I disagree. If you believe science is not based on presuppositions, then you are one of those people who think there’s no value in metaphysics. — T Clark
Kastrup says that he is a naturalist and that mind-at-large just is nature. Soinoza says God just is nature―that is the extent of the comparison I was making. — Janus
If we have totally separate consciousnesses then how do the stable patterns through which your consciousness organizes itself accord precisely enough with the stable patterns in my consciousness to explain a shared world wherein we will agree on what is in front of us down to the minutest details? — Janus
Kastrup uses the word 'consciousness', but I don't think he believes that the universal consciousness is conscious of anything apart from what all the percipients (the dissociated alters) are conscious of. For him it has no plan, but evolves along with everything―it just is nature in the sense that Spinoza's God is nature. — Janus
To say the table is still there when no one is looking means that whenever someone does look again, experience will reliably present the same table in the same place, behaving the same way.
— Tom Storm
That doesn't explain why everyone will see the table there for the first time. — Janus
[1] We live in an ordered universe that can be understood by humans. — T Clark
The fact that our sense organs and brains are similarly constituted can explain how it is that we see things in similar ways, but it cannot explain just what we see. The content of perception, that is what is perceivable which animals also perceive in their different ways, is contributed by the world, whether that world is physical or mental.
If it's physical then the mind-independent physical existents explain how it is that we and the animals see the same things. If the world is mental then the human independent mind that constitutes the things we perceive explains it. If mind is fundamental then all our minds must be connected (below the level of consciousness, obviously) via that universal mind.
We've been over all this many times and you have never been able to explain how just the fact of our minds being similar, but not connected, could explain a shared world. — Janus
He would say the ultimate truth is the Absolute, which is a state of unity in which there is no thought because there are no divisions. Thought is the realm of partial truths. In that realm, you can't really escape dualism. — frank
Thought is necessarily dualistic. Implied is some unified world beyond thought. This is Hegelian. He's an example of the way I think. — frank
As such matter is real and human mind-independent, as it "mind-at-large". — Janus
It's not as if mind could exist without matter, any more than matter could exist without mind, for Kastrup. — Janus
...materialism is a fantasy. It’s based on unnecessary postulates, circular reasoning and selective consideration of evidence and data. Materialism is by no stretch of the imagination a scientific conclusion, but merely a metaphysical opinion that helps some people interpret scientific conclusions.
Btw, Kastrup's view is vaguely Neoplatonic like Plotinus' view. — frank
Monists can't seem to nail down how we're all enjoying a big fat illusion, but they're sure we are. — frank
Kastrup's philosophy is pretty much Schopenhauer reheated. — Janus
I don't think that is what he argues. He argues that matter is what appearances look like to mind. It is the tangible aspect of mind, so to speak, not a separate substance. — Janus
It also follows from this that real objects and beings of all kinds can have existed prior to the advent of human consciousness and that we can coherently talk about that existence as being human mind-independent. — Janus
I don't know Kastrup's answer, but there is no scientific definition of life (according to Robert Rosen). — frank
Would you say the chair someone is sat on would stop existing once all consciousness is extinguished? Sure we can’t make any statements or propositions about the world without consciousness but the world exists as a state of affairs despite consciousness. There is a difference between the table existing and the proposition of the “the table exists”. — kindred
This can be tricky however because to exist is to be perceived is not true. I know that I exist despite no one perceiving me as my consciousness tells me so. Yet a rock who does not posses consciousness exists independently of me perceiving it. So I think this type of idealism fails to account for continued existence of object after conscious perception of them ceases. — kindred
A natural follow-up question is: if non-living objects are the extrinsic appearances of mental processes, whose mental processes are these? This is where Kastrup leans heavily on mind-at-large, a move that has clear affinities with Advaita Vedānta (he has many dialogues with Swami Sarvapriyananda) and with Berkeley, whom he occasionally acknowledges. — Wayfarer
I’ve been critical of Kastrup’s notion of mind-at-large, but I’ve come to see it less as a posit of a cosmic intelligence and more as a way of marking the unavoidable fact that existence always appears within the horizon of consciousness. — Wayfarer
“Life” does not mark a higher degree of consciousness, but a structural distinction: the emergence of a private point of view within mind-at-large. Tables and rocks exist as stable appearances of mental activity, governed by lawful regularities, but there is 'nothing it is like to be a table'. — Wayfarer
But it’s also worth noting that if one tries to conceive of “the world” — a rock, a tree, anything at all — as existing in the total absence of mental processes, one quickly runs into an insoluble conundrum. — Wayfarer
I haven't read Mein Kampf, but Steiner mentions it more than once in explaining the climate of post WW1 Germany.
It always struck me that populists don’t really do ideas, they do slogans.
— Tom Storm
I don't think Hitler was a populist. Populists don't usually have substantial agendas. Hitler obviously did. — frank
I've mainly been trying to figure out how Being and Time connects to Heidegger's fascism. — frank
Before one can decide which position is preferable, yours or his, it is necessary to be able to effectively summarize each position from within its own logic. — Joshs
... I think Bitbol’s interpretation of phenomenology owes more to Michel Henry than to Husserl. Like Henry, Bitbol’s focus is on consciousness in Kantian terms as immanent structural conditions of possibility for an individual subject, whereas for Husserl, Merleau-Ponty and enactivists like Varela and Thompson exposure to intersubjectivity is equi-primordial with subjectivity. — Joshs
Bitbol treats social influences as secondary to the transcendental or structural conditions of intelligibility, whereas Husserl treats intersubjectivity as co-original with subjectivity. The transcendental ego is always already a transcendental-collective ego, insofar as the world it constitutes is already populated by others and the meaning of objects is co-constituted through shared experience. — Joshs
I would argue that a moral claim is simply an affirmation or denial of value that one is prepared to be wrong about, — Esse Quam Videri
Personally, I'd argue that such denial fails to account for the fact that we do judge communities to be morally mistaken and traditions to be ethically distorted, and we do speak meaningfully of moral progress against communal consensus. Fallibilism is socially mediated, but not socially grounded. — Esse Quam Videri
But it seems like it's being misused or misapplied in the context of the present day world. — Questioner
You said: Relativism says what’s right or wrong depends entirely on culture or individual preference..
This is a claim (see the epistemic meaning of a claim or assertion), which the relativist cannot make because it is self-contradictory. — L'éléphant
Is hate an emotion, or is it more of an attitude, or a judgement? — Questioner
Is hate more irrational or logical? — Questioner
Does hate serve a purpose? — Questioner
Do love and hate always express themselves? — Questioner
Why is it that both love and hate can result in both heroic and evil actions? — Questioner
Which one has the wider radius of effect? — Questioner
Is hate what happens when someone is not loved? — Questioner
Is hate a stronger force than love? — Questioner
Are destruction and construction two sides of the same coin? — Questioner
Is hate ever positive? Is love ever negative? — Questioner
The evolutionary advantage of love seems obvious, considering we are a social species. Attachment to our kith and kin better ensured we all survived. — Questioner
Chopin Nocturne Op 9 #2, while reciting, reading and or listening to Nietzsche's Night-Song, from Thus Spake Zarathustra, Thomas Commons translation for those who don't know it in German. The super abundance experienced in the Dionysian Oneness that occurs is easily a case against suicide. — DifferentiatingEgg
Being social primates, it is instinctive in us to care about the way others see us, so it isn't a matter of "should care". — wonderer1
Feelings are far from arbitrary. They’re appraisals of situations which inform us of our relative preparedness to cope with , anticipate and make sense of them. That is, affect reports the significance and salience of events , why they matter to us. Without them, words like betrayal, cruelty and rape are ethically meaningless. — Joshs
Just look at this forum, for example. There are, for example, some prominent posters here who are vocal proponents of charity, humanism, and liberalism. And yet from the way they treat other posters here it's clear that they themselves don't practice what they preach. — baker
Because it makes practical sense to do so. Empathy exists. — I like sushi
