seems like a little bit of a stretch to me. — Joe0082
seems only a partial truth, — Joe0082
We only know the direction from the "point of the big bang" and the approximate time of its beginning. But we do not know (are not sure) that this happened from the "point". — SimpleUser
the faster than light expansion of the early universe is only impossible by the internal physical laws of the universe. — counterpunch
I think this is right.
Your interpretation is in keeping with that of Ivanhoe's notes concerning V12. — Amity
This question is tied to a preoccupation I've developed around neoliberalism, which I think is partly fuelled by a desire to create strife in the same way a video game does. — frank
I see this verse a little differently. I think it has more to do with the fact that when we seek to overwhelm the senses or indulge in excess, we’re unable to appreciate the diverse qualities of the world. — Possibility
Therefore, the sage seeks only what he needs, not what he sees (acts in the capacity of his belly, not his eye). — Possibility
“your eyes were too big for your belly” — Possibility
All of this refers back to the relation between substance and lack: if we concentrate only on filling our world to the brim, then it leaves no room to appreciate wu in relation to the Tao. — Possibility
It does make a big difference. I do think there are separate experiences being considered here.
I will mull in the idea while considering the other translations. — Valentinus
Perhaps the differences of meaning are related to which kind of observation is required. — Valentinus
MY OCTOPUS TEACHER is a fine documentary on a particular octopus - on Netflix. — Bitter Crank
"Ontological Principle" that "no argument is valid if it overdetermine a cause that affects only external factors without having any kind of internal consequence", — Gus Lamarch
Awakening from the scientific trance for a second, one has to say the universe could not expand then coalesce into the vast reality it has become from an infinitely small point Just not possible. In fact ridiculous. Nor could energy expand faster than the speed of light. Not possible. Nor could gravity shape matter and anti-matter into a universe capable of creating and supporting life, even if on just one little planet. No way. — Joe0082
bored me out of my mind — FlaccidDoor
I'm not completely sure what made me think back to this from what you mentioned. — FlaccidDoor
I like that too. It closely hews to the Lin version I was trying to articulate earlier but is more elegant. — Valentinus
This essay is very helpful - thank you. Here is a PDF version (unfortunately without the Chinese characters). — Possibility
You don’t really own it, though. Your possession of it is an event in which you are relating to the pitcher’s substantial potentiality (its capacity to be held, seen, felt, etc), and your use of it is an event in which you are relating to the pitcher’s insubstantial potentiality (its capacity to be empty or filled, sold, given away, etc). — Possibility
Did your sister and your South Carolinian parents hate the experience? or was everyone else who had to deal with it the most hateful of the situation? — FlaccidDoor
“If I put it on a shelf, my house will be more attractive” - is to behold value in the substance of the pitcher, and derive benefit from that (for the house). — Possibility
I like that too. — Valentinus
One thing which I am also wondering is if we think about any form of consciousness in any other life forms apart from human beings, we would have to query in what form would meaning be grasped if it is not in the form of language, as we know it? — Jack Cummins
But if you find a error in my logic please show it to me because it would really help. — SmartIdiot
I don't buy it either. — Bitter Crank
"More liberal than thou" liberals can be vicious, vituperative vipers. — Bitter Crank
The question of meaning arose late in the historical game (just my guess). Tyrannosaurus Rex probably didn't worry about the meaning of existence. Five million years ago, our predecessors weren't worrying about meaning either, We, on the other hand, do worry about it--a lot. (At least people on this forum do.) — Bitter Crank
They absolutely can be civil. A civil discussion between a Trump lover and a Trump loather probably won't result in changed positions, but if they can at least get to what it is about Trump (or any other politician, political issue, religious question... all sorts of things) that they love or loathe, that would be good. — Bitter Crank
Family is one of the places where children (and parents) can stake out claims for what they believe, or what they don't believe, as the case may be, then defend the territory. Family argument is the cradle of opinion making, and learning the skills to have and deploy opinions. — Bitter Crank
Yes - the model you're taught when you study adult learning is that learners progress through four stages - unconscious incompetence (I don't know what that is') conscious incompetence ('I don't know how to do that'), conscious competence ('I can do that if I really try') unconscious competence - mastery or 'second nature' i.e. something that can be perfomed effortlessly. (Like watching a great pianist - they make it look easy.) Wu-wei is a form of mastery or 'second nature'. — Wayfarer
It isn’t ‘non-being’ that Lao Tzu is referring to, though: it’s lack. What is translated as ‘non-being’ relates to this idea of lack, and so does this lack of substance described in verse 11. — Possibility
The value of the pitcher is in our relation to its substance, — Possibility
out of many, one (the motto of the US). — TheMadFool
As a beginner, I should have realised that in dealing with my own limited understanding, I should steer clear of attempts to help. — Amity
I not only quoted the story, I made additional comments see my post to Wayfarer.
Thanks for your contribution — Amity
This is echt Jordan B Peterson. — Tom Storm
The pitcher must exist for it to be a benefit to one. The utility that makes it beneficial is possible through the non-being. The wheel makes carriages exist and move. The non-being involved in the wheel is what makes the being of the carriage possible. — Valentinus
I read Possibility's remark to mean the benefit is the direct utility of the result; The pitcher holds water. The wu permits it to be filled and emptied. — Valentinus
Therefore in the being (yu-chih) of a thing,
There lies the benefit (li).
In the non-being (wu-chih) of a thing,
There lies its use (yun). — T Clark
Wu refers to the idea of lack - its meaning hasn’t changed, only the level of relation to these ideas. Here, rather than a figurative or active lack of being, it is a tangible lack in relation to certain objects and their potential substance. Wu is a vital aspect of the Tao - what we ignore, isolate or exclude in our relation to the world, what is missing or removed, is an integral part of how we relate to the world on all levels of awareness. In Western thinking, we conceal this aspect at each level and focus only on the tangible substance, as if this lack doesn’t matter. But lack exists as a necessary aspect of even the most concrete or fully-formed reality. — Possibility
I think Lao Tzu is making a distinction here between substantial value (benefit) and immaterial potentiality. Value is the capacity or ability that exists in what is; - is the capacity or ability that exists in what is not - but can be, was before, or might have been. It is this relational structure to the world, between substance and its lack, that all action, dynamic, movement, change, creation and destruction derives from. — Possibility
They may say that about me, but it's not true, — RogueAI
The reason politics has become divisive is because the conservative movement (about 80% of it) has lost their minds, has bought in to all this white grievance BS, believes crazy conspiracy theory shit, and is enthrall to a narcissistic sociopath. How can I have common cause with such people? So, I avoid them as much as possible. — RogueAI
