Sometimes I want to talk about, do philosophy about, etc. the world independent of human concepts, human knowledge, etc. I like ontology. — Terrapin Station
I'm talking about the material thing, the thing that would still be present (at least for a short period of time) if everyone were to sudddenly drop dead. — Terrapin Station
What kind of wall do you prefer to bang your head against? Brick or concrete? One with sharp extruding bits that draw blood, or more a smooth surface that just causes concussion? — Wayfarer
But i wasn't talking about our concepts, perception, knowledge, etc.
It's very annoying to keep changing the topic to epistemology. (And/or philosophy of language, etc.) — Terrapin Station
what it's supposed to be physically as something public. — Terrapin Station
Will people in the future think that we are evil because they disagree with us? — TogetherTurtle
You're talking about concept-formation there, right? Again, I'd ask why you're talking about that. I wasn't talking about concepts per se. — Terrapin Station
You're not understanding me. The objective world is perspectival. — Terrapin Station
Why would you be talking about "grasping" something? — Terrapin Station
An abstraction? Why would you say it's an abstraction? — Terrapin Station
The ideal (in my view) would be to get people to realize/acknowledge perspectivalism. — Terrapin Station
The more important thing here is that "'true' for everyone" overlooks perspectivalism, the fact that no two perspectives or reference frames/reference points are going to be the same, a fortiori because they necessarily have different spatial orientations. — Terrapin Station
No, I'm not saying that at all. Some matter is obviously mind on my view. I'm a physicalist, an identity theorist. — Terrapin Station
All concepts are the result of individual thought. — Terrapin Station
I don't agree with any sentence there, — Terrapin Station
You're going to keep asserting "shared" meaning and I'll keep pointing out that it's not actually shared, and then you'll respond where you talk about shared meaning again, and then I'll point out that it's not actually shared again, etc. — Terrapin Station
That question particular strikes me as bizarre. Objectivity in no way hinges on us. The objective world would be there just the same if life had never started. — Terrapin Station
Objectivity is a philosophical concept of being true independently from individual subjectivity caused by perception, emotions, or imagination. A proposition is considered to have objective truth when its truth conditions are met without bias caused by a sentient subject. Scientific objectivity refers to the ability to judge without partiality or external influence, sometimes used synonymously with neutrality. — Wiki
There's a traditional sense (a la scholasticism for example) of "real" that's basically the same as "objective ," but that's a bad idea, because it discounts an d basically dismisses personal, psychological phenomena. — Terrapin Station
The mystery is why that would be the assumption. We could go through how communication works on my view step by step if you're interested, but that will probably take some time and it's a significant enough tangent that we should probably start another thread on it if you're interested. — Terrapin Station
The presence of culture and other human beings dominated our development and has a huge impact in developing our established norms - like there are human beings and I'm one of them. — Harry Hindu
Yeah, but how did we get to the point of "understanding too much" in the first place if we didn't already start from a deconstructed state and then built it all up? — Harry Hindu
Okay, but how would the fact that we can agree ("I think that nonconsensual killing is wrong"--"Hey! I think that nonconsensual killing is wrong, too!") or the fact that we can cooperate ("Let's make that illegal then") have any impact on the fact that morality, meaning, etc. are subjective? — Terrapin Station
I agree with all this, and indeed it's crucial to my point. Note the 'we' that appears here.Because we want to know what the world is like, and we believe it's worthwhile to examine that with a methodological approach different than science in addition to doing it with science's methodological approach. — Terrapin Station
That would be the case no matter the ontological reality of meaning. — Terrapin Station
The whole point is to figure out what meaning really is, how it really works, which just as when we're doing science, can easily turn out to be contrary to conventional wisdom, conventional ways of looking at it, etc. — Terrapin Station
The real puzzler is why people are so averse to subjectivity. — Terrapin Station
I think that the whole idea of "intersubjectivity" is nonsense outside of the fact that we can agree with and cooperate with each other. — Terrapin Station
Meaning and coherence are subjective. — Terrapin Station
And what is his dignity then if not in being a philosopher? Man is metaphysics, and metaphysics is time that would climb out of itself into its future (an eternity-to-be) in terms of its past as mastered memory.Philosophy, then, is one aspect of the total manifestation of spirit – consciousness of spirit being its supreme flowering, since its effort is to know what spirit is. It is, in fact, the dignity of man to know what he is and to know this in the purest manner, i.e., to attain to the thinking of what he is. — Hegel
... the joyous affirmation of the play of the world and of the innocence of becoming, the affirmation of a world of signs without fault, without truth, and without origin which is offered to an active interpretation. — Derrida
Fair enough! I'm happy to have at least not been boring.You've given me some food for thought here, I'm going to have to come back to you on this on. — Happenstance
Damn sign, you just made my brain hurt! Am I not being open-minded by declaring metaphysical ignorance as axiomatic?! :joke: — Happenstance
Look at it from my point of view; either I believe that matter is actual or deity is actual! This to me, is the crux of the matter (if you pardon the pun!) — Happenstance
Whatever metaphysical axioms are afoot, we all have metaphysical ignorance so saying what is or isn't seems to me something we can't be sure of. — Happenstance
There is no asking what meaning is.
Thought is proper to man alone – not, however, to man only as an isolated individual subject; we have to look at thought as essentially objective. — Hegel
We said, with regard to thought, that there is no asking what its meaning is, since it is its own meaning; there is nothing hidden behind it – not, however, in the ordinary sense of that expression, for thought itself is the ultimate, the deepest, behind which there is nothing further; it is entirely itself. — Hegel
Thought is proper to man alone – not, however, to man only as an isolated individual subject; we have to look at thought as essentially objective. — Hegel
The temple of reason in its consciousness of itself is loftier than Solomon’s temple and others built by man.
In everyday life, of course, we have to do with opinions, i.e., thoughts about external things; one has one opinion, another has another. But in the business of the world’s Spirit there is a completely different seriousness; it is there that universality is. There it is a question of the universal determination of the Spirit, nor do we speak of this or that one’s opinion. The universal Spirit develops in itself according to its own necessity; its opinion is simply the truth.
A third conclusion to be drawn from what has been said up to this point is that we are not dealing with what is past but rather with actual thinking, with our own spirit. Properly speaking, then, this is not a history, since the thoughts, the principles, the ideas with which we are concerned belong to the present; they are ‘determinations within our own spirit.
But the heart must be dead which finds satisfaction with dead bodies. The spirit of truth and life lives only in what is. The living spirit speaks: “Let the dead bury their dead;. follow me!” If I know thoughts, truths, cognitions, only, historically, they remain outside my spirit, i.e., for me they are dead; neither my thinking nor my spirit is present in them; what is most interior to me, my thought, is absent.
— Hegel
So, originally, I think the search was for a kind of intellectual illumination, a seeing-into-the-first-principles as a noetic act. — Wayfarer
Incel, I know about. As for idealism - have a browse through some of the pages about Timothy Sprigge. Only learned of him when his obituary was published, but a full on — Wayfarer
That's where maths comes in so handy! Nobody has to say 'whaddya mean, "7" '? — Wayfarer
But idealism, Hegelian and anything like it, pretty well fell right out of favour in the English-speaking world (except for amongst 'neck-beards' ;-) ) That's the problem! — Wayfarer
I'm not the type to dismiss ecstatic states, but I have been trying to figure out how to integrate them into my life. — csalisbury
So the really good state wants to dance and exult and see the bad state as 'blindness' or 'confusion' that is over now that the truth is revealed. And the really bad state wants to see the good state as deluded and sugarcoating. — csalisbury