This stuff comes out as an act of whistleblowing, which is an act of alerting attention to a perceived wrongdoing. — Sapientia
Not at all. I went to the University of Sydney, never encountered such an attitude. Again, it can happen anywhere, but not because of anything peculiar to 'our society'. — Wayfarer
naturally am inclined to agree but the reality of communicating such a subtle understanding requires that there is an institutional 'exoskeleton' to carry forward the idea. In fact that is very much what I think has been lost from Western religious institutions since the advent of modernity. It has become more and more externally focussed rather than an authentic 'encounter with the unknown'. The 'encounter with the unknown' is much more characteristic of modern spiritual movements than traditional Christianity, nowadays. — Wayfarer
The meditation I practice has no particular format. It's simply a matter of learning to sit still, being aware of the body-mind, and returning to the breath. It's not a matter of isolation, but really the complete opposite. There is a sense that the life and breath in me, is the same life and breath in every other being. The sense of separateness is precisely what is being dissolved by such a practice. — Wayfarer
No. Hence my argument, which you seem to evade. — jkop
Sure. So how about you get the image into paint and zoom in on that apparent red pixel until that pixel fills your screen. Then get back to me with which colour it has.
EDIT: I'd like to point out that the colour of that faux-red pixel doesn't change because of the surrounding blue, we are not "mixing" them in our perception. We're quite capable of seeing individual pixels at these resolution (1080p, just stick your nose in the screen).
The blue merely influences how we perceive it due to false signal it gives us that we ought to white balance the image for outdoor circumstances. Then our brains filter out blue from the grey, which makes the grey appear red. Taking a closer look (literally!) shows the error. — Benkei
So what would seeing its atoms and molecules be an interpretation of? — jkop
The presence of a single, coloured shape is set by the objective facts of seeing. Hence seeing precedes interpretation. — jkop
There isn't a Platonic Form, there's consensus on the wavelengths associated with colours when an object absorbs light and reflects light back. And I mean this in the sense of spectrum. The science is pretty clear on this. If we then "think" we see red, when in reality there are no colours emitting with a wavelenght between 622nm to 780nm, then we've been fooled by our very fallable perception. — Benkei
(Also the answer is a bit more subtle because the picture does emit light in that wavelength range of red as part of the white/gray areas but something is red or reddish due to a concentration of a particular spectrum of wavelength in a particular area but that is more about chromacity). — Benkei
I agree we can use the word "red" in different contexts but when we disagree on the redness of something, how are we going to arbitrate this question? I have no problem with you referring to the strawberries as appearing red but if we want to definitely answer the question whether they are red, we have to conclude they aren't irrespective of our subjective experiences of seeing. — Benkei
The problem has always been that beliefs are ultimately very personal things. Once you start to regiment them and dictate them the institutionalisation can't be too far behind. 'Orthodox' really means 'right belief' (or strictly speaking 'right worship' but it is very similar in meaning.) — Wayfarer
But in any case, the Buddhist model is very different to the Christion one - instead of a powerful father figure (Pope) controlling the levers of ecclesiastical power, which radiates out through a hub-and-spoke model, a networked movement, which is centripedal rather than centrifugal. But then, the whole basis of the religion is also different, Buddhism being grounded in insight in the nature of experience, rather than believing according to what you're told. — Wayfarer
But Richard Rohr's approach is more about finding the truth of spirituality through meditation. Of course, that requires openness to the possibility of there being something to be found; that too is belief of a kind. — Wayfarer
Wikileaks has had 100% publication accuracy and always has, — discoii
Say the cloud above me is a white cumulonimbus. When I say "there exists a white cumulonimbus cloud several thousand meters above me" I seem to be making a true claim. — darthbarracuda
There seems to be an objective fact that is exemplified by this statement or any statements of similar structure. — darthbarracuda
You've forgotten The Spanish Inquisition? The persecution of the Cathars? I think the time of religious institutionalism has past. But in any case, the Buddhist model is very different to the Christion one - instead of a powerful father figure (Pope) controlling the levers of ecclesiastical power, which radiates out through a hub-and-spoke model, a networked movement, which is centripedal rather than centrifugal. But then, the whole basis of the religion is also different, Buddhism being grounded in insight in the nature of experience, rather than believing according to what you're told. — Wayfarer
But we don't get to interpret its presence, nor the coloured shape. — jkop
To understand law, we must start with the first principles of law: we are mortal, we require food and water, we require families, and we require shelter for ourselves and our families. Those are the laws of nature which define the human condition. We cannot escape the human condition. No human can change those facts through our own faculty of reason alone. — ernestm
Quantum interpretations does not inherit any of this in any form. In fact the Bohm interpretation wants nothing of it as it adopts non-locality. — Rich
All that matters is that the symbol, or representation, of that light is consistent - that the effect is always the same per the cause for that particular person. — Harry Hindu
As far as I understand, they are separate and distinct theories that have yet to be unified. — Rich
As I indicated above, even if morality requires an external force to impose it upon us (who, then, imposes it upon the imposers, I wonder?), ceding this control to organized religion would be a catastrophic mistake. — Arkady
It was unnecessary, uncalled for, and ruined what might have otherwise been a productive discussion. — Chief Owl Sapientia
For this reason, I reject the idea that Relativity in any form has any ontological basis. All they do is resolve some measurement problems with the Lorentz Transformations. — Rich
You are making an assumption that such a thing as 'the drinking class' actually had any objective existence at all. — ernestm
I don't see why you need to be so insulting. — ernestm
That's part of the very first definition that comes up if you google "destruction", but whatever. — Chief Owl Sapientia
There are plenty of others which define the meaning of the verb "destroy" as to put out of existence, and other similarly worded definitions. — Chief Owl Sapientia
Do you know what? I'm not even going to read any further. Your accusation that I am making this up is too stupid and uncharitable for me to want to continue. — Chief Owl Sapientia
Right. So we can stop trusting telescopes that there really are more stars in the sky than we can see with the naked eye. — Benkei
You also can't throw me the ideal gas law, but I think you'll have a hard time convincing folks that the ideal gas law can't be an object of cognition. — Aaron R
Isn't it simpler to suppose that these are properties are all actual or potential properties of matter. — Cavacava
EDIT: the strawberries only appear red but in reality the colour red isn't present in the picture. — Benkei
To destroy something completely so that nothing is left. — Chief Owl Sapientia
What do you think makes that so? Why new? Why objects? These objects were part of the previous structure, so what makes them new, and what made them one (before you acknowledge them as many)? — Chief Owl Sapientia
3. I had in mind the object. My objection, as I thought I had made clear, was not so much the glass part, but that you are naming it a drinking glass, which brings with it the baggage of functionality, which, as I said, is not inherent in the object itself. quote]
I don't understand your resistance to functionality. The object was created, produced with a specific purpose, to drink from, that's why it's called a drinking glass. Of course the functionality is inherent within the object, that's why it was made. When an object is clearly made for a specific purpose, to divorce its functionality from its existence doesn't make sense. It's existence is dependent on its functionality. Without that purpose it would not have been made, and would not exist.
— Chief Owl Sapientia
By the object, I mean the object, and nothing else: not your conception of it as a tool, and not how you relate to it as such. — Chief Owl Sapientia
4 & 5. You could simply call it a glass, and that might just resolve the issue that I've explained to you. We don't have to talk about a nameless object and I'm not trying to play a game, I'm just trying to do a bit of philosophy here. — Chief Owl Sapientia
6. Drinking is not part of the object. I don't know why you apparently aren't getting this. You haven't really addressed what I've said about this. If you disagree, then you should explain why. Simply asserting that the object is the drinking glass doesn't explain why you think that, it doesn't clarify much, and it doesn't explain why you think that my criticism of that claim is wrong. — Chief Owl Sapientia
7. Apparently you haven't noticed, but I have not been consistently calling it that, and have purposefully avoided doing so. I'll call it that when that is what it is, and when I have good reason to do so. That's fine if you want to go no further than this ordinary practical assumption, and do not want a deeper philosophical examination, but that'd just be sticking your head in the sand. I am trying to talk about the object itself, which is distinguishable from the purpose you see in it. If dropping the name "drinking glass" will get you to do that, then let's drop that name, shall we? — Chief Owl Sapientia
No, that's not in the dictionary definition. That's something that you're reading into it. I acknowledge that the context may be unusual, but that doesn't mean that this terminology cannot rightly be applied in this context. — Chief Owl Sapientia
This motion constantly changes everything. — Rich
It is quite clear to me that everything is changing in one manner or another all the time. There is nothing I can say or do to convince you of this. — Rich
You can be mistaken about the real thing you are perceiving, but how can you be mistaken about a perception? To use the specific example, how can you mistakenly call a desk a table if you are perceiving a desk? The only way I see how is because the person doesn't speak english very well and thus thought that a desk was called "table" in english. But this would be an error in language, not in perception. — Samuel Lacrampe
He says in many places that he believes religion is evil or the source of evil. — Wayfarer
Ethics has been one long, miserable slog from humanity treating each other extremely horribly to treating each other very slightly less-horribly. — Arkady
The object is the sum of its parts, yes? So if the object is destroyed or annihilated, then by implication, so are the parts. — Chief Owl Sapientia
But you also refer to the object, and there is nothing in the object itself which makes it a drinking glass. So it seems that your attachment to your conceptualisation of the object as a tool is getting in the way of talking about the object itself. — Chief Owl Sapientia
So, are we talking about the drinking glass or the object? If the former, then yes, the drinking glass has ceased to be. But what about the object? — Chief Owl Sapientia
The answer to this earlier question of yours would be that it hasn't been completely annihilated and it has all the same parts, and they are the criteria being used to conclude that it is the same object. — Chief Owl Sapientia
The glass that is smashed into pieces and then rebuilt from those pieces is an example of something being dissembled and reassembled. — Chief Owl Sapientia
This provides an actual observation of your own duration and the impossibility for you to describe it. I am asking for a more direct experience. — Rich
However, if I was to be put in the same kitchen, I would observe everything changing on the macroscopic level (the dust in the air, the deterioration in the wood, your life itself, the ink on the paper), and at the microscopic level (the energy of all quanta). — Rich
This is why I say, philosophers need to be constantly exercising their observation skills via the arts. I first learned of the skill in the art of observation when I studied photography many years ago. A philosopher must always be exercising and refining the art of observation. — Rich
Descriptions are necessarily limited, inaccurate, imprecise, and provide no avenue to understand the nature of nature in themselves. They are simply a tool for communication which may or may not help two explorers to better understand. To this end, I have always felt metaphors to be far more helpful. — Rich
Have you ever tried describing duration in words or mathematics? — Rich
Stop duration, create a state, and describe it while still observing your efforts to describeit in the same duration. with such an attempt you should witness the impossibility of what you are suggesting as should anyone who believes that mathematics, words, logic, or any symbol is adequate to describe the nature of experience in duration. — Rich
A single example? — Rich
