I cannot see any reason to create a new child and I have not had any children myself. — Andrew4Handel
Why not? — Possibility
You seem convinced that your own experience and understanding of the world has nothing to offer these so-called experts. — Possibility
But surely you would agree that the most accurate platform to work from is still the original text, and that essay highlights just some of the errors and assumptions surrounding any interpretation Chinese to English - especially by experts. — Possibility
Each translation brings with it the translator’s historical, cultural and ideological position in relation to the text, to ancient Chinese culture, to Daoism and to the Dao. — Possibility
If you choose to dismiss this based on my apparent lack of expertise, then that’s your methodology. I’m just sharing my journey. — Possibility
Our attention and effort is naturally drawn to sensory details that differ from our predictions. So long as we find it useful to allocate attention to new information, then we generate an immediate overall impression or prediction of this something new, and then with repeated allocations of attention and effort, we acquire further sensory details that distinguish qualitative structure, and the brain employs sampling strategies to maximise detailed information with minimal effort - we categorise and group repeating qualitative patterns as concepts. — Possibility
for me, the initial step in awareness is the unfathomable whole, or what I refer to as ‘this’, the possibility of which must exist prior to il y a or ‘there is’. It’s the reference point necessary for any awareness to occur, even in a potential sense. Yet there is no awareness of it. This points to the contradiction at the heart of all existence. — Possibility
I find it curious that so many of these translations read in a subject, such as the Tao, the government or leaders, that doesn’t exist in the original text. One of the basic rules of Chinese grammar is that it is topic-prominent, whereas English tends to be subject-prominent. Many sentences in Chinese don’t have a subject at all, which can be confusing. — Possibility
The trick, I think, is to be wary of making the same mistake as described in this verse, and forcing an interpretation to fit the conceptual structure of our own experience and knowledge, but rather to be open to restructuring our experience and knowledge, our conceptual structures, to fit the original Way. — Possibility
...whatever attributes we possess have been defined by the requirements of adaptation to the environment. And the only criteria for success that such a theory recognises is successful procreation. — Wayfarer
You may note that 'abstract reflection on the nature of reality' can't really be accomodated under any of these headings. And I'm afraid philosophy per se doesn't fit into this framework, either. — Wayfarer
My claim is that when intelligence evolves to the point of being able to seek reason and meaning and to question the nature of reality - as it did, for example, with the Greek philosophers - then we've escaped the tyranny of the Four F's, so to speak. — Wayfarer
It's not so much a matter of 'bootstrapping', but that at this point, human intelligence can see beyond it's genetic and biological origins. Which is why, for example, this particular species of hominid has been able to weigh and measure the entire scope of the Cosmos; not an ability you would expect to acquire chasing wildebeest around the savannah, I would have thought ;-) — Wayfarer
Sounds more like the momentary dhammas of some Buddhist schools - each moment of experience arises and passes away in an instant, although the Buddha is said to be able to perceive their exact duration. Very different to Aristotelian philosophy with its essences and substances. — Wayfarer
This beautiful poem comes from Tao Te King. — javi2541997
My question wasn’t to challenge this separation, but to understand the process of switching from fingers and toes to body, and to emotions and thoughts - particularly the qualitative structural differences between what we refer to as fingers, bodies, organisms, emotions and selves. — Possibility
I hope this clarifies what I was saying. — Possibility
space is added between them — James Riley
I think that's fair and far better expressed than my version. — Tom Storm
If it was space before the big bang, and space after the big bang - then what changed? Plus, light still only travels at a defined velocity in space. Then did light travel faster before the big bang? — Don Wade
Shock waves require a medium - pretty much any and every wave requires a medium. — tim wood
If you're inclined to accord any, what might your ultimatums entail — Aryamoy Mitra
Not skills so much as the body doing its thing. I see a skill as something a human being can acquire or not. Being able to see in a particular way may be a skill. Being able to see in itself, not so much. — Tom Storm
If we first assume the universe started with a Big Bang, then there should have been a shock-wave extending out from the center. Science tells us that the shock-wave could not move faster than the speed of light. Did it? — Don Wade
I mainly wanted to bring up the practice to emphasize how the arguments regarding scholarship complicate the direct reading of the text. — Valentinus
I will try to give an answer that connects with our discussion after some time. It a practice of meditation where the homework is difficult. I can't see very far ahead. It is like learning the form in Tai Chi. I understand more of the language framing it after doing it for a while but I am not able to explain much. — Valentinus
I like this description. We like to think of ourselves as complete, whole, known (or at least knowable) in some substantial sense; that there exists some predetermined ‘essence’ of who we are, waiting to be discovered by ourselves and others. We continually lose and try to ‘find ourselves’, not realising that we are newly made by the variability of our ongoing relation to the world. The old masters didn’t assume or try to form an identity for themselves. By holding fast to the way, instead of holding fast to an identity or ‘known quantity’, they come across as unidentifiable, murky, passive and lacking in any apparent personality. It’s like trying to describe an electron. I especially like the phrase “formal, like a guest”. — Possibility
Inward Training understands Daoist practice as
ultimately connected to consciousness and spirit ( shen 神 ), with particular
emphasis placed on the ability of the heart-mind ( xin 心 ) either to attain
numinous pervasion ( lingtong 靈通 ) or to separate the adept from the Dao
as Source. — Valentinus
While it is true that this map has continuity with Dao De Jing, it can never be a replacement for it. — Valentinus
Why do we talk about emotions, perceptions and thoughts separately depending on the situation, when we don’t experience them as separately as these terms make out? — Possibility
I think this highlights the three levels of awareness that are often confused/blended into one (verse 13), and the cascade structure (verse 16) that presents each level as merely one facet of another level of awareness/relation. — Possibility
I agree. I’m not often convinced by the reasoning given for Taoist practices, but I definitely think they draw attention to an important aspect of ‘experiencing the Tao’ that can be easily ignored in an intellectual approach to the TTC. I think verses 13 to 16 at least point out the bodily aspect of relating to the Tao as inseparable from our experience. — Possibility
From that point of convergence, the line between the practical and the intellectual is not only a type of self awareness but an understanding of what is around you and the capacity to act effectively as a result.
A lot of scholars resist reading this perspective as the intention of Lao Tzu and Zhuangzi but the many traditions that used those maps for their own purposes are important voices to be heard. — Valentinus
I'm not sure I understand this. — James Riley
I think the first two lines of this verse refer to meditative practices as a method of attaining the ‘emptiness’ observed in the old masters of the previous verse. Strict stillness is required to have any hope of getting to the root of existence. — Possibility
I understand this verse as describing a process from attaining stillness in being, to then being able to observe the flow of everything, and notice the stillness to which everything returns again and again, revealing an underlying constancy to the world. When we’re aware of this, we have a clearer understanding of the world as a whole; but without this awareness, our actions lack flow and can be reckless and vicious. Without this awareness, we are apart from the world, and in conflict with it.
From an awareness of this underlying constancy, though, we are part of the flow, and act with fairness and justice for all. When we are fair and just, we have the capacity for great leadership, which then enables a spiritual awareness that brings us to the Tao. — Possibility
Plus, from the beginning of this sentence structure (arguably even the beginning of the verse) Lao Tzu is referring to a quality with no reference to ‘self’/‘I’ (the person in question attaining ‘emptiness’), so it really doesn’t make sense to suddenly bring a ‘self’ back in at the end. — Possibility
English is insufficient in helping me articulate what I’m understanding here, so again bear with me. This last line refers to the eternal Tao as having no ‘main part’ to its structure, and no probability to its existence. This is contrast with verse 13, where the ‘I’ (the self as wú) is described as having a ‘main part’ to its structure (shen), through which one suffers greatly. — Possibility
So, the attaining of ‘emptiness’ is not a state of having NO self, but of dissolving the ‘I’ into the Tao — Possibility
When the body is recognised as just one facet of our conduct in living (rather than as its main part), then what draws our attention but cannot be seen is recognised for more than its destructive quality.
When our conduct, morality or lifespan is recognised as just one facet of consciousness, then what attracts our desire to learn but offers no set of instructions is understood as more than merely hopefulness.
And when our knowledge or consciousness is recognised as just one facet of a broader experience, then what attracts our efforts to relate, but cannot be grasped is meaningful for more than this quality of being abstruse. — Possibility
I get the sense that intellectual approaches to the TTC tend to put aside the genuine difficulty in attaining this ‘emptiness’ as a physical state. — Possibility
There seems to be a kind of ‘could if I chose to’ approach to this practical aspect of the Tao, — Possibility
The idea that we theoretically have intellectual control over our emotions, and thereby our thoughts, words and actions, is what Barrett challenges from a scientific standpoint. — Possibility
But I don’t want you to get a sense that I’m attacking your approach as such. — Possibility
I don't know if this has worked? — scientia de summis
The law of noncontradiction applies to logic, not to reality. There is no restrictions in reality, but restrictions in logic. Logic is all about restrictions. — Yohan
I always thought that (the war) was more fear based. I agree hatred and fear often show up together or lead to each other...maybe those are two ends of a spectrum. — DingoJones
How are the views up there on your high horse? — Bartricks
It is the principles of logic that I question. If I am wrong on that, and physicists have found a sock, then yes, since it is a logic sock they would have found, I would recognize it. — James Riley
On the other hand, if physics or any other study for that matter, had disproved a fundamental principle of logic in pursuit of their own inquiries, I think it would have been Earth-shaking news that rocked the world. Again, I've not heard of it. I suspect I would not have to come here looking if it existed. — James Riley
I chose physics because their inability, but desire to marry two theories is, I think fundamentally important to philosophy. — James Riley
Ha, it’s okay! I love to hear everyone views and to learn from them. — Charlotte Thomas-Rowe
Was that hate or fear? — DingoJones
I often hear people say that "hate" is wrong or bad. But to what extent should we consider this with a concern or with significance, and should we give energy to this on the basis of degree — Cobra
Well done for trying. But, you know, maybe stop. — Bartricks
If there is a group of smart people going backwards, instead forwards, to the very beginning, with the goal of launching an all out assault on the fundamental principles they thought were in stone, re-testing to make sure they are indeed in stone, and infallible, and that their comrades at the front, pushing forward with physics, are still on the right track, then I would sleep better at night. — James Riley
In conclusion, I just came here looking for a sock. — James Riley
you might have made fun of me — James Riley
I assume that physicists abide the advice of tim wood, above, regarding tools and the proper use thereof. And I assume that abidance is the cause of their failure. — James Riley
more than a simple "gentleman's agreement" — James Riley
meet its burden of proof with more than a "because I said so." — James Riley
I see no harm in assigning a small cadre of physicists to look into it. After all, it seems to be their camp which is frustrated. While they are skipping along their investigative way forward, they might send a party back to make sure they didn’t get off the trail at the beginning. — James Riley
All the foregoing, and my tossing out the rules, had me generating what I thought were interesting opinions on particle physics, singularities, matter, dark matter, energy, dark energy, and time. But I’d sure like to nail down why I’m wrong about my foundation before I continue building on it. — James Riley
The function of repeatability in experiments is NOT to confirm a hypothesis.
The function of repeatability is to check the reliability of the experimental result. — bert1
A single unrepeated experiment, if reliable, is enough to refute a hypothesis. You don't have to do it again. — bert1
