And, it is that facet of human nature that worries me. It is reckless and insatiable, and needs to be controlled. Would you agree with my pejorative here? — Shawn
Can anyone chime in on the internalist account for the definition of a "need" contra a "want"? — Shawn
Yeah, it's interesting to note that the desire for money is often due to a want, and not a need, since needs are already de facto easily satisfied, given our socio-economics of satisfying wants.
What do you think? — Shawn
Are you your thoughts, feelings, actions? — Xtrix
Where are "you"? — Xtrix
Where is this "self"? — Xtrix
Likewise for "soul," likewise for "spirit," "subject," "mind" for that matter. — Xtrix
If you're defining "self" within a certain theory, and giving it a technical definition I'm not aware of, then that's different. I don't see you doing so. — Xtrix
it's hard to say whether or not we "believe" in something when we don't know what it is. — Xtrix
What "evidence" is there that there IS a self? — Xtrix
Correct, DMT will have that result. Other psychedelics can in the right settings, but DMT is a very reliable means of producing this effect. — DingoJones
Id call that loss of memory and attention, not self. — DingoJones
That implies the self is present but otherwise focused. So I would say its not the same thing we are talking about. — DingoJones
Interesting, please elaborate. — DingoJones
I really would like to know, as to why people confuse needs for wants and wants for needs? — Shawn
When I have satisfied all my needs, then should my focus shift towards the entertainment of wants? — Shawn
How do you go about satisfying wants if all your needs are met? — Shawn
It seems to me that at this point, that needs get redefined when they seem all satisfied, as the things we find it hard to do without. Such as, coffee, tea, pizza, etc. — Shawn
Interestingly enough, does money count as a need? — Shawn
We all know that it is more meaningful to spend time on things like reading or outdoor activities than on playing video games or choosing luxurious clothes. — Rystiya
It maybe true that an external reality exists but how can we describe it? Once we start to describe it we rely on individual perceivers. — Andrew4Handel
Its very difficult to explain to someone whose never experienced it. — DingoJones
So now imagine when youre in the room you are the one working the machines, and when you return after leaving, you are surprised to find on the security cams that the machines work fine without you and the machines being worked/controlled by you was an illusion.
Its like that, if any of that makes sense. — DingoJones
What the Buddhists will say is that we become "attached" to the "I," the "self," and that this is a cause of suffering. — Xtrix
I think that's a possibility. One watches a Buddhist monk burn himself alive and not move, and one has to wonder if there's something to this practice of "non-self." — Xtrix
in the sense of recognizing a concept that isn't what we normally think it is — Xtrix
Well there is still something going on, an experience is happening but its not the “self” thats experiencing. When the “self” returns, — DingoJones
but what we are and who we are have a long history of interpretations. — Xtrix
Have you tried any psychedelics or achieved a deep mediative state? In other words, have you actually done anything that would result in the loss of your sense of self? — DingoJones
I answered that. I do not know had the friggin "greatest" inauguration, and I do not care. — Nobeernolife
but everytime I partially checked some of those lists of lies, I only found distortions, misinterpretations or outright false claims. — Nobeernolife
I do not know what your name-calling is about. I know the "mainstream" media slogan about Trump being a "liar", but everytime I partially checked some of those lists of lies, I only found distortions, misinterpretations or outright false claims. — Nobeernolife
Did DJT have the largest, greatest, best inaugural as he claimed - insisted upon? — tim wood
Just as running from the tiger is "interesting", so is sitting in the house, if your life is on the line. — TheMadFool
I wonder what could be more interesting than not dying? :chin: :mask: — TheMadFool
I recall hearing that, there's a difference between not dying and living and in the spirit of this sentence, the priority now is not living but not dying and given that this restructuring of our priorities is a global phenomenon, you're right in saying that entertainment (circuses) isn't really a need. In a sense then we were under the delusion that entertainment was/is a necessity insofar as not dying is our concern. — TheMadFool
They'll start going into existential crisis and say "What's the point of anything?" — schopenhauer1
A fish in a bowl swims around, eats, swims a bit more, checks out the castle, swims, swims through the plant, etc. — schopenhauer1
If Rome's survival depended so much on circuses, wouldn't that make the latter an essential for the former, a need as it were. — TheMadFool
I saw a pretty good video about it yesterday that you might like: — Pfhorrest
If I want to get involved in a discussion do I have to read every reply that came before me? It seems prudent in smaller threads, but when you pass a certain threshold of number of replies it seems like it just becomes really intimidating. — WatchingRook
Blame the media for not shutting their materialist faces — Gregory
From what I understand, China is already over the hump locally, and it's only been like three months, and they didn't take the drastic measures we are. — Pfhorrest
a few riots and a couple deaths will please everyone just fine — darthbarracuda
What I'm just saying that precautions can have some effect on our manners, which I think has also negative consequences. — ssu
So we don't need to wait until there's a vaccine before things can go back to normal, just until we get over the hump of the curve. Once the number of new cases starts going down (even if just because there are fewer people who haven't gotten sick yet left), we don't have to worry about slowing its increase anymore, and can go back to normal knowing that the medical system won't be overwhelmed by those who depend on it. — Pfhorrest
What on earth makes you think they'll be closed down indefinitely? — IvoryBlackBishop
Nah.
In truth it's called simply cabin fever: "Cabin fever refers to the distressing claustrophobic irritability or restlessness experienced when a person, or group, is stuck at an isolated location or in confined quarters for an extended period of time." — ssu
Perhaps one problem will be that we will learn "social distancing". We'll adapt things just like with medical personnel (even before the pandemic) that you don't shake hands. Shaking hands can become something rude or an issue you don't do with strangers. And your personal distance kept is longer. — ssu
There will be circuses only some appreciate, New forms of art — Gregory
Circuses will be foregone and survival will continue by the population, as long as they realize that it is needed for survival. — god must be atheist
The moment the word gets out that the rich get access to more entertainment than they, all hell will break lose. — god must be atheist
"Let them eat cake" will become "let them watch football" when "they" (the poor saps) are completely fed up by ceaselessly watching Little Rascals and Brady Bunch reruns in their free time. There will be no football to watch; revolution will break out. — god must be atheist
What I wrote in the previous post is pure psychology. In economic reality, the circus will come back to town the moment it gets a chance. Circuses, much like the movie industry and sports, are a particularly apt instrument to channel cash from the pockets of the everyday working stiff to the pockets of the rich and famous. — god must be atheist
Another circus act is trading illicit circus drugs and dancing girls. I have been out of that entertainment venue for too long to have any real knowledge of its operative and functioning diversity and dispensity. But I am now curious how they work under the circumstances.
In other words, (for the meeker in spirit) : do hooking and selling street drugs still continue under the new rules? — god must be atheist
Half the world is not going to die from the corona virus. — Gregory
Those are good points. I guess I was thinking of it as belonging there because that's the facet of education that I've focused on in my own essays, but yeah, there is learning to be done in every field. My first thought is that perhaps philosophy of education spans and intersects all of the fields, in the same way that history (which you'll note is not depicted on that chart) spans and intersects all fields. And really, much of education in any subject just is learning the history of that subject, getting caught up on what has already been studied so far, so those seem to fit together well. — Pfhorrest
I did define fideism when I first used it in the book, back in the chapter Against Fideism. I do try to avoid making people look up unusual words, but I also assume that people are reading the whole thing from beginning to end. — Pfhorrest
Yeah, that is intended to be representative of all of philosophy, though of course many of those sections could be further subdivided, especially the "Knowledge & Reality" and "Justice & Morality" ones. I would put philosophy of education in the "Knowledge & Reality" section, as education is about the institutes of knowledge (and a later essay in the book is even titled On Academics, Education, and the Institutes of Knowledge). — Pfhorrest
Nah, I don't mean that any serious thinking counts as philosophy, just that the faculties needed to do philosophy are the same faculties that constitute personhood. Those same faculties can be applied to things other than philosophy, though all at least tangentially related to it in the ways elaborated on in this essay. — Pfhorrest
a decent chunk of the population has little interest in philosophy, but I don't think it's out of any kind of inherent disinterest, but more out of a feeling of overwhelm and helplessness. — Pfhorrest
I suspect that for a whole lot of people, the task of examining their own thoughts and feelings is like that. They take a peek in their own mind, see a huge mess that they can barely begin to even comprehend never mind to improve upon, get stressed and overwhelmed at the very prospect of beginning such an enormous project, and "NOPE!" out before even beginning it, because they have more important things to do like relaxing enough tonight to get to sleep early enough to be awake enough in the morning to do their job well enough to keep getting paid enough to keep paying their landlord to let them stay inside their home instead of getting kicked out onto the street.
For most of them, I imagine, even that chain of implications is too daunting to think about, and just "relax enough to get to sleep" is about all they've got the mental strength left to handle. This isn't their fault, but the fault of the harsh world we live in, and I believe that if people were less traumatized by life, far more of them would be inclined, and able, to do things like philosophy. — Pfhorrest
Given a sufficiently long enough interval to analyze all the potential iterations of a game, then a human being would become no different than a hyper-rational computer.
True or false? — Shawn
Analogously, think about chess for a moment. Given that chess is the oldest game in human history, and given that it is deterministic, then through enough iterations it can be demonstrated that both players, given a sufficiently long backlog of past historical games, are going to face situations where winning becomes... impossible.
What is left to entertain is simply a mistake committed by either player to ensure victory. Since both players, given enough iterations, become hyper-rational, then winning becomes impossible, and the game looses its "fun-factor".
I believe the analogy can be demonstrated for ANY deterministic game, and thus, game theory has been refuted for any deterministic game. — Shawn
No where is it implied that air travel means all international trade. — boethius
Yes. In some ways I feel more free, like I'm not abiding by societies expectations of how I should behave. I feel like the need to be sane is a way of society keeping us in line so we can be controlled. Society wants everyone to be sane, but sometimes, I think, it is in the interest of the individual to experience some insanity. — Wheatley
yet I see the fear in other people wanting me to act "normal". — Wheatley