The self this side of the senses may be in part shaped by what is on the other side of the senses from information passing through the senses, but the self doesn't exist the other side of its senses.
That is, not unless one has the belief in telekinesis, psychic empathy and the paranormal. — RussellA
That's nearer to what I'm on about. Note the convergences with (neo)advaita and the like. There's an academic, Robert M. Wallace, who has written on Hegel's philosophy of religion, see this. — Wayfarer
God is commonly described as a being who is omniscient, omnipotent, and so forth. Hegel says this is already a mistake. If God is to be truly infinite, truly unlimited, then God cannot be ‘a being’, because ‘a being’, that is, one being (however powerful) among others, is already limited by its relations to the others. It’s limited by not being X, not being Y, and so forth. But then it’s clearly not unlimited, not infinite! To think of God as ‘a being’ is to render God finite.
But if God isn’t ‘a being’, what is God? Here Hegel makes two main points. The first is that there’s a sense in which finite things like you and me fail to be as real as we could be, because what we are depends to a large extent on our relations to other finite things. If there were something that depended only on itself to make it what it is, then that something would evidently be more fully itself than we are, and more fully real, as itself.
... when Hegel and his predecessors in this project talk about human beings becoming more ‘themselves’ by stepping back from their current desires and projects, they aren’t focusing on a narrowly intellectual kind of functioning. Plato wrote extensively about love ( eros). His central concern in this writing was to show two things. First, that love necessarily has an intellectual dimension, a dimension of inner freedom or questioning. This is because love seeks what’s truly Good for those it loves, and therefore it has to ask the question, what is truly Good? And second, Plato wanted to show that inner freedom ultimately has to lead to love of others, for their capacity for freedom. So inner freedom and love, head and heart aren’t ultimately separable from one another.
For his part, Hegel explains that inner freedom leads to love of others – this is a part of Plato’s argument that Hegel spells out more fully than Plato did – because attempts to be free independently of others necessarily fail. They fail because by excluding others from what I’m concerned about I define myself by my relationship to them (namely, the relationship of excluding them), and thus I prevent myself from being fully self-determining: that is, from having inner freedom.
This connection between freedom and love will come as a surprise to some of the self-described admirers of freedom. But it’s easy enough to see in everyday life that people who think of themselves as having ‘enemies’ seldom manage to be very free, internally. Plato and Hegel aren’t saying that we must agree with others about everything, or endorse everything that they do. Rather, they’re saying that we need to be able to see something in others that we can identify with, so as not to be confronted by something completely alien, which will define us (always) by this relationship rather than by ourselves.
How about the self as a social habit, something we all perform and insist that others perform ?What if it is all an illusion; what if the self is just a construct of thoughts that belong to no-one, but that insist on belonging to someone? — Ø implies everything
if a system then uses AI to figure out what is "beautiful" based on big data, we will further push people's appearance in photos toward a "standardized beauty" because of that data bias. This could lead to the same effect as people getting mental health issues from normal marketing standards of beauty pushing them to pursue that standard but in an extreme way of actually being that mirror laughing back at you every time you take a photo of yourself compared to what you see in the mirror. — Christoffer
A new type of disorder in which people won't recognize their own reflection in the mirror because they look different everywhere else and people who haven't seen them in a while, other than online, will have this dissonance when they meet up with them, as their faces won't match their presence online. — Christoffer
Another way of looking at this is that language (or the core pattern creation and manipulation power therein) has "escaped" into technology — Baden
The thought does cross my mind, however, that in the event of such a global emergency, could humanity not cut off electrical power from all of the servers? — Wayfarer
Yes, but not a social fiction. There's a difference. It is at the least entailed in our species, not our culture. — schopenhauer1
The tragedy is a real as anything, just to be clear. But this self experiencing itself in a matrix is a repetition of my favorite religious myth, the crucifixion. The cross is a mother is a matrix. Its perpendicular lines suggest a collision of opposites. It's only ever down here on our gliding prison planet that good can exist -- always in chains, dreaming a freedom that would be death, as if life's obstacle were its knowledge of itself.I said that the tragedy is democratic and afforded to all people with deliberative, self-reflecting brains. — schopenhauer1
Debord argues that the history of social life can be understood as "the decline of being into having, and having into merely appearing. — Wiki
The Real is what is out of our power, eludes symbolic interpretations and answers. — schopenhauer1
But on the other hand, this semiotic relation is what works for life and mind as encoding structure that can surf the world's entropic gradients with practiced habit. — apokrisis
What is behind the requirement to 'avoid any appeal to rational insight?' — Wayfarer
Why is it that mathematical insight is said to call into question our nature as 'physical beings'? — Wayfarer
:up:That is how they enjoy(ed) it. The enjoyment is not knowing. The Tao and Nirvana and Flow state we are always seeking. Broken tool man. — schopenhauer1
reason is the faculty which explains, not something to be explained. And that this sits uneasily with naturalist philosophy. — Wayfarer
the nature of scientific law is not itself an empirical question. — Wayfarer
As soon as you wonder whether the laws we know - like Newton's laws - could be different to what they are, then you're straying into metaphysics, knowingly or not — Wayfarer
This is a strange question.And, pray tell, how could one make a 'detailed case' for reason, without relying on reason to make the case? — Wayfarer
It's not an 'accusation of bias', I'm trying to understand the rationale behind the article, and why the faculty of reason was called into question in the first place. — Wayfarer
The map contains two fictions – the "self" and the "world". As Kant says, we are stuck in the phenomenal and cannot truly represent the thing in itself. — apokrisis
As I stressed earlier, the modelling relation says the map is a model of a territory with us in it. So it is a selfish view. An Umwelt as von Uexküll put it. Thus it ain't actually a map of a territory in the usual lumpen realist sense. — apokrisis
The question I was asking, is how come esteemed philosophers, such as W V O Quine, sought 'avoid any appeal to rational insight?' Why does the paper that this article was based on deny that there could be knowledge of mathematical objects? What is behind those denials? — Wayfarer
Still feel as though the point I was labouring has somewhat slipped the net here — Wayfarer
Eden = no self-awareness. No ability to be uber-deliberative and to thus be existential. There was a time when there was no break. — schopenhauer1
I tend to hold that such absolutes are probably how human minds are cognitively arranged in order to make sense of reality. Do they map to 'reality'; do they operate outside of a human perspective? — Tom Storm
On the same theme - what is your take on the notion that reason requires some kind of guarantor for it to operate. The logical absolutes; identify, non-contraction and excluded middle seem to make reason and math and this conversation possible. — Tom Storm
Obviously different kinds of existence are considered in philosophy, but on the whole, naturalism and popular philosophy tends towards a flat ontological structure, rejecting the kind of Aristotelian distinctions between different kinds of being, doesn't it? — Wayfarer
The way we humans model the world – using a rigourous and objectifying method – is also the causal logic of how that world itself works. It is how the Cosmos developed into being. — apokrisis
You sound like you want to make the separation secondary to the unity. Which would be the brand of Hegelianism that Fichte popularised. Hegel was striving to do what Peirce actually did. Show how unity is irreducibly triadic. — apokrisis
It is a challenging thesis. To self domesticate – become essentially peaceful and cooperative – we had to kill off the violent males until our primate reactive violence was tuned down to a minimum. We had to weed the Neanderthal alphas out of the gene pool. — apokrisis
Shaman rituals through nights in the long house would allow the deed to be debated and coalesce as the agreed right thing. Justification would hang in the air until it developed the weight of inevitability. — apokrisis
:up:It does represent an exile from Eden of sorts. A break. — schopenhauer1
So yes, you can make a dichotomy of the subjective and the objective and so appear to create the two antithetical realms of the mind and the world. You can set up the standard Cartesian dilemma which results in a doubled reductionism. A belief in two disconnected substantial realms. — apokrisis