Art is not simply about beauty — Jack Cummins
Everything that can be counted does not necessarily count; everything that counts cannot necessarily be counted. — Albert Einstein
model — Tom Storm
By paying attention to, for instance, "the negligent and the insignificant" (J. Miller) – "the immensity of the particular" (G. Steiner) – to begin with. IME, Heidegger makes a distinction without a difference: the "ontological mode" corresponds to limit-situations (K. Jaspers) of "the everyday mode". To wit:
Before enlightenment; chop wood, carry water. After enlightenment; chop wood, carry water.
— Zen Kōan
NB: Closer to the pragmatic sense of wu wei, I prefer ecstasy to the term "enlightenment" — 180 Proof
Stability of form and structure is an illusion. It is a product of our minds' frequency relative to the frequency of what is being observed. Change is relative and minds change relative to every other process. The rate at which they change, or process external information, is relative to the speed or frequency at which the external world changes. Some changes happen very fast and some very slow. Those that happen fast appear as "non-physical" processes, while those that happen very slow appear as stable "physical" objects. — Harry Hindu
Final cause and formal cause — apokrisis
Yeah... and I keep thinking to myself, if cause is this fuckin' elusive, why even get to god? — Tom Storm
Spock was interesting precisely because the writers could never quite make his total dedication to logic functional.
The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, only ceteris paribus; the novelty of the Taurek paper is that Taurek shows that it is never the case that all other things are equal. Or rather, that it is our choice as to what is to be considered relevant and what isn't. Consider the Captain and the Islanders in the final example in the paper, who are caught in the need to determine what it is that is relevant to the evacuation. — Banno
consciousness is fundamental
The universe looks more and more like a great thought rather than a great machine. — Sir James Jean
So we can forget No. 3 because it's not a solution. — Alkis Piskas
this would not considered moral — Alkis Piskas
God moves in a mysterious way. — William Cowper
Die if need be, never kill. — Cândido Rondon
I just said that "major good" is not a code, not that codes are not needed. — Alkis Piskas
Maybe as a method or rule. — Alkis Piskas
If we could live forever — TiredThinker
ashrama, also spelled asrama, Sanskrit āśrama, in Hinduism, any of the four stages of life through which a Hindu ideally will pass. The stages are those of (1) the student (brahmacari), marked by chastity, devotion, and obedience to one’s teacher, (2) the householder (grihastha), requiring marriage, the begetting of children, sustaining one’s family and helping support priests and holy men, and fulfillment of duties toward gods and ancestors, (3) the forest dweller (vanaprastha), beginning after the birth of grandchildren and consisting of withdrawal from concern with material things, pursuit of solitude, and ascetic and yogic practices, and (4) the homeless renouncer (sannyasi), involving renouncing all one’s possessions to wander from place to place begging for food, concerned only with union with brahman (the Absolute). Traditionally, moksha (liberation from rebirth) should be pursued only during the last two stages of a person’s life. — Encyclopedia Britannica
Why do you assume "art, science and God" have anything to do with depicting "reality"? (Btw, follow the link highlit by "Agency".) — 180 Proof
Think of it like trying to explain yellow to someone who is blind — I like sushi
If you have had an episode of psychosis you probably understand this a little. — I like sushi
Should the numbers count? — Banno
"You shall not kill". This can be very easily "broken" without diminishing morality, by just considering the case of killing to defend oneself. — Alkis Piskas
Right. It's not a code. It's more even than a principle. It's the foundation on which ethics and etchical behaviour are built. A code is addressed to a particular situation or a kind of situations. A foundation is independed of and covers any situation. — Alkis Piskas
Empty phrase that needs work. — L'éléphant
roll a pair of dice — RepThatMerch22
Aristotle was talking out of his ass and the conclusion derived from his ass makes as much sense as a turd on a plate. — 180 Proof
How can everything not? — 180 Proof
Prepared in advance. (The term "preset" is mainly used in music, but I like it! ). Maybe the word "predefined" is more appropiate. What I mean is a laid down list --formulated methodically-- of things to do or not to do. (The word "list" is used loosely here, of course. But "The Ten Commandments" is actually such a list.) — Alkis Piskas
Ethics based on "major good for the greatest number" do not include any kind of codes — Alkis Piskas
I trust your goodwill Agent Smith. Really. But I can't believe that you are asking this after so many times that I presented my position on the subject of ethics. In fact, no one came to me with his/her position! So your question sounds quite ironic, doen't it. (No offense.) — Alkis Piskas
What if I don't believe in your God or to any God? — Alkis Piskas
The ancient polytheistic notion of gods as super-humans, living on clouds or mountains, would certainly be verifiable/falsifiable by modern scientific methods. Ironically, in Daniel 14, the prophet performed a sort of scientific test, to falsify the belief that the idol called "Bel" was actually consuming the food offered to him. But that real-world god-concept long ago succumbed to the ideal-realm god-concept of the Judeo-Christian-Islamic monotheism. Yet there are no scientific methods to verify the existence of a deity that is defined as a non-physical Spirit, and exists eternally outside the limits of space-time. So no, there is no way to reconcile the religious belief in a holy spiritual God with the scientific belief in a wholly material world — Gnomon
That's why some philosophers & scientists have attempted to make peace between the Spiritual & Material worldviews, by creating a no-fly-zone between them. Natural Science was presumed to be authoritative about all physical questions, while Supernatural Religion (Theology) ruled over all metaphysical inquiries. But voluntary segregation doesn't work if both sides are motivated to have it all: to have the last word on all questions of Truth. — Gnomon
However, there may be a different way to conciliate the Science vs Religion conflict. That middle way is the purview of secular Philosophy, which has no official creed, and is only interested in plausible Truth, not scientific Facts or religious Faith. Unfortunately, the polarized adversaries both tend to belittle the power of unaided Reason to discover universal truths, without divine Revelation or empirical Verification. However, those of us who are not taking sides in this "holey" war, can create our own personal NOMA, in which to hide from the crossfire. — Gnomon
fuzz them — Jack Cummins
BTW, I'm totally against "The Ten Commandments" or any "preset" moral codes or dogmas as a basis for morality. Or for whatever else in that matter. I have already mentioned in this thread that they impair moral judgement, and thus judgement in general. — Alkis Piskas
They actually both fit in. But not if you rely on "The Ten Commandments". — Alkis Piskas
