This is the objective reality implication we often neglect when claiming we believe in objective reality. The corollary to claiming we believe in objective reality is, that the meaning lies in that reality, not in us, and we just found it out there. Because it is intelligible to us, it must be that the outside world has some form of meaning already prepared for us to discover.We're desperately trying to find something that doesn't exist, because we simply cannot comprehend the confrontation with the fact, that the universe doesn't care whether or not we exist. — Carlikoff
No matter which approach you take answering the question of the meaning of life, everyone agrees that it's firmly tied to the question "why". — Carlikoff
We're desperately trying to find something that doesn't exist, because we simply cannot comprehend the confrontation with the fact, that the universe doesn't care whether or not we exist. — Carlikoff
Because it is intelligible to us, it must be that the outside world has some form of meaning already prepared for us to discover. — L'éléphant
Good. We're getting somewhere.I disagree that the 'outside world' is intelligible to us, but we may do better with our inside world - our thoughts. — Tom Storm
So, would you agree if I conclude from it that you don't believe in objective reality? — L'éléphant
Let's agree that objective reality is one that has facts and truths. So, facts, as we know, are actual/correct statements about the world.I am not certain what the term objective reality refers to. — Tom Storm
Let's agree that objective reality is one that has facts and truths. — L'éléphant
We're desperately trying to find something that doesn't exist, because we simply cannot comprehend the confrontation with the fact, that the universe doesn't care whether or not we exist. Whatever you might say is the meaning of life, let it be happiness, power or serving some god, it will never satisfy the human desire for a meaningful meaning. — Carlikoff
Whatever you might say is the meaning of life, let it be happiness, power or serving some god, it will never satisfy the human desire for a meaningful meaning. — Carlikoff
Okay then, that means you don't subscribe to objective reality. Which is fine. I was merely saying that you clearly express it.Reality? Not sure what is in scope here. In general, it seems to me that communities determine what is true through a collaborative exercise in creating agreement. You could say that truth is created not found. Examples of such truths might include - 'democracy as the best government'; 'the value of education'; 'god/s care about humans', 'the imperative of progress'... — Tom Storm
Okay then, that means you don't subscribe to objective reality. — L'éléphant
e.g. Epicurus-Lucretius' 'swirling-swerving atoms'... Spinoza's 'conatus' ... :fire:Humans are part of Nature and so are ultimately grounded in nature's thermodynamic imperative. To persist, thou shalt entropify! — apokrisis
Perhaps it refers to 'publicly accessible regularities of nature' (operationalized in theoretical models as physical laws & constants and/or in philosophy as reason's limits). Maybe not "certain", but, IMO, a pragmatic heuristic nonetheless.I am not certain what the term objective reality refers to. — Tom Storm
If the "meaning of life ... is itself meaningless", then the meaning of that (every) statement is also meaningless, no? :chin:Whatever you might say is the meaning of life, let it be happiness, power or serving some god, it will never satisfy the human desire for a meaningful meaning. The meaning of life can ultimately only tell us what our actions rely on, not what they should rely on. There is a meaning of life, yes, but it is itself meaningless. — Carlikoff
You can search for explanation of objective reality. Then decide for yourself if your understanding leans towards the subjective. I just gave you what is an objective reality is. For example, if you think that snow is white and blood is red, then there's your objective reality. Facts come in statements. So, think about that. "Snow is white" is a fact -- is it in the outside world? If you agree, then you agree there's meaning out there --that snow is white. And it is intelligible to us. We picked it out from the external world.The thing is, I am not sure. — Tom Storm
So the point is that meanings are evolved. They are ways to codify the practices that allow intelligent order to gain control over the forces of entropy.
But the proof of the pudding is the long run. The system of meanings that define some stage of human sociocultural development might not lead to long term thriving.
So the search for a meaning to life is really the search for the codified practices that could sustain life in some suitably long-run and flourishing way. — apokrisis
But if you think that "snow is white" is not a fact, but our subjective interpretation of the world, then you don't believe in the objective world. — L'éléphant
Perhaps it refers to 'publicly accessible regularities of nature' (operationalized in theoretical models as physical laws & constants and/or in philosophy as reason's limits). Maybe not "certain", but, IMO, a pragmatic heuristic nonetheless. — 180 Proof
To persist, thou shalt entropify! — apokrisis
Colour, as you know is a product of light and our sight process. Things themselves do not have colour — Tom Storm
But for me this does not tell us much about an objective world, just how the a fragment of that world seems to us, based on the constructions of language and perception. — Tom Storm
We're desperately trying to find something that doesn't exist, because we simply cannot comprehend the confrontation with the fact, that the universe doesn't care whether or not we exist. — Carlikoff
"Why" is not a question. It's just an interrogative adverb. One has to use his imagination to turn the "question of the meaning of life" into one that takes the form of "Why", The first that come to my mind is "Why does life exist?", but I can't be sure that this would be your question if you had expressed it.No matter which approach you take answering the question of the meaning of life, everyone agrees that it's firmly tied to the question "why". — Carlikoff
Not necessarily. The meaning of a word is its significance, what does this word signify, convey to someone. Just that. It doesn't imply that there's a purpose for that word. For example, "What does Martin mean?", "What is the meaning of the word abracadabra?", "With tall I mean 1.80m height and more", and so on. There are no purposes in any of these.When we ask about meaning, we ask about purpose, about the reason for a given circumstance. — Carlikoff
Hello, maggot.
:yikes: Sorry, your honour , I was drunk. — Wayfarer
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