Just decide to change and change and stop being lazy and accept responsibility for your state of affairs. If, though, all of this is out of your control and you're just telling us you're a one legged person forced to hop about ten steps behind the rest of us your whole life and it really sucks, then I'll cry for you if it makes you feel better. — Hanover
Your consistent attempt to instigate intimate social interaction here by openly revealing and discussing the personal details of your life belies your claim that you wish to live as a hermit without social interaction. — Hanover
Well there you have it, language is two dimensional, but it operates - and operates recursively, and that makes it dynamic. So there is TLP, the last word in philosophy, and the fact that the limits of expression have been expressed extends the limits of expression, so that they cease to be the limits, though there are still limits. ( I'm struggling at my own limits of expression here, but if I can make this understandable, then it becomes possible to explore further again.) Looking at the picture of language as a picture, I see something that has been unclear, become clear. So my world has changed. — unenlightened
I might have a go at a separate thread if I can find the right levers... I think I'm talking about transformations of insight - awakenings. — unenlightened
Primary and secondary education will always be a matter of familiarizing the young with what their elders take to be true, whether it is true or not. It is not, and never will be, the function of lower-level education to challenge the prevailing consensus about what is true. Socialization has to come before individuation, and education for freedom cannot begin before some constraints have been imposed.
But, for quite different reasons, non-vocational higher education is also not a matter of inculcating or educing truth. It is, instead, a matter of inciting doubt and stimulating imagination, thereby challenging the prevailing consensus. If pre-college education produces literate citizens and college education produces selfcreating individuals, then questions about whether students are being taught the truth can safely be neglected. — Richard Rorty
A social mask is necessary, we use clothes for this reason, we deny sexual and bodily functions or wrap them up in acceptable ways. In fact anything we hold private is part of social masking. We use the mechanism of joke making to allow us to address some of these no go areas in a mostly well managed process of comedy, but even here we violate the boundaries on multiple subjects. It reduces to the truth and fictions we create to protect ourselves and others from these truths. Some people are quite comfortable with two or more faces, politicians are used as good examples but anyone who wears clothes is just hiding facts that we all observe for ourselves but not able to tolerate for most others. Since you struggle to put on various social faces, imagine that we also fart in company, but silently so as to conform, and clothes give a semi permanent social face, hiding our bodies, bodily habits, thoughts etc. Even acquiring a language and accent from our early years becomes a social face and identity, while it’s a conforming mechanism its also a social mask that we show to rest of the world. Imagine if we developed personal language expressions? Aside from the communication issues, it would prevent us from forming tribes and groups that are important parts of our social masks. — tmb
Most people want fulfillment, some get it by dominating, or being dominated. Ultimately social interaction requires a tradeoff with our individuality and its needs. Hierarchies in social groups appear universal across all species. Individuals rarely win this with taking a beating at many stages of life or compromising individual needs. — tmb
You did not say what age of children you endow with these attributes. I have four adult daughters and work with kids of various ages. No question they are different in may positive ways to adults but are still selfish and generally thoughtless. Teenagers go through a stage of self centricity, boys differently to girls, and show many negative attributes as well as serious consequences at this stage. I understand their neurons get pruned during puberty to provide resources to sexual maturity, so brains don’t work that well. By 25 the prefrontal cortex is mostly developed and then they realise their parents do know a bit, and they grow up and start learning about life. — tmb
Perhaps this is the change from TLP to PI, from static to dynamic (see Pirsig). — unenlightened
The reflexivity of depicting language as a picture is static; TLP is the correct picture, and having the correct picture 'once and for all' there is nothing more to be said that can be said. — unenlightened
Difficult question without knowing more about the person or specific circumstances. If you are interested I will give you my perspective on this as it has affected me — tmb




Why do you think it might be necessary to state such an argument? — Wayfarer
Anyway, this is far beyond the OP. — StreetlightX
I was just thinking earlier that I can think of few philosophers who were quite as diametrically opposed to Plato than Wittgenstein. — StreetlightX
Do you have a point? I don't care to semantics. — Relativist
Off a cliff, preferably. — StreetlightX
Forget minds. Minds are overrated and largely uninteresting. Think in terms of behaviour, action, practice. Math is a practice. — StreetlightX
As with the whole issue of math, which is not an abstraction of the 'mind', but an abstraction of the sign. — StreetlightX
You just answered your own question, but is TPF a place? — Relativist
If you have to ask, you need to get a better grasp on the English language. — StreetlightX
It is the specific place that the speaker of the sentence has in mind, and has presumably referenced in another way. — Relativist
They persist over time for an individual. — Banno
Hmph. If they agreed as to the colour of seven. — Banno
What colour is seven?
I suspect you might agree that this question is not helpful. — Banno
Square objects in the world have squareness (and other properties, including spatio-temporal lications). "Square" (qua square) has no real world referrent, so squares do not exist in the world. — Relativist
I do! I think people overlook this all the time. — Wayfarer
In other words, the reality of abstracta, if established, undermines materialism. And that's why most of your plain-language philosophers won't have a bar of it, although they won't necessarily put it in those terms. Instead, they'll talk about 'language as use', thereby hoping to sidestep the whole issue. — Wayfarer
You see, there is little justification above its own dictates. — schopenhauer1
I'm suspicious of a philosophy that reports to follow "nature" through "reason". There's a lot of "well, of course, "reason" (aka the philosopher's preference for what is deemed reasonable sounding) dictates this or that action, and "reason" is part of nature. You see, there is little justification above its own dictates. — schopenhauer1
Usually I find that if I reflect on who I am that I share in the faults I find frustrating, and it tempers my anger or frustration; we are only human, and we are all faulty because of it. — Moliere
In the passage you quote it's worth noting that these were the sorts of things Marcus would say to himself -- so it's not like he necessarily lived up to his code at every moment of his life. They were the sorts of things he would say to himself to help him live a better life and achieve some kind of contentment with the way things are. — Moliere
All we can do is take off the lid. The fly has to find its own way. — Banno
I tend to be a "what you see is what you get" kind of guy. — Bitter Crank
In fiction I have also found that sort of comfort, that there are other people like me in the world. And in life, too, I have found that comforting insight. — Bitter Crank
So, you were dealt a bad hand. Sorry about that. Your diagnosis is explanatory, in part. I can understand better how your immobilization might happen. On the other hand, you are tending to the condition with which you must live. That is no small thing. Tending or not tending will have dramatically different outcomes. So keep up the good work of taking care of yourself. — Bitter Crank
At least the ego dominates the individual. What else could dominate? — Bitter Crank
The king: "The people are revolting."
The Queen: "Yes, I find them very revolting." — Bitter Crank
