Comments

  • Tragedy and Pleasure?

    The moral aspect of bed bugs is connected to assumptions about dirt. In a similar way, I understand moral panic as being involved in the example of Aids being about assumptions about gay sexuality. The moral aspect may involve moral judgements and generalised assumptions.

    The advice about Covid-19 was helpful at times, although some of the contradictions and lack of clarity seemed to show that the leaders were so uncertain themselves.

    As as writing about difficult experiences is concerned, there is philosophy of understanding it, therapeutic writing about it, as well as fiction and other creative writing about is as an art form. These are separate angles but may be blended effectively. There is fiction which explores philosophy ideas as well as creative fiction. The division between therapeutic and creative writing is a different approach but it is possible to do both.

    Personally, I would love to write more fiction. Previous to finding this forum in lockdown, I used to go to writing groups and I have started doing so again. Often, I end up writing real life experiences and people often seem surprised, asking, 'Did that really happen?' I know that a lot of real authors blend personal experiences and fictive elements together. Such fiction probably is also a way of reframing difficult and tragic life events in a meaningful way.
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?

    It is very likely true that people don't want 'deep' entertainment all of the time. Generally, I want depth in general. For example, I do care what lyrics in music I listen to but I have moments when I listen to lighter 'pop' and alternative music. Generally, I am more needy of 'deep entertainment' when low in mood or having a lot of difficulty in life. It is a little like the House of Love's song 'The Beatles and The Stones', which says, 'The Beatles and the Stones put the V in Vietnam, made it good to be alone..'

    The creative arts and entertainment have so many different purposes. It is true that we are oversaturated by them, which may lead to them being not as significant as they could be for many. They blur into the background of the stimuli of life experiences.
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?
    The idea of 'restful, contemplative art' is so different from what is considered as entertainment; which may be more about distraction. So much of consumer orientated materialist art as entertainment may be about a shallow form of catharsis, as switching off from real life as opposed to deeper consideration and contemplation of it. This may be an obstacle for those who want to make art and see art as inherent in everything. It probably means that the challenge for those who engage in arts is to enable an audience to participate in the art of seeing itself.
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?

    The dramas of news affect us as spectators but also impact on us so much. It as if the news tells us 'what is next' in many respects. In the time of the pandemic it was a case of watching news to see what was permitted with the changing guidelines. It was also the unveiling of tragedies of deaths throughout the world, with everyone being at risk potentially and responsible for action in not spreading the virus.

    Even now, it is possible that there is a moral panic about contamination, even in conjunction with bedbugs rising. The bugs may be arising due to poor housing conditions and overcrowding, with many buying secondhand furniture. Nevertheless, there is still a certain amount of stigma attached to the problem and moral panic, with people being urged to have chemical sprays which are more probably more harmful than the bugs themselves. Sorry for going off in a rant about bed bugs and it is because a new infestation of them has occurred in the last few day in the shared house where I am living. They are unpleasant but the group of us have already had many chemical sprays and it is as if landlords can impose all kinds of regimes in accommodation to protect their property. Only 2 weeks ago I was rather shocked to find that CCTV cameras had been installed in the communal kitchen and I am not sure why. It feels rather Orwellian.

    Being based in Britain it does feel like a question of what happens next with the change of government. There is so much poverty, concerns about the benefit system, healthcare and housing and uncertainty. The uncertainty of daily life and the future is throughout the world, especially with climate change. Also, with all the images of suffering in the news there is a danger of people becoming desensitised to it as if suffering is the new 'normal'.

    The experience of personal dramas occurs within the context of this wider narrative. The outer dramas also interact with the inner life. Personally, I find that too much drama in real life gets in the way of creative activities, like creative writing and stories It can be as if the outer dramas consume too much inner energy. Of course, the challenge may be to be creative in channelling the difficulties of life into forms of art, but it not an easy task at all.

    Saying that, a certain amount of humour may help in balancing the unpleasant aspects of life. In many respects, life may be a tragicomedy.
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?

    The idea of partaking in performance is important and that may be the appeal of so many shows, including live music. A lot of this may be becoming lost as people become immersed in digital media, in isolation as opposed to community participation.

    With this in relation to trajedy, what may occur is that people participate in the experience of trajedy as if they are living and growing through it. In that way, one becomes the hero of trajedy. That is not to dismiss the individual who is alone reading, listening or looking at art, but some of the underlying process of transformation may be a little different than when it is done with the connectiveness in performance participation.
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?

    Thanks for your detailed response. The most striking aspect of what your post raises is how do the tragic in art and the art of living interact. What may be worrying is that in spite of the potential within art for catharsis and wisdom through artistic expression it may be not going in the right direction. That is because the tragic dramas are being externalised in life in so much conflict, especially so many devastating war situations. It is possible that news in the media is becoming the new tragic drama, rather than individuals' inner journeys taking them to the place of 'better', or ethical living. People may be becoming spectators of the tragic aspects of life through the cultural consumption of manufactured media news.
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?

    The Dionysian aspects of catharsis show how tragedy and ecstasy may be interconnected. I see this as being about the process of transmuting the darkness or finding the sublime within it. In some ways, this is similar to the quest of the shaman, who journeyed to underworld and upperworld regions. This involved the process of healing and art for the people by the shamans who may have been 'medicine men' or performers.
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?

    Of course, times have changed and what art satisfies is so variable. So much has changed with postmodern values and aesthetics. Also, there is so much choice with people to choose from the whole of history and global perspectives. It can be daunting or it can be an exciting adventure. It makes the search for what works to appeal to the depths of one's own life dramas and quest a personal quest. In previous times, what was considered as important in art, drama, literature and writing may have been more of a group quest whereas it is becoming interconnected with the pursuit of the inner life.
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?

    My understanding of the argument that Aristotle's picture of catharsis as being different from physicalism is that he came from a different worldview. Even though he brought the idealism down to the world of causes he was still basing his ideas on the ancient worldview primarily. The idea of catharsis and purgation of humours is so different to the understanding of physiology. It would involve balance through bloodletting. Such practice would not make sense today apart from for people who suffer from the blood disorder of polycythemia, who are often advised to donate blood.
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?

    Your understanding, based on Artaud, of drama as involving the some expression of savage aspects of life is consistent with Freud. It goes back to the ritualistic aspect of life, including religious rites. Drama performance, with the live element, is like a ritualistic celebration. It may involve some kind of channelling of taboo aspects of human nature in a socially acceptable form. It may also be an expression of anger at life's injustices as opposed to the celebration of the joyful aspects of life.
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?

    The books which you speak of sound interesting. It does seem that it is harder to get a glimpse of the nature of trajedy in the commercialised West. So much of drama and cinema is about sensation. I actually prefer going to see drama rather than watch films because it feels like a participation in the problem dealing with suffering, death and difficult emotions rather than superficial glamour. It is likely that the mythic depths are still present amidst the glamour, but some may get lost. That may be why fiction may still have an important role to play in dealing with existential experiences, because story remains the essential aspect.
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?

    What I find really useful about your post is that it looks not simply at the audience experience of art and trajedy but the process of art making and suffering. Artists and writers may be able to work with the raw material of suffering to create a profound vision. Audiences may be able to partake and participate in the masterpieces of this.

    It is likely that the art of Van Gogh appeals to so many because he created a profound visual worldview amidst suffering. Of course, the life of a writer and artist may contribute to an enigma.

    I studied art therapy and it does seem that the creative arts can be a way of living with suffering and the injustices of life. Both the making and appreciation of art forms may be a way of processing life experiences.
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?

    I have just seen your post and others, which I will look at properly tomorrow. However, what I do wish to say immediately is that the reference to Fuller, as opposed to Nuttall, on many occasions is a bad typo error. So, I apologise and will correct it in my outpost tomorrow morning. Thanks for pointing it out to me.
  • Tragedy and Pleasure?
    As I am aware that my summary of Nuttall's discussion may not have been full enough for critical discussion, I will add this quote on why the weakness of Aristotle's outlook as opposed to that of Nietzsche or Freud is that Aristotle's account, 'seemed to place its emphasis on form, and, on the palpable unreality of trajedy.' Nuttall goes on to suggest 'in frightening dreams the subject can as it were experience disaster without actually experiencing it'. He adds that tragedy is a way 'of practising for crisis'.

    This seems important to me, with the tragic aspects of art being connected to the development of wisdom for living. However, I am sure that there are many levels of understanding the tragic in art, and that the ideas of Aristotle and so many philosophers contribute to this. Any thoughts on Nuttall's comparison between dreams and tragedy, or on the wider issue of tragedy, pleasure in art in connection with human suffering.
  • Is Karma real?

    Part of the problem which I see with the idea of karma is when it is thought of as 'punishment' or 'reward'. This was a basis for justifying the caste system.

    Really, the idea of karma means cause and effect, 'As you reap, so shall you show. ' in its esoteric sense, it involves cause and effect being complex, beyond physicality. This involves aspects of the depths of the subconscious. For example, I often do feel that I get bad consequences if I feel that I have acted in a way which I should not have done. Sometimes, it seems to be 'instant karma', like the John Lennon song. Nevertheless, my karma is probably connected to my subconscious and conscious awareness of mistakes.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?

    The division between matter and spirit is an interesting one. It may involve the visible and invisible and it may not be completely distinct, with quantum physics showing this to be a fuzzy area, such as Davis Bohm' s idea of the indifference between the implicate and replicate order. It may be about processes itself in the nature of manifestation in nature and life.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?

    I wonder how different the atheism of substance dualism is from theism. I know that there have been threads on substance dualism and that I have engaged with you on the topic many times. At one point, I remember you comparing it with the difference between an Afro hairstyle and a bald head, an interesting analogy but I am not sure if it is that clearcut.

    The difference may be theism often speaks of God as a being and nondualism with Being itself as the foundation of everything. I wonder about how different this really is and such theism and atheism as a different linguistic stance as opposed to an entire difference in metaphysics. In particular, even though Buddhism doesn't portray a specific 'God' the understanding of consciousness may be similar to ones that speak of the 'divine'. Ancient thinkers, such as Stoicism, thought in such a way rather than the dichotomy between theism and atheism which arises in the phllosophy of religion as it stands presently.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?

    I guess it is very different when one is reading books, such as ones on non-dualism in the pursuit of philosophy as opposed to under the guidance of a 'guru'. It is important to remember the context, and how it was connected to ideas for application in spiritual searching and living as opposed to simply being about analytical issues.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?

    I have gone back to reading Spinoza(not sure which translation on my Kindle), although I am finding it 'heavy weather). It may be that Spinoza was challenging the theism with which he was familiar. However, it still has to be recognised that he was writing in a historical period so different from the current one. This makes his correspondence with current thinking, such as neuroscience, mere speculation. Of course, it is possible to reframe his writings in such a way but that does mean acknowledging that it is interpretation, as is any use of a historic philosopher in thinking about issues of the current time.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?

    Non-dualism is a fairly difficult perspective because it involves going beyond splits, or binary divisions. It is a bit like the title of the Waterboys' song, in trying to see, 'The Whole of the Moon'. It involves awareness of partiality in epistemology in trying to be aware of the 'other side' of perception.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?

    I have been reading about Spinoza's philosophy and as far as I can see there is a lot of ambiguity over how his ideas are interpreted, especially the equation between God and nature and his idea that God was 'nothing other than the whole universe'. As an alternative to atheism it can be viewed as suggesting that 'God' is in every aspect of nature.

    I am currently looking at a chapter by Varadara V. Raman, 'Thoughts on Deism and Pandeism', in , 'Pandeism: An Anthology of the Creative Mind' (ed Mapson and Perry.in which it is argued that, God,
    'is there in the heart of grand supernova as in the singularities of dismal black holes. He is mutely present in every breath of Man as in every neuron fired in the brains. The Creator is into the Creation: In creatura creator. A crude analogy would be a playwright who writes a one-hero play and gets into its performance himself: not very common, but not impossible, especially for God. This is the God of pandeism.'

    In that respect, the duality of nature and God can be seen as more consistent with non-consistent with spiritual non-dualism as opposed to the materialistic one. The choice of seeing nature/consciousness or God/consciousness may be the duality of choice inherent in human thinking.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?

    The idea of a 'neutral theory' is an interesting one as being seen as objective. Kant thought that he was able to establish it by a priori logic. It does come down to the issue of whether there is an absolute 'truth' and the perennial philosophy is an interesting alternative to Kant because it involves pluralistic understanding based on intersubjective common principles.

    However, the concept of a neutral theory may be still problematic because it is bound up with meanings and values. For example, the choice of the dual options of theism or atheism may come down to psychological and pragmatic concerns in choices of how to perceive the nature of 'reality'.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?

    Thank you for reminding me of Lao Tzu's writings, because they do capture the descriptive issues of Tao. Sometimes, even though the concepts of theism and atheism and other positions are useful as a tool, they can become too rigid as ways of seeing. Indeed, transcendent and imminent can be seen as dualistic, which is the way human thinking involves splitting.

    Labels are central to both theories and metaphysics, as ways of trying to analyse the way in which life works, as the aspects beyond physics. For many it may come down to science gradually, with philosophy almost as an apologetic appendage. Even science, founded in empirical knowledge is only descriptive understanding. Science and philosophy can become split, with so much validity being placed on the 'truth' of science when the abstraction of creating scientific theories and models involves the metaphysical and metaphorical imagination.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?

    I do see the query as to whether materialism is a form of non-dualism, especially as that was my first thought when I became aware of more 'spiritual' forms of non-dualism. The mind-body problem is made so complicated by an apparent duality of mind and body, but a clear connection between the two.

    I have read some of Damasio's writing and it is fairly well argued. It may be hard to entangle the underlying basis of the unity and know if there is an primary basis of mind and matter because they emerge together. It may come down to first causes and it is hard to know whether the matter arose from consciousness or vice versa. In a way, it may not be important as a tangent, although it can be seen as of importance in knowing whether there is any 'spirit' involved as an eternal source of consciousness.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?

    It does seem that materialism arose as a consequence of atheism rather than the other way around. Personally, I see both materialism and idealism as being a bit limited and 'flat'. Non-dualism may be one option amongst others.

    One book which I have been reading recently is 'Berkley: A Guide for the Perplexed', by Talia Mae Betcher (2008). Berkley's idealism may have been a central one and it was connected with theism. It holds that only ideas and spirits exist, to the point where even objects and the external world are seen as mind-dependent. He denies the existence of matter. This is open to a lot of potential criticism.

    Naturalism and realism can be seen as a radical departure from the idealism of Berkley. Also, the philosophy of Sartre sees the existence of matter and bodies as à starting point. It does come down to what is primary, in the dual existence of mind and body or their embodied unity. The way in which non-dualism departs from such perspectives is that it sees mind as embodied, but sees consciousness, as the source, whether this is called 'God' or not.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?

    To have no hope can be to be at the end of one's tether and suicidality. I have known people who have committed suicide or attempted it in the face of despair and loss of all hope. One book which I found useful for thinking about this is by James Hillman, 'Suicide and the Soul', in which he argues within suicidality, there is usually a wish for transformation. This is dependent on hope to some extent, although acknowledging despair is probably essential as well.

    Bringing this back to the topic of theism and atheism, it is possible that both can lead to suicidal despair. The first person who I ever knew who committed suicide did so after becoming an evangelical Christian. That is because rather than being filled with a sense of salvation, he saw himself as so sinful. In some religious perspectives the duality comes down not to good being projected 'out there' metaphysically onto God as a separate being. The Biblical account of 'the fall' of the angels and mankind, with the idea of original sin, is a bound up with assumptions of duality.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?

    It is a good question whether it is necessary to have theism or atheism before one gets to non-dualism. It may be possible in secular society, which is science-based and plural, to get to non-dualism but,historically, most form of non-dualism emergent in the East came after the Hindu belief in gods. Nevertheless, even though Hinduism had many gods there was still a belief in an underlying 'oneness'.

    Also, even though theism preceded atheism, many aspects of ancient philosophy, including Greek and Stoic philosophy were less dependent on belief in God than in the thinking of the Judaeo-Christian worldview.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?

    In connection with Swami Ahhanyananda as a figure, my first approach in reading his book, 'The Supreme Self: The Way to Enlightenment', as he describes his life in a cabin in the wilderness, in his own quest was that it would be so difficult to do this in the current time. That is because it is so difficult to establish a life detached from others in the West. To participate in life in the West one needs is subject to ID checks and reliant on the internet for so much. Most exploration of ideas, even about spirituality, is done online.

    One other aspect which he speaks about is how he followed Ram Dass initially.Then, he found out that Ran Dass had a 'dark side' with his sexual relationships with women and attempts to conceal this. He stopped following Ram Dass and his teachings for some time. What this shows is that even though the ideas of the East may be an appealing alternative, the dark side of religion, or human nature, shows up in Eastern as well as Western religions and spiritual movements.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?

    The way in which you describe religion points to the way in which, in its extreme, religion can give comfort of salvation and atheism to nihilism.

    At the moment, a friend who has become a Jehovah Witness, keeps sending me 'preachy' emails, saying that the Bible holds the 'truth' for the troubles of the world, the 'end times', which will be replaced by a better world for the righteous to inherit. Such people cling to hope, which may be similar to the romanticism of the 'new age'.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?

    I think that you wrote a post to me some time ago about non-dualism. It is interesting that it can be an approach for approaching all metaphysics but is so often ignored within Western philosophy. It may be about the organisation of the right and left brain in thinking, especially within education. It may be that those with a more mystical leaning find it makes sense than those with a more theoretical approach. Ideally, I would like to be able to blend the two as a more synthetic understanding, going beyond the duality of right and left brain, Eastern and Western philosophy. I am all in favour of seeing bridges rather than inherent splits.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?

    I didn't come across the idea of non-dualism until a few years ago. Nevertheless, even when I was going to Christian Union as a student the Brahman-Atman relationship which I had read about seemed important. I do find the ideas of Eastern traditions more compatible than many in Western theism or atheism. It may come down to a far more contemplative approach to life or a softer, more subtle metaphysics.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?

    I have started looking at your links but will read them further before making a full reply. My current approach to your post is that you see the issues very theoretically. I am not dismissing theory, because it is certainly a way of navigating one's way around thinking about issue carefully. I try to read the theories for clear thinking, especially in untangling knots of socialised beliefs. But I am not sure that it comes down to ontology completely. There seems to be something deeper, but maybe I say this because I am not convinced entirely by naturalism.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?

    It is debatable how much the issue of materialism vs idealism matters; for some it can be pure academic philosophy. In a way, it may matter more to those who come from a theistic perspective, especially in relation to the issue of life after death. Having grown up within a Catholic background, I definitely began with a clear belief in life after death and it has perplexed me ever since.

    At one point, the issue was whether life after death would be physical or material. It was round about that time that I began to question life after death seriously. Heaven and hell, reincarnation, karma and nirvana may be symbolic of one's place in the eternal scheme. Nevertheless, coming from the starting point of Catholic or Christian theism, which was rather worrying with the prospect of fear of hell, I continue to find issues of God, or lack of God, as well as concepts of mind, body and spirit fascinating. Non-dualism appeals to me because it encompasses the splits, especially in a way which is a realisation of one's self, or ego, in a way which is part of larger processes, which can be an important part of the experience of enlightenment.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?

    It would be hard to defend idealism in the face of science and quantum physics demonstrates duality, such as in particle as a particle and wave. It presents a less certain nature of causality. Idealism would signify the disembodied as more real than the embodied. Non-dualism goes beyond this, but it can be seen as having a foot in idealism when it involves seeing consciousness as the source, whereas materialism sees matter as primary.

    What is probably the importance of Shopenhauer here, is the way in which he brought the numinous, or 'thing in itself' of Kant down to being imminent in human experiences as opposed to transcendent.

    The 'new age' movement did usher the ideas of interconnectedness. The romanticism of new age has died and may have been replaced by brokenness and isolation. Also, the philosophy of materialistic determinism may be an ideology to support totalitarianism or authoritarianism in its denial of consciousness and free will. Marx spoke of religion as the opium of the people but atheistic materialistic determinism may lead people to loss of meaning, and turning to alcohol and heroin to dull the pain of meaninglessness.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?

    Paradox is a useful way of seeing opposites. It is like looking at both sides of a coin and realising that they are both aspects of the same coin. Taoism grasped the idea of duality within oneness so well.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?

    To some extent it comes down to the use of various labels to try to explain the metaphysics of 'reality'. In thinking about whether theism depends on atheism conceptually and vice versa, an essential aspect is what one means by the concept of God, as an idea in the human mind.

    In considering the history of theism, it is worth thinking about the origins of religion and supernatural belief. It may be considered in the context of the anthropologist, James Frazer's description of transitions from belief in magic, religion to science. In looking at whether theism itself was dependent on the opposite of atheism, it has to be remembered that ancient people did not have the knowledge of science. Also, it is possible that human beings literally believed that they conversed with gods or God, such as Moses receiving the commandments from God. This was spoken of by Julian Jaynes in 'The Bicameral Mind: The Origins of Consciousness'. Jaynes argues that the human beings may have actually heard 'voices', with schizophrenia being a throwback to such experience. He suggests that this involves a lack of differentiation between inner and outer, or subjectivity and objectivity.

    It could be argued that it comes down to the way in which opposites are constructed in the human mind, such as embraced by Taoism. There are opposites, such as good and evil, male and female, light and darkness within the framework of a larger underlying unity. The human mind constructs in a dualistic way, so this has led to the development of opposites in historic development, including subjective and objective, as well as theism and atheism, or earlier in Abrahamic religions, as God and the devil.
  • To What Extent is the Idea of 'Non-duality' Useful in Bridging Between Theism and Atheism?
    I have edited the title and added a poll, to see if people see a link between idealism and belief in God. I wonder are the two connected as philosophical ideas?
  • What is 'Right' or 'Wrong' in the Politics of Morality and Ideas of Political Correctness?

    I wonder to what extent democracy is increasing or decreasing in the digital age. We have so much access to ideas and of means of expression. It is in the context of free expression of ideas that the issue of political correctness arises. Nevertheless, so much is becoming controlled at a digital level that freedom in daily life may be vanishing. For example, when applying for jobs, all is done online and what I find is that most responses I get are bot responses rather than human beings.

    Also, digital media may encourage marginalisation through the free expression of prejudice. The shadow of democracy may be the expression of prejudice and this may come down to how the elite and leaders at the top manage the issue of free expression. While political correctness can be extreme, the actual outlawing of political correctness may amount to encouraging stereotypes and prejudice to keep those at the lowest levels disempowered and silenced in some contexts.
  • What is 'Right' or 'Wrong' in the Politics of Morality and Ideas of Political Correctness?

    The idea of being objective or subjective is often approached from the perspective of rationality. However, it may come down to core values, which may be more complex, in standing back and thinking critically, as they are so involved in aspects of daily life and bound up with the the reflective processes in philosophy and philosophy. This may involve fetters which get in the way of self awareness, leading to blindspots, which may be stumbling blocks in philosophical understanding, making the distinction between the subjective and objective into a blur of confusion so often. The only possible way for disentangling this may be about looking to the depths and sources of underlying beliefs, especially in relation to core values.
  • A poll regarding opinions of evolution

    I also wonder about the possibility of 'no origins' as such, with cycles in the earth and the wider cosmic sense, including other worlds and universes.