Can you have consciousness without any content? — frank
Can you have content without consciousness? — frank
If there's a relationship, what is it? — frank
How would you describe the difference? — frank
what grabbed you about the book, in a nutshell? — 0 thru 9
Even though Suzuki is talking about Christianity in particular, it equally applies to the whole of Western Civilization, which seems to have a credo: “We must beat the obstinate Earth into submission. Once we have mastered and conquered it, we will live like the kings we are! Of course, there are other strange peoples who are not going along with our plan. They are sitting on a gold/silver/coal/whatever mine and refuse to dig it up. Fools. We will take it to use as God and Nature intended.” — 0 thru 9
but the Bodhidharma clearly knows how to talk, and has not become innocent like the beasts, And likewise Lao Tzu and Chiang Tzu. — unenlightened
I think it is appropriate to say that the transcendence is a moving forward not a return, certainly not a return to a prelinguistic awareness. — unenlightened
You have my attention. A couple of quotes would be helpful. — unenlightened
There can be no return to the innocence of not knowing. — unenlightened
Another interesting fact: Skanderbeg in Spanish is said Jorge Castriota (Albanian: Gjergj Kastrioti) — javi2541997
What I do not understand is why it is underrated is the Western world. Some "philosophers" or "thinkers" consider their principles just to have fun in a "hippy mode" — javi2541997
I have always been interested in Japanese culture and I read books and some stuff on the topic. But, I am not going to lie, language is a barrier regarding to understand Japanese people. Yet, I think it is worthy to at least have a look, without the necessity of being an expert. — javi2541997
On the other hand, I am currently having a big interest in Greek culture and Balkan history. — javi2541997
I think I am saying "interesting" a lot when I interact with you by the wa — javi2541997
So, you pronounce each vowel or consonant in the words, right? — javi2541997
Exactly. I have read somewhere that Gjika is a name or last name. When I searched Gjika yesterday in Google, it appeared different people from Albania. So, I guess that such a noun is related to persons and not objects. — javi2541997
Although I am not sure I entirely understood your post yet, let me try to adequately respond. — Bob Ross
Analytic Idealism would posit that our minds are alters of a universal mind, and space and time only emerge as a production of perceptive conscious beings. In terms of analytic idealism, the world around you that you are perceiving is fundamentally the unfolding in space and time (which are synthetic but arguably not a priori in the sense schopenhauer exactly meant it) of eternal platonic ideas. Although space and time do not behave necessarily as we would intuit from normal every day-to-day experience, they are also within the eternal ideas as we are, as evolved emergent perceptive and self-conscious beings, a part of those eternal ideas. — Bob Ross
Are you saying that the mind can “switch” (so to speak) between two modes of existence or perceptive capabilities? — Bob Ross
In every metaphysical theory, I find there is the problem of accounting for the inevitable eternal somehow continually “converting” into something temporal—and I don’t know how to account for it adequately under any theory. — Bob Ross
The G is silent not the J in the word Gjika. — javi2541997
Is this correct? How much the Greek phonology have influenced in Albanian pronunciation? — javi2541997
In Albanian it is written as "Gjika", but it is pronounced with just a G because Modern Greek γκ is used to write "g" as a stop. Like omitting the J. So, we have to pronounce it like saying "ghicas" — javi2541997
the speakers of unattested indigenous languages become literate by learning Greek. — javi2541997
in option one she will get an apology. How has she lied in this case? As the curse says if he apologises he is released from it and the curse ends — Benj96
The only thing required to set the ball rolling is jeremiah and his family to have something bad happen to him/them. Which is guarenteed to occur. As everyone has bad days. — Benj96
Would make for a very sparsely populated philosophy forum, however. — Wayfarer
I don’t think our mind works materialistic: I think that the modernist era has produced a predominant metaphysical view in favor of materialism. Also, why would our mind working materialistically entail duality? Are you saying materialism entails irreductive materialism? — Bob Ross
Do you mean that metaphysical theories evolve? Or that they don’t give absolute truth? — Bob Ross
I can assume that you could understand me if you listen me speaking! — javi2541997
Thank you for helping me to understand them and how to pronounce it. Another thing that I learned today! — javi2541997
C: "cé"
Ç: "s" or the similar sound of a S.
Ë: É a vowel with big pronunciation.
Nj: I do not know how to pronounce it, the sound of these consonants are not in my mind when they are together!
Zh: Like "ch" — javi2541997
It is interesting because I guess we should to analyse each language and then conclude which one is more complex to replicate. — javi2541997
It's unfortunately not true. E. g. the Czech Ř is notoriously difficult to pronounce. — Baden
But, is your language complex in other areas? Like gender endings, conjugation, vocabulary and its syntax, etc... I am Spanish. How difficult would learning Albanian be for me? — javi2541997
Would it be a struggle for a foreigner who is learning Albanian to replicate these sounds? — javi2541997
But, do you have any issue or struggle related to grammar or syntax? — javi2541997
It seems that spelling is not so important in Albanian, but what about the other uses in your vocabulary? — javi2541997
The people can, and always have, spoken fluent English, and produced correct pluralizations, without knowing any of these things. Then, are these "rules" part of no conscious knowledge? — javi2541997
Now, sometimes I do hear physicalists rightly point out that an analytical idealist is not actually providing an explanation to consciousness at all but, rather, simply positing it as fundamental without a detailed account of mind — Bob Ross
to me, it isn't that impressive for one's metaphysics to align with scientific knowledge but, rather, one should be holistically determining the best metaphysical theory based off of parsimony, explanatory power, internal coherence, external coherence, reliability, intellectual seemings, etc — Bob Ross
Men being no longer the bread winners, often assume the role of stay at home dad - raising the family.
Perhaps, men become the more pursued sex, rather than the pursuer. Women make the moves, ask men out on dates, do the proposing. Maybe men are more often objectified, their looks and demeanor becoming more important than their career prospects, finances or social status. Men are cat-called on the streets, harassed, groped inappropriately in the club, expected to be highly sexualised and submissive. The feminine becoming ever more dominant and brazen towards men. — Benj96
If depth has an ultimate ceiling, then the ceiling must be above everything we know, beyond to observable universe, utterly transcendent. This, too, has been called “God.” — Art48
A transcendent God, almost of necessity, must be a person. For such a God must have a desire to communicate with us; otherwise, how could we ever know such a God existed? If it utterly transcends everything we know, then we obviously have no reason to suspect it exists unless it provides some clues, in the form of miracles and scriptures. — Art48
You can zoom in as far as you like on the micro-circuitry of your television set, but you'll never find a story there — Wayfarer
Right. Ever since we became selves, back on the African plains. — Wayfarer