I am beginning to think that philosophy is a cry for help trying to make sense of the world we have been thrown into. — Andrew4Handel
IMO, religion is for mystifying answers (i.e. placebos, snakeoil) whereas philosophy is for clarifying questions (i.e. medicine, surgery). Believers seek certainty; thinkers seek lucidity. — 180 Proof
Are you rejecting soul in favor of other words you regard as more appropriate labels for perishable human identity such as: mortal, frail, fragile, delicate, finite, terminable etc? — ucarr
Is there any context, set of circumstances or the like in which soul could work as a practical label you could accept? — ucarr
If a friend active within an intersubjective community to which you also belong should happen to say "Intersubjective agreement is the soul of worthy codes of conduct." would you find such usage acceptable? — ucarr
Do human mind and physical world create together a Venn Diagram of an overlap, which is to say, a portion of each identity blended into a shared identity? — ucarr
Is it your belief that rainfall in the rainforest that grows the plants results from random forces such as air currents, barometric pressure, temperature and the seasons? — ucarr
Is it your belief the world caused you? — ucarr
Your rational mind, however, operates independently of mindless external world, creating knowledge of sense impressions a priori. — ucarr
I don't use the word soul or any substitute for it. It's a non starter for me, a poetic or historical term — Tom Storm
A soul is an imperishable essence, so it has no role I can think of in fragility or frailty. — Tom Storm
I think the word human is a synonym for frailty - but also for resilience. — Tom Storm
If a friend active within an intersubjective community to which you also belong should happen to say "Intersubjective agreement is the soul of worthy codes of conduct." would you find such usage acceptable? — ucarr
I would say, what do you mean? Perhaps what is intended in that sentence is: 'Intersubjective agreement is the substance of all codes of conduct.' — Tom Storm
A soul is an imperishable essence... — Tom Storm
If you were tasked with putting words to such a cry for help, what words would you use? — ucarr
I think questions arise at least partly through discontent. Would we have any progress scientific artistic or otherwise if people were content? — Andrew4Handel
I think the idea that science adequately explains things is probably an illusion or complacency in the same way some religious people believe there religion is the only guide needed for Life. — Andrew4Handel
Camus said: "There is but one truly serious philosophical problem and that is suicide" — Andrew4Handel
As regards the Venn Diagram, the mind doesn't overlap with the world, the mind is part of the world. — RussellA
...forces are mindless, although not random. — RussellA
I don't believe in spontaneous self-causation, — RussellA
I believe that every effect has a cause and the world is deterministic. — RussellA
Randomness is a human concept for events that are too complex for us to analyze what is happening, a system may be chaotic but it is still deterministic, whereby effects are preceded by causes. — RussellA
Is it your belief the world caused you? — ucarr
Yes. The age of the Earth is about 4.5 billion years and it is believed that 4.3 billion years ago the Earth may have developed conditions suitable to support life. — RussellA
Your rational mind, however, operates independently of mindless external world, creating knowledge of sense impressions a priori. — ucarr
...innate knowledge does not mean that the person has been born with such knowledge, just that such knowledge wasn't expressed. Innate knowledge requires experiences to be triggered or it may never be expressed. For example, a person is not born with the knowledge of the colour red, but are born with the innate ability to perceive the colour red when experiencing it for the first time — RussellA
A human's innate knowledge, in other words a priori knowledge, is the end product of over 3.7 billion years of evolution, ie, Enactivism
The rational mind has grown out of the world, and is therefore not something separate to it. — RussellA
For example, a person is not born with the knowledge of the colour red, but are born with the innate ability to perceive the colour red when experiencing it for the first time — RussellA
Another puzzle, perhaps overriding the above, is that humans forget that they create these puzzles themselves and then try to solve them as if they exist in their own, independently of them.Another puzzle, perhaps overriding all of these, is why it is believed that humans will ever be capable of solving these puzzles. — RussellA
Okay. For you soul has no practical use or, at least, no practical use within scientific or philosophical contexts.
A soul is an imperishable essence, so it has no role I can think of in fragility or frailty.
— Tom Storm
I think the word human is a synonym for frailty - but also for resilience.
— Tom Storm
Given your above understandings, is it reasonable to conclude they suggest you might regard the pairing: human soul as being a contradiction, an oxymoron? — ucarr
Okay. If another person uses soul to mean {something ≠ human soul}, but instead something like substance, would find such usage tolerable? — ucarr
Regarding essence, I understand the word as having two main attributes: a) unavoidable; b) invariant. What do you say? — ucarr
Philosophy at its core, one might argue, concerns wisdom about living the good life. If suicide per Camus is the philosophical problem, then his character bore the stamp of deepest skepticism. — ucarr
I don't have reason to believe in this idea of essence or even understand what it means... — Tom Storm
humans are pretty vulnerable - being fragile and silly animals and all that. — Tom Storm
For me all knowledge is made by humans and has limitations. — Tom Storm
...people will sacrifice their life for an ideology. — Andrew4Handel
Essence is not one of your favorite words. Other people talk about it, but such conversations have never drawn you in. — ucarr
What about essential? Do you sometimes find practical uses for this form of the word? — ucarr
If a sarcastic and witty friend said to you, "Foolishness, fragility and spouting off are essential parts of human nature." how would you reply? — ucarr
Are you telling me mind is a discrete unit within a system we call world? — ucarr
if appearance of randomness can be conquered, will the debate be resolved in favor of pre-determination? — ucarr
Some will say a concomitant of your above quote is an embrace of the notion life can arise from non-life. — ucarr
In the above statements I perceive you to be telling me innate knowledge is a kind of genetic predisposition for knowing certain things. — ucarr
Once the person has the empirical experience of seeing the colour red and she remembers it, and, on top of this remembrance, develops additional impressions and, on top of these, develops additional evaluative and judgmental thoughts, her mind is now operating independent of external world? — ucarr
The Hard Problem (of neuro-science). — ucarr
...people will sacrifice their life for an ideology.
— Andrew4Handel
Do you think this is a good thing? — ucarr
Are you telling me mind is a discrete unit within a system we call world? — ucarr
Not really, more that the mind is an intimate part of the world, along the lines of the article Panpsychism, Panprotopsychism, and Neutral Monism by Donovan Wishon. I'm somewhere between panprotopsychism and neutral monism. — RussellA
if appearance of randomness can be conquered, will the debate be resolved in favor of pre-determination? — ucarr
Yes, in principle, the future could be calculated, though the computer needed to analyse the world would probably need to be as big as the world, taking chaotic systems into account. — RussellA
Some will say a concomitant of your above quote is an embrace of the notion life can arise from non-life. — ucarr
Yes. This goes back to neutral monism, which is the doctrine that both minds and physical entities are constructed from more basic elements of reality that are in themselves neither mental nor physical. — RussellA
In the above statements I perceive you to be telling me innate knowledge is a kind of genetic predisposition for knowing certain things. — ucarr
Yes, exactly. — RussellA
A car when driving on a road is external to the road but is still dependent upon the road. — RussellA
As regards the hard problem of consciousness, as an animal such as a cat, dog or donkey could never understand the European Commission, no matter how much it was explained to them, I don't think humans could ever understand what consciousness is. Even if a super-intelligent and super-knowledgeable alien visited Earth, and tried to explain the nature of consciousness to us, we would still be incapable of understanding. We may be able to learn more about the role of neurons in the brain, but what consciousness is would still elude us. — RussellA
Why does my opinion matter? — Andrew4Handel
I am citing Camus on the power of ideology to motivate versus science. — Andrew4Handel
Furthermore, do you believe moral logic trumps scientific logic as motivator of the fight against evil? — ucarr
I don't know what moral logic is. — Andrew4Handel
I don't know if all ideology has a moral component. — Andrew4Handel
Camus seems to just be highlighting that what motivates people is meaning rather than facts. — Andrew4Handel
Science could be used to enhance life but it has also been seen as robbing life of meaning and turning us into automatons to be manipulated. — Andrew4Handel
In the end this is all going to be filtered through personal consciousness which I think leaves us with an existential dilemma concerning meaning making. — Andrew4Handel
I have no particular commitments to views on human nature and I am fairly certain I am not an essentialist. — Tom Storm
If you have some sympathy for non-essentialism, can you assess nihilism and the range of possible identities it affords humans? — ucarr
Being ridiculous for a moment, let me assert humans cannot become cats. — ucarr
I have no problem with definitions and classifications. The issue is how far can you push these to arrive at intrinsic qualities. It's these I am skeptical about. — Tom Storm
Are you an essentialist? A theist? And why? — Tom Storm
I have a theory that in many (but not all) instances, the more you delve into anything, the more it can seem reasonable - whether it be Islam or existentialism. Once you get to know the conceptual framework and the nomenclature, it is easy to be seduced by worldviews, especially if a few key ideas already align with some of your encultured views and preferences. — Tom Storm
Is this type of thinking non-binary WRT the physical/mental binary? — ucarr
Is this a way of saying an analysis of the world, as it becomes viable, merges into the world. If so, is one of the implications that analysis of world is finally just self-referential world? From this does it follow that the self-referential part of world is exampled by humans? — ucarr
Is it correct to say these neutral basic elements are in reality to some degree alive and that, therefore, it's meaningful to talk about degrees of aliveness? — ucarr
Consciousness therefore has some degree of grounding in chromosomes and genes? — ucarr
The mind_world interface is something like the intricate tessellations of an M C Escher drawing? A tile -- in this case reality -- covers a surface -- earth -- with no overlaps or gaps? — ucarr
I see your take on the problem of consciousness is that for humans the correct position is necessarily agnostic in the strict sense of knowledge-not. — ucarr
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