Perhaps 'mysticism' is waiting for sudden revelations as a way of life. — 180 Proof
It is not necessary that you leave the house. Remain at your table and listen. Do not even listen, only wait. Do not even wait, be wholly still and alone. The world will present itself to you for its unmasking, it can do no other, in ecstasy it will writhe at your feet. — T Clark
Mystery means lots of things. In what way is it confused with mystical? — T Clark
People use the word. We ought to be able to agree on what they mean. Or at least they should be able to explain what they mean. — T Clark
Given the prominence of Covid in the news over the past year, for 50% of people to say they don't know what symptoms to look for in their own health as indications of whether they have caught the virus is surely alarming. — Tim3003
Are truths useful? Truth refers to many kinds of ideas so this is a pretty loose series of questions. I think there are many useful applications for truth. In areas where truth matters - health - for instance, an untruth/deception/omission can kill people. I think where people most crave or project truth - in spirituality, or meaning or the nature of reality - we don't know of anything definitive.
Aren't there falsehoods that are more useful? Not sure of your intended meaning here- in some contexts lying is better than truth telling.
Is the truths that you pursue(d), if you pursue(d) them, useful? I have no idea. I was interested in epistemology some years ago. I came to the view that it isn't worth pursuing subjects I am not an expert in. In these I have no clear way of discerning truth. Possibly the most useful thing I know of is the ability to write a clear sentence. It doesn't have to be a true one.
If they aren't useful, do you practice philosophy knowing that finding the truth is useless? I don't practice philosophy but I try to reflect on choices I make and on what ideas/actions I choose to engage with. In real life I suspect philosophy doesn't matter. It does not appear to be useful in quotidian activities.
Is usefulness the correct criteria to judge if we should pursue truth? In some contexts, yes, if the utility of that truth can help conscious creatures to flourish and reduce suffering (I am a piss-poor, simple minded utilitarian). — FlaccidDoor
Shall I suppose that at least we agree that talk about g/God is pretty much useless until and unless first there's a meeting of minds on what g/God means, or that is, no wothy discussion unless folks know at least their own minds? — tim wood
But we currently do not have any observation that confirms their existence. — John Chlebek
And I wonder, to what degree do you think science makes proclamations about truth amounting the Platonic ideal, or Ultimate Truth? Because in my view, based on every scientific paper I've ever read, is that scientists go out of their way to define the methodological and evidence based limitations of their truth claims. — counterpunch
How do you know anything except by some sort of observation? How do you know that you know anything? What reasons do you have to believe anything? How do you know that you're being rational as opposed to being irrational? The evidence you provide to answer these questions will all be observable. — Harry Hindu
If you can show that A causes B, and can apply that principle to create technologies that use A to cause B at the press of a button, reliably and consistently, anytime you want, in what way is it not True (with a capital T) that A causes B? — counterpunch
Then you have no justification, or reason, to believe that 2+2=4? Or that you have a pain in your foot? So, you're saying you have faith that 2+2=4 an that you have pains in your feet? — Harry Hindu
They thought they were resisting tyranny. Somehow I think they were over-reacting. — James Riley
he method by which to conduct that will, to form such intentions, to decide what is good or bad, is to initially think whatever you are just inclined to think even if you can’t name a good reason to, and to agree to disagree with anyone who thinks differently (i.e. to live and let live, to respect liberty), until one of you can show reason — grounded in those criteria above — why someone or other’s intention is bad. That still doesn’t conclusively settle what is good, but it narrows in on it gradually. — Pfhorrest
adamantine firmness — Wayfarer
It seems to me that life is much more enjoyable and less burdensome when one is not afraid of when it may end. — darthbarracuda
"beliefs can only be considered reliable when they are backed, (somehow), by observation."
Is this observable or it is it a faith statement? — John Chlebek
Not much of a philosophical case, but I see you have made your personal stance known. — schopenhauer1
The guy is a billionaire. The fact that he took the time and went through the Hell that he did to do the whole presidency thing is telling. Who would bring such a thing on themselves if they didn't care? — synthesis
I wonder if you would care to revise your claim that you don't feel any restrictions on your freedoms. — fishfry
Tens of millions of people had their jobs outsourced over the past decades and nobody cared...until Trump came along. — synthesis
) Rationalizing one's existence is arduous and painful, and there are no unequivocal answers - only uncomfortable, and affirming ones. — Aryamoy Mitra
Rationalizing one's existence, can only be undertaken with a finite set of constraints (time, mainly) - rendering that one can't philosophize endlessly, before convening on a decision. — Aryamoy Mitra
3) That a decision or appraisal emerges, after some length of time, is what accords all meaning to the exercise (to commence with). — Aryamoy Mitra
I know that some people think Leonard Cohen is music to commit suicide to. — Jack Cummins
I can't relate to classical music at all — Jack Cummins
