How should philosophy relate to all (current) scientific research? — spirit-salamander
Is an 'eternal' Trinity a philosophical fallacy? — ernest meyer
OK. That could be the start of another debate but I'll leave it there. — Amity
My concern was that this translation appears negative about hope. I think that when we send out that kind of message, it is possible that we are not thinking enough about the implications for hopeful readers who don't look beyond...and take that at face value. — Amity
It concerns me when some talk of the body, fear and hope as being illusions. It is important to recognise the reality. The whole interaction of body, mind and spirit. — Amity
I guess that the phrase 'another brick in the wall' is seen here as a positive - another way to build up towards the aim of increased self-awareness or self-realisation. — Amity
Not sure about 'acting from our true natures' - what is your true nature ? — Amity
I too see the TTC as a guidebook - but how we are guided depends on the translation. We can be led astray... — Amity
The greatest misfortune is the self. How is it our biggest problem is the ego ? Think about all the troubles we get into when the ego is out of control. The issue here is to dial down the sense of self-importance.
13-16: The greatest rulers are the ones who can transcend the ego. They feel concern for the greater good. The greatest individuals are ones who love something greater than themselves; the family, team and community. They are the ones who can truly take charge of their own destiny. — Amity
I think this is where I disagreed with you most due to my concern that I couldn't see how any responsible person would believe that hope is not a good thing. Discussed 20 days ago, p11.
I think that you were influenced by the Stephen Mitchell translation of Ch13.
The second line 'Hope is as hollow as fear'.
Expanded to 'Hope and fear are both phantoms' — Amity
the Derek Lin translation and explanation — Amity
Our biggest problem is the ego that reacts to words of praise or criticism; there is a tendency to desire positive opinions and avoid criticism perceived as negative. — Amity
I see nothing there about hope not being a good thing.
It is this kind of translation that Possibility warns against. — Amity
I guess I just wanted you to acknowledge that you have no evidence for saying that Lao Tzu thinks the same way you do here. It’s all based on your own personal judgement, affect, desire... — Possibility
I happen to think it does detract from your understanding, but what do I know? You’re not after an accurate understanding of the TTC, only one that you can live with. I’m not saying there’s anything wrong with that - just try not to get too defensive at how a different perspective might makes yours appear. — Possibility
This is not engineering — Possibility
What matters is that you take responsibility for whatever inaccuracies you might be putting out there - that you claim them as your own, not attribute them to the TTC or to Lao Tzu. — Possibility
But why the big gap? That doesn't fit it being a joke paper right? That's the equivalent of explaining a joke, which always ends in nobody laughing. — Razorback kitten
I appreciate your explanations and would be grateful for an example of how it changed the way you relate to the world... also T Clark. — Amity
Your interpretation is that wu-wei is better than benevolence and etiquette. That makes sense from your experience and understanding of the world, and from my personal experience I would agree with you. But it’s not a judgement made by the TTC, and so I think it’s irresponsible to claim that the TTC or Lao Tzu makes this judgement, because it doesn’t: we do. — Possibility
You’re responsible for the choices you make to block or enable the flow of chi in the world. This is not about what others do with the information you provide, but about your capacity to inform/deny, connect/isolate, and collaborate/exclude. Wu-wei is about recognising your influence of chi at the level of potentiality: the changes you effect without action; the influence you have on the world that cannot be directly attributed to you in a linear causal relation. — Possibility
With great power comes great responsibility. — Possibility
Just because no-one can blame me for misinformation, does not absolve me of responsibility - not according to wu-wei. If that means the TTC appears to lack confidence or seems ambiguous, I’m okay with that - it’s consistent with the example of the old masters. I don’t think it IS ambiguous, I think he’s being more accurate, not less. — Possibility
I used confusing language. I was saying there is a fundamental and unavoidable conflict between intellect and wu wei.
— T Clark
I don’t agree with this. I think intellect that assumes a linear causal relation between potentiality and action is bound to conflict with wu-wei. But this is neither unavoidable nor fundamental. I think intellect that understands the dimensional or many-to-one relational structure between potentiality (or more specifically intentionality) and action has no conflict with wu-wei. — Possibility
I’d like to explore your evidence for this. I would argue that what looks like ‘changing his mind’ stems from the choice of concepts in the English translations, not from Lao Tzu being deliberately vague. I think if that were the case, he would not be so repetitive with characters. — Possibility
The structure of the TTC is the original structure, consisting of Chinese characters (each signifying the quality of an idea) arranged in a particular logical sequence. Interpretation is how we rearrange this structure, ie. in English. — Possibility
This judgment is your interpretation. The structure includes a number of options, including thinking and waiting in hope. — Possibility
I think it’s important to point out that I’m not referring to the Tao here, but to the TTC, which (as I mentioned) claims to be the disembodied (eternal) Te, which is not the Tao. To argue that the TTC has no structure is ridiculous. It’s not ineffable, it’s a text. — Possibility
My use of the term ‘affect’ here is not in reference to a ‘thing’, but to our influence in the flow or distribution of energy (chi). — Possibility
...but his reply to your accusation has me in stitches. Oh, the irony! — Banno
Ad hominem. Blub, blub, blub. Try and argue something. Notice the arguments I have made. Then try and address them. — Bartricks
I don't think it's a problem, it's a cost of doing business. — fdrake
Doctrinally, "What is there?" is answered by "How we imagine what there is". — fdrake
So, on to the easy question: what is there? — Manuel
Maybe my notion of 'mysticism' is too mundane or prosaic for this new(er) age? — 180 Proof
I think that the question is really how genuine the ones on hallucinogenics are? — Jack Cummins
It turns out I was actually a psychologist, and I agree my first answer was not appropriate, but my second was. — ernest meyer
Ad hominem. Do you have a criticism of the argument or can you not face arguments for conclusions that you dislike? — Bartricks
I’m not sure what you’re ‘trying out’ here. — Possibility
I’m not implying that you interpret it this way. I only mention it because I have noticed this interpretation in a number of translations. ‘Do this, don’t do that’ is not the structure of the TTC, despite how many translation are structured. I think Lao Tzu says ‘etiquette is not a something to strive for in itself, good or bad’. — Possibility
But to assume he’s passing judgement, declaring something as ‘good’ or ‘bad’, is a mistake. — Possibility
in every action we take - whether it’s interpreting the TTC on a public forum or in our private behaviour - we are still responsible for how it impacts on others. — Possibility
But it’s more than this: Lao Tzu is commenting on the prevailing culture - what was commonly accepted as ‘truth’. My point was that it was not simply an alternative of possible points of view. — Possibility
This interesting commentary from Charles Wu’s 2013 translation of verse 18 (thanks again for the Terebess website): — Possibility
A little peyote goes a long way.... — Valentinus
You could theoretically reproduce all the findings of cognitive science in symbolic form, such that an alien intelligence could interpret and understand them. But you could not reproduce the experience of being human in such an objective medium. It is not amenable to third-person reduction. — Wayfarer
I think consciousness is considered a difficult problem in philosophy because for hundreds of years it has proven impossible to explain how chemistry which is essentially nonexperiential produces the experience of "what it is like" to be someone. — Enrique
What book is that? So I may explore it for myself. — SteveMinjares
Yes. I see that the guidance given in the TTC attempts to reverse conventional views held at that time.
It seems to resist a second-order moral way in preference to a first-order 'natural' way.
Can we be sure that this is best for our selves and others? — Amity
What is 'natural' ? Is a question I raised earlier.
Is the TTC with its apparent reliance on natural intuition right for a progressive world ? — Amity
Conventions of some description are necessary. — Amity
So the Zhuangzi differs in this important attitude from the Laozi—we need not try to escape from social life and conventions. Conventions underlie the possibility of communication and are, thus, useful. This gives Zhuangzi’s Daoism less of the primitive thrust of the Daode Jing (the term wu-wei virtually disappears in the inner chapters).
I disagree that it is not an argument.
— schopenhauer1
You are wrong to disagree. — unenlightened
Yes, in Chinese culture it is of 'supreme importance' as Derek Lin discusses at length.
Out of all the virtues, this is the first and foremost.
He asks the students to consider why this might be so. Interesting responses and good feedback. — Amity
Filial piety IS the ‘natural’ or basic relationship. — Possibility
To be honest, I think we may have a different understanding of ‘natural’ and ‘conventional’, which probably contributes to the confusion... — Possibility
