No, I'm not saying that bad buildings are akin to bad acts. As I said above, I'm saying that the use of the word bad is not always subjective, it depends on what our point of reference is.
I do, believe rape is bad or morally wrong because of the objective nature of the harm done. It's just as objective, in my view, as the existence of the building. And ya, rape is bad regardless of what anyone thinks. — Sam26
A building is "bad" if it does not fulfill its purpose, contextualized to the needs of the person building the building. The key here is that the "bad" judgment of the building is relative entirely upon human needs. — Hanover
My beliefs are internal to me, just as my sensations are internal to me, so just as an expression of pain, which is something internal (the sensation) is expressed via ouch or a cry (external), so too, are our or my beliefs (internal) expressed via acts in the world (external), whether linguistic or not. — Sam26
How many planets are in our solar system? — Srap Tasmaner
We could look at ancient Athens, employ our abstraction, and say that there are buildings there; but those are not buildings in the same way that our buildings are buildings, are they? — Srap Tasmaner
I noticed that those you rejected, as a realist, are either abstract (mathematical stuff), or highly intangible (values and morality). And the one you embrace, as a realist, is reality itself -- which to me is a concrete stuff. Were in it.. We can't separate our selves or musings from reality. But somehow, morality and mathematics can be talked about as if they have a separate, permanent space somewhere that can be called into action at a moment's notice. — Caldwell
If a self-described realist claims to be making a metaphysical assertion founded upon reason, and if he accepts that the tribunal of reason are his experiences, then at the very least he is describable as being a methodological solipsist, even if he believes to have obtained conclusions that aren't reducible to personal experiential verification... — sime
Cheers. Hence my puzzling about direction of fit. Consider Srap's planet example - what counts as a planet is imposed on the world, and yet restricted by the world. That same process is in place for maths. and perhaps for ethics. — Banno
What we think is out there is what enters the conversation. Unless you're saying they're the same thing? — khaled
But we don't know when we have succeeded. — khaled
Oh, he believed those things? Then it shouldn't be difficult for you to provide some citations for your claim.I do. If I don't "know better" than an Iron Age philosopher, given all that humanity has learned in the interim, then God help me. Old Siddhartha believed in the "soul" and in reincarnation (and most certainly in the pantheon of Hindu gods to one or another extent), both obvious fallacies, and the latter an obviously ridiculous fallacy, to a logical positivist like me. — Michael Zwingli
,Relief Without Drugs... — Wayfarer
For all practical intents and purposes, we agree that the Pali Canon is "the word of the Buddha".I may or may not have a different opinion than Gautama. What do you think? Do you know exactly what he thought? — Janus
I'm not a Buddhist and my relationship with Buddhism is rather complicated. But when someone claims to know better than the Buddha (or better than the Pali Canon), this catches my attention and I am very curious as to whether the person can live up to their claim.I have read Buddhist works a fair bit. Works in Zen (Dogen, D T Suzuki, Shunryu Suzuki, Hui Hai, Kaplan (I think) Thich Nat Hanh, Tibetan Buddhist works by authors whose names I can't remember and I've read some of the sutras (the Diamond Sutra and the Heart Sutra are two I can remember the names of) I've read a little Vasubandhu, Nagarjuna and some early discourses of the Buddha, and lots of other stuff I can't remember the titles of. I'm familiar with the Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path and the idea of interdependent origination and so on.
Your two paragraphs contradict eachother.Obviously much of it is open to interpretation, and there are and have been many schools of Buddhism. I understand the idea of the truth of suffering, that it is caused by craving and attachment, the idea that suffering can be ended, and the proposed way of ending it.
The question is as to whether any of that is proposed as the way to end just individual suffering, or whether it is proposed as the way to the final end of all suffering. I have some sympathy for the former, as I think there is some truth in it, but the latter is an unattainable goal, unless you were to destroy the world entirely. To be born into this world is to be subject to inevitable suffering.
You said you read all those Buddhist sources, but you still have those questions??At least one of the causes of suffering caused by human attitudes and actions has been identified. What possible solution could there be to suffering caused by natural events? Do you really believe that the behavior of the natural world is going to change, or that humans could cause it to change?
Gautama suffered old age and death just as we all will. Do you really believe he felt no pain whatsoever? — Janus
If we can achieve a good death and the ability to suffer pain and physical decline cheerfully, what more could we ask? — Janus
All "external objects" are the products of experience based upon the shortcomings of our human sensibilities, — Michael Zwingli
We're stuck playing tennis in our heads between 'object' and 'subject' with an invisible, or non-existent, ball called 'metaphysics'. There is no clear winner and it just might be that there actually isn't even a game being played at all. — I like sushi
I think the philosophical stance that is implicit in Buddhism is quite intelligible if studied diligently. — Wayfarer
/.../ I think a lot of the talk about realism and anti-realism gets stuck on this, but unhelpfully so. There's little point in getting hung up on that problem because it cannot be surmounted. The solution is to accept that state of affairs and move on. We're talking about the way things seem to us to be.
For some of us, things seem to be such that there's an external cause of our internal representations, something we cannot alter in real time (we can, of course, alter it after the perception, interact with it's construction - Joshs). I'd hazard a guess that for any who think there's not an external cause of our representation, the argument rests not on some way things seem to them to be, but rather on the above meta argument (that everything is ultimately some way things seem to us to be) and we should discard discussion of that meta argument as unhelpful.
So the issue really is in what things seem to have an external cause and why they seem that way. — Isaac
For all practical intents and purposes, we agree that the Pali Canon is "the word of the Buddha". — baker
I'm not a Buddhist and my relationship with Buddhism is rather complicated. But when someone claims to know better than the Buddha (or better than the Pali Canon), this catches my attention and I am very curious as to whether the person can live up to their claim. — baker
Your two paragraphs contradict eachother. — baker
You said you read all those Buddhist sources, but you still have those questions?? — baker
A.k.a. "The Third and a half noble truth: Suffering is manageable".
No, this is not part of the Buddha's teaching. — baker
You said:I haven't said I know better than the Buddha. — Janus
The Buddha maintained that there is a final solution to the problem of suffering. So if you say that there is no "final" or complete solution to the problem of suffering, you are in direct opposition to the Buddha.There is no "final" or complete solution to the problem of suffering. — Janus
Indeed!Of course all of this is, at least in regard to the sense in which I think the OP intended to question the idea of Realism, way off topic. Perhaps it should be moved to a thread of its own. — Janus
I haven't said I know better than the Buddha. — Janus
You said:
There is no "final" or complete solution to the problem of suffering. — Janus
The Buddha maintained that there is a final solution to the problem of suffering. So if you say that there is no "final" or complete solution to the problem of suffering, you are in direct opposition to the Buddha. — baker
Oh, he believed those things? Then it shouldn't be difficult for you to provide some citations for your claim.
1h — baker
For anti-realism, something's being true is the same as it's being known to be true.
Now a direct implication of this is that if something is true, then it is known - that we know everything.
Anti-realism is apparently committed to omniscience. — Banno
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