On the side, where do you lay the cornerstone of the Apollonian time, to consider what is pre and post Apollonian? — Shamshir
with the 'woke' buzzword flying around — Shamshir
The idea of the Übermensch is not new. — Shamshir
The difference is, I think, that anarchism implies some sort of idealism for a world wherein laws and such don't exist or could be abolished... whereas a Ceasar or a Napoleon didn't believe that was a possibility or ideal to be achieved, but rather made use of that reality. — ChatteringMonkey
And people who just do not want to make a blind guess about the question because there is no unambiguous evidence upon which to make a meaningful guess...ARE CORRECT. — Frank Apisa
It shouldn't come as a surprise that science is pagan, if you've read any of the creation stories where the 'gods' teach men to read and write and craft. — Shamshir
The übermensch being a sort of anarchist is a bit of a hard sell I think. Above the law yes, but more as a Napoleon or a Ceasar, than an anarchist I think. — ChatteringMonkey
Paganism has to do with ritual; something that was thrown away by early Christian, Buddhist and Taoist tradition - as unapparent as it may seem now. — Shamshir
And why is his Übermensch, the same as Proudhon's?
"I stand ready to negotiate, but I want no part of laws: I acknowledge none; I protest against every order with which some authority may feel pleased on the basis of some alleged necessity to over-rule my free will. Laws: We know what they are, and what they are worth! They are spider webs for the rich and mighty, steel chains for the poor and weak, fishing nets in the hands of government."
That's why. — Shamshir
Russell was a pacifist, so presumably he would have to let himself get beat up by Nietzsche if he wants to stay true to his philosophy. — ChatteringMonkey
I don't know. Nietzsche has more black-light posters in opium dens. Russell has more unicorns. — ernestm
to convincingly scathe the Apollonian in a long structured and systematic treatise — ChatteringMonkey
he still didn't seduce Wagner's wife. Good try, but still did not amount to much more than intellectual masturbation. Western philosophers still look to Russell instead. — ernestm
I don't know about Platonism being the first manifestation of the Apollonian — ChatteringMonkey
but wasn't the tragic a fusion of the Apollonian and the Dionysian. The problem with platonism was that it was 'only' Apollonian. — ChatteringMonkey
Talking in terms of conceptions is fraught. That's objection numero uno. It's based upon the following... All conceptions have linguistic form, and as such all are existentially dependent upon language. — creativesoul
that is why I’d recommend Nietzsche’s debut work (his self criticism of this work is also a nice insight). — I like sushi
Perhaps you would be so kind as to elucidate further your insights on it? — ernestm
none of it really passes Hume's Guillotine. — ernestm
I’d recommend starting with his first book ‘The Birth of Tragedy’. Beyond G&E will open up to you a lot more if you look at BoT. — I like sushi
NOt sure if this is a joke — Coben
Can you ethically justify eating meat? — Kaz1983
In Merk's defense, he is attempting to use my framework, and in doing so is being very diplomatic in checking for my agreement. — creativesoul
Existence is not the sort of thing that exists. It is not discoverable. It has no elemental constitution. Thus, it makes no sense on my view to talk in terms of "existence as it is in it's entirety". — creativesoul
existentially dependent upon being taken account of. — creativesoul
The interesting feature of this framework is that we can easily swap "being taken account of" with all sorts of other considerations. We can isolate the elemental constituents and assess whether or not any of them are existentially dependent upon any number of things. — creativesoul
Given the history of philosophy proper...
You can say that two times! — creativesoul
I agree, that's why I think firearms for self defense have become a religion. — ernestm
All notions of "identification" and/or "identity" are existentially dependent upon metacognition. Metacognition... language. Language... thought/belief.
Identification is required for successful reference.
The notion of "identity/identification" is overplayed... All identification presupposes existence, regardless of subsequent further qualification.
Howzit relevant? — creativesoul
"its existence in its prior entirety"? What is that saying?
I wouldn't know what "its existence in its entirety" would be saying, even, that "its existence" wouldn't suffice just as well for (in other words what is "its entirety" adding to "its existence"?), but then modifying "entirety" by "prior" is that much more confusing. — Terrapin Station
You just need to have a non-Aspie understanding of "create." — Terrapin Station
It's not so much of a paradox if we realize that we're creating meaning "in the meaningless." — Terrapin Station
I still don’t any serious explanation why people are walking around scare? Where does this fear come from? Why is it not so apparent in other countries? — I like sushi
"Religion, you see, is not in its roots adoration of a god or a goddess. Religion is fear. Religion is the spark that issues forth when the thought of death or danger strikes the individual. It's personal. It grows out of darkness and uncertainty.""
A E Van Vogt, Book of Ptath — ernestm
mass cannibalism with so much infrastructure wrecked? — Bitter Crank
However, to bypass START treaty restrictions on making new kinds of nuclear weapons, Bolton already had to state it was not a new kind of weapon, but a modification of the B612-12 nuclear bomb. So he only pissed off the Russians, but didn't actually violate the treaty. — ernestm
Do you not know," he continued, "that it is a sign of fear in a man for him to carry arms? And no man who is afraid would ever have a chance to become king any more than a slave would." — Dio Chrysostom: The 4th Discourse
You want to live, so live your life how you want to live it. Then you will see meaning in a lot of things. These things won't have absolute meaning, but you won't care, because they will have meaning to you. — leo