I get this unsettling feeling that many people (10 thousand? 100 thousand?) in the USA are actively chomping at the bit to start another US civil war… or some bloody battles anyway. — 0 thru 9
The Trump anomaly is a symptom, not the disease or the cause. — Vera Mont
The outline proves itself very useful for evolutionarily amenable discussions about complex things; things that are comprised of a set of more basic irrevocable elemental constituents(simpler things). Water, for instance, or civilization, government, stories, language, meaning, thought, belief, logic, truth. concepts, linguistic frameworks, conceptual schemes, etc. — creativesoul
But you are back to this question of public demonstration, are you not? I don't see why people are so obsessed with this question — Leontiskos
So how can the information be physical?
— Wayfarer
By being encoded in the structure of physical stuff.
Why think there is information available to us, other than that which can come to us via configurations of physical stuff? — wonderer1
Trying to dismiss what I say by associating it with a philosophical position I don't hold is both a red herring, and a strawman — Janus
Hadot’s founding meta-philosophical claim is that since the time of Socrates, in ancient philosophy “the choice of a way of life [was] not . . . located at the end of the process of philosophical activity, like a kind of accessory or appendix. On the contrary, its stands at the beginning, in a complex interrelationship with critical reaction to other existential attitudes . . .” (WAP 3). All the schools agreed that philosophy involves the individual’s love of and search for wisdom. All also agreed, although in different terms, that this wisdom involved “first and foremost . . . a state of perfect peace of mind,” as well as a comprehensive view of the nature of the whole and humanity’s place within it. They concurred that attaining to such Sophia, or wisdom, was the highest Good for human beings. — Philosophy as a Way of Life
What does this mean for the different, and often conflicting, belief-systems of the religions? It means that they are descriptions of different manifestations of the Ultimate; and as such they do not conflict with one another. They each arise from some immensely powerful moment or period of religious experience, notably the Buddha’s experience of enlightenment under the Bo tree at Bodh Gaya, Jesus’ sense of the presence of the heavenly Father, Muhammad’s experience of hearing the words that became the Qur’an, and also the experiences of Vedic sages, of Hebrew prophets, of Taoist sages. But these experiences are always formed in the terms available to that individual or community at that time and are then further elaborated within the resulting new religious movements. This process of elaboration is one of philosophical or theological construction
Why must we argue about "higher things" when it is not rationally, logically or empirically demonstrable that there are in fact any higher things? — Janus
Biden campaign has a user account on Trump's platform. — creativesoul
What do you mean by 'exactly'? — wonderer1
So how can the information be physical?
— Wayfarer
By being encoded in the structure of physical stuff.
Why think there is information available to us, other than that which can come to us via configurations of physical stuff? — wonderer1
If we pressure people to stop talking about gold because of the danger of fool's gold, then we deprive many people of the search and possession of real gold. — Leontiskos
The important aspects of life are precisely those which cannot be publicly demonstrated. — Janus
Originally, Philosophy studied both aspects of reality (mind & matter), but since the Renaissance secular split, philosophers have been forced to distinguish their observations from religious dogma, by providing empirical evidence. — Gnomon
The point is, theology and religion do not have exclusive rights to the "domain of values". — Fooloso4
As soon as discussion turns to the qualitative dimension, the domain of values, then the response is 'Ah! You're talking religion.'
— Wayfarer
That may be true in some cases but certainly not all. — Fooloso4
Meaning depends on a physical interpretive context. T — wonderer1
Okay, so the idea is that secularism denies this vertical dimension? — Leontiskos
Yes, but is secularization inherently tied up with strong notions of egalitarianism? If not, then where does the strong egalitarianism come from? — Leontiskos
Our minds do not—contrary to many views currently popular—create truth. Rather, they must be conformed to the truth of things given in creation. And such conformity is possible only as the moral virtues become deeply embedded in our character, a slow and halting process. We have, Pieper writes, “lost the awareness of the close bond that links the knowing of truth to the condition of purity.” That is, in order to know the truth we must become persons of a certain sort. The full transformation of character that we need will, in fact, finally require the virtues of faith, hope, and love. And this transformation will not necessarily—perhaps not often—be experienced by us as easy or painless. Hence the transformation of self that we must undergo “perhaps resembles passing through something akin to dying.”

I think this is the serious danger in censoring that sort of language for fear of abuse. — Leontiskos
I am going to assume it was an attack by Israel — FreeEmotion
Just looking at the BBC report from the scene, I'm not seeing a big crater, and I'm not seeing lots of demolished buildings and damaged buildings. Rather it looks like a lot of people camped in the hospital courtyard, and a rather modest explosion in a crowded place. So it does rather look to me as if it was more likely a palestinian missile gone horribly wrong. — unenlightened
By the same token, unless someone is wise they may be wrong when attributing wisdom to Aristotle or anyone else. Is there anyone here able to make that determination? — Fooloso4
I do think when people reach for the term 'higher truth' we should question this as it can be used in a range of ways. And it can be used to shut down discussions. As in, 'There are higher truths you don't understand, Son.' — Tom Storm
I have never understood what "modernism" means — Dfpolis
If I remember correctly, (Hadot) had an early interest in mysticism but later moved away from Plotinus’ Neoplatonism. — Fooloso4
If it were a matter of reasoning then, as is the case with mathematics, Aristotle could reach clear, definitive, undisputed, and necessary conclusions. But he does not, and neither has anyone else. — Fooloso4
Hence it is clear that Wisdom must be the most perfect of the modes of knowledge. The wise man therefore must not only know the conclusions that follow from his first principles, but also have a true conception of those principles themselves. Hence Wisdom must be a combination of Intelligence and Scientific Knowledge: it must be a consummated knowledge of the most exalted objects — Nichomachean Ethics
I specifically said that I didn't think it was Wayfarer's intention to be patronising, but this kind of argument can easily been understood that way. — Tom Storm
Wasn't Hamas and Islamic Jihad fighters killing every Israeli they could find and reach already highly inflammatory? — ssu
Wolf must have affected greatly the Kant's system, but probably in opposition way? — Corvus
Somehow the single most powerful rocket fired from Gaza ever, that could destroy whole buildings, misfired and hit one of the few hospitals in Gaza. — ssu
(The philosopher Christian) Wolff became known throughout Europe as a martyr of reason and the Enlightenment, thereby only increasing his fame. The Crown Prince of Prussia, Friedrich II (later Frederick the Great), commissioned a French translation of Wolff’s so-called ‘German Metaphysics’ in 1736, and rumour has it that he read it so often that his pet monkey Mimi threw it into the fire out of jealousy. — The Great, Forgotten Wolff
The question is how can we tell if someone has the right virtues or attributes? — Tom Storm
Not your intention, but that does sound like elitist, status seeking dogma. — Tom Storm
I think we also agree that is not something we should argue about since neither of us knows — Fooloso4
what suspicions or conclusions follow from an awareness of the limitations of knowledge in exploring fundamental questions? I think the answer is: human beings are not wise. — Fooloso4
if we accept that physical regularities occur because of "what the universe is," then it would seem like it is self-determining... — Count Timothy von Icarus
The wise man according to Socrates is the man who knows when he does not know. — Fooloso4
There is no being a subject without having an intentional relation to an object known — Dfpolis
the collapse of the wave function has nothing to do with consciousness. — Dfpolis
This seems to be the case to me if we also allow that the "laws of nature" are not external forces that cause the universe to evolve in such and such a way, but are rather merely descriptions of the intrinsic properties of the universe. — Count Timothy von Icarus
