And I don't intend to mount one. — Quixodian
Which is what is generally regarded as empiricism. You commonly cite that position in these arguments, yet when you're challenged on it, you deny it: — Quixodian
You're appealing to sense-experience, empirical observation, or whatever you want to call it. At least be clear about that. — Quixodian
But if you then associate 'taking on faith' with religion, then you fall back on the faith/reason dichotomy which is writ large in our culture and which I say which leads to stereotyping. I think the way you're evaluating it is like this: that Buddhism is a religion; religion is not something that can be validated empirically; therefore it's a matter of faith. — Quixodian
For example, a skilled musician may have a deep understanding of how to play a complex piece of music which they can't explain, but only enact. — Quixodian
Notice how generally any assertion of 'higher knowledge' (Jñāna) is categorised as 'mystical' or 'spiritual', which kicks it into the long grass, so to speak. But really in those cultures to which it is endogenous, such an understanding is quite prosaic. There is a cultural milieu in which it is intelligible, navigable and communicable. Precisely what our culture is lacking. — Quixodian
But in western culture, a hard and fast division has emerged between what is categorized as faith and what is categorized as scientific knowledge. There’s nothing corresponding to ‘jñāna’ in our lexicon, so all that can be said (usually dismissively) is that it’s something ‘spiritual or mystical’. — Quixodian
The stages and states of realization can be verified inter-subjectively. — Quixodian
If instead of saying ‘the thing in itself’, you were to say ‘the world as it is in itself’ or ‘reality as it is in itself’ or even ‘reality as it truly is’, I think it would convey the gist better. — Quixodian
If we discussed Kant's notion of Transcendental Idealism and then I ventured into his ideas that surround that, I believe I would be justified. — schopenhauer1
You know the arguments, you said. They have nothing to do with personal preferences. Personal preferences should not be the determinate for what others should have to endure. — schopenhauer1
That being said, you can't just talk about this stuff in isolation. Schop's ideas were a system infused with pessimism. The Thing Itself is ultimately striving nature of existence — schopenhauer1
It seemed to imply you don't judge procreation, people, but I do.. Like I was judging someone's clothes or trying to make someone feel bad or something else of a negative connotation of how "judging others" is used. — schopenhauer1
A new study published Thursday in the journal PLOS Climate found the wealthiest 10% of Americans are responsible for almost half of planet-heating pollution in the US, and called on governments to shift away from “regressive” taxes on the carbon-intensity of what people buy and focus on taxing climate-polluting investments instead. — CNN
You said,
I've told you before that I have never had a desire to reproduce, but I don't sit in judgement on those who do. — schopenhauer1
Lame-duck sauce response, but at least it's not snide. That is to say, it really didn't address much of what I wrote. — schopenhauer1
Eek. You think I am simply "judging people" like procreation is a fashion trend that I find repulsive? You negate the very reason for the judgement (and not the 'judging'- there is a difference). — schopenhauer1
What is the motive behind throwing more people into the world? We want someone else to go through the disturbing episode. After just extolling our abstraction abilities, you cannot hide behind "instinct" for why. We clearly can do the opposite of our initial desires. We do it all the time. If you say it is so that they can experience the joy that you sometimes feel, that is ignoring the logical other side of life. That is becoming the judge and executioner for someone else, making it their burden. And so the disturbing episodes continue. — schopenhauer1
If you weren't going to give a pat optimistic snide remark towards the pessimistic stance, carry on and ignore. — schopenhauer1
We cannot accept our mortality and that has produced vain dreams of eternal life and paradise, while we cannot even be sensible enough to be happy on Earth during our brief existence between two nothingnesses. — Janus
It's not arbitrary, you are correct, it's subtle and delicate. Small changes drastically change how we conceptualize items as being one or many (is a tree one thing, or many?, etc.) — Manuel
100% agree. It makes no sense as to how these microphysical things could lead to anything really... — Manuel
The difference for h. sapiens is that we are aware of our existence in a way that animals are not, and it's a difference that makes a huge difference. — Quixodian
But you are hitting on a most interesting point, often overlooked. What you say about animals is indeed correct. It raises the same issue, the animal is doing the individuating (in so far are we are able to discern what they do), meaning, it's an internal mechanism of the creature. And I think this generalizes to all creatures, that have a minimum level of experience (above a slug, for instance). — Manuel
This is another mystery to me, the lack of identical aspects to object in the world. This changes in the micro-physical world, but that's virtually alien to lived experience.
Interesting, we seem to have different starting conditions, but agree on similar conclusion. — Manuel
I would prefer 'the human condition'. — Quixodian
I mean, a good deal of epistemological questions do not affect our day to day life, we pursue them because we find some of them interesting. What makes a tree seperate from the ground a *fact* about the world? Or a chair different from a table? Is that a fact about the world or something that pertains to the way we conceive the world?
It seems to me that hard problems remain, no matter what we postualte, individuality being a hard topic, as is identity and grounding relations… — Manuel
The example of Schopenhauer pointing out that Kant assumes plurality when he argues for the existence of "things-in-themselves", isn't an intuition. Individuation is something we do to nature, it's not something that is inherent in it. So, in this sense the "thing-in-itself" makes more sense than "things-in-themselves". — Manuel
I think your reasoning is on the right track, though I very much disagree with calling Schopenhauer "stupid" - heck the fact that a good deal of the fathers of modern physics - Einstein, Schrodinger and Pauli all considered him a genius, cannot lead me to that conclusion. — Manuel
So we arrive at the mighty mystical X yet again ? It's fine to posit X as long as we admit (and don't even care) that we don't know what we are talking about ? Why not not posit it ? I'd rather just call paradox or confusion what it is. Why bluff ? — plaque flag
With what we know now, matter is not nearly as vulgar as we once thought. Nevertheless, we can't say it's dead exactly (that's a human category, after all - it's in biology too, but it's a bit unclear it seems to me), but we can't say it's alive either. It just is. Maybe it is a blind striving of some kind, a sort of impetus or tendency to just go on, and perhaps, complexify itself, to some degree. — Manuel
But it seems some of the old problems remain, in slightly different terminology. Thankfully, it's not a very popular current, because of its obvious problems, not unlike panpsychism, which also has its issues and followers. — Manuel
It then lays hold of the law of causality as a guiding principle or clue, regarding it as a self-existent order (or arrangement) of things, veritas aeterna, and so fails to take account of the understanding, in which and for which alone causality is. — Schopenhauer
But if you can make sense of the world existing independently of humans, I politely challenge you to share that sense here. — plaque flag
You are basically asking me if my not being able to make sense of the square root of blue means that there is no square root of blue. There's no great answer here. Nonsense does not compute. — plaque flag
I find it funny that there's discussion about materialism in relation to Schopenhauer, for the very thing I quoted is quite relevant, — Manuel
I hope I beat the same drum to a different rhythm. — Banno
Right. So when I make this point, which to me is a crucial point, please don't keep saying 'oh yeah, so what. Everyone knows that.' It's kind of annoying. :angry: — Quixodian
Most of the issues I refer to are the consequences of the attempt to apply the methods of science to the problems of philosophy. — Quixodian
It's not that they elaborate an explicitly materialist worldview, but that their 'ordinary language' philosophy abjures metaphysics, and leaves the realist attitude untouched. — Quixodian
I must admit, I do not get how Will-Proper (Will unaffected by the PSR), is somehow the "real" reality if it is all double-aspect all the way down. — schopenhauer1
But I do think there is indeed a blind spot in some thinkers. It's a macho thing. Toughminded oriented I'm-a-truth-computer thing. — plaque flag
How many people do you think have really taken on board Kant's 'copernican revolution in philosophy'? It is far less part of popular culture than 'the selfish gene' or many of the other tropes of neo-darwinian materialism. — Quixodian
I think we are trained into being virtual foci of responsibility. — plaque flag
To me we can either call protons instrumental posits (useful fictions) -- or fallibly accept them as real. I use to choose instrumentalism, which is still reasonable, but I now prefer fallible realism. — plaque flag
The world-from-no-perspective is not something I can make sense of. — plaque flag
You can't get to the thing itself by way of empirical observation. You will never get at it that way. That is where the realists/materialists are missing subjectivity/inner aspect of being, etc.
Hence he says:
Thus we see already that we can never arrive at the real nature of things from without. However much we investigate, we can never reach anything but images and names. We are like a man who goes round a castle seeking in vain for an entrance, and sometimes sketching the façades. And yet this is the method that has been followed by all philosophers before me.
— WWR — schopenhauer1
The discursive self 'is' this coherence. Continual self-contradiction is no longer self-contradiction, but the discursive self dissolving into confusion. First philosophy is explication as much as inference. One need not prove a condition for the possibility of proof, though it seems like one of philosophy's job to fallibly make these conditions explicit. — plaque flag
Because there never is an observed without an observer. Notice this has even become manifest in atomic physics. And also please notice that I’ve acknowledged that we can treat ‘the world’ as if there were no observer for practical purposes. The mistake of naturalism is then to extend that to a metaphysical claim that we see the world as it really must be absent any observer. That is the point of The Blind Spot argument that I got a thorough bollocking over some years back but which you will be pleased to know has now morphed into a book. — Quixodian
However, if "all-is-mind" in some sense (the details are always different), then you can have your cake and it it too, sort of thing. — schopenhauer1
Before I proceed, would you like citations, or is it just the subject itself is always going to be this way? — schopenhauer1
Schopenhauer is vociferously atheist. I don't find it unclear, but I understand it takes something like a gestalt shift for it to make sense. — Quixodian