I also recognize two types of thinking. I call them making crap up and learning. Some people just make crap up, because they are to lazy to go out and learn. For example some people are bad at math, because they don't try hard enough and make excuses. — Jeremiah
If you want to remain open, you can tell her you are willing to talk about her issues and potentially help her find out her direction. However, you do not owe her anything, especially if she shows no signs of actually trying to move into a better situation. — Chany
A choice can perhaps be a decision that contains an absence of an impulse or instinctual drive that mechanically pulls us to act without reason in order to immediately satisfy and it needn't only be sexual or aggressive. It is acting without reason; the autonomy to reason is acting without being enslaved to our impulses. A choice must therefore be wholly moral, something peculiar only to those who possess it. "Every determination of choice proceeds from the representation of a possible action to the deed through the feeling of pleasure or displeasure, taking an interest in the action or its effect.” — TimeLine
Nothing rational took place because it was instinctual. Your decision was propelled by an impulse but a rational choice to eat foods that contains the highest nutrients for optimal health and the required energy to sustain you despite the taste is an actual choice. — TimeLine
That being said, however, I do believe science should be more integrated into the philosophy departments (and not necessarily vice-versa). Philosophers need to be knowledgeable about science, but scientists do not necessarily need to be knowledgeable about philosophy (it's more like it's optional, or perhaps a one-semester class). — darthbarracuda
I don't believe that the main purpose of our dreams is to "tell us something," to "give us an alternative reality," to "jolt our thinking," to "expand our reality," or to help us find solutions to problems. Some of these may occasionally be a fortunate byproduct of some dreams, but it strikes me as too 'new age-y' or mystical or unscientific to consider this as their main function. — Luke
I don't consider the "meaning" of dreams to be very significant. — Luke
Which are you? Do you need structure to succeed? Are you fearless? — T Clark
Not cave folk, I'm thinking older than that.
What I mean is that some of the information would obviously be adverse. Let's say one dream has a predator killed and a few days later they mix up the dream and believe the predator is dead only for it to later kill them. This is what I mean when I say they are odd in evolutionary terms. All I can think is that dreams were different back then (had a different function) or the truth does not matter so much because it gave a fitness (encouragement?) that was beyond fact.
Yes, people can act on dreams now because we are all have an intuitive understanding of semiology and can differentiate information through self reflection. I do not know if the earlier animals were able to do that. — JupiterJess
What are the benefits of lucid dreaming? Is there a downside?
— woodart
I do not know. I was interested in occult AP stuff at that time. — JupiterJess
I meant they would have had greater evolutionary value than their current forum. The reason I say this is because dreams present adverse information that overtime could be confused as being something that happened. — JupiterJess
They are very odd in thier current form. — JupiterJess
I've tried Lucid dreaming techniques and they worked for a time. Eventually the prompts become ineffective. It's weirdly exhausting so I keep putting it off. — JupiterJess
Philosophy is a failure of a discipline. To me, the failure of philosophy represents the absurdity of putting one's trust in the unaided human intellect. Boy, am I glad I got a degree in engineering! — lambda
They are unusual from an evolutionary perspective since they appear to present false information which could endanger the animal itself. All I can think is that perhaps before we were saturated with culture, and our minds were more limited, they were useful predictive devices. — JupiterJess
I actually enjoy a lot of my dreams more than real life and the more I write them down the more real they appear when I sleep. I hope to gain greater control over them at some point. — JupiterJess
The value and purpose we place on dreams is not totally subjective, given current research in neuroscience (an intersubjective activity). However; it's your prerogative to assign any meaning you like to dreams, consult palm readers and astrologers, partake in seances, etc. if that's part of your "vision quest". For many, however; philosophy is a knowledge quest. — Galuchat
I'm speaking for the scientific research. If you want to believe something else, it won't change that. — apokrisis
I have this image of the brain putting bits of memories in specific (real, material) locations in the brain, and then linking them together, so that useful, cohesive information can be found, assembled, and handed up to the conscious mind. But, in the process, odd-ball bits are put next to each other and at that moment, an odd-ball bit of a dream is produced. — Bitter Crank
It's almost like in the absence of sensory input or (what usually passes for) conscious thought, you end up eavesdropping on (other parts/systems of) the brain going about its business, and you don't understand what the hell you're listening to. — Srap Tasmaner
In a sense, that's saying there's just nothing for philosophy to do here, and that's fine. — Srap Tasmaner
People find meaning and value in all sorts of experiences, whatever their source.
You don't have to see what apokrisis said as contradicting your view. — Srap Tasmaner
Although I do have memories of a few dreams that were quite nice. My desires were instantly gratified, I was powerful and perfect. I'm not talking about sexual stuff either. I was just content with myself. I think one of these positive dreams was of me teaching philosophy to students — darthbarracuda
It makes me wish I did dream more. — darthbarracuda
That is why dreams seem a constant chase after meaning. You are still trying to make some kind of narrative sense of what is going on - fitting some tale to it. But as MU points out, Fred is never Fred as every passing image throws up a new scene.
On this view, vivid R.E.M. dreams serve no great psychic purpose. R.E.M. exists to stir up the brain to near waking state so you will be ready to go if something does wake you up. The images are just what the brain has to do - fill in the blanks - because it is designed to generate a constant flow of anticipations and those become vivid when actually answering sensation is absent. — apokrisis
I think daydreams can be equated with mind wandering, or creative thinking. — Galuchat
in my whole life I have never felt what I felt in that dream. It was one simple image of me and a little boy but the feeling was just overwhelming. — TimeLine
I don't thing my dreams come from fragments of previous experience. This is completely inconsistent with what I experience in dreaming. What I experience is mostly new experiences in my dreams, with just a few, but very few, fragments of previous experience. So for instance, your example of a dream about a loved one. Let's say the loved on is Fred. — Metaphysician Undercover
Granting that we are all insecure to some degree about some things, I can't see what advantage treating this universal fact as central could have for philosophical inquiry. We can never free ourselves from all fear. I do agree that it is a good idea to try to become free from concerns about inconsequential anxieties, for example how we appear to others, what others think about us, and so on. But I think that is a bit of a side issue, taking care of which perhaps just frees us up to a greater extent than otherwise for more fruitful inquiries. — John
But if we are driven to find rational explanations, then we need to find an acceptable mode or system of thought that supports the feeling. — John
Sure, but all the examples you give here are due to social conditioning I would say. — John
And just how is it that you have earned the right to speak for most people? And you accuse me of righteousness! — John
All I've been advocating is a disposition of reverence towards life: including nature and humanity. I started out referring to it as a "sense of the holy". — John