Sure. But what is the use of this? It's not as if understanding that things look differently from different perspectives is going to bring about world peace. — baker
Anekāntavāda (Hindi: अनेकान्तवाद, "many-sidedness") is the Jain doctrine about metaphysical truths that emerged in ancient India. It states that the ultimate truth and reality is complex and has multiple aspects. Anekantavada has also been interpreted to mean non-absolutism, "intellectual Ahimsa", religious pluralism, as well as a rejection of fanaticism that leads to terror attacks and mass violence. Some scholars state that modern revisionism has attempted to reinterpret anekantavada with religious tolerance, openmindedness and pluralism. — Wikipedia
Once you realize that disagreements, the seedbed of all violence, including wars, arise from looking at issues from only one side and not from all sides, including your enemy's your reason to take up arms will be gone. — TheMadFool
Your reason for taking up arms might then be gone, indeed, but not your enemy's.
— baker
That's because they haven't looked at our differences from all sides - anekantavada failure. — TheMadFool
Right, Jains. People who make a point of eventually slowly dying of starvation.
— baker
Any hard evidence for this? — TheMadFool
Why should they?? They are your enemies. Why should they care about seeing things the way you see them? — baker
Ok, I believe you but there are those who are not interested in the truth, or in justice. It (death) won't come swiftly. — Abu Hirawa (The Misfits)
I agree with you that real contradictions are impossible. If someone claims a contradiction as real, say p & ~p, all we have to do to resolve it is to say p from one angle, ~p from another angle but not the case that p & ~p from the same angle. The p & ~p was only an apparent contradiction. — TheMadFool
Literally the article says:
An object can be potentially F and potentially not F, but it cannot be actually F and actually not F at the same time. — javi2541997
If they want the truth, they should care but, — TheMadFool
While all along, you get to be the arbiter of truth, eh? — baker
It seems more natural to relate "at the same time" to "be" rather than to "object": — litewave
Your words.While all along, you get to be the arbiter of truth, eh?
— baker
Where did you get that from? — TheMadFool
That is your view. Surely you're aware that other people don't think this way. It's safe to say that most people don't believe that your views are the same as theirs, and certainly not as relevant as theirs.Anekantavada takes into account all parties involved, favoring none over the other. My views are the same as anyone elses, including yours.
However, that we disagree, a contradiction threatening to rear its ugly head unless it hasn't already, suggests a higher truth who's projections are the two of us. Don't you wanna what that truth is? I want to.
Your words.
Anekantavada takes into account all parties involved, favoring none over the other. My views are the same as anyone elses, including yours.
That is your view. Surely you're aware that other people don't think this way. It's safe to say that most people don't believe that your views are the same as theirs, and certainly not as relevant as theirs. — baker
Underneath your optimism, idealism, egalitarianism burns a fire of supremacism — baker
After all your speeches and posturing you're nothing but a common thief. — (Die Hard)
No. What you're failing to acknowledge is that in your quuest for egalitarianism, you're bulldozing over the opposition, or at least trying to do so.You've, I'm afraid, missed the point of anekantavada which is to point out that there are no real contradictions but only apparent contradictions. Your whole argument is predicated on the former. In true anekantavada spirit, my response would be you're right but, for better or worse, I'm not wrong. Let's just leave it at that. Feel free to disagree though. — TheMadFool
Hey, false humility makes for false pride!Underneath your optimism, idealism, egalitarianism burns a fire of supremacism
— baker
From a certain perspective that could be true and I feel sorry that I could be read that way:
After all your speeches and posturing you're nothing but a common thief.
— (Die Hard)
All I can say is I'm just an African ape, like Richard Dawkins takes great pains to point out when referring to h. sapiens, trying to make sense of faer world.
This is a romanticism that someone living in the real world wouldn't indulge in.Anyway, there's a right perspective i.e. though everyone is entitled to an opinion, we can still get to what might be called an objective truth (see addendum 2 in my OP) which no one in faer right mind can/would deny. This however doesn't imply that two parties in a dispute, philosophical or otherwise, are wrong though. All it means is the real (?), the whole truth is more intricate, thus more beautiful even if also exasperating, than we imagine it to be. — TheMadFool
This, I suppose, is the Buddha's madhyamaka/the middle path. — TheMadFool
Once you realize that disagreements, the seedbed of all violence, including wars, arise from looking at issues from only one side and not from all sides, including your enemy's your reason to take up arms will be gone. World Peace! — TheMadFool
Now in your case of perspective, you're introducing a 3D object. But that does not fit the original definition's tie to reality, that it is only a 2D object. Could we call your 3D object's perspective a "square circle"? Sure, we can call anything, anything within a context. But is that the same as the context of the philosophical square circle argument in 2D geometry? No. — Philosophim
The finger (square circle) pointing at the moon (contradiction) is not the moon (contradiction). — Thich Nhat Hanh
Ah yes. So when the Nazis come to take me to the gas chambers I should try to see things from their point of view. — EricH
This is a romanticism that someone living in the real world wouldn't indulge in. — baker
Ah yes. So when the Nazis come to take me to the gas chambers I should try to see things from their point of view. — EricH
The horror, suffering, and anguish of a situation is all the more reason to invoke anekantavada. One party involved has failed to give the other's point of view the attention it deserves. — TheMadFool
Projected back into our world — TheMadFool
Suppose there's a truth regarding, say, God in a 3D world. Call this G. We, in our 2D world, can only see shadows of G. Theists believe God exists (square shadow) and atheists believe God doesn't exist (circle shadow). Put the two parties on the same stage and we have a contradiction: God exists & God doesn't exist (square circle). — TheMadFool
That's still not a contradiction though — Philosophim
That is a contradiction of beliefs, but not of facts — Philosophim
The horror, suffering, and anguish of a situation is all the more reason to invoke anekantavada. One party involved has failed to give the other's point of view the attention it deserves. — TheMadFool
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.