t I believe language is simply a way of capturing sensory data (5 senses) and/or superimposing data sets so obtained and averaging them as it were to extract patterns from them. In both cases, words, nothing more than auditory/visual/tactile symbols, are assinged either to individual sense datum or to the pattern observed in them — TheMadFool
To do neuroscience, you have to be able to make predictions, and to develop theory you have to have some of those predictions be reliable. This makes it the only player in Explanation Town, — Kenosha Kid
I'm reminded of people typing on computers connected to the internet that science cannot possibly work...
— Kenosha Kid
Those guys.....deserving of little mention and even less respect. — Mww
equally a mistake to think this is a theory about the structure, or explaination, of our being in relation to time — Antony Nickles
Thoughts are, let's just say, immortal, they survive the Grim Reaper's menacing scythe. — TheMadFool
his personal real world relationships with some of those involved in the conflict. And he was generally the sanest and most mature of the lot of us. — Foghorn
why do we so often deliberately seek out the experience of being driven crazy? — Foghorn
Not my circus not my monkeys — skyblack
I think the stated topic was most likely a prop, which served to help us hide our conflict addiction from ourselves. — Foghorn
How does participation in a meaningless activity demonstrate compassion for victims? — Foghorn
none of us in that thread are in a position to challenge those committing the atrocities, however we might have defined them. — Foghorn
An idealist or skeptic can at least hold the materialist model as a useful if often unreliable tool, without falling into traps like claiming qualia isn't real, based solely on data received as qualia, while transmitting said argument to others solely through means that they will experience as qualia. — Count Timothy von Icarus
It would be useful for Jack Torrance. Maybe for a QAnon member? — frank
Unless someone considers themselves eliminitavists, which I think is just crazy. — Manuel
It needn't be the case that idealism is opposed to realism at all. — Manuel
it does all depend on one's state of mind, because if you can't find a book that is coming from the right place there is no point. It is a bit like suggesting that a classical music lover should try heavy metal or trip hop music. — Jack Cummins
I have always found the novel to be a far better expression of truth and wisdom than academic philosophy and science. — Mystic
when it comes to the latter, his fans like to draw a distinction between the man and his work, so you may comfort yourself by doing the same. — Ciceronianus the White
I’m a great admirer of Dewey, but Heidegger’s work, along with Derrida, Gendlin and a few others , moves a step or two beyond Pragmatism. Dewey connects affect and intention-cognition , but still retains a distinction between the two that Heidegger was able to transcend. His analysis of the relation between the self”A Swabian peasant trying to sound like me" is what Dewey is reputed to have said about everyone's favorite Nazi. — Ciceronianus the White
But on Heidegger himself, it's seeming to me that he puts activity prior to substance. If this is true it radically changes the position of materialism. It is not matter that acts, but action as a substantial verb encountering a world of matter — Gregory
Hence my puzzlement that Joshs thinks "We find something better and only then do we see the limits of the previous approach". Recognising the problem seems an essential first step. — Banno
To my eyes Heidegger's ontic is dualistic (me and a hammer) but his ontology is not so, — Gregory
just as a hammer can be thought of as a wooden stick with a metal piece on the end of it, weighing a certain amount and of a certain dimension or having other properties, but isn't thought of such when we're absorbed in the activity of hammering, likewise the world isn't simply "material." — Xtrix
What type of being does Man understand? The material world? I haven't seen where Heidegger explicitly denies this, although he focuses on hammering for example instead of hammers. — Gregory
I think it’s best not to dwell on care. I see care as a bridge between the analysis of being-in-the-world and temporality. We “care” about the world by default— we can’t help it. Just as we can’t help being (or having) a world. What’s more important is the structure of time that emerges from the analysis. After all, it’s not “Being and Care”, it’s being and time. — Xtrix
the very distinction between “self” and “world” is very much antithetical to Heidegger. — Xtrix
...Midgley's point; philosophers are needed in order to point to the smell and the feted pooling. — Banno
I think Midgley right in pointing to social contract theory as the broken pipe in the foundation, and I don't see that there is a clear solution; so I don't agree with you. If you were correct that we see the rot only from the vantage of a new philosophical system, that system would be apparent and ubiquitous — Banno
Are you saying that the role of philosophy is essentially descriptive? How do you assess Midgley's paper? — Tom Storm
If Heidegger believed that love was ontic and anxiety was ontological, than I think he has it backwards, although I don't think he says this. Intentionality always has to be activated by love of something in some sense. You can't just have will power and anxiety. You would be crippled instantly. — Gregory
There's a tension between system building and critical evaluation in philosophy. Perhaps the system builders - your Kant, Hegel, Russel - thrive when the basis of society is unthreatened; and the critics - Socrates, Nietzsche, Wittgenstein - in what might be called "interesting times"? — Banno
the presumed notion of a social contract has its limits. Only then we can look for something better. — Banno
There seems to be a strong correlation between depression and the ideology of “following” one’s heart. As a lack of responsibility and structure in one’s life decreases the sense of purpose, depression increases. Instead, society tells us to experiment with drugs (antidepressants) and chase false hopes instead of solving the problem. Shunning social obligations and familial responsibilities in order that one might increase a sense of individuality commonly occurs — Ladybug
So is care that important? Not really, and it can often be mistaken as being emotional somehow because of the connotations of the word, when it’s more akin with directed activity or more related to awareness/attentional behavior. — Xtrix
