• unenlightened
    8.7k
    Any time you find that an ordinary abstraction isn't clean enough, or strong enough or is just too close to what the other chap is saying, you are liable to find yourself tagging on an abstract adjective to give it more puissance.

    Don't do it! Step away from the adjective and make no sudden thoughts.

    Reality is real enough, you don't need absolute reality.
    Meaning is not more meaningful when it is true meaning.
    If the truth is not true enough, actual truth is no improvement.

    The place is littered with these double barrelled obscurities, objective reality, absolute truth, sometimes you even find double headed monsters - truly absolute objectivity.

    But the worst of them is absolute. I swear that no one who uses the term knows what it means, and if they look it up on wiki they will be none the wiser.
  • Baden
    15.6k


    Numerous historical reports of adjective-hybrid usage by folks with PhDs and other such absolute amaziball credentials makes their legitimacy unquestionable in a truly* meaningful way. Should you have doubts, I have pictures I photoshopped myself on a website I produced while smoking some stonkingly* super Afghan.

    *Excuse the adverbs—poetic licence.
  • Hanover
    12.1k
    Reality is real enough, you don't need absolute reality.unenlightened

    But we do have to account for what we know to be subjective interpretation that doesn't exist in the original. What I impose on the interpretation of the object or the author's meaning can be said not to exist outside of my reality.

    If I can speak of what is actually in the original, then I'm speaking of something objective, or absolute. If I can speak of what I have added to the original, I am distinguishing the objective from the subjective. It does matter that what I see isn't actually there, especially if your vision is clearer than mine.
  • unenlightened
    8.7k
    Absolutely.

    Fabulous.
  • Baden
    15.6k


    I think the point is that if your only purpose is emphasis and there's no clear distinction to be made in context then the addition of the adjective to the concept is at best superfluous. Which is OK in everyday conversation i.e. "This steak is absolute perfection", but a symptom of muddled thinking in philosophical discourse.

    And your examples don't really match up with un's.
  • Hanover
    12.1k
    And your examples don't really match up with un's.Baden

    The examples were:

    Reality is real enough, you don't need absolute reality.
    Meaning is not more meaningful when it is true meaning.
    If the truth is not true enough, actual truth is no improvement.
    unenlightened

    The modifying adjectives employed all related to emphasizing the reality of the object, and the argument, as I took it, was that such modifications were superfluous because the assertion that something is absolute, objective, real, true, or whatever adds nothing.

    Because he was not referencing other sorts of modifiers, but that they all related to truth, I see the concern of the OP as there really not being a distinction between the real and the perceived at least to the extent that we talk about the two as if they are the same and there is no reason to declare one more real than the other.

    You looked at the OP just as a matter of useless grammar, agreeing that people throw in all sorts of unnecessary modifiers that litter a sentence and provide no additional meaning.

    And my point is that those modifiers do provide additional meaning. Their significance is that they point to metaphysical distinctions.
  • Baden
    15.6k


    Well, 'my reality' vs 'your reality' would be more of a psychological difference than a metaphysical one. There's an issue of mixing discourses. Context is key, of course. If you can really justify a distinction, go ahead and make it.
  • frank
    14.6k
    Plus we shouldn't write two paragraphs just to explain that the map isn't the territory. Just say the map isn't the territory and go about your business. You weren't going to address any challenges anyway.
  • unenlightened
    8.7k
    Well, 'my reality' vs 'your reality' would be more of a psychological difference than a metaphysical one.Baden

    I'd say it was more an abuse of language. My fantasy and your fantasy can be different just because they are not reality. Reality is unqualified; that is my point.

    Likewise, there are not degrees and kinds of truth.
    There is no such thing as a false meaning, and there is no such thing as a true meaning. A proposition can be true, or it can be false, but its meaning is just whatever it means.

    "Objective reality"appears in a title where it is proposed to have been undermined by science, as if there are other realities - experimental? - subjective? that are able to trump it. It's simply bad English and can only lead to confusion.

    "Absolute truth" appears in another title, and is claimed to be impossible. I say it is incoherent. I don't believe people who talk in this sort of way have the least clue what absolute anything is, and take it to mean pure, or complete, or something even more vague but important - like very strong vodka.
  • Hanover
    12.1k
    Well, 'my reality' vs 'your reality' would be more of a psychological difference than a metaphysical one.Baden

    If you qualify realities into "mine" and "yours," you're inserting value into the term "real," as in the phrase "real reality" would distinguish, at least in that context, not a subjective reality, but an objective reality, making the term real not superfluous per the OP.

    I'd also point out that psychological differences can be metaphysical, especially in the context of idealism because they wouldn't reference just my construction or misconstruction of reality, but they would reference reality itself.
  • fdrake
    5.9k
    Plus we shouldn't write two paragraphs just to explain that the map isn't the territory. Just say the map isn't the territory and go about your business. You weren't going to address any challenges anyway.frank

    Unfortunately people still need to be convinced that the territory isn't another kind of map.
  • Streetlight
    9.1k
    Today's lesson on the Absolute:

    "The verb to solve, from which the term "absolute" derives, can be broken down into se-luo. In the Indo-European languages, the reflexive group *se indicates what is proper (suus)-· both that which belongs to a group, in the sense of con-suetudo, suesco (Gr. ethos, "custom, habit," Ger. Sitte), and that which remains in itself, separated, as in solus, sed, secedo. The verb to solve thus indicates the operation of dissolving (luo) that leads (or leads back) something to its own *se, to suus as to solus, dissolving it - absolving it - of every tie or alterity.

    The preposition ab, which expresses distancing, movement from, reinforces this idea of a process, a voyage that takes off, separates from something and moves, or returns toward something. To think the Absolute signifies, thus, to think that which, through a process of "absolution," has been led back to its ownmost property, to itself, to its own solitude, as to its own custom. For this reason, the Absolute always implies a voyage, an abandonment of the originary place, an alienation and a being-outside. If the Absolute is the supreme idea of philosophy, then philosophy is truly, in the words of Novalis, nostalgia (Heimweh): that is, the ''desire to be at home everywhere" (Trieb uberall zu Hause zu sein), to recognize oneself in being-other. Philosophy is not initially at home, it is not originally in possession of itself, and thus it must return to itself" (Agamben, Language and Death).

    Now all anything one has to do is add another grand sounding word to it and et voilà! You have philosophical garble.
  • BC
    13.2k
    The place is littered with these double barrelled obscurities, objective reality, absolute truth, sometimes you even find double headed monsters - truly absolute objectivity.unenlightened

    The People are recklessly employing all these allegedly useless modifiers and intensifiers because, in these times, there is no Grammar King and every man does as he pleases (to paraphrase Judges 21:25). Let us not elect the Supremely Infallable Grammarian, for then there would arise an even greater lamentation.

    Still, what you say is totally true: truth is truth; it doesn't, it can't, get more true. It is what it is, what is not is not, and that's that.
  • BC
    13.2k
    For this reason, the Absolute always implies a voyage, an abandonment of the originary place, an alienation and a being-outside. If the Absolute is the supreme idea of philosophy, then philosophy is truly, in the words of Novalis, nostalgia (Heimweh): that is, the ''desire to be at home everywhere" (Trieb uberall zu Hause zu sein), to recognize oneself in being-other. Philosophy is not initially at home, it is not originally in possession of itself, and thus it must return to itself" (Agamben, Language and Death).StreetlightX

    Scrieu vendium maximus.
  • Shawn
    12.6k
    See, you're even doing it @unenlightened. To prove a point, and now we may rest since the point has been made.
  • unenlightened
    8.7k
    there is no Grammar King and every man does as he pleasesBitter Crank

    Happily, that is so, and happily that is not so. There is no Grammar King and every man does as he pleases, and yet there is grammar, there is philosophy and there is a way of making sense and many ways of making nonsense, and every man who wants to philosophise must be a democratic socialist in his language or be a pseudophilosopher. Poets, politicians and mathematicians of course can do whatever they please with no qualms. If you do as you please with language, you may even have folks nod wisely at your utterances, but that doesn't mean you have said anything.

    @StreetlightX is the honourable exception here, having the good sense to cast the Absolute as capitalised noun, the other to the world, rather than trying to use the unqualified as a qualifier.
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    Agamben, Language and DeathStreetlightX

    If you could give a one or two (or more) paragraph review of this book, I'd be an eager reader. I've looked at it on Amazon; it appears formidable to be sure. But I wonder if in your opinion it tears the fabric of language and understanding too far to be of use to anyone except a fellow render.

    I fear I'm not clear. Lots of people like wine and invest in knowing something about wine in service of their enjoyment of the wine. Of those, some take it to extremes and worry about north- or south-facing vineyards, or latitude, or rainfall or composition of soils. That is, their enjoyment is no longer of the wine itself. In my opinion, much philosophy is a similar extension of focus beyond the bound of any original problem or area of interest, and becomes a game in itself for its own sake. In respect of a criticism of this sort, how does the book fare?
  • Streetlight
    9.1k
    It's one of my favourite books, but it took me a long, long time to really get a hold of it's import. Part of the 'problem', if you can call it that, is that it's a foundational book for understanding Agamben's larger project, but then you have to have a feel for that to really place the book in its proper context.

    On the other hand, it's an absolutely bewtiching book that sparkles on every page, regardless of all that. It's full of little gems like that small etymology of the Absolute above, and even if it takes you a while to get a fuller picture - as it did me - you will learn alot, and come away edified, even on first reading.
  • unenlightened
    8.7k
    absolutely bewtichingStreetlightX

    Saarrfssn Rk Rastrdly.
  • Streetlight
    9.1k
    Oh Gosh darn it lol. I've been up 20 hours, leave me alone.
  • frank
    14.6k
    Unfortunately people still need to be convinced that the territory isn't another kind of map.fdrake

    You're probably right.
  • 0 thru 9
    1.5k
    This could be yet another example of the benefits and usefulness of (or at least a familiarity with) the E-Prime theory of using substitutes for the verb “to be”. Even though the OP pointed out unnecessary adjectives, they could perhaps be thought of as extensions of the verb. Or maybe the pile of cherries on top, so to speak. The benefit of E-Prime according to its creator is avoiding a dogmatic, god-like point of view. So someone inclined to define things once and for all (presumably in order to move on to bigger things) might say “the actual sky is absolutely blue” or something similar. Kind of like killing an imaginary fly with real dynamite. The writer who would call a spade a spade should be compelled to use one, as Oscar Wilde humorously put it.

    This is where art is far more nimble, being less literal. The more literal the language tends to be, the more specific it becomes. The more specific it becomes, the more individual and relative it tends to be. Which is probably NOT the intent of the one making an “absolute” and sweeping statement. (Science usually has no such problem with small bits of data).

    One can only imagine the comic folly that ensues when our imagined bold speaker makes “absolute, actual, and true” assertions about the “real” Absolute realm (aka God or the Ideal). Hmmm... the Tower of Babel seemed like a good idea on paper... Maybe if we try again, only taller this time. :chin: But seriously, for what it is worth, I think/believe that an Absolute realm or Being exists. Though it can be approached, I would think it is somewhat analogous to the sub-atomic sphere. Proceed carefully, at your own risk. Fools rush in, and angels roll their eyes and sigh at us fearless puppies.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    I thought I had truly asked about absolutely emphatic abstractions in this thread. But maybe I didn't post it.
  • 0 thru 9
    1.5k
    I thought I had truly asked about absolutely emphatic abstractions in this thread. But maybe I didn't post it.Terrapin Station
    Absolutely! (As Rocky Balboa might put it).

    Poets, politicians and mathematicians of course can do whatever they please with no qualms.unenlightened
    They have words to thank for their position. Words that scream for your submission. No one’s jamming their transmission.

    Plus we shouldn't write two paragraphs just to explain that the map isn't the territory. Just say the map isn't the territory and go about your business.frank
    I like to keep the territory in my car’s glove box, being much more accurate than a drawing. But you think a map is difficult to re-fold... oy! :snicker:
  • frank
    14.6k
    I like to keep the territory in my car’s glove box, being much more accurate than a drawing. But you think a map is difficult to re-fold... oy! :snicker:0 thru 9

    Carry a phone charger in your car and use google maps. It has a GPS function and it can also tell you where the traffic is backed up.
  • S
    11.7k
    The point you're making is true of only some but not all cases. In the discussion on morality, it was useful to distinguish between moral relativism and moral absolutism. That is, what is good relative to what so-and-so thinks and feels, or what is simply good. There is no simply good. It's all relative.
  • S
    11.7k
    Yes, or that the mashed isn't the potato. Funnily enough, conflating two distinct things causes problems, but philosophy-types apparently love doing this.
  • Metaphysician Undercover
    12.4k
    Because I was afraid to speak
    When I was just a lad
    Me father gave me nose a tweak
    And told me I was bad
    But then one day I learned a word
    That saved me aching nose
    The biggest word you ever heard
    And this is how it goes

    Oh, supercalifragilisticexpialidocious!
  • Deleteduserrc
    2.8k
    Yes, or that the mashed isn't the potato.S

    Stop trying to make 'fetch' happen.
  • Deleteduserrc
    2.8k
    I see the concern of the OP as there really not being a distinction between the real and the perceived at least to the extent that we talk about the two as if they are the same and there is no reason to declare one more real than the other.Hanover

    Even if that were what the OP was about...

    - I'm having trouble gleaning that, at least from the OP alone...maybe there's some extra-thread context I'm missing? -

    ...but even if the OP were a symptom of a broader pomo attempt to collapse the distinction between lived experience and facts - something, something, safe spaces - would it really help to save a space for emphatic 'reallys' or 'absolutelys'? as indices of a refusal to accede to the pomo safespacers' demand for insular, reassuring pseudo-realities untethered to the world as it is?

    This seems like a slippery slope, which will lead inevitably to 'really' or 'absolutely' inflation. If anyone can get their grubby hands on these words - and they will, if those words have power - they won't mean much of anything.

    And that's already happened.
  • S
    11.7k
    :rofl:
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