Egyptians, Arabs, Jews, Persians, etc., not just Greeks. — Apollodorus
Are you a condescending prick or merely masking your own insecurity? — Tobias
The pleasure is entirely mine. I wish all "fools" were like you. But, apparently, not. — Apollodorus
But they are rarely skeptical of the "reason" they have replaced it with. — Foghorn
Skepticism (American and Canadian English) or scepticism (British, Irish, Australian, and New Zealand English) is generally a questioning attitude or doubt towards one or more putative instances of knowledge which are asserted to be mere belief or dogma. — Wikipedia
Reason is a certain way of seeing the world — Tobias
Platonism was far more powerful than it is often realized. It was of course heavily sponsored by Alexander and his followers. It was transmitted through Plato’s Academy which functioned from 387 BC to 529 CE and through the so-called Alexandrian School at Alexandria, Egypt, which lasted from 306 BC to 642. Other philosophical circles formed in Rhodes, Syria, and other parts of the Greek-speaking world. In Christian times Platonism was transmitted through the University of Constantinople from 425 CE into the 15th century when the capital city was taken by the Turks. But it also made its way to Italy and so it spread to the whole of the western world (as well as to the Islamic world). But very few people actually know that unless they are into Byzantine studies or related fields. — Apollodorus
You are probably correct in a sense. But the Hellenistic weltanschauung transmitted through Plato and Aristotle survived for many centuries, influenced Alexander, Rome, Christianity, Islam, and the Renaissance, and formed the very foundations of Western civilization. Not a negligible feat it seems. — Apollodorus
Socrates calls himself a midwife and a physician of the soul. He acknowledges that both have knowledge. Like the sophists he has knowledge of how to argue using reason and rhetoric, — Fooloso4
Yes, of course, Feyerabend's rebut to Popper. To wit: "Name the greatest of all inventors. Accident." ~Mark Twain — 180 Proof
Necessity is the mother of all inventions. — proverb
The classic wisdom-of-the-crowds finding involves point estimation of a continuous quantity. At a 1906 country fair in Plymouth, 800 people participated in a contest to estimate the weight of a slaughtered and dressed ox. Statistician Francis Galton observed that the median guess, 1207 pounds, was accurate within 1% of the true weight of 1198 pounds — Wikipedia
"Mysteries" always beg questions and never answer them. Questions which can only be satisfied by "mysteries" are pseudo. "Faith in mysteries" is a gateway drug. — 180 Proof
There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy. — Hamlet
Reminds me of the gambler's fallacy. On the ceilings of some old casinos, like angels in a cathedral, they still paint stars. :sparkle: — 180 Proof
Darkness within darkness, the gateway to all mysteries. — Tao Te Ching
Some other time, then, Socrates. For now I am in a hurry to go somewhere, and it is time for me to go away.
Where is he going in such a hurry? — Fooloso4
In psychology and psychiatry, insight can mean the ability to recognize one's own mental illness — Wikipedia
In another case, when he was informed that the prestigious Oracle of Delphi declare that there is no-one wiser than Socrates, he concluded "So I withdrew and thought to myself: ‘I am wiser ( sophoteron ) than this man; it is likely that neither of us knows ( eidenai ) anything worthwhile, but he thinks he knows something when he does not, whereas when I do not know, neither do I think I know; so I am likely to be wiser than he to this small extent, that I do not think I know what I do not know." — Wikipedia
There is a fine line between genius and insanity. I have erased this line. — Oscar Levant
There are countless non/ir-rational paths that have been taken. Tell me where they've lead that the path of reason hasn't already passed by. Point out one of those dark paths that have gone farther / further than the lumen naturale. Isn't the goal to turn (metanoia) from the shadows on the wall and see that we can leave Plato's Cave (mystification) by following the sun (reasoning)? — 180 Proof
the invasion of Russia. — Foghorn
But then is it really called knowing if it's unreasonable? Or something else? — Moliere
How is it possible. — Andrew4Handel
But aren't the events of the last five years a little too strange? If you went back to 2015 and tried to sell the story of what America's actually gone through, you would be laughed out of the room. Nobody would take you seriously. I think reality has been trying to hit us over the head with a certain lesson:this (Trump) is what happens when you devote your life to chasing idols like fame and money and power. This is what naked ego looks like. Take a good hard look. I think there's design to it all. — RogueAI
No, I think in essence you are correct. It's just that sometimes when I see "mind" as opposed to "matter", I just type automatically. It's not a critique.
Just emphasizing that back in 17th and 18th century, you could make such a distinction. But by now it's not very substantive.
The only thing to stress in these metaphysical disputes would be how much consciousness matters, no pun intended. — Manuel
I thought my quoting Freddy's "Noon: moment of the briefest shadow; end of the longest error; high point of humanity" would make the point that, for me, more light (reason) not less engenders philosophical understanding. "The truth"? As Freddy wrote "... a Fable: the history of an Error". — 180 Proof
What seems like the most irrational approach to a problem will often be ignored even if the results bear fruit. — I like sushi
Why assume that matter and mind are distinct?
Until someone can tell me where matter "stops" and mind "begins", this distinction doesn't make sense.
Another thing altogether is to say that mind (consciousness specifically) doesn't really exist, in a manner like Dennett argues, that everything is an illusion.
In that scenario we can only contrast a version of the world in which experience exists and one in which it does not. But this distinction between mind and matter can't be coherently formulated, I don't think. — Manuel