Temet nosce (Know thyself) — Oracle of Delphi
The unexamined life is not worth living. — Socrates
No one is wiser than Socrates. — Oracle of Delphi
I know that I know nothing! — Socrates
You maybe good, but you think you're bad — Agent Smith
Taoism, puts a great deal of emphasis on this (lateral) inversion: People who behave humbly are actually arrogant and vice versa; fools are sages and sages are fools; so on and so forth! — Agent Smith
self — javi2541997
Most interesting! — Ms. Marple
Vide Daniel Dennett (consciousness is an illusion). — Agent Smith
you're dumber than you think you are — MAYAEL
The guy is a computer freak — Hillary
Both the oracle and Socrates make a plea for self-reflection, basically resorting to a mirror metaphor for our minds.
That's swell, but there's a certain well-known phenomenon that happens with mirrors viz. lateral inversion - left and right are swapped in the image - that gums up the works so to speak.
Sticking with the mirror metaphor/analogy, this would mean a person examining him/herself is likely to evaluate him/herself as the exact opposite of his/her true self. You maybe good, but you think you're bad and vice versa; you maybe an extrovert, but (mis)label yourself as an introvert; you get the idea.
One example from a relatively recent study in pyschology is the notorious Dunning-Kruger effect which is, bottom line, the fact that smart people see themselves as dumb and morons think they're brainy. Lateral Inversion! Oui?
One philosophy, an Oriental one, Taoism, puts a great deal of emphasis on this (lateral) inversion: People who behave humbly are actually arrogant and vice versa; fools are sages and sages are fools; so on and so forth! — Agent Smith
The guy is a computer freak
— Hillary
I wish my achievements matched my zeal! :sad: — Agent Smith
Your book will be a bestseller! Maybe we can work together for a future Nobel Prize. Fifty-fifty! — Hillary
The greatest moron of all is me. I wallow myself in my complete moronship and stupidity, and even my mirror image seems brighter than me. What blissful knowledge! And at least I know myself! — Hillary
Indeed, there are more questions than we can answer, but, speaking for myself, questions are, at the end of the day, are the cardinal sign of avidya (variously translated as ignorance or absence of wisdom).
As Socrates said "I don't know, I don't think I know", ignorance leads to a sometimes burning desire, an unquenchable thirst, for knowledge, but, from what I can gather from here and there, the path is, for better or worse, simply a loop and we return to where we began, back to square one.
The natural, obvious, question is is the game worth the candle? What was the point of a journey if the end is the beginning? Sisyphus was being tortured! — Agent Smith
A photon has a potentially measurable beginning and end, but no set path in between. Once we determine or initiate its existence, we can calculate roughly where we might look for it at any particular time along the journey, or probabilistically if and when we might find it at a certain point in space - barring other interactions, of course. Any set of rules for that journey is determined and redetermined in relation to observation/measurement/interaction.
What is a photon that interacts with nothing? — Possibility
A collection of photons that interact with nothing can form a black hole, if the density of them, or their energy is high enough. — Hillary
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