the power or faculty of attaining to direct knowledge or cognition without evident rational thought and inference — Merriam-Webster dictionary
It seems that the more one falls from the essential, the more one has to rely upon more indirect means.
Intuition is most direct, logic/reason less direct(further from essence), while sensory observation is furthest. — Yohan
I guess every view is rooted in an intuition.Both logic and ideals are developed over time through experience. A baby learns through intuition - so both rational as well as idealistic thinking is attained through intuition. — Hermeticus
Notice that scientists often don't contemplate essentials. What is truth? What is meaning? Because they are too far away from essence, is my guess. Philosophy being closer to intuition and essence, is consciously trying to attain the essential. However, one could argue that science is closer to essence, or already has it, so it need not think about it. It's possible that no path is inherently more likely to be closer to essence.I'm not sure why sensory observation would be furthest away though. My intuition tells me that while matter may not be THE essence, it certainly comes off as quite essential. — Hermeticus
You are implying intuition comes after and or is dependent upon socially acquired concepts? This may be true.Your entire Op is informational structure. The words that you use represent concepts that are entirely socially derived. Without this socially derived informational structure, what sort of intuition would you posses at all? — Pop
I imagine the intuition was always there, however, guiding the process unconsciously / subconsciously. — Yohan
I don't know.I have tried to imagine a consciousness before language and society, and there is not really much there without those socially derived concepts.
It would seem, there would have to have been some sort of cognition / intuition but it would have been a far cry from what we enjoy now.
I was trying to highlight how indebted we are to socially derived knowledge for our present state of consciousness, and I wonder what we could have intuition about without this socially derived knowledge? — Pop
So then, how to "reach" essence?
The only path left may be intuition. — Yohan
I could keep going with every response given. Which, would either lead to an endless cycle of going from one concept to another, or to a stripping away of concepts until essence is arrived at. — Yohan
So then, how to "reach" essence? — Yohan
Labels? It is an unusual naming. Label is a piece of blank sticky paper, you write on something, and stick to something for ID.Things aren't defined by labels. labels are defined by things — Yohan
We are basically making order of our concepts. But what is the essence of a concept? And where do concepts come from?Labels? It is an unusual naming. Label is a piece of blank sticky paper, you write on something, and stick to something for ID.
We use concepts, definitions and names. You define things and concepts with words and more concepts with logical clear meaningful linguistic expressions. — Corvus
The phenomenal world is a mixture of experience and conceptual organization of that experience, creating the sense of objects having objective material existence. Not different than how when we dream our dream experiences are conceptualized into appearing three dimensional and solid, even though its all technically flat...2-d or 1-d. Three dimensionality, I hold, to be an emergent property grounded in 2d or 1d. Something like that! I don't grasp what 2-d or 1-d are grounded in without a 3-d reality. Its out of my depth as well. For some reason, I have a great faith in eastern doctrines which call the phenomenal world "Maya". Something about it rings true to me, and I've had brief moments where the external world seemed like it was within my consciousness.I thought all the fuss was about what you call apperances - the phenomenal world. Is the phenomenal world all conceptual or all material? I'm out of my depth. — TheMadFool
I thought you asked me what the definition of essence is? I would have to use concepts to define it. But what if concepts are lacking in essence? Then what use would a conceptual definition of essence be?We are basically making order of our concepts. But what is the essence of a concept? And where do concepts come from? — Yohan
I was asking you that question. — Corvus
I thought you asked me what the definition of essence is? I would have to use concepts to define it. But what if concepts are lacking in essence? Then what use would a conceptual definition of essence be? — Yohan
There is form essence and essence essence.Forget about the concept. Just explain what essence means from your thoughts. That is your concept of essence. — Corvus — Yohan
Just as my being-myself-ness was always here through the various stages of my biological and psychological development or de-development. (Unless the memories of having been myself in the past are illusions and I am a new being which has inherited another's memories and have mistaken them for my own) — Yohan
Perhaps "form essences" as I called it, might be more pragmatic generalization than truly essential. It may not be possible to find a perfect fit definition for what is minimally required to be a human. On the other hand, I imagine the closest thing, if we want to be very scientific about it, might depend on human DNA.Problem would be the fact that each and every human being is different in its psychological state, personalities, experience and even bodily structure in strict sense. In that case, would it be possible to apply the concept of form to define human essence?
But there are some common points in human beings such as they have 2 arms and 5 fingers and 1 head ...etc, but then there are cases that they don't, even if minority. Therefore would it be meaningful attempt for reaching essence in this regard? — Corvus
It may be that being-one-self-ness is a shared universal quality present "in" all beings.You talk about your being-yourself-ness. But what is that? It is something unique to your own self, which is contingent and syllogistic belief or emotion. What significance can it give to the rest of the others? — Corvus
Perhaps "form essences" as I called it, might be more pragmatic than truly essential. It may not be possible to find a perfect fit definition for what is minimally required to be a human. On the other hand, I imagine the closest thing, if we want to be very scientific about it, might depend on human DNA. — Yohan
It may be that being-one-self-ness is a shared universal quality present "in" all beings. — Yohan
Kind of losing meAgain the uniqueness and self contained exclusion of each DNA can be problem for being universal essence. — Corvus
Doe this mean your being-yourself-ness is constantly changing as the content of your experience changes? If so, who or what is registering the changes?It may be that being-one-self-ness is a shared universal quality present "in" all beings. — Yohan
The name "being-one-self-ness" seems totally meaningless without the content of it, which is bound to be all different and unique. — Corvus
The phenomenal world is a mixture of experience and conceptual organization of that experience, creating the sense of objects having objective material existence. Not different than how when we dream our dream experiences are conceptualized into appearing three dimensional and solid, even though its all technically flat...2-d or 1-d. Three dimensionality, I hold, to be an emergent property grounded in 2d or 1d. Something like that! I don't grasp what 2-d or 1-d are grounded in without a 3-d reality. Its out of my depth as well. For some reason, I have a great faith in eastern doctrines which call the phenomenal world "Maya". Something about it rings true to me, and I've had brief moments where the external world seemed like it was within my consciousness. — Yohan
What we see are only the appearances of things. When such appearances are mistaken to be the things in themselves, we become materialists. (Matter(appearance) is essence)
Concepts are maps of appearances. When those maps are confused for the things they map, that is Idealism. (Conceptuality/mind is essence) — Yohan
Kind of losing me — Yohan
Doe this mean your being-yourself-ness is constantly changing as the content of your experience changes? If so, who or what is registering the changes? — Yohan
If you want to get into this, we should probably start very basic, starting with definitions of mind, matter, and reality.As far as I know, the difference between idealism and materialism is that in the case of the former, whatever you perceive is mind-generated i.e. the universe itself is, in a sense, imagined by (a) mind(s). Materialism, on the other hand, claims that this isn't the case and that all that which we perceive do exist out there and that the mind has no role in the universe, existentially that is. — TheMadFool
I didn't mean to say that my experience of being myself is human, or a universal definition for humans. But there may be some commonality between all humans of what it I like to be human, even if its also unique to each. It doesn't really say much to say that what makes humans humans is an internal quality. That's why external definitions are more pragmatic.It would be registering in one's own memory as it changes. But the change is not the point. The point is that it is all unique and exclusive. So how could it have anything to do with the essence of human being?
For instance, I don't know your being-yourself-ness at all. Only you know it. How could that concept have anything to do with my essence of human being? and vice versa. — Corvus
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