You don't know what you want. Neither do I. Few to none of us know what we REALLY want because what we really want has so rarely if ever been an option that we have so little real experience in considering it.
[snip]
... more of the same, kinda boring really. So my mind is forced to look further in search of whatever it is it really wants. — Hippyhead
What's going to happen when we finally get what we've so long dreamed of, that which lies beyond our dreams? — Hippyhead
There is no remedy in the virtual, because there is no real novelty there; the virtual is inevitably an extension of the known. — unenlightened
You don't know what you want. Neither do I. Few to none of us know what we REALLY want because what we really want has so rarely if ever been an option that we have so little real experience in considering it. — Hippyhead
Well, clothed differently, as I am shy. — Ciceronianus the White
You can find me on stupid-joke-porn.com! — Hippyhead
But then your last question wants to bring what must necessarily be beyond the known within the known — unenlightened
Because Gods can be infinitely cruel. — praxis
Because Gods can be infinitely cruel.
— praxis
Thank you for chanting your usual dogmas. — Hippyhead
I remember even at school people who had really clear plans. I was never like that — Jack Cummins
You don't know what you want. Neither do I. — Hippyhead
What criteria could exclude the act of wanting from everything else? — TheMadFool
We use virtual reality to become armadillos? Seriously, I don't see a human based solution to excluding the act of wanting. Maybe some theorize they can, but even if so, way too rare to be relevant.
Dunno. Maybe I don't get your point and am not being helpful. — Hippyhead
I have a response to the version of the want paradox that goes like so: I don't want anything = I want nothing. — TheMadFool
I started a thread a while back that basically dealt with this, but regarding belief instead of “want.” I would argue that “I don’t want anything” is not equal to “I want nothing.” To me, phrases like “I want X” imply an intent to possess/own something. Therefore, X must be an actual thing, and nothing is not a thing. — Pinprick
Any ideas on that front? — TheMadFool
I mean what's the error in taking the sentences, 1. Not to want and 2. Want to not want as equivalent? — TheMadFool
Ignorance. — Pinprick
double negatives — Pinprick
Because “not wanting” is not an action. — Pinprick
Ok, seems reasonable, so what happens when we get everything we want? — Hippyhead
Care to expand on this? — TheMadFool
I don't see how this is relevant. — TheMadFool
This is the paradox. Can you give this a second look if you don't mind? Thanks — TheMadFool
That's because your heart's desire is not expressed in concise words, but in ineffable feelings.You don't know what you want. Neither do I. — Hippyhead
Are you aware of any linguistic concept that is relevant to the paradox? — TheMadFool
What's your take on this? — TheMadFool
What say you? — TheMadFool
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