According to the doctrine, impermanence isn't the cause of suffering but ignorance. Ignorance of our true nature (emptiness). If we could realize our true nature or 'make emptiness real' then we wouldn't suffer, — praxis
it's not ignorance in and of itself that's the obstacle but ignorance of certain truths, e.g. the four noble truths and impermanence, that lead to suffering. — TheMadFool
What if you desire that which you hate in equal proportion? — Brett
Nope, not buyin’ that. Reason is the ground of everything mental in a rational agent with respect to what is or may be, including the exposition and subjective validity of consciousness.
Consciousness = experience + emotion. Consciousness is the state of my being conscious, the unity of that of which I am conscious. I am not conscious of my reason, but only the manifestations that represent it. — Mww
That information just is the material world. — Pfhorrest
Now what the problem really is, as I see it, is how the materialist can demonstrate the being of abstraction/conception by purely physical means — aRealidealist
Still not sure what a principle of reason is; ALL principles are given from reason, so saying “principle of reason” is redundant on the one hand, and leads to the notion that reason needs a principle to justify itself, which is quite absurd. — Mww
In my experience on this forum, the prevailing view of the ‘mind-matter’ question is still largely shaped by Cartesian dualism and its consequences. But I think many of the implications of that have been absorbed by our culture, and therefore by us, without us being necessarily aware of what they mean. — Wayfarer
As far as ‘theories of consciousness’ are concerned - that’s really what we’re talking about here - I think we need to situate the whole discussion in relation to some school, approach or domain of discourse, rather than trying to develop an entire system de novo. — Wayfarer
Once the thought is formed a qualia arises.
— Pop
It may be a question of terminology, but this does not seem right to me. You can have sensations (called in philosophy impressions or qualia) whether you think about something or not. Not only the reception of sensations, but the formation of perceptions is a spontaneous procedure that can precede or follow the formation of a thought based on them. A simple example: you bite into the fruit, feel a strange taste and at the time or later you think "This cherry is over-ripe". Of course, what there is not is first a thought and then an impression/qualia. — David Mo
Right. I think this draws on Husserl’s understanding of ‘umwelt’ and ‘lebenswelt’ which are likewise very basic or foundational and for that reason very difficult to discern. And why? Because ‘to discern’ is to bring into focus, to make of it the figure against a background, where the lebenswelt is the background against which we discern particulars. So in that sense, to speak of it is already to misunderstand it. — Wayfarer
Is a concern about whether time is discrete or continuous a truly substantive issue, or is it akin to other debatable subjects that have little relevance to the physical world, like the existence or non-existence of irrational numbers? — jgill
What proposition? I don't find it. Repeat it, please. — David Mo
Mind is a state of consciousness.
Consciousness is fundamental. A state of entangled, integrated, and unified information must exist for any thought to arise. It is all ineffable until this happens.
The idea that consciousness is a subset of mind is a nonsense ,as the basis of any thought is a state of entangled, integrated, and unified information ( consciousness ) — Pop
Confused? Try to tell me what is on your mind right now that is not experiences, emotions and thoughts about experiences and emotions or ideas based on experiences and emotions. — David Mo
But they are not minds. — David Mo
How can you separate experience and consciousness?
— Pop
As used in this thread the term "consciousness" (as equivalent to "mind") cannot be. Experience is one of the elements that form consciousness. — David Mo
What is consciousness then? If you introspect into your consciousness you will find experiences and emotions. Nothing more. Remove the experiences and emotions and your consciousness will be empty. — David Mo
There, no doubt you will now agree
— Pop
There are a lot of objects that offer entangled, integrated, and unified information. A schedule board, a newspaper page, a puzzle book, my hat tag... I don't think any of them have a consciousness. — David Mo
And the basic fact is that, with the brain gone, we find no trace of that consciousness anywhere, — David Mo
What is consciousness then? If you introspect into your consciousness you will find experiences and emotions. Nothing more. Remove the experiences and emotions and your consciousness will be empty. — David Mo
You make it sound like consciousness is stuff. I don't believe that consciousness can be accurately be described as "stuff". It doesn't matter how spooky you describe the "stuff", I still don't think it is consciousness. — Wheatley
↪Pop Put what do mineralogist say about rocks? — Wheatley