Does poetic mean vacuous? — Agustino
When you're making music, don't you follow a method? Don't you think about some guiding principles? About how different sounds are interconnected? What effects minor and major scales create? etc.? Clearly you must. Any craft, even poetry, takes honing, which is done methodically and deliberately. — Agustino
Yeah, like that. — Agustino
Well, you have to specify what exactly you mean by "know"? — Agustino
Well, I think the bird is definitely conscious, in that it reacts to stimuli, and probably projects a world for itself the same way us humans project a world for ourselves. What I think you might mean is that a bird lacks the self-awareness of human beings, and the reflexivity of our thought. In other words, the bird does not think about what it is thinking. It does not think about why it is singing, why it is flying, etc. — Agustino
Thanks for sharing that stuff about your personal, meaningful experiences btw. — numberjohnny5
How are you using "subjective" and "objective"? — numberjohnny5
Is generation synonymous with causation there? — numberjohnny5
Because your "intrinsic to our experience" isn't clear to me. — numberjohnny5
Note that by "mental apparatus" I don't mean some static object; rather, I mean a dynamic, mental processing structure. In other words, experience is a mental process. — numberjohnny5
I see. So what determines levels of hierarchy is priority and generation? Is generation synonymous with causation there? — numberjohnny5
So if the physical generated the non-physical, would you then say that the physical would be at the top end of the hierarchy? — numberjohnny5
Of the mind. "Objective" or "extra-mental" would refer to everything that is not of the mind. — numberjohnny5
Hmmm it seems you are introducing the concept of overarching narrative into the procedings. — Jake Tarragon
The mega-meta narrative bothers me. — Jake Tarragon
Which is why I've been interested in finding out what "beauty" is ontologically for you. It seems that to you beauty is both subjective and objective. Well, what is objective beauty, ontologically? Is it the actual properties of things that we perceive? So objective beauty (external-to-mind beauty) exists in the objects themselves independent of any observer? Or is it a mixture all at once between subjective and objective beauty? — numberjohnny5
I just want to clarify something: For me, "experience" is synonymous with "conscious experience". Do you agree? — numberjohnny5
I'd prefer to say that the properties of a bird (which includes things like colour, movement, etc.) cause us to experience something that we feel and refer to as "beautiful". — numberjohnny5
I take it you're only talking about those individuals who experience and label such birds as beautiful, since not all individuals will feel all birds are beautiful...? — numberjohnny5
By "intrinsic to our experience" are you referring to something intrinsic in our minds/mental apparatus? — numberjohnny5
Ah right. So the non-physical is what...superior to/better than the physical? — numberjohnny5
Would you say that the assertion that "consciousness/non-physicality determines relative levels of hierarchy" is subjective? — numberjohnny5
Perhaps consciousness is on a spectrum, but why would you think birds have any of it? — tom
Ok, so if "beauty" is not an entity but requires an observer, then what, ontologically, is "beauty" in your view? — numberjohnny5
Ok. Why is that particular quality/aspect the determinant of relative levels of hierarchy? Why not, say, limbs or mass, for example? — numberjohnny5
I don't know what birds see in each other. It could be that what the bird sees is the same thing that we see--that is, the female cardinal clearly sees a red male cardinal. Some birds do, anyway. — Bitter Crank
Our identification of beauty in birds doesn't inform them of their beauty. It's a bridge too far. So, perhaps "we are to birds as God is to us" still holds, but oppositely since
God may be as distant from us as we are to birds
So, God's vision of us may do for us what we do for birds, which may be something, or nothing. — Bitter Crank
So "beauty" in the sense you're using it in this thread entails some entity/process/X/?? which involves
(a) perception of the bird (first concept of beauty?);
(b) a second (abstract) concept of beauty that refers to the first concept (perception), and that which then is possibly creatively applied to "a form of being which is higher than humanity".
Have I got that right? — numberjohnny5
My response is that I would have to understand what "Divine Being" actually is? I take it it's not material and therefore immaterial? — numberjohnny5
"Higher" is a quantitative term (conventionally speaking). So I'm asking in what sense "higher" are we than birds per that definition. You might be using an unconventional definition of "higher" though, so you'd need to share that with me in order for me to grasp what you're getting at. — numberjohnny5
Ok, but I see the "scale" as subjective, fyi. We could use scales for many purposes; in other words, there is not one "true" or "correct" purpose for using/applying scales to things. — numberjohnny5
It depends on the individual tasting the ice cream and the amount of properties that produce sensations/perceptions of "sweetness" for that individual. There might be a limit as to an individual's taste budes being able to make distinctions of sweetness once they taste things that are intensely sweet. One could still compose some product with whatever properties makes something sweet to an individual with an excessively large amount of those sweet properties to ensure that it's relatively one of the sweetest products to taste. — numberjohnny5
In that case, I don't think that animals that are relatively dissimilar to us perceive qualities as "beautiful" apart from them being able to do so for evolutionary purposes. — numberjohnny5
What is "beauty" in the sense that you're using it? And would you also have a view per what beauty is ontologically? — numberjohnny5
I'm confused. Let me try to clarify something of my position in case it helps further the discussion.
Any perception/appraisal is going to involve some mind (human or non-human (including something like a god)) observing some other (or some mind perceiving/appraising aspects of itself). That's necessarily the case. — numberjohnny5
In what sense "higher"? — numberjohnny5
Well, I am a physicalist. ;) — numberjohnny5
I don't view things as intrinsically "superior/inferior/valuable, etc.". That's all I'm saying; and it seems that you do. — numberjohnny5
Would there be a higher being higher than the higher being, btw? — numberjohnny5
But I can’t quite make the leap from there to the second paragraph. — Wayfarer
I suppose one answer might be, that the sense of being loved is in some way to ‘feel beautiful’. At a very basic level, your mother’s love for you as an infant instils a sense of self-worth in you which might, at a stretch, be a kind of beauty. (The sad testimony to this is the pathologies of infants who are raised with an absence of all maternal love.) — Wayfarer
So I suppose, within the Christian framework, the sense of the Lord as a ‘loving father’ and indeed the sense in which the sacrament of marriage recapitulates that love, is also a source of something very life beauty. — Wayfarer
The problem is, I can’t see how it constitutes any kind of proof. — Wayfarer
Do you mean a hierarchy in which certain animals that have evolved particular capacities to evaluate qualities (like beauty) in other animals that have not evolved such capacities? — numberjohnny5
Apart from humans, I do think that some animals can evaluate such qualities in other animals insofar as what is "beautiful" to them might serve different evolutionary functions (e.g. avoiding or falling prey to predation). — numberjohnny5
I don't think that hierarchies are objective things, btw. They are just ways that minds organise things. So there is no intrinsic "superior/inferior" "valuable" differences in things apart from minds thinking about things in that way. — numberjohnny5
It depends on the person, since beauty is subjective. — numberjohnny5
Again, beauty is subjective. There is no objectively "beautiful quality" that exists in things apart from some mind judging qualities to be beautiful. — numberjohnny5
It could be true that someone/thing observes a quality in us that we aren't aware of and judges it as beautiful. But that judgement belongs to the mind of the observer judging that quality. — numberjohnny5
I'm not sure what a "higher form of being" means. — numberjohnny5
I'd put it like this: we are capable of perceiving and appraising aspects of non-human animals that other non-human animals cannot perceive and appraise (based on our biological apparatus). But it's probably also true that some non-human animals are able to perceive and appraise aspects of humans that humans cannot perceive and appraise (e.g. infra-red perception, sonic detection, etc.). — numberjohnny5
I don't know; maybe we can; but the question is whether we can know that we can; and I'd have to say 'no' to that. — Janus
Fundamental to what? Terms are defined in the context of specific theories or models. So, if such a model or theory fails to give us something good, then some other might. — Πετροκότσυφας
Birds prefer--choose--beauty in their mates, he thought. A male cardinal does not need to know that he is beautiful, but his selective mate does. — Bitter Crank
But to assess one's appearance as "handsome", or "beautiful" and identify the degree of loveliness requires an accurate assessment of one's appearance from the POV of others. — Bitter Crank
There is a New England shape note song--or maybe the Southern Harmony tradition which speaks of the longing to see God — Bitter Crank
Well, yes, it is the experience of the world in itself; but, by mere definition it cannot be experience of the world as it is in itself. The 'for us' and the 'in itself' is a logical distinction that circumscribes our epistemic limits, according to Kant. — Janus