Are the two paragraphs saying essentially the same thing? And if not, what could possibly be the practical significance for our daily lives of the difference between them? — Joshs
Yes, I agree. Here is an example:
We agree that the cup is on the table
The only way we could agree that the cup is on the table is if there is a cup, and there is a table, and the cup is on the table.
There is a cup, and there is a table, and the cup is on the table.
Compare:
We agree that the cup is on the table
The only way we could agree that the cup is on the table is if something like Q can be an externality in relation to mind only to the extent that it have its own internality, a subsistence , a being into itself that can be clearly separated from what causes or influences it. A thing can persist as itself , and external to another thing, for so many milliseconds, for instance. This notion of how things exist in time rests on a particular kind of metaphysical thinking, or something like that.
hence... you get the point — Banno
Many recovery programs (AA) along with groups like Boy Scouts have references to a "higher power" or some idea of "god/God," though it is open to interpretation. At what point does it become coercive? — Paulm12
It's a nicer motto than "God hates fags and commies" — Bitter Crank
Religious people do not want the state to interfere with their theology, organization, practice, rituals, and membership. — Bitter Crank
A scientific instrumentalist will say that the mathematical model of an electron best describes and predicts the results of observation.
So a scientific realist will say that the Standard Model corresponds to the way the world is, whereas a scientific instrumentalist will just say that the Standard Models works. — Michael
In turn, objects of judgement, imagination, volition, and so on, including cognition and even (gasp) experience itself, then assume the guise of phenomena, at the expense of the notion of sensory “appearance” from which the term originated. — Mww
Not where I’m coming from, but ok. — Mww
They say that Van Gogh was not as accomplished a painter as Picasso, but I don't think we can say that he was an inferior artist. I suppose we might say that because Picasso had mastered the traditional artistic skills, he was more able to revolutionize art in the way he did. Things seemed to come easy for him; was that because of technical mastery?
Similarly, there have been many more technically able guitarists than Frank Zappa or Robert Fripp, but the music of, say, Yngwie Malmsteen and Steve Vai leaves me cold. Could this be because Zappa and Fripp had other skills, not particularly involved in guitar technique, that they brought to bear on their guitar playing (harmonic awareness, note choices, etc., that they got from being composers and having a natural all-round musical knowledge and musicality)? Or do we in this case want to reach for the arty stuff to explain it: conceptual vision, emotional investment, or imagination? — Jamal
formal logical structures, like mathematical operations and logical laws, are structures in the experience-of-the-world. They're neither private or subjective, nor external and objective - they transcend or at least straddle the subject-object distinction. So causality is neither in the world, nor in the mind, but in the experience-of-the-world. (This is the meaning of Quantum Baynsienism.) — Wayfarer
The collective unconscious appears to consist of mythological motifs or primordial images, for which reason the myths of all nations are its real exponents. In fact the whole of mythology could be taken as a sort of projection of the collective unconscious. We can see this most clearly if we look at the heavenly constellations, whose originally chaotic forms are organized through the projection of images. This explains the influence of the stars as asserted by astrologers. These influences are nothing but unconscious instrospective perceptions of the collective unconscious.
- C.G. Jung The Structure of the Psyche Collected Works 8
(but then Wayfarer denied that of logical rules, which he still maintains are 'real'), something like 'exists outside of individual minds', but then idealism is in hot water requiring God already (usually reserved for the end of a conversation!) — Isaac
idealism vs materialism is not actually the same debate as realism vs non-realism. Idealism is not non-realist, but claims that the external material world has no intrinsic or inherent reality outside the experience of it. So it may be opposed to what you think is 'realist' but to declare that it is non-realist actually begs the question, that is, assumes what needs to be proven (that the external material world is inherently real and that the denial of this constitutes non-realism.)
I think the assumed version of realism behind that article is scientific realism. — Wayfarer
'Doctor', to us. (Actually, he has two doctorates.) — Wayfarer
Even given a consistent idealist ontology, that the fundamental constituents of knowledge are not objects but ideas and sensations, this doesn't mean that pain is not real, because it is experienced as real, and that experience is apodictic (cannot plausibly denied). — Wayfarer
In this type of philosophy, it is difficult to establish a temporal coherency, or a continuity of existence from one moment to the next in time. So process philosophers end up positing some sort of spiritual element which produces a relationship between one moment of time and the next, to account for the observed temporal continuity and apparent consistency of being as time passes. — Metaphysician Undercover
What it does though is give us the principles required to understand the priority of the spiritual over the material. — Metaphysician Undercover
Of course, there are external events which may make a big impact, such as when a parent dies or leaves the family. — Jack Cummins
having to face the reality of the spiritual world. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think many people can separate what they like from what they respect. — T Clark
It's pretty rare, at least as far as my experience goes — Janus
, just highlighting that if one really seriously believed in the importance of preparing for an afterlife, then one would live a very different life — Janus
Interesting as well. I equivocate visceral with emotional. What is something visceral that doesn't hit you emotionally? — Noble Dust
No offense, but I was looking for the thoughts of people who are familiar with this particular issue. — Tate
it is fitting to be sad to recognize that bothering to live is pointless. — Chisholm
Since there can be no end external to one's entire life, since one's life includes all of one's ends, life as a whole cannot have a point — Chisholm
