Satyam Shivam Sundaram — Hindu Mantra
I'm not acquainted with "Hindi priorities of transcendentals" but, during the Scholastic Middle Ages in Europe when "the transcendentals" became foci of metaphysics, I don't recall them being given a set, indefeasibly reasoned, "order of priority" since each is conceived of as an essential feature, or category, of being (i.e. substance).So, as per Hindus, truth is priority 1, then comes good in second place and last but not the least we have beauty.
How does the West order, in importance, the transcendentalia? — Agent Smith
I suppose through a phenomenological-pragmatic prism I conceive of "transcendentals" in order of predicates used discursively for describing, selecting & recognizing ... (and not as reified abstract 'properties' or 'ideals' of objects (pace Plato et al (re: universals)):What are your own thoughts on the matter? How would you order the transcendentalia?
I'd say most problems are caused by incorrigibly failing to discern between 'tractable and intractable and pseudo' problems to begin with, Smith. I think you're making a category mistake referring to existential (pragmatic) "priorities" in terms, or the context, of some "priorities of transcendentals" (metaphysics).I ask because I feel many if not all our problems are caused by not getting our priorities right.
If truth isn't the first principle, one cannot really believe the second and third principles. — unenlightened
If truth isn't the first principle, one cannot really believe the second and third principles. — unenlightened
Truth is beauty, beauty is truth. That's all ye know, and all ye need to know. — John Keats (On a Gracian Urn)
Maybe, just maybe, Truth = Good = Beauty. They're the same thing?! — Agent Smith
"The gap" encompasses immanence like the horizon – it's ineluctable.The other thing I wanna know is how to we close the gap between the real (immanence, tangible) and the ideal (transcendental, ethereal)? — Agent Smith
I guess to idealists it's "indispensable" ...Prag[ma]tism wins, nevertheless idealism is indispensable.
My neighbor is an ugly little bald-headed self-righteous SOB, spreading lies behind your back and pretending. That's the ugly truth. Dunno what's he good for. Then again, he's only human.
The True, the Bad, and the Ugly. A holey trinity? — Hillary
Most interesting. — Ms. Marple
Maybe, just maybe, Truth = Good = Beauty. They're the same thing?! — Agent Smith
Aphoristic formulae (not mantra) — skyblack
Why assume these "principles" are propositional (cognitive) stances? On what grounds – "principle" – does one "really believe" truth if "truth is the first principle"? (re: problem of the criterion) :chin:If truth isn't the first principle, one cannot really believe the second and third principles. — unenlightened
ask because I feel many if not all our problems are caused by not getting our priorities right. For example, I'm a sucker for good-looking peeps and my life is nothing but a series of disasters caused by my idée fixe with beauty. — Agent Smith
You're shallow and you suffer from lack of something in you. This is the true meaning of your desire for physical appearance. I've dated super good looking individuals, and appearance-challenged individuals. I'm speaking from experience.I ask because I feel many if not all our problems are caused by not getting our priorities right. For example, I'm a sucker for good-looking peeps and my life is nothing but a series of disasters caused by my idée fixe with beauty. — Agent Smith
Maybe, just maybe, Truth = Good = Beauty. They're the same thing?!
My analysis is incomplete. Maybe someone can help out. Establish the truth ( :chin: ) of the following equalities:
1. Truth = Good
2. Good = Beauty — Agent Smith
What is = what ought to be = what is desirable? — unenlightened
You're shallow and you suffer from lack of something in you. This is the true meaning of your desire for physical appearance. I've dated super good looking individuals, and appearance-challenged individuals. I'm speaking from experience. — L'éléphant
I'm not Hindu, but the idea of listing one's hierarchiy of priorities is an interesting one.
Truth and justice seem like they should make the list, but not beauty unless that is taken to mean all worldly pleasures.
At any rate, my top priority is my family, truth and justice be dammed. — Hanover
I attempt to incorporate "ugly truths" (i.e. disvalues) in my conception – negative dialectic (i.e. non-identity) – of "the transcendentals" as... ugly truths as a counterexample to the transcendentalia ... — Agent Smith
(wherein the former concerns 'judgments-conduct' / the latter concerns 'practices-norms') which are modes of immanent resistance ... instead of transcendent idealizations-idolatry (re: "the Beautiful" "the Good" "the True").• resisting indifference / waste (aesthetics)
• resisting harm / injustice (ethics)
• resisting error / nonsense (logic)
I attempt to incorporate "ugly truths" (i.e. disvalues) in my conception – negative dialectic (i.e. non-identity) – of "the transcendentals" as
• resisting indifference / waste (aesthetics)
• resisting harm / injustice (ethics)
• resisting error / nonsense (logic)
(wherein the former concerns 'judgments-conduct' / the latter concerns 'practices') which are modes of immanent resistance instead of transcendent idealization-idolatry (re: "the Beautiful" "the Good" "the True"). — 180 Proof
There's another thread, by Jack Cummins, on human judgment & error. Can error ever get a handle on accuracy? — Agent Smith
Even so, we could set that aside and run with it. Where does the path of relativism lead before it bleeds to death from a self-inflicted gunshot? — Agent Smith
fallibilist — javra
Historically, fallibilism is most strongly associated with Charles S. Peirce, William James, John Dewey, and other pragmatists. Global fallibilism (also called pragmatic fallibilism, contrite fallibilism, epistemic fallibilism, epistemological fallibilism or fallibilistic empiricism) implies that no beliefs can be conclusively justified,[3][5] or in other words, that knowledge does not require certainty.[6][7] Moreover, global fallibilists assert that because empirical knowledge can be revised by further observation, any of the things we take as empirical knowledge might turn out to be false.[4][8] The claim that all assertions are provisional and thus open to revision in light of new evidence is widely taken for granted in the natural sciences.[9] — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fallibilism#Global_versus_local_fallibilism
the latter is Socratic knowledge (I know that I don't know). — Agent Smith
Most interesting. — Ms. Marple
Panta rhei or Change is the only constant. — Heraclitus
Change is an illusion. — Parmenides
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