There is some Russophobia in this thread. — Wallows
If the attitude within the Russian leadership is that we are "the enemy", then "Russophobia" is justified. — Metaphysician Undercover
I propose the mechanism of innovation in every field is mis-remembering. — Sim
For creative thinking the replication and divergence caused by the error could best be described as being a process similar to mis-remembering. Though I would hold the process is guided by our conscious mind.
This just applies to creative thought I would hold all creative thought requires this two step replication and alteration process. — Sim
When I read "enlightenment" - I didn't think yoga. I thought political system based on science and rationality. — karl stone
enlightenment would be to accept that science describes reality — karl stone
When religion is discussed on the forum, it’s generally in reference to Christianity — gnat
...1. If selfishness exists, a person cannot reach enlightenment. — gnat
This seems problematic to me. For a start, are "selflessness" and "selfishness" synonymous here, for youto reach enlightenment, a soul must act selflessly — gnat
I am in the process of writing an essay on the impairment of theory of mind in schizophrenic patients, and the connections it has to the personal subpersonal divide. I was advised to look at the upshots this empirical evidence may suggest about the divide itself, but I am unsure about which stance I can take in order to defend a solid thesis. Should I talk about how the divide is necessary in and of itself, or try to posit that the personal cannot exist without the subpersonal (ie their relationship is causal)? Any suggestions? — rei
The value of an idea is in its usefulness, not in its novelty. — Pattern-chaser
Not at all: the possibility of deriving something effectively is what distinguish what we know and what we can not say we know. If your contention were true there would be no criteria to establish in which direction orientates a research with uncertain results, except on some kind of unspecified usefulness.
Furthermore, you're hiding something: if an idea is useful, and if we rest on usefulness alone, there is no other way than casual discovery to search for another, because we may rely on the first occurring useful idea. Using this kind of reasoning, only casualty, and not reasoning, would have been the source of discovery such as calculus(which deepest origin is: how to calculate the area of a circle), its application to physics and the incredible development of technology.
Explicitly you are saying, that(and this is so disputable) we CLASSIFY ideas on the criterion of their usefulness, which, in this case, is COMPARATIVE criterion not a GENERATIVE, as I requested you to give your account on. — Ikolos
Nothing can deliver objective knowledge to humans, nothing at all. — Pattern-chaser
To answer “nothing can...objective knowledge.”
That statement could only be credible if you were to comprehensively deny the possibility of the unknown and predicate the statement upon those terms. — Dan84
The question is really whether so-called higher states of consciousness can yield genuine metaphysical knowledge; objective truths (as opposed to subjective feelings and beliefs) about the nature of reality and the 'meaning' of human life. — Janus
What about the identification of new axioms of infinity in mathematical logic? Do you consider them new or just derived from the preceding ones? — Ikolos
So inspiration seems to be providing those new links (via deduction or whatever). — Devans99
I have the same basic drivers as a bonobo; we both seek physical/emotional pleasure and shun physical/emotional pain. — Devans99
That's because you seem unable to move beyond that which can be "deduced/adduced". — Pattern-chaser
How else do we derive new knowledge? It seems its always via links to existing knowledge (and ultimately to our senses). — Devans99
I'm not saying its abduction/deduction only that we use, but whatever we use (heuristics etc...) it seems to take existing ideas as input. — Devans99
Everything we can deduce/adduce is from our senses. Our memory is filled with things deduced from our senses. I don't see where 'original thoughts' can come from? — Devans99
There is nothing subjective about it at all. Good>Evil. It's just math. — Devans99
No more wearing masks can be a challenge in this parade called "life". — Wallows
I am extremely doubtful about the veracity or even coherence of the common notion of enlightenment as some kind of esoteric, higher, objective knowledge. — Janus
Computers can't generate truly original information so why should we be able to? — Devans99
the question remains 'is it possible to have a truly original thought?' — Devans99
Training to conceive... — BrianW
I think creation of 'new' ideas is more like filling in links. We start with an existing idea (which can be traced back to our senses) and what we create is the link to a new idea, via deduction/induction. — Devans99
Each sensation is distinct, particular, and unique, due to the changing nature of the world which we sense. Therefore a thought which is derived from a sensation, is necessarily a truly original thought. — Metaphysician Undercover
can we learn to generate concepts, ideas, etc,?
Some would say we don't need to learn because the process is inherent in our minds. But, I find it to be too crude and ill-governed as it is presently and I wonder if we could develop it further into a scientific process that can be designated as creation or conception?
Can we take the little we know of this mental process and develop it into a scientific discipline? — BrianW
[ My highlighting.]Zero came from consideration of emptiness. Infinity from consideration of the very large.
Can anyone refute this with an example of a genuine new idea? — Devans99
And my question is: do you think you understand the process of creation, and imagination, well enough to map out such a "system of practice"? My personal view is that you don't, as demonstrated by your question, and by the way you express it. But there is much to creativity, and very little to my understanding of it, so.... :wink: — Pattern-chaser
Personally, I'm not adept at the processes of mind but I'm trying to figure out whether it could be a valid course of investigation. For example, science has its methods of investigating dark matter/energy. However, the basic hypotheticals of what or how they could be are based on mental conceptions which are adequately informed and guided by reason and empiricism. Therefore, though it's a venture into the unknown, every step forward seems to be grounded in a high degree of probability if not certitude.
I'm just wondering whether we could do the same and come up with a way in which our imaginations could contribute to the knowledge we already possess instead of largely being relegated to the domain of fiction.
Is it possible to determine how to give utility to our processes of conception/imagination? — BrianW
it seems we can't generate a purely abstract idea without drawing on existing knowledge? — Devans99
So, my question is,
should we start training ourselves on how to conceive or imagine?
By training, I mean something better regulated than mere flights of fancy, perhaps, a system of practice with better utility for the overall mental process. — BrianW
[My highlighting.]I don't deny that more radical transformations do, rarely, take place, but I don't believe they can reliably be achieved by any deliberate form of disciplined search. — Janus
Can anyone think of a perspective that makes life/reality or the world a moral and desirable state of affairs? — Andrew4Handel
↪Pattern-chaser
I am putting you on my "Smart List" for now. — hks
The problem is we have incompatible beliefs and desires... — leo
The problem then is, how can we all agree on whether it is an urgent problem that we ought to all tackle together now? — leo
To me the root problem again is fear... — leo
The science is clear. Without rapid cuts in CO2 and other greenhouse gases, climate change will have increasingly destructive and irreversible impacts on life on Earth. The window of opportunity for action is almost closed. Link to entire article. — WMO
Examples of empty names are; Santa Claus, Harry Potter, and Pegasus. [...] Yet, those empty names don't refer to any person or object in the world. — Posty McPostface
obfuscation is OK for poetry — Devans99
This is obfuscation? :chin:They had changed their throats and had the throats of birds. (link to original) — W. B. Yeats
↪Pattern-chaser
Exactly! Thank you. — hks