Comments

  • The Linguistic Quantum World
    I think a distinction should be made between types of beliefs. The beliefs you're using as examples here are context-dependent and directly related to the world around us. What I'm trying to get at is fundamental belief,the beliefs that are the foundation of how each of us perceives and experiences the world. These are often not apparent to us (maybe more apparent to those of us who post on philosophy forums, true). They're beliefs about the self.Noble Dust
    [my emphasis]

    I’m not sure that such a distinction between self and world can be made.Joshs

    Yes. I'm not sure that the distinction between beliefs is so clear-cut. I understand ND to mean that beliefs about the self are the foundation from which we relate our perception and world experience? There are many aspects to self which are not Either/Or.

    Philosophical or religious beliefs are beliefs about the world, but beliefs about myself are the foundation on which these other beliefs are built.Noble Dust

    The different aspects of self are inter-related. For example, the physical, mental, spiritual, aesthetic, ethical and psychological. They can be broken down in bits for analytical or conceptual purposes. But as seems to be agreed, it is what matters to us that can make a difference in how the world is seen or interpreted. Perhaps our 'attitude' to events or others attitude towards us. The importance of making the best choice in any given situation. Our stories or narrative self can stem from - or be the source of - this attempt at understanding. Making the pieces fit the whole.

    ***
    Kierkegaard said that the truth or falsity of an aspect of the world is subservient to how it matters to us.Joshs

    I think this aligns with @Noble Dust's view of the importance of self? Knowing self as much as is possible. A basic core, and yet, a changing/changeable self.

    ***
    Thanks for the quote. It comes from Rouse's paper 'Kierkegaard on Truth' - pp13-14 of the downloadable pdf. Here: https://www.academia.edu/30917243/Kierkegaard_on_Truth
  • The Linguistic Quantum World
    Does it need to be seen to be believed?
    — Amity

    This is a very good question
    javi2541997

    :smile: I think that my almost throw-away line at the end of a paragraph [*] was inspired by BC's excellent post, ending:

    How about "believing is seeing"? Some times we do not see reality because we do not believe that it is real; and visa versa, we see the non-existent because we believe it exists. Some see god's purposes in every bird song and car crash.BC

    [* ]
    What does the term 'quantum' mean? How does it relate to 'experience'? Mental meat? Physical heat? It seems to be the smallest, basic building block, have I got that right? Is it stable? I have no idea. Indeed, the whole thing is a mystery to me. Does it need to be seen to be believed?Amity

    For me, the word 'quantum' doesn't mean anything much when it comes to experience. I'm posing that question to learn how @Noble Dust interprets it in terms of linguistics and life.
    His 'Linguistic Quantum World' is a story of sorts.
    How has he dis/connected the dots to satisfy his 'belief/s'?

    Belief is undifferentiated from reality down here. There is no "higher" reality in a spiritual sense, nor a "true" reality (in contrast to falsehood) in a logical sense, that exists "behind" or "beneath" my beliefs about reality. Belief is reality. There is no difference.Noble Dust

    Where is 'down here'? Where your mind is?
    Here, the beliefs about the self is particular to you and your experience, no? Are you trying to make this a general claim in the world of concepts?
  • The Linguistic Quantum World
    This is just word vomit and I'm not posting these thoughts with the intention of arguing a position.Noble Dust

    Good. Nothing quite like a spew of thoughts about thinking, self and the world. Ideas not quite regurgitated (as in repetition without understanding) but bringing up swallowed food through one's throat.
    Sometimes because the belly has had enough (over-thinking?) or something hasn't agreed with it (toxin).
    Numerous causes. Pregnancy > sick > baby. A new thought bringing joy, pain or pleasure to the world.

    So, thanks for flinging some our way. To re-digest? Ugh! To examine, yes! Why not infect us all...

    The initial questions about synonyms/concepts of belief and attitude. Well, look no further than the online WordHippo Thesaurus. Simple. Pick your pleasing synonym from a list. As Concepts, then probably the SEP or similar.

    If I use language to dig around deeper into the cadaver of my thoughts, the knife eventually hits the operating table. I've cut through the whole thing. Belief is not a set of thoughts which are then represented by words. Belief is more fundamental than thought.Noble Dust

    First thing, your thoughts are not dead. They are alive and kicking. Pinning them down can be a problem. Some strong 'believers' do indeed pin or spin dead dogma (assumed, absolute truth) - holding a strict, stuck attitude to life. Others have flexible opinions or are open to examine thoughts/attitudes.

    The 'knife of language'. Hmmm. Ah. Now there's the thing...we can verily tie ourselves up in knots.
    How blunt or sharp - what are we wielding it for? What t/issue to be cut up and forensically examined?
    How many senses involved? Is it to improve our self-understanding or to argue with others about 'belief'.
    Both and more. We can make or read poetry to 'dissect' or express...just one example. We can use words like 'The Linguistic Quantum World' to gain attention. What the actual hell...?

    Cutting to the chase:
    What do I believe about myself? untangling this question requires a lot of rigorous work and honesty. I am the window through which I experience the world; I am fundamental to the world I experience.[...]

    Beneath language, at the quantum level of experience, is something that exists in an undifferentiated form. This is belief. Belief is undifferentiated from reality down here
    Noble Dust

    What does the term 'quantum' mean? How does it relate to 'experience'? Mental meat? Physical heat? It seems to be the smallest, basic building block, have I got that right? Is it stable? I have no idea. Indeed, the whole thing is a mystery to me. Does it need to be seen to be believed?

    My fundamental beliefs about myself shape my reality. That could be another way of saying it.Noble Dust

    That could well be true. Just as the opposite. It works both ways. The world, your experience of it, can shape your attitude and beliefs...your current 'reality' can change...depending...

    What are your fundamental beliefs about yourself? Thanks for voicing your thoughts :sparkle:
  • How 'Surreal' Are Ideas?
    Perhaps you - or others - have a similar experience of alternating mental states when immersed in the creative writing process?Amity

    OK. Perhaps I've gone too far and will stop now. Treading on personal lines a step too far. I know some are uncomfortable or not interested in sharing such experiences. This ain't the place for that.

    One last thing, when I wrote 'alternating mental states', I was also thinking of 'altered states of consciousness'. What some creative artists (or anyone really!) practise to blunt the sharp edges or sharpen insight into life, physical or mental. To find their muse and ideas. Or simply to chill.
    https://www.irishtimes.com/culture/books/booze-as-muse-writers-and-alcohol-from-ernest-hemingway-to-patricia-highsmith-1.2369720

    Murakami thinks that 'rich, spontaneous joy' is the source of creative expression. He tries to attain a certain emotional state to invigorate and begin a new and different day. I wonder if he achieves this by his daily practice of running or swimming. Exercise producing an endorphin high? The energetic interaction of body and mind helping to generate ideas...time for a walk or wander...

    How can we know we are there? –In the room where dreams and life are merged– and could it be possible to know when we enter and when we leave the room?javi2541997

    It's perhaps the effects of being/becoming increasingly aware that mean more...?

    Bye for now - and thanks for the thoughts :sparkle:
  • How 'Surreal' Are Ideas?
    But every time I woke up, I realised it was all a dream, no matter how genuine it appeared. Perhaps Murakami refers to the third room as a mix of both. A more continuous experience where dreams and awakened moments are more plausible.javi2541997

    Do you never have lucid dreams where you know you are dreaming and can sometimes control the way it progresses?
    So, it can be seen as a mix of the real, the surreal - the conscious and the subconscious. A hybrid state of consciousness.

    How can we know we are there? –In the room where dreams and life are merged– and could it be possible to know when we enter and when we leave the room?javi2541997

    I am not sure that there is a definite point of entry or exit between the 2 types of awareness from the subjective perspective. It is more of a slide or flight, to and fro, I think. I don't know.
    However, objectively, a small study has apparently shown that: 'the unusual combination of hallucinatory dream activity and wake-like reflective awareness and agentive control experienced in lucid dreams is paralleled by significant changes in electrophysiology.' From: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2737577/

    ***

    He admitted that the subconscious can often be unknown. He likes to explore this specific room in most of his novels, but I never thought he actually believed in the existence of this room. He couldn't explain with proper words what it feels like to be in the third room, but he claims that it exists, and he wonders if everything in the room exists as well, or if it is a hallucination. It was interesting to me to perceive that while he wished to explore this room, he also hesitated.javi2541997

    I think that if the 3rd room is his subconscious, then there is every reason to be wary of what ideas or images might surface. Perhaps that is why some people fear letting go, releasing their rational mind to explore the creative. Memories, emotive issues can be easily triggered by a single word.

    Murakami no doubt has his demons transferred to fictional characters and settings. Seems open to explore them but perhaps there are even deeper shades or layers of darkness, beyond the walls, wells and tunnels he keeps secret.

    Perhaps you - or others - have a similar experience of alternating mental states when immersed in the creative writing process? Surreal ideas?
  • How 'Surreal' Are Ideas?
    So, if you don't really mind—or Jack, since this is his thread—I would like to share my opinion, quoting and understanding Haruki Murakami.javi2541997

    I understand Jack to encourage all and any participants with a relevant view. He talked earlier of a 'collaboration'. I like that spirit of discussion where we can learn, even be inspired...

    Murakami is an excellent novelist. He came to Spain because he was awarded a prize for literature. Debating with some fans, he stated: I think there is in our consciousness a hidden room. In this room, it is where our real selves live and create art. Sometimes it is difficult to enter it; others leave it. I imagine this room as dark or poorly lit, like a train station at night or a pit.javi2541997

    Thanks for sharing this. Were you there? I've read or listened to Murakami and yes, he has interesting things to say about himself and his writing. His creative use of metaphors. A metaphysical imagination, perhaps? Surreal ideas.

    What I learnt is that consciousness could hold a secret (rather than hidden) location where our ideas flourish. I agree with Murakami that it is difficult to join these locations. Well, what he actually said is that it is difficult to be aware when we are in our creative room, hidden from the rest.javi2541997

    In what sense did he mean 'aware' - fully conscious of the world around? The creative space being the layer below. The 'hidden' subconscious or unconscious. So, when in writing mode, you are in a flow of ideas and images desiring no interruptions from daily life. "Time for tea, dear!"

    I came to the conclusion that there could be three rooms for surreal or real ideas, dreams, etc. It is more normal to have a single tangible room. A second room where the tangible and unreal could be blurred (our dreams), and a third door, the one Murakami mentioned as the source of our creative thoughts, apparently.javi2541997

    Interesting conclusion and fascinating how the magic number 3 always seems to arise when talking about consciousness. Even in some TPF short stories about dreams/houses, there are 3 levels connected by stairs; the dark basement, the full main living area, the attic where things are stored or people hide.

    The 3 lines in meditative haiku verse. Metaphysical imagination? Realism. Idealism. Does it matter what label is used if there is a sensitive and sensible awareness that flows and captures a moment of time...I remember your simple poem which captivated readers in the TPF competition :sparkle:

    Freud's 3 levels: the structure of mental life - id, ego, superego. The 3 levels of consciousness, the iceberg analogy - the conscious (visible tip of the iceberg), the preconscious (just below the surface), and the unconscious (vast submerged portion).
    https://www.simplypsychology.org/unconscious-mind.html

    ***

    Only a few of the many links:
    https://eprints.glos.ac.uk/2393/ - with free download.

    Helewise, Freya (2012) Boundless Venus: the Crossover of the Conscious and Unconscious in the Works of Haruki Murakami. Masters thesis, University of Gloucestershire.
    Perhaps too academic - heavy reading at 122 pages! But the pdf allows you to skip to interesting parts.

    ***

    https://owlcation.com/humanities/1Q84-Is-About-Portals-of-Consciousness
    The novel, which is technically three books in one, holds together by what I call "portals of consciousness." Murakami is known for his works that play off ideas of intuition and psychic prowess. His readers are left wondering if the events in his stories are to be taken at face value as reality or if the events are about the characters losing their minds. The author pushes readers to think beyond what they expect of consciousness, that perhaps humans can do incredible things with their minds if they let themselves tap into the subdued parts of themselves.

    Murakami’s books aren’t for everyone. They can be violent and sexually graphic. For other readers, Murakami might be too strange. 1Q84, like many of his works, can be better understood if you know a thing or two about psychologist Carl Jung. In fact, Murakami pens a unique chapter in the novel that briefly mentions Jung. It’s one of the last chapters called “Cold or Not, God Is Present.” (This is a play on the phrase “called or not, God is present.
    ***
    Last but not least, an article written by Murakami himself. Quotes:
    I want to open a window in their souls’: Haruki Murakami on the power of writing simply.
    The master storyteller on finding a voice, creative originality and why he has never suffered from writer’s block.

    Writing in a foreign language taught me to express thoughts and feelings with a limited set of words.

    It is my belief that a rich, spontaneous joy lies at the root of all creative expression

    I came across this line recently in the New York Times, written about the American debut of the Beatles: “They produced a sound that was fresh, energetic and unmistakably their own.” These words may provide the best definition of originality available. “Fresh, energetic, and unmistakably your own.”

    Originality is hard to define in words, but it is possible to describe and reproduce the emotional state it evokes. I try to attain that emotional state each time I sit down to write my novels. That’s because it feels so wonderfully invigorating. It’s as if a new and different day is being born from the day that is today.
    Guardian - Murakami on the power of writing simply
  • How 'Surreal' Are Ideas?
    I wonder if there is someone about who can explain how 'accepted answer' works? God, are you there?
    — Amity

    I don't want to derail this very interesting OP but after reading your question, I believe I can help you, Amity.
    javi2541997

    Heaven be praised :smile:

    However, I do not believe that 'accepted answer' follows a pattern of quality.javi2541997

    I know. I mean who does this AI guy think he is they are :roll:
    Seeing as how you're here, javi, good to see ya' - I wonder if you have any thoughts on 'metaphysical imagination'. What it means to you? Or anything else you'd care to add or comment on...the surreal wonder of language/s? Where your creative ideas stem from...
  • How 'Surreal' Are Ideas?
    Hmm. I thought perhaps you had been meddling with the OP, pressed a button to change the thread's category to 'Question' or something like that. I wonder if there is someone about who can explain how 'accepted answer' works? God, are you there? :pray:
  • How 'Surreal' Are Ideas?
    The term 'surreal' in my updated title is a way of seeing ideas and symbols as being a potential shift from metaphysics as absolutes, to the scope of a tentative notion of the metaphysical imagination.

    View Answer
    Jack Cummins

    Accepted AnswerJack Cummins
    What?!
    Why? Eh? :chin:

    Does this mean the question: How 'Surreal' are Ideas?' has been answered to your satisfaction?
    Or indicates your wish to end the thread, or your participation in it?
  • How 'Surreal' Are Ideas?
    Oh, we have crossed posts... it's all good :smile:
  • How 'Surreal' Are Ideas?
    The thread was intended to explore the debate over idealism, but with reference to semantics.
    — Jack Cummins
    What "debate"? You haven't even stated the proposition in contention we're supposed to either be for (thesis) or against (antithesis). Please clarify ...
    180 Proof

    I am totally bemused by the turn of events. However, I don't think Jack's intention was to start a 'for and against' debate. His style is exploratory. A follow-up to certain books he is reading.
  • How 'Surreal' Are Ideas?
    I enjoy the exploratory aspect of your threads. And admire how you attempt to respond to each participant. If you are under personal stress, then is it wise to put further pressure on yourself? I know there is a plus side - a release of thoughts in writing and engaging with others with similar interests. However, when it comes to the big topics like 'Idealism', then it can become increasingly messy.
    I have sympathy with seeing how things go in a discussion and was inspired to read more. Still pondering 'metaphysical imagination'. Thanks for all your effort but remember to breathe and chill :cool:
  • How 'Surreal' Are Ideas?
    Disappointed. It's been done before...and probably better...see Search box for other threads on Idealism. For starters: https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/13196/speculations-in-idealism/p1 - started by @Tom Storm.
  • How 'Surreal' Are Ideas?
    OK. Later... :sparkle:
  • How 'Surreal' Are Ideas?
    Glad you enjoyed. I just typed in 'metaphysical imagination' et voilà :cool:

    It wasn't exactly what I was looking for. Convoluted theories give me a headache.
    There's plenty out there relating truth to understanding to interpretation. I wanted something I could get my teeth into, a bit more 'arty' and relatable as it were...

    I haven't read all of this but it seems to tick a few boxes - with downloadable pdf:

    “Landscape and the Metaphysical Imagination”
    Hepburn, Ronald W. | from Multimedia Library Collection: Environmental Values (journal)
    Hepburn, Ronald W. “Landscape and the Metaphysical Imagination.” Environmental Values 5, no. 3 (1996): 191–204. doi:10.3197/096327196776679320.

    Aesthetic appreciation of landscape is by no means limited to the sensuous enjoyment of sights and sounds. It very often has a reflective, cognitive element as well. This sometimes incorporates scientific knowledge, e.g.,geological or ecological; but it can also manifest what this article will call “metaphysical imagination,” which sees or seems to see in a landscape some indication, some disclosure of how the world ultimately is. The article explores and critically appraises this concept of metaphysical imagination, and some of the roles it can play in our aesthetic encounters. (Source: The White Horse Press)
    Environment and Society - Landscape and the Metaphysical Imagination

    On p4/15 the question is posed: Why should metaphysical imagination be underacknowledged today? and then gives the answer as 'embarrassment'. Because it might be seen as a religious experience, lacking rational support. Other strands are explored like truth and the scientific understanding of nature.
    So far, I find this thought-provoking, and easy to read in quite an old-fashioned style.
    More about the author, here:

    Ronnie worked alongside Donald MacKinnon and Antony Flew, both serving as important, early mentors. Other thinkers he often turned to included Kant, Marcel, and Otto. This dynamic set of influences shaped a philosophical approach which insisted upon a dialectic between perception and theory, phenomenology and analytic method, where each would be at hand to question and sometimes undermine the other.
    Ronnie was wary of fixed positions, and often preferred a critical metaphysical outlook which sometimes put him at odds with other philosophers. In his exploration of the links and boundaries between the aesthetic, moral and religious, his attention was drawn to wonder, the contemplative stance, imagination, the sublime, freedom, respect for nature, and the sacred. Ronnie brought this distinctive approach together with autobiography, narrative and the shaping of the ethical life to challenge moral philosophy’s preoccupation with rules and principles in his paper ‘Vision and Choice in Morality’, his contribution to an Aristotelian Society-Mind Association symposium with Iris Murdoch in 1956.
    British Aesthetics - Ronald W. Hepburn

    ***

    That really resonated with a lot of my thinking.wonderer1

    Care to expand? Any examples of how metaphysical imagination is used?
  • How 'Surreal' Are Ideas?
    Thanks for further clarification. Even if we all end up in a tangled web of confusion...it's fun, innit?! Well...hmm...sometimes :wink:
  • How 'Surreal' Are Ideas?
    The author of the paper you linked to writes

    …justified belief aims at truth, not imaginative capacity, or understanding. If we focus too much on having justified beliefs, it is harder for us to suspend disbelief and try to inhabit views that we don’t believe.

    Thinking of metaphysics this way as split off from empirical truth perpetuates a dualism between ideas and reality, the physical and the metaphysical. The philosophers I follow don’t treat the metaphysical as ‘imaginative capacity’, but as the plumbing undergirding the intelligibility of a true belief.
    Joshs

    OK. Update: I started reading the article, then started skimming, then stopped. Confused and bemused.
    I have sympathy with the view that imagination is central to understanding no matter what kind of 'truth' is involved. This involves a willingness to investigate other ways of thinking - to come in closer to an other's perspective or 'world'. Are some people more capable of this than others? Creatives in any field?

    I didn't read the author as trying to separate ideas and reality. But to see the value in describing metaphysics as being like art rather than science. Views or ideas are developed or generated by imagination. But this also includes what is experienced. It's a combination. But there is a high chance of me not having understood a word!

    As to the 'intelligibility of a true belief' - is this about understanding what someone truly believes? How can this be known? It seems that engaging in this might mean putting aside self, or pulling aside our own blinkers, all the better to see/hear/sense an other. Is that what you meant by 'plumbing'? To clear the blockages in pipes? Or is it more a processing system or conceptual structures...

    Your chosen quote comes at the conclusion of the article:

    Metaphysics as Essentially Imaginative and Aiming at Understanding
    Michaela Markham McSweeney
    Abstract: I explore the view that metaphysics is essentially imaginative. I argue that
    the central goal of metaphysics on this view is understanding, not truth. Metaphysicsas-essentially-imaginative provides novel answers to challenges to both the value and epistemic status of metaphysics.

    [...]
    There are other things that matter besides truth. Imagination is both intrinsically and instrumentally (in part because it can lead to understanding) valuable. Understanding is an important goal of certain kinds of inquiry. On the metaphysics-as-essentially-imaginative view, both imagination and understanding are central to what metaphysics is for. But justified belief aims at truth, not imaginative capacity, or understanding. If we focus too much on having justified beliefs, it is harder for us to suspend disbelief and try to inhabit views that we don’t believe. And there is value in doing so.
  • How 'Surreal' Are Ideas?
    Thanks for the quote and informed response. I haven't fully read or understood the paper, as yet. So, not sure of context. Interesting subject. Imaginative plumbing?

    It's possible that any confusion in my posts is on account of stress, because it can lead to muddled thinking. However, it would probably be going too far to describe me as 'psychotic' or 'deluded'.Jack Cummins

    I think you're doing just great, given your stress levels. I'm confused by what it is you're trying to unravel. That's another fine knot you've got me in :wink:
    You led me here:

    Metaphysical Imagination' - what do you think it is? How have you used it?
    In the meantime, I found this: https://philarchive.org/archive/MCSMAE
    Amity

    [ BTW, you introduced the idea of psychosis. Is this a case of "You don't have to be mad to plumb 'metaphysical imagination' but it helps." :chin: ]

    Edit to clarify: I am asking you what you think 'metaphysical imagination' is and what it involves/entails? You introduced it here:
    ... seeing ideas and symbols as being a potential shift from metaphysics as absolutes, to the scope of a tentative notion of the metaphysical imagination.Jack Cummins
  • How 'Surreal' Are Ideas?
    Language is the way humans process experiences, with the formation of concepts, but it does not mean that it the only possible way. For example, it is possible to form visual representations of ideas and this itself is likely to have come first in human culture, such as in symbolic representations.Jack Cummins

    Yes, of course, that is why I included 'images':
    ...any interpretations of anything depend on our minds processing words/images,Amity

    Ancient representational art.
    The painting of a wild pig and three human-like figures is at least 51,200 years old, more than 5,000 years older than the previous oldest cave art.
    The discovery pushes back the time that modern humans first showed the capacity for creative thought.

    Prof Maxime Aubert from Griffith University in Australia told BBC News that the discovery would change ideas about human evolution.

    “The painting tells a complex story. It is the oldest evidence we have for storytelling. It shows that humans at the time had the capacity to think in abstract terms,” he said.
    BBC News - World's oldest cave art

    Real or Surreal Ideas can be found and shared anywhere...in imagination and creativity.
    I really don't understand what your problem is? I note your edit:
    The term 'surreal' in my updated title is a way of seeing ideas and symbols as being a potential shift from metaphysics as absolutes, to the scope of a tentative notion of the metaphysical imagination.Jack Cummins

    :chin:

    'Metaphysical Imagination' - what do you think it is? How have you used it?
    In the meantime, I found this: https://philarchive.org/archive/MCSMAE
  • How 'Surreal' Are Ideas?
    Also, despite the emphasis on physicalism, all interpretations are dependent on ideas and language. What is language and its connections to symbolic forms of interpretation? Are ideas mind-dependent, subjective, objective or intersubjective constructs in human semantics?Jack Cummins

    Of course, any interpretations of anything depend on our minds processing words/images, ideas shared through language. Language is the main way we think and communicate. You have expressed your ideas here. You know how it works via symbols, syntax and semantics.

    We send and receive messages. To inform, to persuade, to express concerns/feelings and so on.
    It involves imagination and interaction with self and others. Language fascinates the ordinary reader of fiction and the linguistics expert. Not to mention the philosopher. So many ways...

    When it comes to Berkeley and his idealist philosophy. You paraphrased it:

    One author he points to is Berkley and the query about whether a tree makes a sound if there is no human being to experience it.Jack Cummins
    Are you sure that is what he asked? If you weren't there to hear it?

    "If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?" is a philosophical thought experiment that raises questions regarding observation and perception.
    While the origin of the phrase is sometimes mistakenly attributed to George Berkeley, there are no extant writings in which he discussed this question. The closest are the following two passages from Berkeley's A Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge, published in 1710. [...]

    The current phrasing appears to have originated in the 1910 book Physics by Charles Riborg Mann and George Ransom Twiss. The question "When a tree falls in a lonely forest, and no animal is near by to hear it, does it make a sound? Why?" is posed along with many other questions to quiz readers on the contents of the chapter, and as such, is posed from a purely physical point of view
    Wiki

    This time the question involves 'an animal'. It broadens the perspective. Outwards away from 'man'.

    Also, in fiction, the idea is considered by Terry Pratchett in 'Small Gods', p2, when he writes that the recurring philosophical question 'Does a falling tree in the forest make a sound when there is no one to hear?' says something about the nature of philosophers, because there is always someone in a forest. It may only be a badger, wondering what that cracking noise was, or a squirrel a bit puzzled by all the scenery going upwards, but someone. At the very least, if it was deep enough in the forest, millions of small gods would have heard it.'
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?
    :up: :kiss:

    Hilariously tragic. El-ev-en! :rofl:

    It reminds me of when my car wouldn't start. I phoned breakdown and suffered my way through the menu choice. Then I had to spell out the registration number to a friendly, female computer.
    ''S''.
    "Sorry, that number is not recognised. Please repeat."
    *sighs*
    I articulated a clear and careful, ''Ess!"
    "Is that 'F' for Foxtrot?"
    :rage: "No, it's S for..."
    Hold the line...
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?
    They'd shoot you dead, just for being incomprehensible. Red-blooded, gun-totin' 'Merickans hate it when they don't understand something.Vera Mont

    That's just not gonna happen, trust me! One of my greatest talents is speech shifting to fit in with whoever's around...I'm good. And when I bring my sample bottles of malt whisky...and host tasting sessions...they'll turn soft as smashed neeps and tatties. We have our ways...yup indeedy.
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?

    Well, whatever makes you think I look vulnerable?!
    Dae ye no' ken I'm a hard-nosed, Glaswegian bitch from hell...with the fuckin' filthiest mouth ye widnae touch wi' a barge-pole. Ma Hielan' grannie is worser than dried heather stuck up yer arse.

    But kidding aside (ah'm no' frae Glesga) you're right. I never thought of that. Playing a character. What about a mix of Katherine Hepburn and Clarice Starling as shape-shifting spaced out Time Traveller...
    See, I have NO imagination! All outta masks and melodrama :sad:
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?
    :smile: :up: :cool:

    Take care. Stay safe. :sparkle:
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?
    Ah, a muse for every purpose. I suppose... Me, I prefer one familiar spirit, even not a particularly powerful one. (My top favourite Terry Pratchett book is Small Gods.)Vera Mont

    Thanks. I found the audio re-recording and it's now 'On hold' in my Libby app. From Penguin:

    Listen to 40 magnificent new re-recordings of Terry Pratchett's Discworld series, read by leading names from British stage and screen including Bill Nighy, Peter Serafinowicz, Indira Varma and Andy Serkis. This epic programme of new audiobooks truly has something for everyone.Penguin - Discworld in Audio

    I might have to say "Au Revoir!" for a spell. Looking at travel options for Deadwood...
  • A Review and Critical Response to the Shortcomings of Popular Secularist Philosophies
    I'm sorry but this 'contrast' doesn't make sense to me. There is nothing simple about secularism as a philosophy. Leaving it here, thanks.schopenhauer1
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?
    Thanks for sharing your loss and how you coped.

    I won't indulge in more political analysis/speculation because I am not sufficiently informed and don't wish to side-track further. But I feel the need to address this:
    But, of course there is the dynamic of the counterprotests, which is the more left wing ventilation protest about so much misery and suffering.Jack Cummins

    I agree that there are complex issues underlying the riots/protests that need to be addressed. However, there seems to be a significant difference in the current make-up of the vicious attacks of the hard right rioters (young, white English males) and the more peaceful anti-hate, anti-fascist protestors (a mix of all genders, age and colour coming together as a 'community').

    Anything to the left of the rioters includes the centre and right of centre, not just left-wing activists.

    In Walthamstow, east London, thousands took over the street outside an immigration bureau shouting “we fight back.”Newspapers from across the spectrum, including several aligned with the center-right, united in praise of the “anti-hate marchers.

    “The show of force from the police and, frankly, the show of unity from communities, together defeated the challenges that we’ve seen,” Mark Rowley, commissioner of London’s Metropolitan Police, said Thursday.
    Politico - The night Britain fought back against riots

    I'll end here.There's bound to be more trouble in the pipe-line but...
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?
    Thanks for this further explanation. I understand the pleasure gained in poetry v the prosaic. You persuasive words poetic in themselves - 'an oracle of syntaxes and silences'.

    Poetry. I'm "attracted to" all the very human, Deadwood characters, major and minor, because each one is an oracle of syntaxes and silences, profanies and cries peculiar to that imaginary-historical place. I'm even more "attracted to" the female and beta-male (i.e. quasi-Beckettian) characters than I am to Al Swearengen even though he tends to be more quotable and one of the two main protagonists (the other being Seth Bullock).180 Proof

    It seems I might have to pack my bags and travel to Deadwood...
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?

    A quick response. Sorry to hear of your increased stress levels and continuing insecurity concerning a safe and affordable place to live in London. Pleasure may well be 'an antidote to suffering' - how would that work in your case? Coming here and 'ventilating'? But it doesn't solve any underlying problems or the causes of suffering. Any type at any level.

    Going back to Freud's ideas, catharsis involves sexuality but trauma too. It also involves the whole spectrum of love and hatred, with aggression sometimes being a source of cathartic pleasure.Jack Cummins

    Yes. And how quickly we go from one extreme of the spectrum to the other. Too many absolute statements being made and positions taken. The either/or scenario plain to witness in American politics and beyond. High stakes in being seen as a white 'saviour'.
    Now, Harris is viewed as the smiling figure of Hope (Love) contrasted to Trump's growling aggression stirring Fear (Hate). It's never as simple as that, away from the cameras, is it? The performance of actors...those behind the scenes pulling strings. They must be having a laugh as they enjoy the results of their manipulations.

    I am wondering about this in relation to the outbreak of the current outbreak of riots in the UK. In some ways it is the opposite to the Brixton riots which were based on opposition to racism. Rioting may be the expression of deep anger and hatred, like the expression of primordial anger of the tribe in the form of cathartic aggression in real life as opposed to in the form of the arts.Jack Cummins

    Today's riots in England are stoked by the fascist hard right. Good to read of the counter protesting forces, here:

    From Newcastle to London to Bristol, anti-racist demonstrators stood up against threat of further racist riots.

    The scale of the anti-racism protests was surely sending a message: an effort to change the narrative after a week dominated by rampant far-right, anti-immigrant violence.

    In Birmingham’s jewellery quarter, outside a migrant centre, they chanted “fascist scum out of Brum”.

    In Liverpool they held banners such as “Nans Against Nazis”, “Immigrants welcome. Racists not” and “When the poor blame the poor only the rich win”. An elderly man with a portable speaker resting on his walking frame played John Lennon’s Give Peace a Chance on repeat.
    Guardian - Protest - United against hate

    I don't believe for one minute that this will be the end of it. As yet, in Scotland we have been spared. Why? Some theories:
    https://www.heraldscotland.com/politics/holyrood/24500512.scotland-far-escaped-riots/
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?
    ... other 'big' TV series like  Sopranos, Breaking Bad, Succession, etc. Well written and performed, but I just don't care about the stories or the characters.

    No fuckin' doubt, Tom, we be a couple of dusty ol' cocksuckers drinkin' from the same crack'd bottle ... like all them other hoopleheads down on their fuckin' luck, laughin' and pissin' it all away in that limey cocksucker Swearengen's saloon. :smirk:
    180 Proof

    I haven't watched any of the series mentioned. Perhaps I just don't care to, for whatever reason.
    What is it about the stories or characters that you don't care about? And what makes Al someone you are attracted to?

    Be careful @180 Proof being a cocksucker and drinking from a cracked bottle holds all kinds of terrors -germs...bacteria and viruses. But hey, seize the day, eh? Even if only in your imagination...
  • A Review and Critical Response to the Shortcomings of Popular Secularist Philosophies
    I haven't read all of your OP but interesting to hear about your use of ChatGPT and your reshaping of prompts. Going with its flow, fleshing out ideas.

    In Western countries, Christian nationalism often seeks to impose pro-life policies, ban certain forms of sexual speech in public settings such as libraries and schools, promote Christian ethical teachings in educational curricula, and restrict access to certain websites. Similarly, Islamic nationalism enforces these and many more restrictions, often with even stricter adherence to religious doctrines.

    Religionists argue that these restraints are necessary to prevent civilization from descending into decadence and excessive hedonism, where higher values are discarded in favor of simple pleasures. They believe that without these moral guidelines, society would lose its ethical foundation and succumb to chaos.
    schopenhauer1

    Yes. The argument - or fear of deteriorating morality if there is no appeal to a higher Being or the Word of God - has been going on ad nauseam. Unfortunately, deeply affecting e.g. American politics.
    It will be interesting to see how things might change. God seems to be as entrenched as guns.

    On the other hand, humanists, existentialists, and secularists who hold notions of "virtue" or "civic virtue" argue that Enlightenment values can temper the excesses of pure hedonism in a secularized society.
    — schopenhauer1

    I read years ago that sexual products and services including production and distribution of pornography generate many times the revenue of, say, sports broadcasting. I see not a lot of comment from those espousing ‘enlightenment values’ in that regard.

    When there’s discussion of the possible connection between pornography and sexual violence against women, there’s a lot of throat-clearing about the evils of censorship and a correct understanding of ‘consent’.
    Wayfarer

    I hope nobody objects but I have shared the above in another thread. It touched on my thoughts regarding stories and any 'catharsis' gained.
    From @Jack Cummins - 'Tragedy and Pleasure?'
    https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/923721

    It's not only online pornography that shapes attitudes towards violence against women. Most thrillers - Nordic Noir - continue to have women as victims. Men, with or without religious beliefs, as perps.
    Arguably, the Bible Story with its power and paternalism is used by some to justify any behaviour. And promote any malevolent political policy. The hypocrisy breath-taking.
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?
    Also, the whole idea of catharsis was central to his perspective on therapy. The idea was that the ventilation of emotional expression is the road to 'cure'. This was based on his work with patients.

    The problem which I see is that it does not always follow that ventilation of emotions and traumatic experiences will lead to a cure and the CBT therapists see him psychodynamic therapy as placing too much emphasis on the past.
    Jack Cummins

    Interesting to read your thoughts on Freud. I have sympathy with the idea of 'ventilation' - or talk therapy being available as a treatment not a 'cure'. Are they the same thing? I think letting all emotions out can open a can of worms, making matters worse. A bit like the punch-bag theory of anger management. It is only a temporary release or relief. But again, it depends on the aims and abilities of both therapist and client...

    However, the emphasis he placed on sexuality had a profound influence on culture and dealing with the repression of sexual aspects of life. It may be central to pleasure itself and it would be hard to imagine trajedy without a sexual aspect.

    The nature of trajedy itself may be about the way in which sexuality causes conflict and potential destruction. His philosophy, which drew upon mythology, emphasised the tension between Eros and Thanatos, the life and death drives/instincts.
    Jack Cummins

    Sex/uality and the tragedy/pleasure/comic aspects of life/death survival instincts...
    I can't help coming back to Deadwood. The discussion has been informative but there is something still nagging at me. Troubling even, as I also consider the possibility of 'catharsis' in viewers. What is it that mostly gives 'pleasure'? Male and female camaraderie?

    This morning, I read something by @Wayfarer - I hope he doesn't mind me transferring his thoughts here?:

    On the other hand, humanists, existentialists, and secularists who hold notions of "virtue" or "civic virtue" argue that Enlightenment values can temper the excesses of pure hedonism in a secularized society.
    — schopenhauer1

    I read years ago that sexual products and services including production and distribution of pornography generate many times the revenue of, say, sports broadcasting. I see not a lot of comment from those espousing ‘enlightenment values’ in that regard. When there’s discussion of the possible connection between pornography and sexual violence against women, there’s a lot of throat-clearing about the evils of censorship and a correct understanding of ‘consent’.
    Wayfarer

    When people watch or read anything concerning sexual violence to any person, gender or age, does it only become a problem when there is addiction? If compulsively following a drama series of violent, degrading behaviour, what kind of 'catharsis' is being felt or even recognised?
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?
    Could you cope with a committee of the of the pesky things?Vera Mont

    Ooh err, missus! Who said anything about a 'committee'? The very word makes me shudder. *shudders*
    I thought it a case of praying to any muses that might float your fancy. Like Melpomene, Thalia or Erato.
    A bit like how Catholics call up St Anthony - that kinda thing.
    Or I can see them as spirits of the bar; shaking a cock or mock tail your way...I could cope with that!
    A Mock Tale, yay :cool:

    When do they start becoming 'pesky' or go AWOL? Hmmm.
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?
    Thank you for this intelligent, informative summary. Words can work wonders, can't they? To read and think imaginatively - to grab, pin down and convey thoughts and ideas in writing - that, for me, is a major challenge. I haven't observed you having much, if any, difficulty but no doubt, when it comes to fiction it's different...
    'To wake the Muse'. Is there only one?
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?
    And some more fuckin' words to live by:
    https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/792330
    180 Proof

    A fascinating insight.
    "I’d rather try touching the moon than take on a whore’s thinking."

    Words to live... or die by. I suppose the whores referred to are the female prostitutes? No males, no homosexuality? It's a big white man's world...whoring, being hard and fucking each other.

    What would 'trying to touch the moon' mean for Al?
    Did he really know the thinking of his whores? How did he view them, other than means to money?
    'Taking on' some thoughts is what he apparently managed. He empathised with being a victim, being brought to his knees. He didn't like it up him either.

    There are certainly more eloquent lines in Deadwood than “I don’t like it, either.” But after rewatching all three seasons of the great HBO western this spring, they’re the words I can’t get over. As uttered by a sex worker named Dolly (Ashleigh Kizer), who spends most of her screen time between the legs of Ian McShane’s coarse saloon owner Al Swearengen, they constitute an assertion of personhood from a heretofore insignificant character. “They hold you down from behind,” Al fumes, as she kneels beside him. “Then you wonder why you’re helpless. How the f-ck could you not be?”

    He’s referring to powerful men like George Hearst (Gerald McRaney), who is slowly bringing Al—along with everyone else in the prosperous frontier mining camp of Deadwood—to his metaphorical knees. And so it’s jarring when Dolly replies “I don’t like it, either,” because she’s really talking about the johns who physically pin her down during sex. “I guess I do that, too, with your f-ckin’ hair,” Al muses, his voice softening to an uncharacteristic whisper. Though he does plenty of despicable things in the subsequent eight episodes of the show’s final season, he never treats Dolly so roughly again.
    Time - Deadwood was the rare show about men that did women justice
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?
    It's bound to be brutal and nasty.
    — Amity
    Nevertheless, intriguing.
    Vera Mont

    'Brutal and nasty' as depicted traditionally and contemporary (personal, social relationships and economic/political dynamics) will intrigue the curious and those willing to compare and contrast perspectives. Human behaviour. Aren't we all psychologists?

    Here, we can share memories of past TV programmes; Western sets/characters ridiculed. How could we ever have been be scared by the Daleks in Dr.Who? Clunky, metal boxes on wheels, vocally challenged and probing with a sink plunger. The iconic "Exterminate"! Perhaps a single, menacing word can trigger deep, basic fears or past trauma...some things never change.

    There are always foes to be fought but friends sought too, sometimes. Drama needs a balance for it to work well. To release emotions and make us think. Hence the OP...'Tragedy and Pleasure?'.
    As the world moves on, so must we take into account new concerns. New elements related to the environment and AI. Our brains are bombarded with conflicting accounts, or even washed by the wicked.

    There is a need to switch off, sit back and be entertained. Even intellectuals need simple. Balance.
    Disengagement before re-engaging.

    Yes, I know that preferring entertainment over heavy philosophical content is frivolous, but I'm okay with that.
    — Vera Mont

    I think Deadwood works well as entertainment and at a deeper level.
    Tom Storm

    Like most art forms, then? We can enjoy the simple pleasures, possibly 'catharsis' without being too analytical even as strong ideas/messages might be slipped in surreptitiously for consumption. A bit like kids not being force-fed green vegetables and fruit but enjoying as burgers or milk shakes.

    But it is violent and pessimistic. In that way, it is not much different to other long form, scrupulously written, television shows. The performances and the script are astonishing.Tom Storm

    From the little I've read, it doesn't sound like 'wall-to-wall' violence and pessimism. It includes humour and hope as most tragedies must.

    Gaskell's account reveals there is no significant difference between genders and class in the experience of self-interest. We pursue what is best for us. The difference of outcomes come about from slight gains or losses of self-awareness in each person. And nobody gets to check the scorecard since it involves life beyond one's view.Paine

    Yes, no matter the differences between humans, mostly it comes down to ego ( back to Freud?).
    The outcomes of our pursuits, including watching drama, will partly depend on our willingness or personal freedom to become open to others. To learn. Not to avoid that which is uncomfortable or not to our taste. To grow and develop.
    But, hey, we all have our comfort zones. Even philosophers... having found their niche or income.

    We pursue what is best for us.
    — Paine

    We pursue what we believe to be best for us - and sometimes what we know to be bad for us, yet want anyway.
    Vera Mont

    Oh yeah, gimme that bar of chocolate...Now!

    And of course, we don't always 'know' what might be best for us at any given time or the consequences of following certain choices. Therein lies the fun of it...and our stories...the tragi-comedy.
    'All's well that ends well'? Somebody might have said...or questioned...
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?
    Update: I did get some commentary on the making of the series and some excerpts.
    I've concluded that I will not be making a heroic effort to see it. Whatever its literary and dramatic merits - and I gather they are prodigious - it's not my idea of entertainment.
    Vera Mont

    I was surprised that you were even considering it! It's bound to be brutal and nasty. I haven't even looked at excerpts and since I can't watch for free... there's no boldly going forth to face up to any horrors...

    At 78, whatever I still need to learn about the human condition will probably come unbidden, in humiliating, inelegant forms. I don't need to watch other people pretend to get there first.Vera Mont

    It's being so cheerful that keeps you going! Wise Old Gal :wink:
  • What are you listening to right now?
    Ciao, javi :cool:

    Preferisco una pizza Margherita e poi un gelato alla pesca e poi un Ugo e poi... :party:
  • What are you listening to right now?
    Earlier version of Sole e Malato:
    Domenico Modugno - Sole malato (Remastered) (6 - CD1)


    Remembered for his winning song at the Sanremo Festival 1958, coming 3rd in the 3rd Eurovision Contest. Orchestra, dinner jacket and bow tie. How things have changed...
    ESC 1958 01 - Italy - Domenico Modugno - Nel Blu Dipinto Di Blu (Volare)