I think you can speculate that he had resentment from romantic misfortune, with some evidence. — fdrake
I wish pragmatists would find something less narrow-minded than "useful". — Ludwig V
I agree that the distinction between the role I'm playing and who I am is very important here. But I don't think it was specifically based on existentialism, though it's more than likely that Hannah Arendt would have discussed it in her writing on Eichmann's trial. — Ludwig V
It captured and reinforced the liberation experienced by many people as WW2 ended. — Ludwig V
Thanks. I'm sightly familiar with nihilism. Not enough to have ever heard of positive nihilism. — Patterner
Was Kierkegaard an existentialist? In what sense yes or no? — Corvus
Dude, you are so lucky. Soon you will be living in a tropical paradise. — Agree-to-Disagree
But there is room until the very last gasp for kindness and affection, and to make what adaptations one can... — unenlightened
This was always my understanding - and, as with the Shapiro reference, I think its true. People f'ing it up doesn't change the basis. — AmadeusD
I hope that is taught in schools everywhere, Frank. — Rob J Kennedy
what do you think would happen if every soldier refused their orders? — Rob J Kennedy
I believe, that where posiible, if we were all more responsible for our descisions, we would have a better world. — Rob J Kennedy
The answer to this question resonates on this thread. Of what value is a philosophical idea if it does not change lives? Or does philosophy as an approach to life live on mysteriously within endless discussions of Russell's paradox and something arising from nothing? Much of what I have read is inconsequential, like the pure mathematics I have enjoyed. — jgill
To be blunt - my specialist area - those who have answered "yes" to the question in the OP have thereby shown that they have not understood existentialism. — Banno
which would make it "of" the object, but as a mapping of object behaviours to "rational awareness". — fdrake
1. Shannon's model, developed for radios and telephones — for precisely this sort of transformation of energy types — is now applied to all physical interactions. So if the model entails indirectness, then everything is indirect. — Count Timothy von Icarus
2. These different types of energy turn out not to always be sui generis types. There has been a lot of work unifying these. We still have multiple "fundemental forces," but the goal/intuition, is that these can be unified as well, like electricity and magnetism, or then electromagnetism and the weak nuclear force. — Count Timothy von Icarus
This would seem to leave too many relations as indirect. And if perception is an indirect experience of the world merely in the way that light has an indirect relationship with photosynthesis or sex has an indirect relationship with pregnancy, then the epistemological claims related to this sort of indirectness seem much less acute (maybe this is a feature, not a bug). — Count Timothy von Icarus
Another wrinkle: wouldn't pain be the transformation of kinetic energy into electrochemical energy, and experience of our own pain thus also be indirect? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Are we to say that ghosts are not real for us, but real for them? Are we then saying that people speak of fake ghosts? That sounds strange, but it may be true. — Manuel
Sorry, I don't mean to be oblique. It's that I think accusations of dualism really depend heavily on the exact formulation involved, so I don't want to be overly direct because I don't think it's always an issue. — Count Timothy von Icarus
It comes down to what makes experience indirect, what makes the relationship between people and lemons vis-á-vis seeing yellow different from the relationship between people's breathing and air vis-á-vis oxygenating blood. If that difference just is that one is phenomenal, and that a relations involving phenomenal experience is what makes it indirect, then that looks a lot like mind having its own sorts of sui generis causal relations, essentially being a different substance from other entities, etc. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Without a way to specify the "indirectness" it seems to reduce to "being phenomenal is indirect because phenomenal awareness is a special type of relation," which is where a sort of dualism seems to come in, along with begging the question. — Count Timothy von Icarus
3. Ancient peoples coherently talked about their mental states.
4. Ancient peoples did not coherently talk about their brain states.
5. Therefore, mental states are not identical to brain states. — RogueAI
Talk of Superman is not the same as talk of Clark Kent. — fdrake
I think there is a more general concern that the "indirect" term is smuggling dualism in. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Yes, perhaps. I meant it as an intermediary between the "thinking" aspect of consciousness (that interprets and makes use of phenomenal experience) and the external world.
So perhaps it is more accurate to say that we are directly cognisant of phenomenal experience and through that indirect cognizant of distal objects. — Michael
What does this mean? It is often repeated, but how close does the Tractatus map to the writings of Schopenhauer? — Fooloso4
Phenomenal experience is the intermediary — Michael
while having good stuff in it, is also in some respects, a step down form the Tractatus. — Manuel
And introduces new (bigger?) problems, like why did the conveyor belt come back with six dots rather than three? And why/how do things cease to exist when we turn around and come back into existence when we turn back? — Michael
If you can measure how parsimonious a model is, then it wouldn't matter much what a community thinks. I think in this case, it's probably provable (not by me) that A is more parsimonious than B, because it takes fewer bits to describe a universe where A is the case than B. — flannel jesus
I don't understand this. There is a difference between something continuing to exist and something ceasing to exist and then coming back into existence. — Michael
Presumably one of us is wrong. Either (A) is more parsimonious or (B) is more parsimonious. I'm not sure that reason is relative. — Michael
I would say that (A) is the more parsimonious explanation and so should be favoured, unless there's actual evidence to the contrary. — Michael
There is no "right way up". There's just the way things seem to you and seem to me, determined entirely by how our bodies respond to stimulation. — Michael
Wittgenstein is a product of his time, and the thing in philosophy at that time was to call all sorts of things "meaningless. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I don't think any rough equating of the thing-in-itself with that of which we cannot speak will suffice here. — Banno
Wittgenstein had an infamous disregard for the history of philosophy. Some might say this was in order to think things through without prejudice; others that it was in order to claim credit for the ideas of others. — Banno
But Kant does not loom large either in Wittgenstein's own accounts of his influences, — Banno
