this terrible burden of philosophy that interferes with what I believe is the very simple (if difficult to achieve) revelation. But then, it is philosophy that requires us to speak what it is that this is about — Constance
the agency of the "I" of my encounter with the world, even when matters turn profoundly insightful and deeply felt, is going to be constituted by the interpretative language education that gave me my "presence" out of infancy. — Constance
Yes!serious meditation reduces the world to its essential or "pure" phenomena — Constance
does this language and the "totality" of my educational grounding which prior to the "sublime experience of presence" determined my thinking, discover "something else" revealed as one approaches the ground zero, if you will, of the famous nunc stans. — Constance
the desire to know based on the knowledge of our ignorance. — Fooloso4
how does one get around the "post construction" of anything which is acknowledged at all, even and especially "just xy" — Constance
It COULD be that x and y are in some metaphysical, non relational simultaneity — Constance
There being something "there" at all is prior to anything one could say about its relations with other things, but then, to talk about its thereness begs the epistemic question, how does "it" get into judgment at all? — Constance
Foolish to doubt the "thereness" of the sight and feel of the cat — Constance
universally valued; love, freedom. knowledge, wisdom, creativity... — Janus
existential indeterminacy. This is an foundational epistemological, and therefore, ontological, problem. — Constance
there is nothing at all epistemic about causality. — Constance
I would say there's no "stuff" of mind or minding, because it is an activity, and as such is merely conceptual unless it is equated with brain processes. — Janus
differences can be found within the dialogues themselves and in the works of Aristotle themselves — Fooloso4
But maybe life is living. And living is many things, — Fire Ologist
body is minding, so mind is more of a verb than a noun, an activity rather than an entity. — Janus
explanation is impossible insofar as its realization would demand the unifying of categories of understanding which are inherently incompatible. — Janus
we could just as well, or better refer to them as minding, itself conceived as the central activity of the living body — Janus
the idea that only physical objects exist absurd — Janus
Ok, but then, the key word, binding us, is "stories". Body is the source of mind. But mind is stories. That's the point. And self is the Subject in the stories. It's fine for a 16 year old, while reading The Catcher in the Rye to sympathize with Holden Caufield, even to "become" the character. But that's what's happening. Should we aware-ing that?stories generated by the body — Janus
nothing dualistic about the body and its activitie — Janus
I am making a rule that says I should not be making rules. — Fire Ologist
Antinatalism isn’t tailored to the specific problem it is trying to prevent, and is way overboard of a response to just suffering. — Fire Ologist
I changed body to bodymind — Janus
but the calm repetitive rhythmic work of rather mundane thread-weavers, arbitrarily spinning a variety of different-colored stories : some very good, some awfully bad, some just tolerable. — Gnomon
Yogācāra, one of the principle Mahāyāna schools, has a theory of the unconscious. See the Wikipedia entry on the ‘ālāyavijñana’ — Wayfarer
But that lack of central authority could also suggest the possibility of some kind of subconscious psychical process. — Heracloitus
Which now makes me wonder if Buddhism accepts/rejects the concept of a sub(un)conscious. — Heracloitus
There is a kind of locality of thought implied here and thus ownership of thought, or thought as belonging to the particular individual. — Heracloitus
That is exactly a reason to leap to no self. If thoughts are why/what we attach to a self (Descartes), and thoughts move without the direction of a central authority, then where or what is this presumed self lacking control over thoughts? Isn't it more reasonable to conclude there is only the convenient fiction of a self unifying these thoughts as they affect what also appears to be a single body?we are unaware where thoughts come from and where they go - so why the leap to no-self? — Heracloitus
Let's get this one out first. I get the sentiment. We just have to plow through. I'm learning that. Your info is invaluable, if I haven't made that clear.(I don't like the condescension of preaching or even advising) — Constance
logic into the discussion is simply provide an unproblematic model for what certainty is. No more than this. — Constance
treat ethics as something that is as variable as belief systems, as customs and "taste". — Constance
YES. This is what I've been wondering in the inverse. Despite history and its fleeting and empty moments, Being is consistently present.There is no history. There never has been. — Constance
Yes you are entirely correct. What I meant was the analysis; this takes place instantly; this is the Dialectic. The pain is the only reality, the thereness which transcends dialectic. But as you know, instantly and ineluctably, we are flooding the being-natural-aware-ing-pain-ing with dialectic. "My ankle hurts. Why did I leap for that Frisbee? Should I be on morphine?" Simplified but you get the picture. These re-present the thereness (of) pain-ing with meaning about pain. Not real, real.Why not allow the world to be what it is? There is nothing in the pain of a sprained ankle that is dialectical. One is not comparing nor is the event historical in any way. It has a "thereness" that transcends analysis. — Constance
Aha! Right. I'm doing to ethics the very thing I'm defending religion from. Right, the essence.this is dismissed in the reduced analysis, for we want to know what the essence of ethics is, not the many "states of affairs" we find ourselves in. — Constance
THIS is where Henry comes in and the essence of religion becomes clear, for while I can see how powerful this idea of the hermeneutic delimitations of thought and understanding is, I am IN a world that is in NO way interpretatively distant. — Constance
Aha, rightNow one can see why this reduction is used to give religion its meaning that was lost in the modernist critique — Constance
Yes, yes. The tragedy of the (uniquely) human condition, resolved not by the ideas of, but by the precise practice of tge essence of religion. By, as SK intuited, but I am adjusting, resigning yourself to the infinite impossibility of possessing the real world as a Subject, yet knowing enough that the objective is only a representation and also, can never possess it--and yet taking the leap anyway; for me, the leap into being. It cannot be an intellectual pursuit because that utilizes and constructs knowledge; it must be a leap of silent faith that for that timeless moment you will face being, your organic self, when you land.And this is where we stand in the world as enlightened beings, very aware that our language cannot possess the "givenness" of the world, yet there it stands before one, the world of beingS, the chairs and tables and interests and things and moods and anything that is "said" being now "under erasure". — Constance
NiceIt is a matter of understanding in the rarest sense, in the occurrent seeing and being here, that we are not "here" at all. — Constance
one cannot, say, even imagine an object being its own cause, to move all by itself, that is. — Constance
And I say, Language that constructs it. This is exactly where we diverge. I am not convinced logic is a "whatever" (attribute, principle, truth?) in Nature; only in Mind. But I remain radically open to any convincing out there. In here, I'm admittedly settled.language that discovers it, — Constance
this coercivity, of logic — Constance
I agree. And I clarify, logic, its function in human existence (history/mind) is undeniable. I say so what if it is part of the constructed? We must adhere to it to function. Then why deny its universality, pre-language, etc? Because it helps when navigating through the ocean of how things really are, to know you are on a ship. Abandon it? No way. Know what it is. Which again is how religion saves us even from logic. It shows us the ocean from the ship, though we are compelled, or at least best to remain aboard.doubt logic as it appears is disingenuous. — Constance
Our self is a living and breathing, caring, pragmatic, historical temporally structured existence that anticipates a future in a perpetual "not yet". — Constance
it is only trivially inviolable. Logic QUA logic is vacuous. — Constance
means you would count value as not something as universally and necessarily true outside of its own construction. But what is its construction? With logic, there is the coercivity in the intuition regardless of the aporia of the language, — Constance
in ethics, it is the pain of this sprained ankle. — Constance
One is that it is a dimensionally diminished map of reality -- — Dfpolis
The Hard Problem arises because an object acting on our senses does not mean that we are aware of it — Dfpolis
At the level of sensation we do not judge, we respond. Errors are ineffective responses, not falsehoods. At the intellectual level, we judge, affirming or deny this of that. The result (our new intellectual representation) either reflects reality adequately for our purpose or not. That implies that we have purposes, not just needs. — Dfpolis
what if ethics were as apodictic (apriori, universally and necessarily true) as logic? — Astrophel
Well. That's what I'm saying. And Heidegger must be who I got it from. The so called experience (seems immediate but) is mediated by the language passed on (as it evolves) through history, input into each "unit" of Mind starting in infancy.You know that perception is an historical construct, even though it occurs without pause. This is evident in that one's own personal history provides that language learning from infancy, yet when we engage with this language, there is exactly this immediacy in the way a knowledge claim is affirmed in and by language. — Astrophel
What the hell! Yes. I thought Hegel had built that idea, yes. Mind is History. It moves through, not just language qua language, but a multiferous system of signifiers, operating in accordance with its own evolved laws mechanics dynamics. Logic for instance, a "grammar". As is ethicsAnd, following Heidegger, this language itself, apart from one's personal history, has a history that goes back through the ages and evolves in historical movements (sound like Hegel? Of course). — Astrophel
make that move into the world (this is what Michel Henry argued with passion) and there we are in this "fleshy encounter" of a very direct apprehension that is NOT qualified by the interpretative values of language. Feel the grass, the pinch of the flesh, — Astrophel
:clap: :up:an unmitigated, unconditioned apprehension of the pure phenomenon that stands before one in vivid presence, — Astrophel
figurative sense ('the object of the enquiry'.) If you designate it as a real object then you're reifying. — Wayfarer
What I'm drawing attention to is that even the undeniably objective always occurs to a subject. — Wayfarer
You're wanting to claim that 'the apple' (read: any object) has a 'real existence' (ultimate reality) which exists (is real) irrespective of and outside of our mediated experience of it. — Wayfarer
propositions provide for Moore a proof of the external world, — Sam26
how do you get outside that mediated experience to see things as they truly are? — Wayfarer
I don't think a new reality is generated out of an existent other reality. — Harry Hindu
An illusion is a misinterpretation of sensory data, not that the data itself isn't real. — Harry Hindu
In explaining the causes you don't dispel the illusion. Instead, you make it a real consequence of real causes. — Harry Hindu
but this makes me wonder about the words. I am not certain about this. Yes my mind exists. If a thing which exists, is by definition real. Then I see where the "problem" is, because I would not settle at that.The one thing that I am sure of is the existence of my mind. — Harry Hindu
It seems to me that you do not mean by "reality" what most of us mean by it. — Dfpolis
why do you priviledge, or prioritize, (your) religious ideality over (primordial) religious facticity? — 180 Proof
but it has to be brought to an even more penetrating analysis in order to show the world that religion is the THE profound center of our existence, not this or that religion, but religion in its essence. — Constance
How does one talk about tis outside of the outrageous volumes of Heidegger, Husserl, Kant, Levinas, Henry, and so on? — Constance
Yes. I completely agree.that this truth is an existential absolute, not a logical one, — Constance
but here, I'm wondering if I misunderstood. I would say, that this truth, not being a logical one, does not imagine, period.one cannot even imagine the existential Good of, say, bliss, love, ecstasy, being Bad, or not being Good — Constance
Again, am I misunderstanding?the Good's existence as Good is as sound as a logical construction. — Constance
Ok, I didn't misunderstand. Yes, "divinity" is caring; not about the projected becoming of mind and history; but in the being of "God and Its Creation" to put it "religiously." To put it philosophically, it is caring (about) being; or, being caring-being, rather than distracted-being, or becoming.Divinity lies in the universal caring about the world, for caring itself is transcendental, mystical, as Wittgenstein would say. — Constance
I'm not sure I understand what you're saying or how your explanation describes exactly how neurons "generate "images"". — Harry Hindu
how something that is "physical" can generate something "non-physical" — Harry Hindu