I do think that the mystifying is language is a real problem in philosophy — Jack Cummins
Listening to Jimi Hendrix is not the same experience as listening to Brahms. Listening to Jimi while cruising a highway is not the same experience as listening to Jimi while trying to solve a difficult puzzle. — Banno
'Everything I say is a lie', which if true is false, and if false is true .i] — 3017amen
Within everything exist everything, so the paradox of the above statement is present in all statements if we allow ourselves to realize it.
For example, consider the statement, "The boy has the blue balloon." If there is no visible light present, does the boy still have the balloon? Is it still blue? — synthesis
Perhaps the consistent theme is, we are trapped in this mystery of self-awareness, which resides in our consciousness. — 3017amen
Perhaps, but much more fundamental would be the acknowledgement that the human intellect is simply incapable of accessing reality in any way, shape, or form, so instead, we make-up all kinds of ways to approximate (for practical reasons). Whatever combination of letters/numbers you may wish to suggest have a relationship based on some natural law is stretching it a bit.
This is not to disparage mathematics or language, in general, as they satisfy basic needs, but (and as is always the case), it is in the understanding inherent limitations that give forth true value. — synthesis
TMF!
Thank you kindly for the link, it said:
Ineffability is concerned with ideas that cannot or should not be expressed in spoken words (or language in general), often being in the form of a taboo or incomprehensible term. This property is commonly associated with philosophy, aspects of existence, and similar concepts that are inherently "too great", complex or abstract to be communicated adequately.
I agree, as you alluded, that there are varieties of religious experiences that are ineffable. In your mind, are there others? For example, say the feelings of love, or to be excruciatingly graphic, during procreation activities/love-making, are those kinds of things similar, you think? — 3017amen
'ineffable' is a way of trying to avoid going too far in thinking — Jack Cummins
eff the ineffable — Samuel Beckett
I don't see why we can't use language to remark on the limitations of our language. That would seem like saying we can't use our minds to think about our own mental limitations. — Jack Cummins
What "...should not be expressed..." has nothing to do with language and is more about stuff like respect, pity, love, goodwill, taboo, etc. For instance, many times I find myself thinking "I don't want to talk about it" and I'm sure this unwillingness to "talk about it" is quite common as evidenced by the many times I've heard it being said aloud to overly inquisitive folks. This, however, as is obvious, not a limitation of language - we can talk about something but it's just that we don't wish to. — TheMadFool
What "...cannot be expressed..." is what the limitations of language should (try to) discuss. Come to think of it, this seems to be an impossible task; after all if something is ineffable, it precludes any and all language-based inquiry. It's like trying to break a bulletproof glass with a bullet. — TheMadFool
As Jack alluded, are you saying we can't use our minds to think about our own mental limitations? — 3017amen
Might such a paradox provoke one to step-back for a moment and consider alternatives to conceptualization? Might there just be another (better) way to seek the truth of the matter? — synthesis
Sure, but that is not germane to the issue. Thanks anyway! — 3017amen
mysticism — Jack Cummins
I guess I went off on a tangent. I'm always distracted but generally by beauty. So, if you want to use me as a beauty-meter here you might want to give what I wrote a second look — TheMadFool
If it can be thought, it can be put into words. — baker
It certainly was thought. — Pantagruel
Not before only, because.Are you claiming that it was a thought before it was painted — Banno
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