In context, yes, everything is 'free', but I ask "what is everything"? — opt-ae
The struggle for freedom is something many can relate to; even young people who've never experienced slavery or oppressions of other kinds get it. — TheMadFool
The quintessential oppressor(s) is one whose freedom is absolute and unbridled and it is against his/her/their freedom to do whatever they like that people rise up against. — TheMadFool
Freedom without limits has too much symmetry. — apokrisis
If everything is free to happen in one way, it is also free to happen in the other. — apokrisis
such as the laws of nature. — Pfhorrest
Maybe what I'm going for is: All is an infinite, complete whole; All acts as an infinite complete, whole, thus acting as one. So it is in our nature, our inherent calling to act as a whole both internally within ourselves and externally with the world.I don’t think it makes sense to induce that ‘our reason for existence is to be whole’ from the belief that ‘anything exists in the universe’. — Possibility
So if I’m striving for adventure in nature and you’re striving for lots of money, then how do you and I relate to each other in achieving a ‘wholeness’ inclusive of each other and our ‘different’ objectives? — Possibility
What most commonly occurs is that we strive to ignore, isolate and exclude those with ‘different objectives’ so that we can achieve this sense of ‘being whole’. — Possibility
Well, if our universe is infinitely complete, then it be fully inclusive of all things. It would also mean that it acts as an infinite whole would act. Basically our universe would both be one, and act as one.I am skeptical as to whether the idea of complete/incomplete has any discernable meaning applied to either the world or the universe. — Arne
I think these clues you mention point out not that there is ‘wholeness’ existing in the observable universe but that there isn’t - that wholeness is ONLY achievable AS this possible imagination of an infinite All. — Possibility
I think you are right, connecting with this whole in this manner where everything is explicitly laid out - is impossible.But in order to become this whole, one needs to integrate how one connects and collaborates with ALL possible relations that could constitute this wholeness, as well as how those relations possibly connect and collaborate with each other — Possibility
The seething quantum membrane from a which a Big Bang might have spontaneously emerged.Space and time emerge from a underlying membrane where neither space and time exist — flummoxed
Feel pretty good about it, thanks for the post.The membrane itself occupies zero space but connects everything to a certain extent, it allows only information flow. How does anyone feel about this — flummoxed
Thanks for your perspective, softwhere. Sorry for late reply. Wife got a job, and kids are still young and suck up lots of attention.What connects all of them is their understanding of how social and historical we are as human beings. We aren't trapped in our heads like pieces of 'mind' mysteriously stapled to pieces of 'matter.' — softwhere
white hole-like Q-tunneling from a higher (false?) vacuum — 180 Proof
To me philosophy at its best is the opposite of merely going along on the surface of things, which is our ordinary mode in daily life. — softwhere
Again, this wasn’t/isn’t an issue for tribal life because they didn’t house time in clocks or space in buildings - their world s a lost world of the ‘infinite’ in the sense of being experienced without demarcations of time or space in anything like our modern comprehension. — I like sushi
Were those guys all living about the same time in Germany? Similar philosophical bents?For me studying Heidegger further illuminated Hegel and Feuerbach and Wittgenstein — softwhere
In exploring the universe we’ve moved from an infinite self in a finite world to a finite self in an infinite world. — I like sushi