All I can say is, there is a natural tendency, a flow, in nature whereby it seeks to be better realised. This is understood predominantly as the impulse to evolution. The reason or purpose behind it, I'm afraid, still escapes my understanding. But, I recognise it as a part of nature, both internal and external, as a part of me and others, and choose to direct my efforts into venturing further into fields of knowledge in search of whatever truths that may lie within. And, as it turns out, in more ways than one, we're all doing the same, each to their own capability. — BrianW
The idea is that, as one moves forward, one becomes able to perceive the next few steps ahead. Thus gradually, one is able to see more of the path the further one progresses. And, as one becomes familiarised with the path, one is able to realise more choices and, consequently, greater freedom in one's actions.
Does this make sense? — BrianW
The teachings on enlightenment (e.g. by Krishna or Buddha) are given by teachers who've attained it for themselves. And, they give the methodology by which anyone can attain the same degree as them, but only if one is willing to put in the necessary efforts. Western (modern) teachings allow people to wait for scholars to discover things for them. This has a tendency to make people lazy and complacent. It's why we find so many people who're willing to regard spiritual teachings as nonsense without having taken the time to venture into them for the sake of better understanding. — BrianW
This is a good point. Speaking of Hegel - I think, if you read Husserl in terms of Phenomenology of Spirit, Husserl would be doing something like - trying to show how one can remain at the level of 'sense-certainty' where meaning is present to itself. If I read POS correctly, its the story of how one negotiates the impossibility of saying what one means - very Derridean. I've been thinking recently that Sense Certainty is something like the beginning of the Duino Elegies - "Who, if I cried out, would hear me among the Angelic Orders?" The simple impossiblity of communicating launches the whole complex machinery of thought — csalisbury
I'm thinking of something I quoted in my thread about trauma, where a therapist talks about situations in which there is an intent to communicate which is thwarted by - or at least at war with - a parallel intent to remain incommunicative. — csalisbury
That seems like a fair, perhaps fairer, reading. Maybe its something of both? — csalisbury
Whenever I see someone new to the boards posting, despondently, about solipsism my gut-reaction is that this is someone who has been deprived of someone to trust and is looking less for philosophical engagement, than reassurance that there is no outside world — csalisbury
The event in which their is a shared focus of attention seems to exceed the signs themselves - in the same way the experience of a play exceeds the contingent collection of [actors, costumes, stage, etc]. — csalisbury
Derrida turns 'the principle of all principles' against any lapse of phenomenological vigilance.
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It seems to me that it is impossible to dissociate deconstruction, Derrida's thought itself as a whole, from the experience or test of language. As we shall we, this test of language is an aporia.
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At the very moment in which I undergo the aporia, I cannot ask what language is (the phenomenological question) or why language is (the ontological question), since these questions ask for an essence, for presence, for being, all of which, according to Derrida, are themselves made possible by language.
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The experience that Derrida is trying to bring forth is an experience --the 'making appear' or the presence -- of the irreducible void, of the difference or lack, which is original and yet not a foundation. So the experience of deconstruction must be conceived as the presence of the non-foundation. — Lawlor's Derrida and Husserl: The Basic Problem of Phenomenology
Aside from strongly disliking the word "pure" there (partially because I have no idea what it's adding), why is that problematic? — Terrapin Station
No idea what this is saying. — Terrapin Station
Thank You!!
This is the best response I've received so far to the point I've been trying to make. Unfortunately, I have to go to class. I'll respond later. — Harry Hindu
If you don't look inside then you have to claim things such as the sentence I quoted above literally contain or are doing meaning. How could that be, though? Just what would meaning amount to re a set of pixel activations, say? Just how would pixels refer to anything? — Terrapin Station
So if I understand the latter question properly, signs elude the question of "what is …” because they are in one sense arbitrary and inherently meaningless while simultaneously also serving as anchors by which our communal, value-constructed meanings are tethered and stabilized, this across a given cohort of beings, on account of communal consent. — javra
I haven’t read Derrida, btw. — javra
<Turns down the poetry knob> — Terrapin Station
I don't understand what this means if you're not simply talking about different arrangements of the primary substance. — Harry Hindu
Different things are just different arrangements of the primary substance (whatever we decide to call it). — Harry Hindu
If there is no difference ..., then it doesn't matter what we call it. — Harry Hindu
It makes no sense to call the substance outside of you one thing and the substance inside of you another. They are both the same substance because they interact.
Now, what do we call the substance? Does it make a difference? — Harry Hindu
I don't think anyone is a materialist/physicalist to be dramatic or edgy. What we're saying is simply that mental stuff isn't something different than material/physical stuff, contra claims otherwise (for example, from Wayfarer). — Terrapin Station
What is its "charge"? I'm not sure what you're referring to there. — Terrapin Station
The materialist just says that the mind is matter and there you go, now mind is just a process of matter and we have immediate access to matter. — Harry Hindu
I think heaven is a state of consciousness not a place, one should try to be beneficial or at least harmless for its own sake. — Noah Te Stroete
The debate here is whether materialism as a theory has a stronger foundation that immaterialism. — Jamesk
We can never independently observe ourselves and so we cannot 'step outside' of this perspective that traps us. — Jamesk
All you ever experience from objects is the idea of the object, never the thing in itself. — Jamesk
...the signisthat ill-namedthing, the only one, that escapes the instituting question of philosophy: ' what is ....?' — Derrida
"Similarly, in Philosophical Investigations he rejects the theory that we might have developed a language for reporting our sensations without the help of the language in which we describe the external world, on the ground that such a language would fail to meet a requirement that must be met by any language."
Where I am lost is, I can't tell apart the language used for reporting our sensations and language in which we describe the external world. — yonlee
When you start walking, you might find the map is not quite right, bears may attack you without warning, there was no mention of the swamp you will have to circumvent.
If you survive, you might want to make a new map. — Valentinus
Berkeley admits this but says that his 'notions' of minds and God are immediate to us in a way that matter is not.
Is he right? — Jamesk
If the structure for persuasion isn't there, no one will come. — Nils Loc
If we answer instead that the source of the illusion of division is the medium of thought itself, then all of the above can be swept away in a single movement. — Jake
If the problem and solution is basically simple the "clerical class", by which I mean all teachers, gurus, priests, philosophers and shamans etc, are no longer needed. And so the authority generating machine of all religions and philosophies works to make sure the subject remains complicated, elusive, in need of experts. — Jake
So, to find the absolute, we must first find the part of us which is tethered to reality. And because reality is absolute, it means everything is tethered to it. This tether must be constant for as long as we are a 'something' within reality. This means that, no matter our changing thoughts, emotions, physical body, etc, there is an unyielding connection to reality. This, I believe, is what is designated as 'self' (or atman in the Bhagavad Gita) and is the distinct connection with reality. Having realised this 'self' it becomes possible to know reality. — BrianW
I like this as a line that brings everything down to earth. Instead of viewing enlightenment as some static state (perfectly present in silence stillness), I think it makes more sense to think in terms of a generally better sense of life. We can talk in less suspicious terms as a more pleasurable way of thinking and feeling about our situation. The vulnerable individual is still down here. He or she is just in touch with a valuable mode of being, intermittently and yet with a poetry that overhears and edits itself. (Scientism thinks it denies itself this pleasure, but lives to sing its own praises in the same way.)one may be said to be enlightened in comparison to those in the relative state. — BrianW
I think it is confounding the absolute with the relative. When we think that all there is to us is the relative (or limited) life, we fail to recognise the fundamental on which everything is based - Reality. The absolute is that part of reality which remains constant, while the relative is that part which undergoes change or manifests as activity. — BrianW
because red is the colour of fire-engines, not the colour of fire-engine-sensations. — unenlightened
If your reality is all a result of your ideas, your design...
Then why the fuck are you asking anyone else anything at all? Better yet...
How? — creativesoul