• The Idea That Changed Europe
    ditto with the classics. But with this qualification: they are all long dead and long gone.tim wood

    One of the reasons they're still read is obviously because they were judged to have enduring value, and the fact that they have been preserved for millenia attests to that. (Presumably there were many minor and lesser writings that were not so preserved.) But I do get that to really understand (for example) Plato's corpus, you would have to read them in the original, so as to grasp all of the allusions and subtleties of the language. But then, it's a difficult field of scholarship, due both to the difficulties of the source texts, and also that they have been subject to centuries of commentary.

    I've been attracted to Lloyd Gerson's books, and also those of a classics scholar Katya Vogt, but their books are very hard to read. They contain very lengthy and detailed footnotes and devote a great deal of time to defending their interpretation against others, ancient and modern, which introduce many intricacies of interpretation and arcane arguments replete with passages in Greek which of course I don't understand.

    But, I do agree with the points you've made above, about assimilating the ideas from these texts, indeed that's why I made the remark at the outset. Also I've noticed this series from Princeton Press which makes available many classic texts.
  • Was Schopenhauer right?
    From the SEP entry:

    According to Schopenhauer, corresponding to the level of the universal subject-object distinction, Will is immediately objectified into a set of universal objects or Platonic Ideas. These constitute the timeless patterns for each of the individual things that we experience in space and time. There are different Platonic Ideas, and although this multiplicity of Ideas implies that some measure of individuation is present within this realm, each Idea nonetheless contains no plurality within itself and is said to be “one.” Since the Platonic Ideas are in neither space nor time, they lack the qualities of individuation that would follow from the introduction of spatial and temporal qualifications. In these respects, the Platonic Ideas are independent of the specific fourfold root of the principle of sufficient reason, even though it would be misleading to say that there is no individuation whatsoever at this universal level, for there are many different Platonic Ideas. Schopenhauer refers to the Platonic Ideas as the direct objectifications of Will and as the immediate objectivity of Will.
    '
    I recall from Kastrup's discussion of the Ideas, that they are like modes of vibration, similar to the way that when a guitar string is plucked, it will emanate a specific note, due to the tension of the string etc. There's a sense in which the ideas as archetypes represent the possibilities of things - that if something is to exist, it has to take a certain form - but that 'form' is not something that exists separately in the supposed 'ethereal realm'. In that sense the ideas transcend existence. They are kind of like a combination of necessity and possibility (ref.) And in this respect there are continuities with neoplatonism and the 'grand tradition' generally i.e. The Ideas are like intermediaries between the One and the individual. However in Schopenhauer will is 'irrational and blind' whereas in neoplatonism the nature of the One is beneficient and purposive.

    But then as the SEP also notes in respect of Schop's ethics, 'Moral consciousness and virtue thus give way to the voluntary poverty and chastity of the ascetic. St. Francis of Assisi (WWR, Section 68) and Jesus (WWR, Section 70) subsequently emerge as Schopenhauer’s prototypes for the most enlightened lifestyle, in conjunction with the ascetics from every religious tradition.' I find this paradoxical, not to say contradictory, aspect of Schopenhauer a bit confounding. On the one hand, he wrote ascerbic diatribes against all religion, but on the other, he seems to recognise the Upaniṣads and the 'life of Jesus' as kind of ideals. I think he had some kind of conflict around these issues - which I well understand, given the highly conflicted nature of religion in European history.

    All in all, his writing on 'representation' and the ideas, I find highly amenable, but not so much his conception of the all-powerful will. I'm still dubious about those aspects of Schopenhauer, but as we all agree, he's a substantial figure in philosophy, and I'll continue to think it over.
  • Was Schopenhauer right?
    It turns out to be more like a book. It's related to the theme I keep returning to. See this chat.
  • Was Schopenhauer right?
    As you know, I generally look to Buddhist principles as a source of guidance, and they proclaim that there is indeed 'an end to suffering', even if it's not something we're likely able to grasp in this life. I concede that is something like religious faith, but one that Schopenhauer himself expressed, even despite his distaste for mainstream religions and rejection of the idea of God. In other words, it's not suffering all the way down - suffering has a cause and an end. I wouldn't look to Nietzsche for insight on that, however.

    If we deny-the-will to the point of getting beyond our own subject-object nature, we can perhaps escape.schopenhauer1

    hence the motif of divine union, merging with the divine, etc. There's a theme I'm exploring in medieval philosophy, 'the union of knower and known'. Too large a digression for this thread.
  • The Idea That Changed Europe
    in the second half of my life, I've come to regret not having been educated in 'the Classics', although I console myself with the thought that had I been part of an earlier generation, I probably would have had them beaten into me with a cane, and would have hated them for it. Nevertheless, I think the want of knowledge of The Classics is a real want, it's a real cultural heritage, and we're the worse nowadays for not knowing about them.
  • The Idea That Changed Europe
    Greek and Roman classics are not part of anybody's culture except the people who speak their languages — that doesn't apply to most here —, and the reason for that is exactly ScholasticsLionino

    So, the 'scholastics', who were avid readers and propogators of 'the Classics', were responsible for the snuffing out of classical education?
  • Why The Simulation Argument is Wrong
    LLMs are not conscious or intelligent, they're just "stochastic parrots."fishfry

    I put this to ChatGPT4. Have a look at what it said.
  • Was Schopenhauer right?
    First, apologies to both of you.ENOAH

    I think you need to slow down a bit. You make many rapid-fire comments, very much stream of consciousness - which is fine, it's part of the appeal of this medium, one of the reasons I've now made 21k entries here :yikes: . But philosophers like Schopenhauer are deep and hard to understand (speaking as a student, not as an authority!) Read, digest, and contemplate.

    Myself, I like to believe that Schop. was 'the last great philosopher'. But then, there's Wittgenstein and Heidegger, also great, so it doesn't quite work. But he was the last great idealist philosopher, and as such deserves a special place in the pantheon (spoken as an advocate for idealism). But take time to take it in - I'm not wanting to idolize him, but he's a really substantial philosopher, material you can read for a lifetime. There's time, at least, for that.
  • The essence of religion
    I presented an argument in response to your gnomic aphorism. If you think it 'makes your point', what is that point, and how did I help make it?
  • The essence of religion
    You did ask me to comment, and I tried to respond in good faith, although I ought to know by now what to expect from you.
  • The essence of religion
    'What did you do to the cat, Erwin? It looks half dead!' ~ Ms Schrodinger.
  • The essence of religion
    It simply cannot be that that cat over there is independent and localized as normal perception tells us.Constance

    Maybe it's Schrodinger's :-)
  • The essence of religion
    I've referred to the Eastern Gatehouse Sutta before. It's a dialogue between the Buddha and Sariputta (who is the figure in the dialogues associated with wisdom teachings.) The relevant passage is as follows:

    "Sariputta, do you take it on conviction that the faculty of conviction, when developed & pursued, gains a footing in the Deathless, has the Deathless as its goal & consummation? Do you take it on conviction that the faculty of persistence... mindfulness... concentration... discernment, when developed & pursued, gains a footing in the Deathless, has the Deathless as its goal & consummation?"

    "Lord, it's not that I take it on conviction in the Blessed One that the faculty of conviction... persistence... mindfulness... concentration... discernment, when developed & pursued, gains a footing in the Deathless, has the Deathless as its goal & consummation. Those who have not known, seen, penetrated, realized, or attained it by means of discernment would have to take it on conviction in others that the faculty of conviction... persistence... mindfulness... concentration... discernment, when developed & pursued, gains a footing in the Deathless, has the Deathless as its goal & consummation; whereas those who have known, seen, penetrated, realized, & attained it by means of discernment would have no doubt or uncertainty that the faculty of conviction... persistence... mindfulness... concentration... discernment, when developed & pursued, gains a footing in the Deathless, has the Deathless as its goal & consummation.....

    ('The Deathless' is a synonym for Nibbana.) Sariputta says "It's not that *I* take it on conviction" - presumably because he has 'known, seen, penetrated, realised and attained it'. Whereas those who have not known, seen, etc, would have to take it on conviction.

    So, in this framework, faith has a role, but it's not the deciding factor, which is a hard-won insight (and the requirements of the Buddhist monastic orders are known to be exacting.) It is nearer to a form of gnosticism, in fact there's a Pali/Sanskrit word 'Jñāna' which is from the common Indo-Eruopean root jn- or gn- associated with 'higher knowledge'. But the overall point is that of a kind of 'saving insight' - in the early Buddhist texts this is stated again and again, in almost every thread, to be insight into the chain of dependent origination which is the causal factor that causes repeated birth in saṃsāra (whether in this life or in future lives). But faith is still indispensable, as one has to have the conviction that there is a purpose to undertaking the arduous path of discipleship.

    So, as for 'whatever is real does not require faith', from the Buddhist perspective, it is quite true, with the caveat that us putthajjana (untrained worldlings) do not comprehend or see what is real as we're basically unprepared and corrupted by attachment to the sensory data.

    But then look at advanced scientific knowledge. That also requires extensive training and preparation, fluency in mathematical and statistical techniques, a grasp of theory, and also exposure to very specific kinds of experience that can only be replicated under highly specific conditions. In many regards, lay readers like ourselves have to 'take it on faith' that the hypotheses and observations are valid as we're often not able to validate those in the first person.

    Traditional Western philosophy had a similar attitude:

    For Hadot...the means for the philosophical student to achieve the “complete reversal of our usual ways of looking at things” epitomized by the Sage were a series of spiritual exercises. These exercises encompassed all of those practices still associated with philosophical teaching and study: reading, listening, dialogue, inquiry, and research. However, they also included practices deliberately aimed at addressing the student’s larger way of life, and demanding daily or continuous repetition: practices of attention (prosoche), meditations (meletai), memorizations of dogmata, self-mastery (enkrateia), the therapy of the passions, the remembrance of good things, the accomplishment of duties, and the cultivation of indifference towards indifferent things (Philosophy as a Way of Life 84). Hadot acknowledges his use of the term “spiritual exercises” may create anxieties, by associating philosophical practices more closely with religious devotion than typically done. Hadot’s use of the adjective “spiritual” (or sometimes “existential”) indeed aims to capture how these practices, like devotional practices in the religious traditions are aimed at generating and reactivating a constant way of living and perceiving in prokopta, despite the distractions, temptations, and difficulties of life. For this reason, they call upon far more than “reason alone.” — Pierre Hadot, IEP

    It's not enough to say that any and all of us have an innate insight into or grasp of the nature of reality by default, so to speak. Otherwise what would be the need of philosophy or science or any other kind of training?
  • Was Schopenhauer right?
    I have never been able to get on board with his Debbie Downer*1 "wanh, wanh, wah" Pessimism and Roseanne Rosannadana "it's always something"Gnomon

    Grow up mate. Schopenhauer is for Big School, not kindy.
  • The essence of religion
    But it shows that concepts are not empty things. They are palpable errors. As I see it, when we talk about the world, we are using categories of understanding. These are concepts, so when I see a dog, the particular dog in front of me is known because I have this schematic in my head about dogs in general, the universal that subsumes the particular.Constance

    I think there are two rather divergent themes in play here. First you referenced the ‘rope-snake’ illusion, attributed to Sankara (although really common currency for all the schools of Indian philosophy). The thrust of that is that we impute attributes to things because of mistaken attachment to them, imputing a value to them they don’t really possess, due to avidya/ignorance. That is the ‘error in consciousness’ in that context. It is comparable in some respects to the Christian ‘original sin’, with the caveat that the Indian conception is more cognitive (corruption of the understanding) than volitional (corruption of the will.) In Indian systems of philosophy ( ‘darshana’) this condition of avidya/ignorance is primeval, i.e. beginningless in time (whereas in Christianity it is assigned to the mythology of the Fall.) It is that condition of avidya/ignorance from which mokṣa (liberation) is to be sought over aeons of life-times.

    But when you talk of ‘categories of the understanding’, I take that to be a reference to universals. Universals are not much stressed in Vedanta (and denied altogether in formal Buddhist logic, although it is upheld in other schools such as Mimamsa and Nyaya. A useful resource on universals in Western philosophy is an essay by Jacques Maritain.) But I don’t see the role of universals as necessarily inimical to awakening in the sense the Buddhists or Hindus understand it.

    //please forgive the pedantic tone of the above, it’s a subject I studied at university//
  • The essence of religion
    It is the same world, but all along there has been this fundamental mistake at the perceptual level.Constance

    An error in consciousness, it has been said.
  • The essence of religion
    I realise my reference to ‘feeling what you cannot know’ is open to a variety of interpretations (to say the least). But what I was trying to drive at, was becoming internally aware of the limitation or shortcomings of what can be put in a propositional form. The language-processing faculty of the mind is obviously a central aspect of knowledge, but there’s another, intuitive faculty which is broader, deeper and more ancient. And there’s a kind of boundary between them that you can become aware of, and I feel it’s something I have become at least somewhat aware of. I suppose I might be referring to the unconscious, and that this is something like what Jung said about the role of symbols in mediating the unconscious. As to how ‘reliable’ it is, obviously anyone is liable to self-delusion, but nevertheless grappling with that existence is an essential part of the philosophical quest.

    On Wittgenstein again: an article by Ray Monk, his biographer, said:

    His work is opposed, as he once put it, to "the spirit which informs the vast stream of European and American civilisation in which all of us stand." Nearly 50 years after his death, we can see, more clearly than ever, that the feeling that he was swimming against the tide was justified. If we wanted a label to describe this tide, we might call it "scientism," the view that every intelligible question has either a scientific solution or no solution at all. It is against this view that Wittgenstein set his face. …

    There are many questions to which we do not have scientific answers, not because they are deep, impenetrable mysteries, but simply because they are not scientific questions. These include questions about love, art, history, culture, music-all questions, in fact, that relate to the attempt to understand ourselves better. There is a widespread feeling today that the great scandal of our times is that we lack a scientific theory of consciousness. And so there is a great interdisciplinary effort, involving physicists, computer scientists, cognitive psychologists and philosophers, to come up with tenable scientific answers to the questions: what is consciousness? What is the self? One of the leading competitors in this crowded field is the theory advanced by the mathematician Roger Penrose, that a stream of consciousness is an orchestrated sequence of quantum physical events taking place in the brain. Penrose's theory is that a moment of consciousness is produced by a sub-protein in the brain called a tubulin. The theory is, on Penrose's own admission, speculative, and it strikes many as being bizarrely implausible. But suppose we discovered that Penrose's theory was correct, would we, as a result, understand ourselves any better? Is a scientific theory the only kind of understanding?

    Well, you might ask, what other kind is there? Wittgenstein's answer to that, I think, is his greatest, and most neglected, achievement. Although Wittgenstein's thought underwent changes between his early and his later work, his opposition to scientism was constant. Philosophy, he writes, "is not a theory but an activity." It strives, not after scientific truth, but after conceptual clarity.

    When I read that, I feel perfectly in alignment with it. But it seems very different from the way Wittgenstein is often interpreted, including on this forum.
  • The essence of religion
    And yet when I tell you I think it all comes down to faith and feeling and that nothing discursive can be known via meditation, intuition or enlightenment you disagree and label me a positivistJanus

    Learning to feel what can't be known is actually a very difficult skill, I believe, and I don't make any claim to have mastered it, but at least I'm aware of it, as something that matters, and something that I know that I don't know. Having an insight into the limitations of discursive knowledge is an insight - I referenced the 'analogy of the divided line' in that respect, as it appears Plato recognises different levels or kinds of knowledge, discursive, and types that are higher than that. What he regarded as higher knowledge, noesis, or insight into the ideas, was very much also a matter of aesthetics, and therefore of feeling (or 'qualia' in that horrible philosophical jargon). But you have told me on multiple occasions that there can be no such thing as higher knowledge, nor a vertical or qualitative dimension of existence, and that anything that is said along those lines must be considered 'matter of faith'. It never seems to occur to you that maybe there is such a thing, and you don't understand it.

    There is an historical dimension to all these matters. I think classical metaphysics was grounded in a kind of vision, 'the unitive vision', also dismissed by you as 'faith'. There is something in it that can be known, but it has generally been rejected or occluded or dismissed by the modern conception of knowledge, as I try to explain to Banno, who likewise says it's simply 'hand-waving' (and also that it is something that ought not to be said). I try to support this contention with reference to citations, which you then also tell me 'have it all wrong'.

    From my perspective, I've made many sincere efforts to explain my arguments to you, over about ten years, which is often met with a mixture of incomprehension and indignation, along with frequent acusations that I've 'dodged the question' or 'changed the subject'. Last time I took a month out from posting, I seriously considered whether I should respond to your criticisms. I'm still considering it, but if I no longer respond, it's not out of defensiveness, it's out of a feeling you have no idea what I'm trying to convey.

    The one thing that comes out of it is that having to explain it over and over again does at least crystallize it for me, even if I feel I'm singing to the deaf.
  • The essence of religion
    I am wondering why I should care. It's just that we always seem to come back to quesions about what is true and how do we know it.Tom Storm

    You often ask 'why should I bother with this?' But something keeps drawing you back into these discussions.

    I think It’s essential that you learn to feel what you cannot know. Coming to think of it, this is a large part of what 'mindfulness meditation' comprises - learning that the verbal or discursive element of your being is only one facet of a much greater whole. That also comes out in artistic performance and art generally. But being aware of it is important - a kind of somatic or bodily awareness, not just on the conceptual level. That's what comes from 'zazen'. Also, for anyone that has done awareness training of the kind done at EST and the like, you're taught that ego resists this awareness, as ego's role is to incorporate everything under its gaze. That is what 'letting go' means in relation to contemplative awareness. (And I *think* this is related to the OP.)

    It's also related to the phenomenological epochē, the 'letting experience be' and seeing it as it is, rather than trying to interpret it. (There's an historical link between the Buddhist 'nirodha' (cessation) and the epochē of the early sceptics.)

    In a different register - much of the hostility that is directed towards religion and/or mysticism on this forum is an unconscious response to the dogmatic authority that presided over it in earlier centuries. I recall reading an excerpt from the founding charter of The Royal Society, which stated in no uncertain terms that 'metaphysik', being the province of 'churchmen', in no way must be considered in the reckonings of the Society. And when you consider the bloody history of that time, the slaughter of the 'religious wars', that was an extremely prudent consideration. Venture a wrong opinion about matters of dogma, and goodness knows what might happen to you.
  • The essence of religion
    When you consider the transcendental, what frame do you find helpful? It strikes me that your form of idealism (as articulated in your article) has some commonalities with Husserl and phenomenology.Tom Storm

    One way of thinking about it is that the transcendent is 'always already the case'. In discovering it, or rather realising it, we are coming to understand something that has always been so (and I think this is connected with Plato's 'unforgetting'). I agree with the relevance of the distinction of 'transcendent' and 'transcendental' noted above, but the latter is in some ways just as difficult to understand - it to is connected with the concept of the 'a priori' which also is a form of 'always already so'.

    This is inexorably connected with what is nowadays (usually dismissively) described as mysticism. But then Wittgenstein also said, not far from those other passages I quoted 'There is indeed the inexpressible. This shows itself; it is the mystical'.

    However that apophatic (cannot be stated) element of Wittgenstein is not especially helpful, or rather it is easily misinterpreted. Recall, as has been touched on already, that the positivists understood Wittgenstein to support their anti-metphysics, which he never did. He recognised that the domain of value, so to speak, transcends the realm of facts. He also says somewhere 'even if all scientific problems were solved it wouldn't touch the problems of life.' So if you make it the subject of propositional knowledge, then you're not really saying anything. You have to walk the walk. ('Do not tell! Display!’, said Oscar Wilde.)

    The only way I've been able to frame all of this is to try and zoom out to a perspective encompassing the history of ideas and the dialectics of modernity. As I've often said, I hold to a form of the 'forgotten wisdom' school of thought, that the ancients had insights into a higher understanding that has nowadays been forgotten (e.g. Huston Smith and others). Because of the particular background of Western thought, there is a kind of unstated barrier demarcating what secular philosophy is able to acknowledge. That is the subject of John Vervaeke's lecture series on The Meaning Crisis. But it's also beginning to surface with the re-kindling of interest in Stoicism and ancient philosophy generally (there's a lot of material now on Substack and Medium, for instance.)

    With apologists it always comes down to "you must not understand" if you disagree with them and/or present arguments they can't cope withJanus

    'Apologists' being anyone who questions naive scientific realism, right?
  • Quantifier Variance, Ontological Pluralism, and Other Fun Stuff
    Dirac's derivation is no more than that.Banno

    Perhaps you can use a couple of sticks to learn to make a fire. It might be more in line with your proclivities.
  • The essence of religion
    I found an interesting essay on Wittgenstein's philosophy of religion - Wittgenstein's Philosophy of Religion, John Cottingham (.pdf).

    Thomas Nagel remarks in a footnote to his essay Secular Philosophy and the Religious Temperament:

    The religious temperament is not common among analytic philosophers, but it is not absent. A number of prominent analytic philosophers are protestant, catholic, or jewish, and others, such as Wittgenstein and Rawls, clearly had a religious attitude to life without adhering to a particular religion. But I believe nothing of the kind is present in the makeup of Russell, Moore, Ryle, Austin, Carnap, Quine, Davidson, Strawson, or most of the current professoriate.
  • The essence of religion
    I simply quoted that in support of @Constance who has expressed similar ideas.
  • The Idea That Changed Europe
    The Theological Origins of Modernity, Michael Gillespietim wood

    I second that, extremely important book, one I read when I first joined forums and which underlies a lot of what I've been exploring since. There's a good review and synopsis here.
  • Quantifier Variance, Ontological Pluralism, and Other Fun Stuff
    Our issue was, what sort of things are numbers? And one answer is that they are real, like trees, sticks and rocks, but that they are in a special world that makes them unavailable for examination in the way that trees and sticks are available. Roughly, Plato's world of forms.Banno

    There is implicit reification in this statement (and please forgive me for flogging what is probably a dead horse.) This is based around the instinctive conviction that only objects are real, or that the scope of what constitutes real things is entirely exhausted by what exists as objects or collections of objects. This is what leads to the erroneous idea of 'ethereal realms' or 'Platonic worlds'. Is 'the set of natural numbers' a real realm in an objective sense? Not at all - but there is nevertheless 'the domain of natural numbers', which are discerned by reason, as distinct from sense.

    The following excerpt pertains to Plato's forms, generally, although it's not difficult to extrapolate it to the understanding of number also.

    Forms...are radically distinct, and in that sense ‘apart,’ in that they are not themselves sensible things. With our eyes we can see large things, but not largeness itself; healthy things, but not health itself. The latter, in each case, is an idea, an intelligible content, something to be apprehended by thought rather than sense, a ‘look’ not for the eyes but for the mind. This is precisely the point Plato is making when he characterizes forms as the reality of all things. “Have you ever seen any of these with your eyes?—In no way … Or by any other sense, through the body, have you grasped them? I am speaking about all things such as largeness, health, strength, and, in one word, the reality [οὐσίας] of all other things, what each thing is” (Phd. 65d4–e1). Is there such a thing as health? Of course there is. Can you see it? Of course not. This does not mean that the forms are occult entities floating ‘somewhere else’ in ‘another world,’ a ‘Platonic heaven.’ It simply says that the intelligible identities which are the reality, the whatness, of things are not themselves physical things to be perceived by the senses, but must be grasped by thought. If, taking any of these examples—say, justice, health, or strength—we ask, “How big is it? What color is it? How much does it weigh?” we are obviously asking the wrong kind of question. Forms are ideas, not in the sense of concepts or abstractions, but in that they are realities apprehended by thought rather than by sense. They are thus ‘separate’ in that they are not additional members of the world of sensible things, but are known by a different mode of awareness. But this does not mean that they are ‘located elsewhere,’ or that they are not, as Plato says, the very intelligible contents, the truth and reality of sensible things. — Thinking Being - An Introduction to Metaphysics in the Classical Tradition, Eric D. Perl, p28

    And we build on this. "7" counts as seven, and with a few extras we can write "3+4=7". These count as numbers.Banno

    The attempt to reduce mathematics to 'speech acts' is inadequate to account for the 'unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics in the natural sciences' (Eugene Wigner). It is the predictive power of mathematics and the synthetic a priori, which has given rise to many of the astonishing discoveries of mathematical physics in the last several centuries. That is exemplified by Dirac’s equations, which predicted the existence of antimatter based purely on the mathematical necessity of solutions to these equations. These solutions (positrons) were not derived from empirical data or observation but from the mathematical theory of quantum mechanics. This aligns with the notion of the synthetic a priori because it extends our knowledge in a substantive way, yet was not derived from empirical observation.

    So the idea that mathematical reasoning can be reduced to speech acts—verbal or written statements within particular contexts—is inadequate to capture instances like Dirac's prediction (and countless other examples from mathematical physics.) Speech acts emphasize the role of language and context in constructing meaning, but Dirac's work suggests that mathematical constructs can correspond to real physical entities, indicating a deeper, non-linguistic form of truth and reasoning. His prediction was based on the internal consistency and logical implications of quantum theory, not merely on the performative use of language.

    The successful experimental verification of antimatter substantially supports the idea that mathematical descriptions can unveil aspects of physical reality that are yet unseen. This challenges purely empirical or nominalist views of science and supports a more Platonist or realist view, where abstract mathematical forms have a real, albeit non-empirical, connection to the structure of the world.
  • The essence of religion
    Ask Wittgenstein how it is with value experiences.Constance

    Speaking of whom.....

    6.41The sense of the world must lie outside the world. In the world everything is as it is and happens as it does happen. In it there is no value—and if there were, it would be of no value.

    If there is a value which is of value, it must lie outside all happening and being-so. For all happening and being-so is accidental.

    What makes it non-accidental cannot lie in the world, for otherwise this would again be accidental.

    It must lie outside the world.


    6.42 Hence also there can be no ethical propositions.

    Propositions cannot express anything higher.


    6.421It is clear that ethics cannot be expressed.

    Ethics is transcendental.

    (Ethics and aesthetics are one.)
    Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus
  • A poll regarding opinions of evolution
    It's an interesting area because it ties in with the radical transformation of views on freedom. Freedom goes from primarily being defined in terms of actuality (the ability to do the Good) to bring primarily defined in terms of potency (the ability to choose anything). This has ramifications throughout philosophy.Count Timothy von Icarus

    A fascinating insight and one I'd never thought of, although I suppose it ties in with the ascendancy of liberalism which understands freedom as freedom of choice.
  • Was Schopenhauer right?
    If a god created us did it have this chatter in mind? If we are organic beings formed by the evolution of cells, is the chatter a formation of cells?ENOAH

    Actually the sources I referred to, and I think Schopenhauer, don’t posit that dichotomy between naturalism vs Divine creation. That, I think, is very specific to (post) Christian culture.
  • Was Schopenhauer right?
    So I agree that humans have a running narrative of reasons and explanations and goals and emotional responses, etc. etc. that come from having a linguistic-based mind, and the dynamics of our brain. This indeed does make us distinct from other animals. However, I don't see how it could ever be different for the human animal.schopenhauer1

    Don't overlook the significance of trance states and sacred silence, which humans also 'have access to' (to express it in modern terminology). For example, in the yoga sutras, there are references to 'nirvikalpa samadhi'. 'Nirvikalpa' is derived from the negation (nir) of vikalpa (mentation, thought forms, vritti). So that state is one of complete abeyance of discursive thought. In Buddhism, there is a Pali term 'papañca' meaning 'conceptual proliferation' or 'mental elaboration'. Suffice to say that internal mental chatter is the default state of humanity, excacerbated by our media-saturated culture. It is the subject of the delightfully-named 'Honeyball Sutta' which explains how beings become enmeshed in never-ending chains of emotional reactivity and attachment, resulting in 'taking up rods & bladed weapons, of arguments, quarrels, disputes, accusations, divisive tale-bearing, & false speech.'

    So speech and discursive reason are indeed central to the human way of being in the world, but they are not the be-all and end-all of existence. And I think this was something Schopenhauer would have understood.
  • A poll regarding opinions of evolution
    By contrast, the classical/scholastic tradition hadnt yet arrived at a notion of subjective consciousness, and as a result, had nothing like the modern concept of the objectJoshs

    Indeed, which is why the term 'objective' only came into popular usage with the dawning of modernity. The pre-moden sense of being was characterised by an 'I-Thou' relationship in the context of the community of the faithful, rather than the isolated Cartesian ego confronting a world of impersonal forces and objects. I see modernity (and post-modernity) very much as a state of consciousness, among other things. We imagine ourselves in ways that were not even conceivable to earlier generations.

    The context of the 'new' (now rather second hand) atheism, they are so embedded in the subject-object worldview that they interpret everything through that perspective, without of course seeing that they're doing that. But that has been commented on by a great many critics.

    I've never read Deleuze and Lacan and others of their ilk (although I've watched a very interesting video lecture on Lacan's 'register theory' which I found both agreeable and interesting.)
  • The essence of religion
    I’m sorry but really a very silly piece of doggerel which adds nothing to the conversation.
  • The essence of religion
    It reminds me of the positivists, who responded to Wittgenstein's Tractatus in a way he never intended.Constance

    There's an essay I often link to that makes exactly this point Wittgenstein, Tolstoy and the Folly of Logical Positivism, published in Philosophy Now magazine (but originally by the British Wittgenstein Society so its provenance is sound.) I've not studied him closely, but the mystical aphorisms at the end of the Tractatus have always seemed to me very much the concluding aim of the overall work. Regrettably that final line, about 'remaining silent', is often used as a kind of fire-blanket to throw over discussion of anything spiritual.

    The other note you're striking, is the primacy of feeling - not simply wishy-washy emotionality, but nearer the dread or 'anxiety' of Kierkegaard. And I'm sure you're right in pointing to that. In Buddhist literature, there is a recognised phase of spiritual growth, "nibbida" (Pali) or "nirveda" (Sanskrit), often translated as "disgust," "disenchantment," or "turning away," denoting a turning point in spiritual growth where an individual becomes disillusioned with the vanity and suffering inherent in worldly existence. (Something I myself have not experienced, but have no reason to doubt that it occurs.)
  • ChatGPT 4 Answers Philosophical Questions
    I enlarged on the above discussion of free will and determinism in line with my interest in Eastern philosophy, by raising a question of where karma fits into the schema . (Notice the caveat that it gives - unprompted - about the degree to which determinism applies to LLM's.)

    USER: I would like to append a question to the above categories - where does 'karma' fit into this schema? It seems to me to be partially deterministic, in that it determines many factors of our present existence, but I think according to Buddhist doctrine, we're not WHOLLY determined by it, as there is the possibility of realising liberation. What do you think?

    ChatGPT: That's an insightful question! Karma indeed introduces an interesting dimension to the discussion of free will and determinism. Let's explore how karma fits into this schema:

    ### Karma and Its Relation to Free Will and Determinism

    **Karma** is a concept found in many Eastern religions, particularly Hinduism and Buddhism. It refers to the law of moral causation, where one's actions in past lives and the present life influence future experiences and circumstances.

    **Deterministic Aspects of Karma:**
    - **Causal Influence:** Karma posits that our current circumstances are influenced by our past actions. This introduces a deterministic element, as our past deeds shape our present situation.
    - **Moral Law:** Like determinism, karma operates under a law-like framework where actions have consequences that follow naturally from them.

    **Elements of Free Will in Karma:**
    - **Moral Responsibility:** Despite the deterministic influence of past actions, individuals retain moral responsibility for their current actions. They can choose how to act in the present moment, which will shape their future karma.
    - **Liberation (Moksha or Nirvana):** In Buddhist doctrine, liberation from the cycle of rebirth (samsara) and karma is achievable. This suggests that while karma influences one's existence, it does not entirely determine it. Through right actions, meditation, and wisdom, individuals can overcome their karmic influences and attain liberation.

    ### Integration with Free Will and Determinism Schema

    1. **Free Will:**
    - Within the karmic framework, free will is exercised through present actions. While past karma influences current circumstances, individuals still have the freedom to choose their responses and actions.
    - The possibility of achieving liberation (nirvana) underscores the existence of free will, as it implies that individuals can transcend karmic determinants through conscious effort.

    2. **Determinism:**
    - Karma shares common ground with determinism in that it posits a causal relationship between actions and their consequences. Our past actions set the conditions for our present experiences, much like determinism suggests that past events shape current outcomes.
    - However, karma is not wholly deterministic, as it allows for the influence of present actions on future outcomes, thus incorporating an element of change and agency.

    3. **Compatibilism:**
    - Karma can be seen as a form of compatibilism. It acknowledges the deterministic influence of past actions while also allowing for free will through present choices.
    - Individuals act according to their desires and motivations, which are influenced by past karma, yet they still have the ability to make free choices that shape their future karma.

    4. **Incompatibilism:**
    - From an incompatibilist perspective, one might argue that if past karma strictly determines present actions, true free will is compromised.
    - However, the notion of liberation and the ability to transcend karmic influences suggest that Buddhism and other karmic doctrines lean towards a compatibilist view, where free will and determinism coexist in a nuanced manner.

    ### Applying to LLM-based Conversational AI Assistants

    When considering LLM-based conversational AI assistants like myself in this context, it's essential to note:

    - **Deterministic Nature:** The responses generated by AI are determined by the data it was trained on and the algorithms that guide its functioning. In this sense, AI operates deterministically.
    - **Lack of Free Will:** AI does not possess free will in the human sense, as it does not have desires, motivations, or consciousness. Its actions are entirely determined by its programming and input data.
    - **Simulated Agency:** While AI can simulate conversation and decision-making, this is based on pre-determined algorithms rather than genuine free will.

    In summary, karma provides a nuanced perspective that aligns with compatibilism, recognizing both the deterministic influence of past actions and the potential for free will in shaping one's future. This contrasts with the purely deterministic nature of AI, which lacks the conscious agency necessary for free will.

    I then put another couple of questions about the relationship of karma and liberation as follows:

    Reveal
    USER: One subtle doctrinal point about the above: you say 'Through right actions, meditation, and wisdom, individuals can overcome their karmic influences and attain liberation.'

    However, in a certain sense, individual existence ceases with the dawning of Nirvāṇa. It is one of the customary criticisms of Buddhism from Christians, who say that the individual continues in 'life eternal'. I won't ask you to resolve the conundrum - who could? - but thought I would just call that out.

    ChatGPT You're absolutely right, and that subtle doctrinal point is significant in distinguishing Buddhist and Christian perspectives on liberation and eternal life.

    Buddhist Perspective on Nirvāṇa
    In Buddhism, Nirvāṇa represents the ultimate goal, the cessation of suffering and the cycle of rebirth (samsara). Upon attaining Nirvāṇa:

    Cessation of Individual Existence: The concept of a permanent, unchanging self (atman) is seen as an illusion. Nirvāṇa entails the realization of anatta (non-self), leading to the dissolution of the individual ego and the cessation of personal existence.
    Transcendence of Dualities: Nirvāṇa is often described as transcending the dualities of existence and non-existence. It is a state beyond conceptualization, where the individual identity merges into a state of profound peace and liberation from all karmic bonds.
    Christian Perspective on Eternal Life
    In Christianity, eternal life is the promise of continued existence with God after physical death. This perspective includes:

    Continuation of Individual Existence: The individual soul is believed to persist after death, retaining personal identity and consciousness.
    Personal Relationship with God: Eternal life is often described in terms of a personal and loving relationship with God, where the individual continues to experience and participate in divine love and communion.
    Doctrinal Contrast
    Buddhism: Emphasizes the dissolution of the self and the end of individual existence upon attaining Nirvāṇa.
    Christianity: Emphasizes the continuation of the individual's existence and personal identity in eternal life with God.
    This contrast reflects deep philosophical and theological differences between the two traditions. While Buddhism sees liberation as a release from the illusion of self, Christianity views eternal life as the fulfillment of the individual's relationship with the divine. Both perspectives offer profound insights, yet they lead to different understandings of what liberation or eternal life entails.

    Your observation highlights the richness and complexity of these traditions, and the challenges in reconciling or comparing their ultimate aims. It's a fascinating area of comparative theology and philosophy that continues to inspire deep reflection and dialogue.

    User: I think the response from the Buddhist to the Christian would be that 'the enlightened' (which is equivalent to 'one who has attained Nirvāṇa') transcends the categories of existence and non-existence. This for example is attested in the early Buddhist text in MN 72 PTS: Aggi-Vacchagotta Sutta: To Vacchagotta on Fire: 'Freed from the classification of consciousness, Vaccha, the Tathagata (i.e. a Buddha) is deep, boundless, hard to fathom, like the sea. 'Reappears' doesn't apply. 'Does not reappear' doesn't apply. 'Both does & does not reappear' doesn't apply. 'Neither reappears nor does not reappear' doesn't apply." So the Buddhist would say that the Christian doctrine of 'life eternal' is grounded in a rather naive apprehension of the nature of immortality.

    ChatGPT: That's an excellent elaboration, and it indeed captures a critical aspect of Buddhist thought regarding Nirvāṇa and the nature of existence and non-existence. The passage from the Aggi-Vacchagotta Sutta illustrates the profound and non-dual nature of enlightenment in Buddhism:

    Buddhist Response to Christian Doctrine of Eternal Life
    In Buddhism, the state of enlightenment or Nirvāṇa transcends conventional categories of existence and non-existence. The enlightened being, or Tathagata (Buddha), is described as:

    Beyond Dualities: Enlightenment is beyond the dualities of existence (being) and non-existence (non-being). This means that the enlightened one cannot be adequately described by our ordinary conceptual frameworks.
    Unfathomable Nature: The analogy of the Tathagata being deep, boundless, and hard to fathom like the sea emphasizes that the nature of enlightenment is beyond ordinary comprehension and linguistic categorization.
    Aggi-Vacchagotta Sutta (MN 72) and Its Implications
    In the Aggi-Vacchagotta Sutta, the Buddha explains to Vacchagotta that questions about the reappearance or non-reappearance of the Tathagata after death do not apply:

    Non-Applicability of Conventional Terms: The categories of "reappears," "does not reappear," "both does & does not reappear," and "neither reappears nor does not reappear" are all rejected. This indicates that the state of Nirvāṇa cannot be captured by the typical binary oppositions used to describe ordinary existence.
    Transcendence of Classification: The Buddha's description suggests that the state of Nirvāṇa is one of ultimate freedom, transcending all conventional classifications of consciousness and existence.
    Critique of the Christian Doctrine of Eternal Life
    From a Buddhist perspective, the Christian notion of eternal life might be seen as rooted in a dualistic and perhaps naive understanding of immortality:

    Attachment to Self: The Christian idea of eternal life often involves the continuation of the individual self or soul. Buddhism, however, views the self as an illusion (anatta), and ultimate liberation involves the realization of non-self.
    Naive Apprehension: The Buddhist might argue that the Christian concept of eternal life fails to grasp the deeper, non-dual nature of true liberation, which lies beyond the categories of existence and non-existence.
    Philosophical Dialogue
    This contrast invites a rich philosophical dialogue between Buddhism and Christianity:

    Nature of the Self: Discussions about the nature of the self, the soul, and their continuity or dissolution in the context of liberation or eternal life.
    Conceptual Frameworks: Examination of how different religious traditions use conceptual frameworks to understand and describe ultimate reality and liberation.
    Transcendence and Immanence: Exploration of how each tradition views the relationship between the finite and the infinite, the temporal and the eternal.
    Such a dialogue can deepen mutual understanding and highlight the diverse ways human beings seek to comprehend and articulate the nature of ultimate reality and liberation.
  • Was Schopenhauer right?
    This actually goes back to Schopenhauer's notion that subject and object are always intertwined. Your thought of a dead, lifeless universe, is still a thought. And even if it is a representation of some "reality", that reality will never be YOUR reality, which is NOT simply "lifeless universe" but a psychologically embodied being THINKING of the lifeless universe, and projecting it, Signifying it, as you might say.schopenhauer1

    Pretty much the exact argument of my The Mind Created World OP.

    He failed to take the Vedanta/Mahayana wisdom far enough. (In that regard, a victim of his age. Bless him for how far he got!)ENOAH

    There is some truth in that, but consider that in his day and place, there was no opportunity for meeting (darshan) with a realized sage from those traditions. And there is also a sense in which his 'pessimism' is overstated, he has many passages on 'better consciousness' and aesthetics and tranquility. But it is true that he tended to stress the first of the four Buddhist truths (that to exist is to suffer.)

    There's an appendix in Bryan Magee's 'Schopenhauer's Philosophy' that considers Schopenhauer's relationship with Eastern philosophy. It begins like this:

    There is nothing controversial in saying that of the major figures in Western philosophy Schopenhauer is the one who has most in common with Eastern thought. Less adequately pondered is the fact that much of what it is that the two have in common was taken by Schopenhauer from Kant. To suppose that Schopenhauer's philosophy was formed to any decisive degree under the influence of Eastern thought is not only a mistake, but misses the crucial point that in Kant and Schopenhauer the mainstream of Western philosophy threw up conclusions about the nature of reality* which are strikingly similar to some of those propounded by the more mystically oriented religions or philosophies of the East, yet arrived at by an entirely different path.

    It would be an error, though one characteristic of Western intellectual provincialism, to suppose that the Oriental doctrines in question were not supported by rational argument: in the case of Buddhist philosophy, in particular, they conspicuously are. But the Kantian-Schopenhauerian conclusions were reached by processes internal to a tradition of thought which is fundamentally rooted in the development of mathematical physics, and this is something with which Buddhist philosophy has been little concerned until the twentieth century. Incidentally, both the Kantian and Schopenhauerian philosophy and the more sophisticated of the mysticisms of the East have received, and continue to receive, extensive corroboration from the revolutionary developments of the twentieth century in the natural sciences. (There is a growing literature on this in the case of Eastern mysticism - a good introduction is The Tao of Physics by Fritjof Capra, which also contains a useful bibliography.) The Eastern religion most congruent with contemporary science is Buddhism.
    — Bryan Magee, Schopenhauer's Philosophy

    *I would say 'the nature of Being' in this context. "Being" conveys the gist better than "reality" in that it is not something we're apart from or outside of.

    Nice that he mentions Tao of Physics, too.
  • The essence of religion
    My thinking is this: Religion rises out of the radical ethical indeterminacy of our existence. This simply means that we are thrown into a world of ethical issues that, in the most basic analysis, are not resolvable. Yet they insist on resolution with the same apodicticity as logical coercivity. Meaning, just as one cannot but agree with something like modus ponens or the principle of identity in terms of the pure logicality of their intuitive insistence, so one cannot resist the moral insistence of moral redemption.Constance

    I quite agree, and kudos for expressing such a deep insight so succinctly. Perhaps for self-aware rational beings such as ourselves, existence is a predicament, a plight which has no obvious remedy. A blog post about Joshia Royce's philosophy of religion put it like this:

    The religious person perceives our present life, or our natural life, as radically deficient, deficient from the root (radix) up, as fundamentally unsatisfactory; he feels it to be, not a mere condition, but a predicament; it strikes him as vain or empty if taken as an end in itself; he sees himself as homo viator, as a wayfarer or pilgrim treading a via dolorosa (way of suffering) through a vale that cannot possibly be a final and fitting resting place; he senses or glimpses from time to time the possibility of a Higher Life; he feels himself in danger of missing out on this Higher Life of true happiness. If this doesn't strike a chord in you, then I suggest you do not have a religious disposition. Some people don't, and it cannot be helped. One cannot discuss religion with them, for it cannot be real to them. It is not, for them, what William James in "The Will to Believe" calls a "living option," let alone a "forced" or "momentous" one.

    As to the sources or origins of 'the religious feeling', they are of course lost in the mists of pre-history. But I will note that when I studied comparative religion, the 'neanderthal flower burials' dating back approximately 35,000 years were often mentioned, as were the discovery of sacred objects carved in bone and stone also from around that time. The conjecture is that all ancient and pre-modern cultures incorporated religious elements from as far back as paleoanthropology allows us to see.

    I would also mention the (often overlooked) role of shamanism and ascetic practices as one of the main tributaries of religion, subject of some of the books of scholar of religions Mircea Eliade (e.g. his Yoga: Immortality and Freedom.)

    More could be said but that will suffice for one post.
  • ChatGPT 4 Answers Philosophical Questions
    OpenAI released their new GPT-4o model today.Pierre-Normand

    I was prompted to use it, and did. I asked it to validate an anecdote about Schopenhauer that I wanted to re-tell in the thread on that subject, which it did. Then, unprompted, it asked 'hey, have you read Bernardo Kastrup's book on Schopenhauer? Did you like it?' I have, and I did, but I thought it was really cool that it asked.
  • Was Schopenhauer right?
    I think disposition has much to do with it. I'm not a fan of owning too many things. I feel better with less. Just sold my car.Tom Storm

    I admire that (although I just bought a car.) But I also gloomily realise the truth of the old maxim about the patterns being set in early childhood, and mine were certainly not at all conducive to either stoicism or asceticism. (Then again, I recall reading in History of Western Philosophy that Schopenhauer himself lived comfortably enough, and chuckled spitefully when his landlady fell down the stairs, an anecdode that Russell seemed to relish, so as to defray any claim regarding moral superiority on Schopenhauer's part.)

    Nevertheless I'll take this opportunity to present another passage from Schopenhauer which I find prescient:

    Of all systems of philosophy which start from the object, the most consistent, and that which may be carried furthest, is simple materialism. It regards matter, and with it time and space, as existing absolutely, and ignores the relation to the subject in which alone all this really exists. It then lays hold of the law of causality as a guiding principle or clue, regarding it as a self-existent order (or arrangement) of things,veritas aeterna, and so fails to take account of the understanding, in which and for which alone causality is. It seeks the primary and most simple state of matter, and then tries to develop all the others from it; ascending from mere mechanism, to chemistry, to polarity (i.e. electricity), to the vegetable and to the animal kingdom.

    And if we suppose this to have been done, the last link in the chain would be animal sensibility—that is knowledge—which would consequently now appear as a mere modification or state of matter produced by causality. Now if we had followed materialism thus far with clear ideas, when we reached its highest point we would suddenly be seized with a fit of the inextinguishable laughter of the Olympians. As if waking from a dream, we would all at once become aware that its final result—knowledge, which it reached so laboriously, was presupposed as the indispensable condition of its very starting-point, mere matter; and when we imagined that we thought matter, we really thought only the subject that perceives matter; the eye that sees it, the hand that feels it, the understanding that knows it.

    Thus the tremendous petitio principii (begged question) reveals itself unexpectedly; for suddenly the last link is seen to be the starting-point, the chain a circle, and the materialist is like Baron Münchausen who, when swimming in water on horseback, drew the horse into the air with his legs, and himself also by his cue. The fundamental absurdity of materialism is that it starts from the objective, and takes as the ultimate ground of explanation something objective, whether it be matter in the abstract, simply as it is thought, or, after it has taken form, as empirically given—that is to say, as substance, the chemical elements with their primary relations. Some such thing it takes as existing absolutely and in itself, in order that it may evolve organic nature and finally the knowing subject from it, and explain them adequately by means of it; whereas in truth all that is objective is already determined as such in manifold ways by the knowing subject through its forms of knowing, and presupposes them; and consequently it entirely disappears if we think the subject away.

    Thus materialism is the attempt to explain what is immediately given us by what is given us indirectly. All that is objective, extended, active—that is to say, all that is material—is regarded by materialism as affording so solid a basis for its explanation, that a reduction of everything to this can leave nothing to be desired (especially if in ultimate analysis this reduction should resolve itself into action and reaction (i.e. physics)).

    But we have shown that all this is given indirectly and in the highest degree determined, and is therefore merely a relatively present object, for it has passed through the machinery and manufactory of the brain, and has thus come under the forms of space, time and causality, by means of which it is first presented to us as extended in space and ever active in time. From such an indirectly given object, materialism seeks to explain what is immediately given, the idea (in which alone the object that materialism starts with exists), and finally even the will from which all those fundamental forces, that manifest themselves, under the guidance of causes, and therefore according to law, are in truth to be explained. To the assertion that thought is a modification of matter we may always, with equal right, oppose the contrary assertion that all matter is merely the modification of the knowing subject, as its idea. Yet the aim and ideal of all natural science is at bottom a consistent materialism.
    WWR page 35

    My bolds :yikes:
  • Quantifier Variance, Ontological Pluralism, and Other Fun Stuff
    God could not be understood by human reason but only through Biblical revelation or mystical experienceReligious Modernity

    I wonder if that shows up here:

    6.5.2.1 The solution of the problem of life is seen in the vanishing of this problem.

    (Is not this the reason why men to whom after long doubting the sense of life became clear, could not then say wherein this sense consisted?)


    6.522 There is indeed the inexpressible. This shows itself; it is the mystical.
    TLP