Exactly. The other thought experiment I was thinking of is about a spaceship full of men. After millions of years (where I guess they clone themselves), they've lost any memory at all of female-ness. They don't even have female plug adapters. The question being: would they know that they're male?
As you hinted, their concept for what they are would stop at human. They don't know that they're male because they don't have anything to compare that to. — frank
So we can see that being able to conceive of maleness isn't just a matter of being exposed to the positive qualities we think of as maleness. Conceiving of maleness is a matter of holding it up against a background of its negation. Conceiving of anything is a matter of doing something with an opposition[
Yes...you've reached the foothills ...keep going ! — fresco
It's worth drawing a firm distinction between appropriacy and utility here. One does not necessitate the other. Feeling a mixture of anger and indignation at your child being slapped in the face by a stranger is an appropriate reaction regardless of utility. Conversely, not feeling much and being concerned only with utility could be considered inappropriate. Same with mass shootings. It's not about being reasonable, it's about being human. (But it's not very on-topic so I'll leave it at that). — Baden
I think it reveals that our society is unable to understand what is important. 120 people. It makes me sick when TV and other media broadcast hysterical reports full of outrage and fake tears. It's such bologna. The worst thing is that the kind of action that really can address violence does not come from attitudes of horror and outrage.
For what it's worth, the murder rate in the US is half of what it was in 1980. 650,000 die of heart disease annually. Cancer 600,000. Let's put our energy there. — T Clark
One should think the reason, regardless of demographics, behind the murder is frustration. I'd think that when the decision to murder is reached, no other options seem viable. Powerlessness. Asserting control. — Hanover
What would such a forgetting entail? The jungle will still grow verdant on the volcanic soils, it will not care where they came from, only how they are there right now. But the prospect of an eruption is too far in the future and in the past to imagine or remember it. Less poetically, the soil formation process and the jungle following it over space will not care about the eruption itself, it will care about how its effects impregnate the present with its potential; where the nutrients and plants are, we shall cast our our net and grow. — fdrake
I live my life in widening circles
that reach out across the world.
I may not complete this last one
but I give myself to it.
I circle around God, around the primordial tower.
I’ve been circling for thousands of years
and I still don’t know: am I a falcon,
a storm, or a great song?
At the moment the Eternal Return is revealed to me, I cease to be myself hic et nunc and am susceptible to becoming innumerable others, knowing that I shall forget this revelation once I am outside the memory of myself; this forgetting forms the object of my present willing; for such a forgetting would
amount to a memory outside my own limits: and my present consciousness will be established only in the forgetting of my other possible identities.
What is this memory? It is the necessary circular movement to which I abandon myself, fleeing myself from myself. If I now admit to this willing - and, by willing it necessarily, I will have re-willed it - I will simply have made my consciousness conform to this circular movement: Were I to identify myself with the Circle, I would never emerge from this representation as myself; in fact, already I am no longer in the moment when the abrupt revelation of the Eternal Return reached me; for this revelation to have a meaning, I would have to lose consciousness of myself, and the circular movement of the return would have to be merged with my unconscious, until the movement brings me back to the moment when the necessity of passing through the entire series of my possibilities was revealed to me. All that remains, then, is for me to re-will myself, no longer as the outcome of these prior possibilities, no longer as one realization among thousands, but as a fortuitous moment whose very fortuity implies the necessity of the integral return of the whole series. But to re-will oneself as a fortuitous moment.
Reminds me of a Tibetan thing:
May I be free of fear
May I be free of anger
May I be free of craving and aversion.
May I be free of suffering and the root of suffering.
May you be free of fear
May you be free of anger
May you be free of craving and aversion.
May you be free of suffering and the root of suffering.
In the real, there is no distinction between me and you, so the two paragraphs sort of say the same thing. Fear is the emotion of the victim and anger is the emotion of the sinner. Together they make up a type or "general problem" that generates identities small to huge.
I think of it as briefly peeking out of my own identity and I'm nameless in a cocoon in the real.
Kind of like turning down the volume on Hal. — frank
Let's just say that there is that possibility, and that it is not something willed or performed or achieved, but a visitation of grace, as you say, or if that is difficult, a natural phenomenon like the coalescing of drops of water, or the seeing of one scene with two eyes. Let's say there is no 'how' any more than there is an action to relaxation. One can prepare a little by doing whatever is necessary, and dropping whatever is not... make some space, get some rest, sow a little kindness...
Or if the poet insists on science, http://ift-malta.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/The-cybernetics-of-self-A-theory-of-alcoholism.pdf — unenlightened
Maybe HAL and Dave are aspects of consciousness. The fuel of consciousness is problems: unanswered questions for the mind, unredeemed sins for emotion, wounds for flesh.
Dave relies on HAL to bring these problems to his attention. It seems like Dave is in charge. He thinks is. But HAL can move Dave like a puppet.
But if HAL is taken off line, doesn't Dave become blind and deaf? — frank
That stuff is an unconscious attempt to resolve a problem. But it also generates persona, so it's like the work of a doctor: if she was successful in ending all disease, she would simultaneously destroy her own identity as a doctor. — frank
Do you know if he ever wrote or spoke about being gay? — unenlightened
There is the moment, and the trauma one brings to it; at each moment there is the possibility of seeing the fragmentation, and seeing it, not from another fragment as observer, but fragmentation seeing itself - a whole seeing.
They always get quiet when humans come around because they don't want everybody to know there's such a thing as a plant party. — frank
Come for a walk with me. We go up the road for ten minutes, and we're in a wooded public garden with paths meandering across the side of a steep hill, with flowers and shrubs and bits of rocky cliff, and steps every now and then to take us up a level. It's warm and sunny with a bit of wind, and as we labour up the hill, I ask you how you feel.
And you say, "I'm depressed, but I think my depression is really anger, but the anger might be about humiliation, or something worse."
And I say, "Is it the trees? Or maybe the steps, that upset you?" — unenlightened
I do have a theory about depression, but I want to talk about feeling not theory here. Express your depression dudes, don't whinge about it in the usual abstract hopeless comfortable way. At the moment you are talking about each other, or Churchill's black dog; Eeyore does it better. — unenlightened
What is cluster b? — Noah Te Stroete
Sounds too uplifting. And your book was due for return yesterday. :razz: — Baden
If you think about the idea of 'giving up' it is a sacrifice. And that's how it always was - denying myself with gritted teeth, the thing that made me comfortably myself. And this was the course dictated by thought, with homilies 'it's bad for you to smoke', 'you ought to stop', etc. So when I stopped like that, I suffered from symptoms, nervous agitation, irritability. I was the same person, a smoker, not smoking and having symptoms, and wanting to smoke.
But then something happened, such that something new was built. The might or must have been some provocation, but to me it is a mystery, that I will call a realisation of ... Well it occurred to me that I did not need to smoke or want to smoke; that I never had, but had been imagining I wanted to all this time. — unenlightened
And I was anxious and agitated and irritable, not because I was not smoking, but because I had always been anxious and agitated and irritable. — unenlightened