TonesInDeepFreeze
People operate mentally in all kinds of ways: Fictionally, absurdly, poetically, ironically, day dreaming, dreaming, mystically and insanely.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
And all of those operations are operations of the mind, therefore bounded by the rules of the mind, which we may call laws of thought. — Lionino
TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze
Laws of thought are facts of the matter about your mind — Lionino
TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze
A law of thought is necessary for the mind no matter what it is doing, ironising, dreaming, thinking, or whatever. All of these have subjacent operations that are necessary to them. — Lionino
TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze
If a mystic experiences contradictions as being true, then he's not breaking the laws of thought?
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I don't think any such experiences are possible. — Lionino
But, if it is the case that it is possible, definitionally there are no laws of thought that preclude from that happening, because it happened, therefore oen is not breaking laws of thought. — Lionino
TonesInDeepFreeze
if by irrational you mean things of the sort of believing the colour green is sweet and that the moon is made of cheese. — Lionino
TonesInDeepFreeze
coming off as senile. — Lionino
"senile" is to guffaw. — TonesInDeepFreeze
wonderer1
Although one might question if some of the further evolutions of this way of thinking might not just succeed in freeing language from coherence and content. — Count Timothy von Icarus
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