P.W. Zapffe, A. Camus, C. Rosset, A. Murray ... :death: — 180 Proof
I've found myself with a much deeper sense of respect and awe for this reality by pulling from Eastern and Western systems simultaneously; thereby bringing those contemplations into harmony with each other. — Bret Bernhoft
Let’s put derealization on a scale, at 0%... — Art48
So, in a society at 100%, people would have extreme engagement and appreciation of each other — Art48
And suppose it was decided that ideally society should be at 75%. — Art48
We can use to 0%-100% — Art48
How do you understand the concept of 'post-truth" itself?
For me it indicates ... wtf ... "alternative facts" (i.e. H. Frankfurt's bullshit). — 180 Proof
From an anthropological perspective people thinking less, those not (still) trying to solve problems (all the time), could (theoretically) be better fitted to modern day society. — Seeker
A socially isolated hermit is fine, but only if you can exist as a 'happy' one. — universeness
Treatments
Bipolar disorder lasts for a lifetime, with treatments aiming at managing the symptoms bypsychotherapyand medication. — universeness
but are you bipolar? — universeness
I suppose the movie captures that wish as whoever the aliens are, they seem to possess such knowhow. — Agent Smith
We don't know, we're ignorant of how we got to be so smart and so creative! The Monolith = Ignorance! — Agent Smith
On another thread, you were expressing your recent positivity/optimism. Are you often 'up the hill and down again?' — universeness
Not all addictions are bad, such as addiction to life, truth seeking, fighting injustice, altruism. — universeness
For example, the congruence between Hispanic American groups may vary from Black American groups, or Middle Eastern groups from European groups, seniors from youth, etc. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
God never gives everything to one person. — Numerius Negedius
Are we addicted to thought? — Xtrix
Are we amateur “philosophers” steeping ourselves in excess? — Xtrix
, is what is needed for better philosophy actually a fasting and detoxification of thought? — Xtrix
According to the research done by Frans de Waal, the differences are not exclusive to humans.
The Gendered Ape, Essay 3: Do Only Humans Have Genders? — Fooloso4
Kubrick-Clarke's story is an odyssey, an endless(?) journey, rather than merely a "quest" to reach some definitive, knowable destination; and perhaps this is the Monolith's odyssey – it's simulations – not (just) ours? :chin: — 180 Proof
The question of simulation becomes one of who is making up who. — Paine
I hope youre saying that ironically because most sarcasm is used in a condescending way. — introbert
The ironic interpretation of any text immediately subverts the writers intentions as reading it as sarcasm — introbert
Irony exists as kind of an argument and to acknowledge it accepts an internal inconsistency in its object. — introbert
Of all the philosophical ubiquities, the most tedious is "does such-and-such really exist?"
Yes, it does, since you are talking about it. — Banno
Symbolically, the "Monolith" is both mirror and window (i.e. "film screen") of the unknown – e.g. individual death; species extinction; event horizon; cosmic horizon; heat-death of the universe – the a priori strange attractor that self-organizes intellect — 180 Proof
It suggests what in my book are Platonic forms of minds with typical sets of ideas, attitudes, approaches, values, and so on. Am I correct? — Agent Smith
If the monolith were to represent the Jungian shadow, this leaves the question of why the monolith on the moon directs mankind towards Venus, though — Tzeentch
It's supposedly far more likely that the monolith simply assembled itself from nearby matter & energy and did its thing than that it were constructed and placed at the watering hole by a super-advanced alien civilization? Interesting, oui? — Agent Smith
pointed out, the monolith appears to be rather simple. — Agent Smith
could the monolith be a symbol for the Jungian shadow self? — Tzeentch
Revealing that the monolith is inspired by the theory of Jungian archetypes devised by Carl Jung, this concept is defined by images and themes that derive from the collective unconscious. Jung believed that certain symbols from different cultures are often very similar as they have been developed from archetypes shared by a collective human unconscious.
So, god/alien in human form was on old trope — Agent Smith
Why not a black, 10 ft. tall cuboid? Now, that's something no one's seen before; — Agent Smith
Why did God, He would be the most advanced alien we could hope to encounter, take a human form, as Jesus? — Agent Smith
it is illegal to use marijuana because of supposed harm it causes, but the widespread enforcement of the law creates much more harm.
The first, on the plains of Africa, is used to improve Moonwatcher's intelligence. The second, in orbit around Jupiter (Saturn in the book) is used to transport Bowman via a worm hole. The third, in the Hotel room, transforms him into a "star child"... — Banno
the moon stuff in your description — Paine
or a silent harbinger from an alien source which seeks to guide humans at key moments. — Tom Storm
(If you want to entertain a particularly spooky thought - our society is completely filled with monoliths - computer/telephone/tv screens.) — Tzeentch
Do you know Rob Ager and his YouTube channel Collative Learning? He has a lot of material on Kubrick movies, including 2001 and the meaning of the monolith. — Tzeentch
It seems to me that Brandan Morris, one of my favorite sci fi writers, observed a batch of monoliths on Enceladus some years in our future, They weren't doing much, but they had rescued Frank Poole? the astronaut who HAL9000 had tossed into space--his mental being, anyway.
I thought the monoliths were perfect as aliens: strange, mysterious, other-worldly, potent, awesome (in the original meaning of the word), etc. — Bitter Crank
To the extent that encounters with the monolith has 'made' us into something, the crisis with the AI named HAL show us another collision of the natural with the artificial. — Paine
