I know I'm not the center of the universe. But physically, I am the center, from purely my own perspective, looking out at the world and all other beings. The occasional angst I get is: Why am I the person who is physically at the center looking out? Is this about the "meaning of life"? I don't care about the meaning of life. I only wonder why I'm at the physical center of it, looking out. Do others feel that way? — Scott South
I know I'm not the center of the universe. — Scott South
The occasional angst I get is: Why am I the person who is physically at the center looking out? — Scott South
I know I'm not the center of the universe. But physically, I am the center, from purely my own perspective, looking out at the world and all other beings. The occasional angst I get is: Why am I the person who is physically at the center looking out? Is this about the "meaning of life"? I don't care about the meaning of life. I only wonder why I'm at the physical center of it, looking out. Do others feel that way? — Scott South
The Universe exists;
"I" exist in the Universe;
"I" am the center of the Universe. — Gus Lamarch
. But physically, I am the center, from purely my own perspective, looking out at the world and all other beings. — Scott South
I suggest you google Nelson Goodman — sime
and his ideas concerning irrealism — sime
that more or less convey the basic structure of community-level solipsistic logic. — sime
The traditional way of thinking is to assume that whenever a community of speakers discuss the universe in an absolute sense, they must be referring to the "same" universe. But this is proposterous according to a Goodmanian irrealist, according to whom each and every speaker cannot transcend their personal frames of reference and so cannot refer to the same universe in an absolute sense, even when they insist otherwise. — sime
Consquently the irrealist understands every assertion, including assertions of absolute truth, as being relative to the speaker and of the form "according to speaker X assertion Y is true". — sime
Is the third supposed to follow from the other two? — Kenosha Kid
If something exists, but it cannot be experienced, and there is something in this existing "something" that is capable of perceiving himself and perceiving the former, this "object" is undoubtedly the center of the first. — Gus Lamarch
Also the universe can be experienced. You're experiencing it right now. — Kenosha Kid
If something exists, but it cannot be experienced — Gus Lamarch
As in "It cannot experience itself".
You're not even trying. — Gus Lamarch
"I" am the center of the Universe. — Gus Lamarch
Perhaps if you tried to achieve the bare minimum, I wouldn't have to try so hard to decipher bad writing. — Kenosha Kid
still doesn't follow, and repeating it prepended with "undoubtedly" doesn't make it any better. — Kenosha Kid
We are the only ones able to consciously absorb information from the Universe and transform and/or shape it in any way we want. — Gus Lamarch
What I say is that the individual capacity of the human being to consciously experience existence makes the "existential" center of the Universe, "Humanity" - the individual - the Ego - -. — Gus Lamarch
"You're not even trying" — Gus Lamarch
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.