Yes, you have: — Sapientia
You only have to look at the capabilities and behaviour of people: they express or make clear their thoughts, feelings and intentions through language and actions. — Sapientia
No, I haven't. An infinite being (nature, being or God, or whatever) would not be in the same class as us finite beings, regardless of whether that infinite being possessed intentionality or not. — John
This is just an unsupporetd assertion. — John
From a purely rational empirical perspective it is merely an assumption that there is intentionality behind human behavior. [sic] — John
No such thing is directly observed in the behavior. [sic] — John
Why don't you be honest and admit that you have no argument to support your contention? Or else explain exactly how you know it is there. — John
We aren't talking about a being, we're talking about the world, and the world is not a being. — Sapientia
It isn't merely an assumption. It's a conclusion based upon a wealth of evidence. — Sapientia
Directness is not a condition which needs to be satisfied. — Sapientia
There's no credible alternative, so there's nothing to really argue against. If you contend that there is no way to rightly infer intentionality, then you are forced into an untenable position which must maintain that we're just completely guessing all the time, and that people could actually be empty zombies. — Sapientia
What is the world, if not a being? It is defined as the totality of immanent being. (Really, 'universe' is a better term because world has many uses more in keeping the phenomenological understanding of the term: 'world of business', 'world of finance', 'world of sport', 'world of entertainment' 'art world' and so on). — John
The question is really as to whether nature is merely a brute existence or if intentionality (telos) is behind its workings. Empirically speaking we simply don't know, and I don't believe we ever can know by means of purely rational or empirical enquiry. There doesn't seem to be any imaginable way we could know by those means. — John
And yet you are unable to say what that evidence consists in. — John
Whatever is not directly observed or intuited must be inferred. It seems you are just being evasive because you are at a loss for arguments. — John
Your view just seems one-dimensional to me to be honest. I'm not at all saying "we're just completely guessing"! Humans cannot be "empty zombies". I believe this because I intuit it, not because I have any purely rationally based empirical evidence to support it; I don't, and neither do you. I also believe the world cannot be an empty zombie world for exactly the same reason. You seem to have bought into a fashionable dogma that says you cannot trust your own deepest intuitions and must rely on merely 'acceptable' views; cling to them for dear life. What an empty feeling that must be! — John
I think this is a category error actually. To speak of the world as if it were another object in the world which can contain, etc. All such words must be mere analogy or metaphor.Personhood is for persons, and the world is evidently not a person, it's the world - it merely contains persons. — Sapientia
Anthropomorphise* :-}anthropomorphisize — Sapientia
This is a mistake, because you're thinking of the world as a totality. To think of it as totality is to think of it as a something with a definite existence. But the world is not something - somethings are in the world.The world is just the totality of it's parts — Sapientia
Right, because the part cannot see the whole.It doesn't even make sense to look. — Sapientia
Sure, but this is a matter of the law not the truth no?We still accord them the same degree of human rights that we do to all other persons, don't we? — John
Indeed.From your argument it follows that a high-functioning person is more of a person than an ordinary person. — John
I don't think being glued to a bed means not being a person. Stephen Hawking has very limited capabilities. Does it follow he's not a person in any meaningful sense? Or even that he's less of a person?I would be living and breathing and fed through a tube, and I would display no signs of having a personality or of having intentionality at all. — Sapientia
Right, because intentionality belongs to the realm of meaning, not the realm of facts.We either rightly intuit it in ourselves and others, in which case it could be argued that we rightly intuit it in nature — John
>:O >:O >:OBut the gist is, spiritual or mystical experiences revealed the true nature of reality, which 'straights' (nowadays, 'straight' means 'not gay', but in the 60's it meant 'not hip') couldn't see. — Wayfarer
>:OStraights were caught up in a conditioned reality which was dictated to them by straight culture, the chief influence on which was the military-industrial complex and consumer-goods manufacturers (Marcuse). Acid removed the scales from your eyes, so you could basically get a window into what enlightened sages (normally, Eastern) could only see after a lifetime of tortuous spiritual discipline. — Wayfarer
How do they achieve this effect (if not chemically)?The point about certain classes of drugs -entheogens, they have been called - is that they really do provide an insight into the way cultural conditioning shapes experience — Wayfarer
The way we infer intentionality is by projecting meaning onto behaviour that we observe. Intentionality consists in our own projection, it cannot be found in the world.If you contend that there is no way to rightly infer intentionality — Sapientia
>:OI don't really care what a wall out of glass bricks that distort everything I say thinks — John
Are they misunderstanding me or am I misunderstanding them? Both, you exist in different dimensions. Placing yourself into another person's perspective brings you closer to the collective consciousness. The autism spectrum could be a fluctuation within the dimensions. Marijuana seems to allow people to navigate more freely, like some sort of ego teleportation. Spiritual awakening is coming out of egocentricity into a new state of being, into the collective consciousness. — stonedthoughtsofnature
I think this is a category error actually. To speak of the world as if it were another object in the world which can contain, etc. All such words must be mere analogy or metaphor. — Agustino
Anthropomorphise* :-} — Agustino
This is a mistake, because you're thinking of the world as a totality. To think of it as totality is to think of it as a something with a definite existence. But the world is not something - somethings are in the world. — Agustino
Right, because the part cannot see the whole. — Agustino
Indeed — Agustino
I don't think being glued to a bed means not being a person. Stephen Hawking has very limited capabilities. Does it follow he's not a person in any meaningful sense? Or even that he's less of a person? — Agustino
Right, because intentionality belongs to the realm of meaning, not the realm of facts. — Agustino
The way we infer intentionality is by projecting meaning onto behaviour that we observe. Intentionality consists in our own projection, it cannot be found in the world. — Agustino
How do they achieve this effect (if not chemically)? — Agustino
Fine, but then its effect isn't spiritual no? It just has a physical effect on the brain, which is experienced as a specific kind of experience, or how does it work?The remaining amount was more like a catalyst than an intoxicant, i.e. it affects the way the neuronal pathways operate, because it amounted to not more than a very minute dosage of the actual substance (unlike other intoxicants and narcotics which literally flood the metabolism.) — Wayfarer
Fine, but then its effect isn't spiritual no? It just has a physical effect on the brain, which is experienced as a specific kind of experience, or how does it work? — Agustino
Okay, I follow you, but I'm asking you about the metaphysics of it. How is it possible for a physical substance to consistently bring about a spiritual experience? Can matter determine/force such an experience upon one? And if so, then how is this possible?I don't want to get into an argument about it, but myself and many other people had truly profound experiences by those means. Of course, the wise realise that one cannot hold onto such states by those means, and the attempt to recreate them can obviously be a trap (not a trip ;-) — Wayfarer
A set is a concept, referring to objects within the world. Actually not even to objects, but rather to conceptual structures which contain (or possibly contain) more than one object. I don't see how you can say the world itself is a set.The world is a set — Sapientia
To affirm that the world is a totality means that you have ruled out the possibility that the world is *gasp* incomplete. What if the world isn't a thing, but a process?If you don't think that the world is a totality, then what do you think the world is? — Sapientia
You don't know what features the world as a whole has. Much more, you probably can't know, because to know would entail being able to see the world from outside.No, because it lacks the necessary features. — Sapientia
Stephen Hawking is in a permanent vegetative state pretty much. He only is able to talk because of technology. Nevertheless, what this illustrates is that someone could be in an entirely vegetative state and still be conscious and a moral agent.The example I gave was of someone in a permanent vegetative state. — Sapientia
Okay. Say a guy has a piece of food in hand, and mimics the gesture of throwing it towards a dog. Then he actually throws it, and the dog catches eat and devours it. Physically speaking, if we are talking just about facts, he threw the food and the dog ate it. But there's something else there. His intention. He intended to feed the dog, not to punish him, for example. The intention is not part of the facts. It has to do with meaning. What do the facts mean? The meaning of the facts cannot be yet another fact.Wrong. There's a fact of the matter, irrespective of interpretation. — Sapientia
Ahh it seems you actually fell in my trap by trying to negate everything I've said :D :D :D ! So you do admit that the "projection" (the meaning) comes from the other, and you can pick up on it. So there is inherent meaning in the world, which exists above and beyond the physical facts, in the sense that knowing the physical facts does not necessarily tell you the meaning.No, it's not right to describe that as a projection. The "projection" is typically from the other, and we are more like "receivers". We either pick up on it or do not or misinterpret it. Sometimes we project our own meaning over the top, but only sometimes. — Sapientia
A set is a concept, referring to objects within the world. Actually not even to objects, but rather to conceptual structures which contain (or possibly contain) more than one object. I don't see how you can say the world itself is a set. — Agustino
To affirm that the world is a totality means that you have ruled out the possibility that the world is *gasp* incomplete. What if the world isn't a thing, but a process? — Agustino
You don't know what features the world as a whole has. Much more, you probably can't know, because to know would entail being able to see the world from outside. — Agustino
Stephen Hawking is in a permanent vegetative state pretty much. — Agustino
He only is able to talk because of technology. Nevertheless, what this illustrates is that someone could be in an entirely vegetative state and still be conscious and a moral agent. — Agustino
Okay. Say a guy has a piece of food in hand, and mimics the gesture of throwing it towards a dog. Then he actually throws it, and the dog catches eat and devours it. Physically speaking, if we are talking just about facts, he threw the food and the dog ate it. But there's something else there. His intention. He intended to feed the dog, not to punish him, for example. The intention is not part of the facts. It has to do with meaning. What do the facts mean? The meaning of the facts cannot be yet another fact. — Agustino
Ahh it seems you actually fell in my trap by trying to negate everything I've said :D :D :D ! So you do admit that the "projection" (the meaning) comes from the other, and you can pick up on it. So there is inherent meaning in the world, which exists above and beyond the physical facts, in the sense that knowing the physical facts does not necessarily tell you the meaning. — Agustino
We still accord them the same degree of human rights that we do to all other persons, don't we? — John
Sure, but this is a matter of the law not the truth no? — Agustino
From your argument it follows that a high-functioning person is more of a person than an ordinary person. — John
Indeed.
Okay, I follow you, but I'm asking you about the metaphysics of it. How is it possible for a physical substance to consistently bring about a spiritual experience? Can matter determine/force such an experience upon one? And if so, then how is this possible?
Well it may either be true, or it may be useful. The law isn't necessarily held around true principles, but rather around useful ones.But, the law is based on the principle, which is certainly held to be true, that we are all equal before God, don't you think? — John
Yeah, to clarify, my previous agreement with you there was simply with the absurdity of Sappy's argument, which indeed implies that a high-functioning person is more of a person than an ordinary guy. I disagree with that. I think it's our personhood that gives us value, not the externals.A high-functioning person is a more interesting, more creative, more valuable (in pragmatic terms) person, for sure. Although, as your example of Hawking shows, a person is not considered less of a person in the absolute sense, even though they might be almost totally physically incapacitated. There also seems to be a spiritual sense in which a person might be more of a person; a Christ for example, or a Gautama Buddha; but the personal greatness of such people consists precisely in the fact that they view all people as being of equal value. — John
Well it may either be true, or it may be useful. The law isn't necessarily held around true principles, but rather around useful ones. — Agustino
The human law of our society isn't divine. We were talking about human laws that govern our societies.I get the sense of that, but how does this apply to a law that's assumed to be divine? A law that's not necessarily true, but is useful, is, necessarily, human. How could a divine law be untrue but useful? At least within a Christina paradigm. — Noble Dust
Our human law is written in those terms. Check the prior discussion and you'll see that it's about the actual laws of society.John said "being equal before God", which is what I was referencing. — Noble Dust
But, the law is based on the principle, which is certainly held to be true, that we are all equal before God, don't you think? — John
Okay, our law is indeed based on that principle. Why is it based on that principle? It's either to do with truth or usefulness.Which I'm agreeing with. — Noble Dust
Yeah, to clarify, my previous agreement with you there was simply with the absurdity of Sappy's argument, which indeed implies that a high-functioning person is more of a person than an ordinary guy. — Agustino
Well it may either be true, or it may be useful. The law isn't necessarily held around true principles, but rather around useful ones. — Agustino
Yeah, to clarify, my previous agreement with you there was simply with the absurdity of Sappy's argument, which indeed implies that a high-functioning person is more of a person than an ordinary guy. I disagree with that. I think it's our personhood that gives us value, not the externals. — Agustino
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