Starting from things like representative democracy and universal suffrage, freedom of religion, freedom of the press, the ending of mercantilism and feudalism. Or starting from things like a conservative will not say that the monarch has supreme power because he or she is anointed by God and because the Bible says so. — ssu
You just made we want to read his last philosophical works — Gregory
And for me it's problematic that the concept of reality is problematic for you, especially because you don't give any reason for it. If you want to discuss it, and if you don't want to, I don't know why you say it."Real" is problematic for me. Is discussing Being any less "real" than laws of logic? I also think ideas of referentiality are questionable. — Xtrix
Math is not based on what we visualize or imagine. Mathematical proofs are based on formal criteria, independent of empirical intuition. That's why there are totally counterintuitive mathematics. The same for logic.If I visualize a triangle, it's not that the triangle is somewhere "outside" myself that can decay, but neither is anything in tho — Xtrix
Yet once the objectives had been achieved, — ssu
Well Heidegger would say — Xtrix
They seem to think strength can solve anything, and yet it is intelligence that accounts for the quality of life. — JerseyFlight
That was 18th century liberalism. Later, liberalism has become the doctrine that accepts any junk dictatorship as long as it allows capital to do business. What matters to the new (?) liberal is the market, and if that requires a police state in order to eliminate a few thousand opponents, it does not make him sick. (Pinochet, Videla, etc.)Liberalism from the Age of Enlightenment was against absolute monarchy, divine rights of kings, hereditary privilege, state religion, the mercantilist policies, royal monopolies and other barriers to trade, and promoted representative democracy and the rule of law and free trade. — ssu
The fatal deception of metaphysical-philosophical thought has been to consider Being as a kind of eternal "being before the eyes" (Vorhandesein). Already Saint Augustine had called attention against the obsessive concupiscentia oculorum of the philosophers, their Platonic insistence on the "vision" of the essence of things instead of living them with patience and with an existential commitment that implied the temporarily limited nature of being.
I think that Marx never addressed how the post-capitalist communist society would specifically be organized and turn from the proletarian dictatorship to full communism as the dictatorship was just a transitory phase. — ssu
And the lack of democratic checks is the basic problem. Why I argue it's an inherent problem is because Marx has an agenda, communism, and an singular agent, the proletariat, which makes democracy just a tool to get to communism and to eradicate capitalism. — ssu
Question:
What does Parmenides have to do with presence and time? — David Mo
Presencing is related to aletheia, to phusis -- that which is unconcealed, that which emerges and endures. The connection to "time"? Fairly obvious: "presence" is something present. The present is a dimension of time. — Xtrix
1. Time is not only present. A present without past or future does not pass and therefore is the lack of time: eternal immobility.The "seeds" of the meaning of Being as "ousia" (and hence substance, nature, object, etc) were already there with Parmenides, as the beginning of the great tradition — Xtrix
I am interested in any distinction you would like to make that would shed light on the problem of Parmenides and time.You don't seem interested in understanding this distinction. — Xtrix
Apart from the Introduction to Metaphysics and some loose lines, your recommendations are excerpts from an interview and a Dreyfuss course on Heidegger. Both on Youtube. Draw your own conclusions."YouTube" Heidegger? — Xtrix
Parmenides thought that being is timeless. He "produced" this thought "outside of time." That's what you said. And it's ridiculous. — Xtrix
Well, finally the clarification I asked for appears.
you (or Heidegger) confuse two things:
Analysis of the psychological or social origin of the ideas.
Internal analysis of the meaning of the ideas.
In the first case, to say that Parmenides' ideas come from the world in which he lives is probably true, but it is something that few philosophers would deny. In different ways it is admitted by empiricists, historicists, Hegelians, Marxists, phenomenologists and many others. It is a statement that is not limited to Parmenides, but to all of us who have ideas. If you or Heidegger say nothing else, your explanation is a banality.
If you pretend to say it is an idea of Parmenides, you are saying an outrage. As the articles I have quoted and many others I could quote to you show, the distinction between the world of truth and the world of appearances, between truth and doxa, is proper to Parmenides. The Goddess clearly excludes that truth comes from the world of things or from the world of appearances. The basic argument of the Goddess is an early formulation of the principle of non-contradiction. That is, logic, incipient state, but logic and rationality, not experience of anything existing. Moreover, the conclusion is that the world of things is not true.
Therefore, in the first sense we can say that Parmenides' ideas come from his world (this gives rise to a religious interpretation of his poem that a minority of phylosophers have attempted), but it is a banal statement. If we say in the second sense that Parmenides affirms that truth comes from existing things (present-at-hand) according to the category of temporality, we are saying an atrocity. To maintain this barbarity we would have to justify it with a careful analysis of the text. Something that Heidegger does not bother to do. Of course. — David Mo
You confuse two different things again:
Parmenides was a man of (his) time (or world, which is the same in common language). "He was not an angel," you said.
Parmenides thought that Being is timeless (eternal and immobile). What I said.
Please make an effort. Perhaps you will see the difference. — David Mo
Is that what you call a response? To repeat the question?In any case, Parmenides is still "presencing", — Xtrix
Is that what you call an answer? To boast of being very wise and look the other way?Because if you don't understand it, it's no wonder you don't understand his views on Parmenides, — Xtrix
First you have to understand what "presence" and "time" mean in Heidegger. When you can explain that to me, you'll see understand the already given answer — Xtrix
The reasons are obvious, too. Not from a lack of intelligence, but from a lack of openness to learning (from him and from me). — Xtrix
The World Bank didn't have any ability to gather statistics inside the country. And did the Soviet Union lie in it's statistics? — ssu
In a country of 5.4 million people, food banks, the Lutheran Church, the Salvation Army and other charities serve more than 22,000 people every week, a number that is growing steadily as a result of the continuing economic crisis.
"The situation has gotten much worse in the last ten years. When I started giving out free food in 2005, between 200 and 300 people came every week; today there are about 2,600,
The above explanation stands. — Xtrix
To say that Heidegger talks a lot about it and that to understand it you have to read everything Heidegger is not to explain anything.Yes, I did. — Xtrix
You confuse two different things again:I didn't mention "the world," I mentioned time, in response to your ridiculous claim that Parmenides was "outside time." — Xtrix
It is normal, you can see something without contemplating it. By turning your back, I guess. You do it almost always in this thread.It doesn't involve contemplation any more than vision involves "contemplation." — Xtrix
Surely not. But neither do you. You are not able to answer a single one of my questions and objections.You don't understand Heidegger. — Xtrix
Parmenides was "presencing," and what was disclosed to him was being. Ditto Heraclitus. Both men, as human beings, thought/wrote/interpreted being from the perspective of time -- namely, the present, that which is present before us, that which appears, that which is uncovered and unconcealed. All of the Greeks took "time" as the perspective in which they interpreted themselves and the world, without knowing it. "Time", as pointed out by Kant, is a form of our sensibility, along with space -- in Heidegger's hands it becomes something much different than this Aristotelian "time" which Kant presupposed -- it becomes temporality, which is what Being and Time is about -- namely, interpreting the human being (Dasein) in its average everydayness, which brings out the ontological structures of this entity, as care. Care (Sorge) is reinterpreted as temporality. — Xtrix
(Btw, Guess you believe in all Chinese statistic too. Or North Korean?) — ssu
No, it wasn't "great", whatever "great" is. I haven't been in the USSR, but I have been in Hungary and Cuba. At my host's house, a university professor, they didn't have a shower head. Not because they couldn't afford it, but because there was not in the store. But here we were talking about poverty. Not the level of consumption.The economy wasn't great. — ssu
I did; you haven't understood it. — Xtrix
That which is present-at-hand is a theoretical object, something that is "extant" or, as Heidegger says, is tied up with what is traditionally meant by "existentia" (basically "substance") [p. 42/67]. Presence-at-hand is a related term, the mode (or attitude) we're in when looking at the world in such a way -- apart from being involved in it with equipment (the "ready-to-hand"). — Xtrix
No. Truth is "there," it opens, it is "disclosed." Aletheia is the truth. The goddess is the truth. It's not "contemplated" — Xtrix
Logical reasoning? This is your interpretation? — Xtrix
Almost laughable. "Outside of time," eh? So Parmenides was an angel. "No presence, no temporality" -- so no human being, either. Where exactly did this "logical reasoning" take place, then? In heaven? — Xtrix
Now, you can explain this imbroglio between presence-at-hand, time and Parmenides — David Mo
Not in my country, basically. — ssu
That is why Aristotle no longer ‘has any understanding’ of it [dialectics], for he has put it on a more radical footing and raised it to a new level [aufhob]. Légein itself--or rather noéin –, that simple awareness of something present-at-hand in its sheer presence-at-hand, which Parmenides had already taken to guide him in his own interpretation of Being-has the Temporal structure of a pure 'making-present' of something. Those entities which show themselves i n this and for it, and which are understood as entities in the most authentic sense, thus get interpreted with regard to the Present; that is, they are conceived as presence ( ousía ) . (B&T: 26/48)
Perfect. That means that each "field" or level of knowledge uses the "parameters" that are useful for its study. And history or sociology has its own, which are not those of nuclear physics or biology.Those parameters will be crucial to the development of any theory in their field. — Isaac
Can you define what this "presence-at-hand" is and what it has to do with time and Parmenides?He does indeed interpret being in temporal terms -- not in the common understanding of "time," but in "presencing" (as Heidegger mentions) in terms of the present-at-hand — Xtrix
Besides, capitalists shouldn’t defend communists lest they lose ther capitalism membership, right? — NOS4A2
Good point! My only doubt was as to the numbers of what might now qualify as the middle class. — Janus
Of course, it is the social groups that compete according to their needs and interests. But this conflict results in something that does not exactly correspond to any particular interest. Marx believed that it was possible to discover the laws governing this "impersonal" outcome of historical conflicts. In fact, he believed that his theory was a scientific explanation of the history of human conflict. According to him, it was the "impersonal" economy that ultimately determined human destinies. I don't know what you mean by "passive", but it was clear to him that it had its own laws and that it determined human behavior at the level of societies, even individually, in part.That economic structures determine the behaviour of social groups. Economic structures themselves are passive, they merely exist, they don't themselves determine anything. It's the necessities and responses of human social groups to them which determines their behaviour. — Isaac
I’ll assume you are. — NOS4A2
This is no admission at all. What you are saying shows that you have not come here to discuss ideas but to attack people.This is a remarkable admission and confirms my hunch that you’re here not to learn or to discuss but to propagandize and exchange fallacies with your comrades. — whollyrolling
Of course. Marx's theory has been falsified in several of his main predictions -with Popper's permission.If you accept such a position you have to concede that the nature of this response is an empirical fact about humans, a fact which, if Marx were wrong about his assumptions of it, would render his theory wrong. — Isaac
This is very vague. Marx needed to know how economic structures determine the behavior of social groups. Other aspects of human behavior are indifferent to his theory because they are meaningless.Marx needs to know how humans tend to behave to make the predictions he makes. — Isaac
If we respond to that environment in a random way then no suggestions about how to effect human well-being should even be considered, we might as well toss a coin, manipulate the environment in random ways because our response to it is random and unpredictable. — Isaac
If, on the other hand, we respond to the environment in predictable ways then we can both predict the course of history, and we can make useful suggestions for how changes to our environment will have positive/negative impacts on us. — Isaac
In this second case, however, we have acknowledged that there is such a thing as human nature — Isaac
I would say that it is a game between necessity and chance. — David Mo
I'm curious. Help me out here guy. — Outlander
This statement may contain gobbledegook. — Bitter Crank
Aligning human nature with capitalism via immutable "competition" is to naturalize a socio-economic system that's only existed for a few centuries. I — Maw
It is not irrelevant, because in one case one type of law will apply and in another case different laws will apply. Only if there are laws in history.That seems irrelevant, it would still be human nature. — Isaac
According to Marx there is no need to go so far. The strength of a class to break its chains (to put it like a pamphlet of the time) would come from the relations between the forces of production and the relations of production. If under these conditions there is a strong and consistent workers' party, the revolution will take place. If there is not, we will have to wait for the next juncture. I would say that it is a game between necessity and chance.And the will and strength would come from where, if not human nature? - Space? Aliens? God? — Isaac
Trying to draw a circle around who is or isn’t a Marxist or communist is a fools errand. If people call themselves Marxists or communists, however, it is a good indication that they are or are at least trying to be. — NOS4A2
Why? I don't care if you are conservative or liberal. After all, I'm not going out for a drink with you.I was asking because I didn’t want to assume that you were. — NOS4A2
I can sum up other examples.... — ChatteringMonkey
So if he says "situation x will bring about situation y" he's relying on assumptions about the responses of human beings to situation x. It's their behaviour which will (or will not) bring about situation y, and so his theory's success hinges entirely on whether those assumptions are right. — Isaac
I don't understand the relationship.It seems quite relevant. The argument against Marx is rarely "we don't want a fairer society", rather it is "such a system wouldn't/hasn't work(ed)". — Isaac