:up:Rather than answers, I come across labyrinths, knots, crosses and spirals and, of course, gigantic question marks looming in front of me... — Jack Cummins
The question, though, is do we have a consciousness or does consciousness have us? — Apollodorus
I can't help but ask questions because it is as if they explode into my [ self organization ] — Jack Cummins
. What, as a part of [ self organization ], is considered a timeless truth? — 3017amen
But there are facets of [ self organization ] that are interesting, even if they're not "theories" in the modern sense — Manuel
As stipulations, for the sake of discussion, this question derived from them definitely works for me. :up:So, If you agree with these definitions, then the question of metaphysics and philosophy reduces to - what is the underlying logic of self organization? — Pop
unique metaphysical doctrine that is non-dualism. — FrancisRay
Advaita "nondualism" is a mystical exercise..... — 180 Proof
It is best expressed in the word advaita or 'not-two'. It is not just that mind and body that are not two. It is the claim that that there are not two phenomena. This gives us the 'One ' of Plotinus and the claim that Reality and Consciousness are the same unitary phenomenon.
Thus while the rejection of mind-body dualism opens the door to various other ideas, the rejection of all dualism leads ineluctably to mysticism and the single, unique metaphysical doctrine that is non-dualism. . — FrancisRay
Metaphysics, for me at least, is the underlying and fundamental logic that causes various phenomena. — Pop
Maybe meditation is clearer than "mystical exercise". Relaxing the learned fixations on thinking / speaking / believing via dualities (i.e. binary opposites) by meditating on paying attention without using dualities to categorize our experiences (and, thereby, our expectations).....what is being exercised, and that exercised mystically? — Mww
I conceive of plural-aspect holism (Spinoza, Deleuze ... Bohm) whereby 'epistemological distinctions' are disambiguated from 'ontological wholeness' much like e.g. waves and other surface features are distinct yet not separate from the ocean. This is what I think "non-dualism" is getting at: distinctions-without-disconnect.Do you agree with the validity of a unique metaphysical doctrine of non-dualism?
Well, horizons (of meaning, intelligibility, information, perception, memory) are absolutely presupposed and can't be "eliminated", therefore, the mystical, like poor, shall always be with us. Trouble (i.e. confusion, delusion) comes, IMO, with filling-in the gaps with gods & other mystagogic woo.Well-asked and well-answered would seem to eliminate mysticism, itself merely evidence of an unsuccessful or incomplete effort. — tim wood
Are you basically saying consciousness is a mystery?
— 3017amen
Yes, in a scientific sense. In a practical sense, it's the most obvious thing in the world. — Xtrix
To say formal logic isn’t abstract is absurd
— Xtrix
Really? What's abstract about all men are mortal?
— 3017amen
This is baffling. What's abstract about syllogisms? It's like saying "What's abstract about 2+2=4?"
Logic is usually called a "formal science." It's very similar to mathematics. Both are grounded in abstractions. I don't see how this is difficult. — Xtrix
1. What are feelings?
2. What are my experiences made of?
3. Where do my needs reside? For example, is that some sort of metaphysical Will (Schopenauer)? Are the manifestations of the Will itself abstract?
4. Are junk thoughts a euphemism for Maslonian stream of consciousness, and if so, does the law of non-contradiction/excluded middle logically apply to the conscious and subconscious mind?
Maybe just pick one, if you care to... I'm trying to understand your assertion that consciousness is not abstract.
— 3017amen
I'm saying the sentence "consciousness is abstract" is completely meaningless. Abstraction is a cognitive process -- conceptualizations, symbols, words, etc., are all involved in abstraction. Consciousness -- in the ordinary use of the word -- is simply human life, human experience. Abstraction -- like thought, like language, like vision, like hunger -- is one feature of human experience.
So to make a wild statement like that is equivalent, in my view, of saying "experience is hunger," or "consciousness is vision." It's just confusion through and through. — Xtrix
Question 2 is completely incoherent, as I've pointed out before. It assumes there's a materialist explanation for something we have no concrete understanding of, apart from our own subjectivity. — Xtrix
It's what goes on all day long when you're talking to yourself. — Xtrix
It's a great topic, but I agree with Xtrix in that it lacks definition. We are considering one indefinite term ( metaphysics ) as it relates to another indefinite term ( Philosophy ), as it relates to another indefinite term ( consciousness ). The result is frustratingly vague for me. — Pop
The words consciousness and self - organization are interchangeable - — Pop
...the mind is viewed as something like a vast blank form which determines the kinds of answers that can be given, but not the specific content which only experience can determine. The forms of intuition, the logical functions of judgment and the categories, fix the necessary conditions of both experience and knowledge but the actual content arises only from something independent of us
This gives us the 'One ' of Plotinus and the claim that Reality and Consciousness are the same unitary phenomenon.
Thus while the rejection of mind-body dualism opens the door to various other ideas, the rejection of all dualism leads ineluctably to mysticism and the single, unique metaphysical doctrine that is non-dualism. . — FrancisRay
Maybe meditation is clearer than "mystical exercise". — 180 Proof
Relaxing the learned fixations on thinking / speaking / believing via dualities (i.e. binary opposites) by meditating on paying attention without using dualities to categorize our experiences (and, thereby, our expectations). — 180 Proof
In that same sense as we know metaphysics includes all that which is behind reality, does this mystery you & I refer to also relate to the Christian (Jesus who had a consciousness) or Cosmological God? — 3017amen
To say formal logic isn’t abstract is absurd
— Xtrix
Really? What's abstract about all men are mortal?
— 3017amen
This is baffling. What's abstract about syllogisms? It's like saying "What's abstract about 2+2=4?"
Logic is usually called a "formal science." It's very similar to mathematics. Both are grounded in abstractions. I don't see how this is difficult.
— Xtrix
This seems to be a little confusing, are you saying the nature of conscious existence is abstract like mathematical structures? — 3017amen
However, for the sake of logical discussion, what makes that question incoherent? — 3017amen
You seem to be referring to self awareness or self-consciousness is that correct? — 3017amen
From your reference. "Life science is alternatively known as biology, and physical science is subdivided into branches: physics, chemistry, Earth science, and astronomy."
No religion. Time for you to put up or withdraw.
The original question:
Thank you for your input. Let's parse one at a time.
— 3017amen
My turn. Answer this:
"With respect to the natural/physical sciences, like science and religion...." Stop right there! Exactly when did religion become a natural/physical science?
— tim wood
I do not want to ask this ten or twenty times. — tim wood
Thank you for saying this, since I often wonder whether philosophy forums are a waste of time. .Hello Francis Ray! Thank you for your contribution. — 3017amen
That is a very intriguing supposition. What do you mean by, unique metaphysical doctrine that is non dualism?
If a dualist believes in the necessary phenomenon of subjective and objective truth, does that in itself imply a dichotomous cognition?
Consciousness can be anything we define it as, because we don’t understand it. — Xtrix
However, for the sake of logical discussion, what makes that question incoherent?
— 3017amen
Because it’s like asking about the molecular structure of ectoplasm. Or like asking “Why do things happen?” — Xtrix
No. You said logic isn’t abstract. Logic most certainly is abstract, as is mathematics.
Consciousness can be anything we define it as, because we don’t understand it. — Xtrix
No. I’m referring to what you and I do every day, almost every second of every day in fact. We talk to ourselves all day long. Introspect for a while and you’ll see what I mean. — Xtrix
Like a breath of fresh air, after the stifling atmosphere of circular philosophical argumentation, I enjoy the clear-eyed views of Tim Wood's terse, and often acerbic, contributions to this forum. His adamant Atheism (Scientism?) simplifies the world into "what matters" (Materialism) and "what doesn't matter" (Metaphysics). That neat & tidy Black & White worldview allows him to make concise & emphatic comments on the ambiguous & equivocal concepts that frivolous philosophers concern themselves with.Hello Mr. Wood:
Thank you for your input. Let's parse one at a time. If my experiences are made of nothing (as you seem to be implying), are you suggesting some sort of metaphysical reality instead? — 3017amen
That neat & tidy Black & White worldview allows him to make concise & emphatic comments on the ambiguous & equivocal concepts that frivolous philosophers concern themselves with. — Gnomon
Heisenberg, accepted the challenge of their baffling "facts", and attempted to reconcile their ambiguous quantum calculations with the mysticism of Eastern Philosophy — Gnomon
But can you make clearer what you mean by "leads ineluctably to mysticism"? — tim wood
The study of metaphysics reveals that all extreme metaphysical theories are logically absurd. — FrancisRay
Quite why so few people see it is a comlpex question, but I think mainly it is because professional philosophers don't do their job properly. — FrancisRay
Yes, but only when "metaphysical analysis" is inadequate (i.e. Woo-of-the-Gaps via the principle of explosion). From the incoherent to the unintelligible is the shortest "leap of faith" imaginable.In this way the results of metaphysical analysis lead ineluctably to the door of mysticism. — FrancisRay
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