To quote the Beatles though, "I am he as you are he as you are me and we are all together." — MrLiminal
It's basically saying we are all connected to everything (infinity) but also connected by death (0), while also maintaining our own individuality (1). Everything dies (infinity becomes 0), and from death new potential is created (0 becomes infinity). — MrLiminal
About Bakhtin, I'll just say it: when people explain Bakhtin to me, I feel like I'm not understanding even half of the things that people are trying to explain to me. Like, there's some parts that I get, there's other parts that I even agree with, but then there are some parts that I just don't understand. — Arcane Sandwich
for so long there was confusion about who within the 'Bakhtin Circle' actually wrote what — Mapping the Medium
I suppose my larger point is that all of these questions are rooted in the fact that we experience life as a singular experience, and I am questioning if it is possible for larger, gestalt consciousness to arise from the collection of individual minds. — MrLiminal
A family is made up of individual people but can act as one. Army units and sport teams can be trained to act as one, despite being many. Is that so different from our own personal biological experience, where so many different organs and chemicals make up what we consider our singular self? — MrLiminal
But since I cannot change them, I "experience" them as necessary facts. Actually, "experience" is not the right technical term to use here. It's more like an "awareness". It's like I have a "double awareness": I'm aware that I could have been born somewhere else, and in some other time, but at the same time I'm aware that I can't change "where I was born, in a spatial sense", just as much as I can't change "when I was born, in a temporal sense."
Does that sound like nonsense to you? It kinda does to me. It just strikes me as odd. Not necessarily "wrong" from a theoretical standpoint, but just plain odd from the POV of plain and simple English. — Arcane Sandwich
The reason that you cannot be born in any other place at any other time is because every particle of your physical body is bound in space and time. — Corvus
Time never allows any physical objects to travel to the past. — Corvus
you are bound in time to the present in time heading to the future just like all of us in the universe. — Corvus
While your physical body is bound by space and time, your mind is free. — Corvus
Your mind can clock back to the past ancient Greek and Roman empire, meet Socrates, Plato and Aristotle, go to a pub, and have some philosophical chats while drinking beer. — Corvus
Why is my existence as a person (and as an "Aristotelian substance") characterized by the factual properties that I have, instead of other factual properties? — Arcane Sandwich
Not only did I not choose to be born, I didn’t even choose to be born in this place instead of that place. — Arcane Sandwich
You are welcome to disagree. That is what philosophical debates are about. But it would be better if you could explain why you disagree, rather than just saying you disagree from your "instinct".Yes... this sounds reasonable... but again, my "instinct" just tells me that something about this is... "off".. — Arcane Sandwich
Your mind is simply what your brain does? I don't get that at all. Brain is needed for mind to operate, but brain does ??? something? Brain is just a biological organ of physical body, which makes mental events possible. Not sure if it does something.Hmmm... but my mind is simply what my brain does, just as my digestion is simply what my gut does. Right? Or do you disagree? Feel free to disagree. — Arcane Sandwich
Sure, Quine would be an interesting guy to have drinks with. He spoke a few foreign languages, and traveled the world extensively. He wrote many interesting Logic books. And I agree with most of what he said.I don't think they would be good drinking partners, if I'm being honest. I think I'd rather talk to Willard van Orman Quine, for example, while I'm drunk. — Arcane Sandwich
what do you make of it, dear reader? — Arcane Sandwich
Not only did I not choose to be born, I didn’t even choose to be born in this place instead of that place. — Arcane Sandwich
Memory, isn’t it? And the consequences of all of the preceding acts that gave rise to your particular existence? — Wayfarer
Hindus and Buddhists believe otherwise. — Wayfarer
And all of the specifics you mention a consequence of karma. — Wayfarer
By the way, enjoying your contributions thus far. — Wayfarer
You are welcome to disagree. That is what philosophical debates are about. But it would be better if you could explain why you disagree, rather than just saying you disagree from your "instinct". — Corvus
Your mind is simply what your brain does? I don't get that at all. — Corvus
Brain is just a biological organ of physical body, which makes mental events possible. Not sure if it does something. — Corvus
Perhaps you could explain how your brains tells your mind to have all the mental events and operations, it would be helpful, and then I could decide whether to agree or disagree with your explanation. — Corvus
Sure, Quine would be an interesting guy to have drinks with. He spoke a few foreign languages, and traveled the world extensively. He wrote many interesting Logic books. And I agree with most of what he said. — Corvus
If you didn't already gather this from my previous post, I think of myself as an expressed vehicle of communication by the whole. — Mapping the Medium
One aspect of Thirdness is 'habit'. — Mapping the Medium
The cascading events in gradient levels of consciousness are a current focus of neuroscience. — Mapping the Medium
You mentioned that you have no relationship to your table, but don't you? As effete mind, it still serves a purpose in your life. It is a sign of where you dine, where you work, the place and space it takes up in your home. Your memories of who gathered there with you. The time you bumped your leg on it and learned to be more careful. Someone designed it. Someone either built it or the machinery that crafted it. It carries all of that and more, and you choose to have it in your home. When others come to your home and see it along with you and your other possessions, the signs communicate to them more about who you are. — Mapping the Medium
You are important on a grand scale, but you cannot be all that you need to be for that 'grand scale' if individualism is so nominalistic that it detaches you from the narrative. — Mapping the Medium
The cascading events in gradient levels of consciousness are a current focus of neuroscience.
— Mapping the Medium
See, I was somehow (I have no idea how) agreeing with you up until there (though I did not entirely understand everything that you said), but it's this last part that's the "deal breaker", for me (and I'm not even sure what I mean by that. Is this a situation of negotiation or not?). — Arcane Sandwich
One aspect of Thirdness is 'habit'.
— Mapping the Medium
Is it? Are you speaking of Thirdness as Charles Sanders Peirce understood it, as Firstness, Secondness and Thirdness? — Arcane Sandwich
You are important on a grand scale, but you cannot be all that you need to be for that 'grand scale' if individualism is so nominalistic that it detaches you from the narrative.
— Mapping the Medium
I don't understand this either. Can you explain what you mean here, in plain and simple English, and as objectively as you possibly can? Try to be as charitable as possible to my intellect here, I'm having a really difficult time understanding some of the more abstract notions that you are speaking about. — Arcane Sandwich
Well, this question confirms that the PSR is false, and nonsense. — Corvus
There is no reason on some facts. If you still insist that you need answer for your question, then what you will get would be an answer of tautology in nature - because your parents have given birth to you. — Corvus
But (and I ask this genuinely, no offense meant) is there any scientific evidence that karma exists? I don't think there is. Which means that if you wish to convince me that karma exists, you will have to do so by way of reason, not of poetry. Logos instead of Mythos, if you will. — Arcane Sandwich
it quickly discovers that, in this way, its labours must remain ever incomplete, because new questions never cease to present themselves; and thus it finds itself compelled to have recourse to principles which transcend the region of experience, while they are regarded by common sense without distrust. It thus falls into confusion and contradictions…. — Mww
I'll admit this may be my own bias here. As my name suggests, I have a tendency towards thinking about liminality. I have just often wondered if the physical separation between bodies is as important as we think it is from our first person singular perspective. Things like quantum entanglement and hiveminds fascinate me, so I sometimes get a bit abstract with these things. — MrLiminal
You brain doesn't "tell your mind" anything, you brain is what minds, so to speak. For example, when you tell me to "mind my own business", you are giving a direct order to my brain, not to my mind. Does that make sense? — Arcane Sandwich
Well but it's an odd thing to talk about, innit? (Hold up while I put on my best "King's Slang", if that's even a thing). How on Earth could the Principle of Sufficient Reason be false? That just makes no sense to me. It makes no sense to anyone. And if the PSR is actually false, as you say it is, then what do we make of it? Can my table turn into a swan, for example? Can a squid pop up into existence in my living room? I mean, if there is no reason for anything, then literally anything can happen at any moment? How does that make even a sliver of sense, ey? — Arcane Sandwich
I still don't think the biological organ brain is mind. It is like saying your stomach is hunger, and your eyeballs are the sight. — Corvus
Not quite. The brain is not identical to the mind, and the mind cannot be reduced to the brain. The mind (as a series of events, and as a series of complex processes) is itself a series of events and processes that a living brain is undergoing. — Arcane Sandwich
You say, mind your business, but you don't say, brain your business. — Corvus
I never heard of someone saying, open your brain. I heard saying open your mind. — Corvus
there are events and objects happening and existing in the universe with no particular reasons or unknown reasons. — Corvus
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