It's not only the words, but it's the way the words are said and what sentence they are used in. Sometimes the words themselves aren't even heard or tried to be heard when I speak them, but it's just because of how my mouth ended up making the sentence or "expression" sound that the person that I am speaking to completely misheard me, and if I try to explain how I may have misspoke then I don't end up explaining that well enough and I get stuck in a loop of feeling like the person is not understanding me while they say that they do understand and then I get anxiety and hide in my mind and in a way run away from the conversation. — Tim Martin
The question has an answer which can be googled. This isn't even philosophy. — S
Nobody seems to have mentioned Ohm's Law which states that ...
Current flowing in a conductor is DIRECTLY PRORTIONAL to potential difference across its ends. Usually this is stated with p.d. as the subject
p.d ∝ current ....... p.d.= a constant x current ....... V= R x I
(NB With current as the subject the constant of proportionality would be 'conductance', the inverse of 'resistance')
The constant of proportionality was named after Ohm, and considered to be 'resistance'. Similarly 'current' and p.d. were named after other physicists, (Ampere and Volta)
There is NO physical theory involving a constant of proportionality relating 'apples' to 'persons' and that is the only basis of an answer to your question. — fresco
I felt a sadness for this beautiful butterfly and also a very close connection to it. Was I also like it, in the wrong place at the wrong time and all my life a futile nothingness, empty and pointless? — TheMadFool
My normative claim here is that we should not just accept this as "good" simply because it is the reality. — schopenhauer1
Also, how screwed up is that that in order to negate someone else's negative experiences, you have to point to someone with yet worse negative experiences. — schopenhauer1
How can you decide having to deal with stuff is bad if there hasn't been any other way ever? This is my point when I talk about ideals. It seems bad to you because there's a completely idealized idea and then you just compare it to the real thing!The point is, we live in a world where we are constantly having to "do something about it". There is no way out of it. That I am saying is bad, and should be a good reason to not bring others into this state. — schopenhauer1
For example, people rather say, "No pain, no gain" or "what doesn't kill us makes us stronger" than say, "life is inherently flawed due to structural suffering". It is enculturated to identify with that which causes the suffering than to call it out as bad.
This is the first thing I disagree with here. In order for you to be "thrown into the world," there has to be a you that we can do something to (namely, throwing you into the world). But there's no you outside of the world. We can't do something to an entity that doesn't exist. Your existence can't obtain until you're already in the world. — Terrapin Station
Three things.
1) Pessimists do NOT have that much influence. Quite the opposite, there are more positive self-help, articles, and advice columns than ever before. As an experiment, start complaining about life's inherent flaws to people, and see what their reaction will be. Not joyous high fives that we are all on the same page, I'm afraid. — schopenhauer1
2) As for inherent negative- I did not mean that the "universe" is structurally negative, but human existence in the universe. I see as structurally negative as being put in a situation of always "dealing with" and being deprived at almost all times. On top of this are the contingent harms (not structural or inherent but probabilistic to each individual and their circumstance). So we have two forms of suffering or harm right there that inform us about existence. See past post about the idea of deprivationalism here: https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/5981/schopenhauers-deprivationalism — schopenhauer1
3) Creating or dealing with life's challenges is exactly the type of thinking I am opposed to. Actually, ironically, this is EXACTLY the thread I am posting about right now. Check it out:
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/6434/the-mild-torture-of-do-something-about-it-assumptions — schopenhauer1
I'm saying energy is more than another consciousness, it is like a super-consciousness or consciousness prerequisite that can generate temporary conscious spirits in any space including mind space because it is you, everything you do can be degraded by a higher energy frequency. — Schzophr
Degraded by higher energy means that, per say, the view of your face from any angle. Energy has you at all other angles and distances from each angle - and more, potentially. — Schzophr
I would ask, does Earth create a field of energy? — Schzophr
What is vision if not a mind imprint on the atomic? — Schzophr