So in my philosophy, there are definitely wives, numbers, hats, red, and moons. But none of those things are simply or purely self-existent, i.e. existing in their own terms independently of the act of cognition (or rather the manner of their existence independent of our cognition of them is perfectly unknowable to us, which is also orthodox Kant). — Wayfarer
No they aren't, John. We have those words for exactly this situation: pointing out something which is not an existing state, something the passage of time has no role in defining. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Your argument is misapplying the propositional to God in this instance: supposedly God is a "mystery" and "beyond" all knowledge because there must "be" something, an ethic, a face, a voice, a thought, a meaning to God which we never pin down, so it may always be there to help us out. In the approach you are taking, God is meant to "be" something, outside out world, yet still of the realm which has profound impact upon the world. It's "magical thinking"-- Oh, how wonderful it would be if the infinite impacted upon are world: the things we loved could live forever. Our wondrous fictions (i.e. the infinite meaning of an idea) would be literal. The sea could be parted even when it was impossible. In the face of horrors of the finite world, there would always be something to fix it. Power we cannot understand always sitting by us, rescuing us from any loss and death of a finite world.
The promises of the infinite is nothing but our wishful thinking. In our minds, we can mix the infinite and the finite together, to posit the latter as the former: life which never ends and, has no possibility of ending. The ultimate comfort, life even when death is obvious.
Transformative? No doubt. If you believe it, it removes death. Whether we are being literal or metaphorical, one has a belief which removes fear, grief and pain over the losses of the finite world. Such emotions become unnecessary because their is no problem. Death is just a illusion. We really live infinitely in God. No-one ever really dies.
It's a mirage though. In our efforts to escape our fears and pains, we've tricked ourselves into thinking we are of the infinite. Death is not an illusion. And God cannot save us for, being infinite, God has no power to define the finite.
(Newport Paul Tillich p.67f))."Existence" refers to what is finite and fallen and cut of from its true being. Within the finite [i.e. manifest] realm, issues of conflict between, for example, autonomy and heteronomy abound (there are also conflicts between the formal/emotional and static/dynamic). Resolution of these conflicts lies in the essential realm (the Ground of Meaning/the Ground of Being) which humans are cut off from yet also dependent upon ('In existence man is that finite being who is aware both of his belonging to and separation from the infinite') . Therefore existence is estrangement.
Do red and numbers exist for those who are blind and inummerate, respectively? — Wayfarer
This is: that the designation of 'existing' to some object is a mental act. In other words, existence is mind-dependent. — Wayfarer
For an object to be an object, it needs to be recognised as such by a subject (which is basically orthodox Kant.) — Wayfarer
You'll have to prove that there exists no object which hasn't been recognised as such by a subject, which you can't do in any non-superficial way. — Sapientia
I had hoped to do that by way of philosophical argument, although I have obviously failed in this instance. But, thanks for your reply. — Wayfarer
A realist holds that mathematical entities exist independently of the human mind. Thus humans do not invent mathematics, but rather discover it, and any other intelligent beings in the universe would presumably do the same. In this point of view, there is really one sort of mathematics that can be discovered; triangles, for example, are real entities, not the creations of the human mind.
Many working mathematicians have been mathematical realists; they see themselves as discoverers of naturally occurring objects. Examples include Paul Erdős and Kurt Gödel. Gödel believed in an objective mathematical reality that could be perceived in a manner analogous to sense perception 1.
you claimed that whatever exists is composed of parts... — Sapientia
if that mystic discovers the existence of God, it remains impossible for that existence to be communicated between people, other than by one person trusting another to be correct in their affirmation. — Punshhh
if that mystic discovers the existence of God, it remains impossible for that existence to be communicated between people, other than by one person trusting another to be correct in their affirmation. — Punshhh
I see no conflict between these two statements. In other words I agree with them both except that I see no need for the 'But' at the beginning of the second one. The members of a spiritual community validate one another's experience because they trust each other's affirmations to be correct, which was the 'out' offered by Punshhh. I would imagine that that atmosphere of trust is one of the great attractions of living in a spiritual community.But what about communities of faith, discourse and practice? For example monastic and ecclesiastical movements and organisations. These provide the means to validate individual experiences, which is fundamental to the teacher-student relationship in a religious order. — Wayfarer
However in my response to the OP I was thinking of proofs for the existence of God, philosophical proofs. These communities don't provide proof in the philosophical sense and neither should they, it is not their business. I was pointing out the reality of the inability to apply philosophy to the question of the existence of God. — Punshhh
You'll have to prove that there exists no object which hasn't been recognised as such by a subject, which you can't do in any non-superficial way. (It is superficial to redefine terms so as to make this exclusion). Whereas all I have to do is appeal to ordinary language-use and logic to demonstrate that it is indeed possible, contrary to the logical consequences of your assertion. — Sapientia
How can language use and logic be used to show that there can exist objects which haven't been recognised as such by a subject? — Michael
With logic we can tell there may be things we don't know about-- the presence of something we have not experienced or been told. What are these things we lack knowledge of? We cannot say for we don't even have the idea to distinguish them until we have knowledge. One of those objects we do not know might be right in front of our noses this very moment and we would be oblivious. That's what it means for an object not to be recognised by a subject. — TheWillowOfDarkness
By our very inability to detail or describe objects we don't know.
You're assuming your conclusion.
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