And at what cost?
Having to bother other people and add to their problems and suffering, directly or indirectly...
Consuming resources that other people could have used instead... — OglopTo
With this: "We are taught to embrace and project universal systems (to understand religion as science and/or one-size-fits-all morality)," you don't mean that everyone is taught that, do you? I certainly wasn't taught that, for example. — Terrapin Station
It's not anything I'm consciously doing (and I don't at all buy the notion of unconscious/subconscious minds). — Terrapin Station
I like the graffiti metaphor. Sure, we might get lucky and have a rewarding interaction. But perhaps we mostly just want to scratch our version of events into the wall. I freely admit that I've been articulating the same basic ideas for years now here and there on the internets. Practice makes perfect. Sometimes I'm inspired by what I see as another's "error" (relative to my prejudices) and write when I otherwise might not. I've also "known" or believed for years now that there's a certain "aloneness" that "ought" to be embraced. Anyone (so runs my belief) with a sufficiently rich inner life is going to have incommunicable complexes of thoughts and feelings that no other human is likely to "get" in an absolutely satisfying way. Every once in a while, someone really shares an important "complex" with us, and that's a great intellectual joy. I'm presupposing that these "complexes" are big, beautiful thoughts or realizations. I don't bother to address the less than noble need to share "misery" complexes. I also write "complex" rather than thought because the feeling toward the thought is as important as the thought. Someone who blandly understands without passion doesn't really "get" it in a way that scratches the intense-for-some desire to share beautiful thoughts.So what makes these debates we have on forums of any value besides exposing our past experiences in indirect forms by talking about our opinions (or better said, preferences)? — oranssi
I'd love to believe that we are regularly visited by aliens, etc., I'd love to believe that magic, including black magic, etc. is real.--all sorts of things like that, as I love the fantasy of that stuff, and I love the idea of it being real to an extent where I read a lot of supposedly non-fiction about it, I regularly visit sites that are supposedly haunted, etc. (Of course, I regularly engage in fiction about it, too.) I want that stuff to be real. It seems to me that the world would be that much more fun if that stuff were real. But that doesn't enable belief. By disposition, I'm a very hardcore skeptic, to a point where I even believe that a lot of scientific ideas that are considered pretty mainstream are really fantastical nonsense that people believe (just like many believe in ghosts, etc.). So if it were emotionally guided, I'd believe a lot of stuff that I do not. But I simply can't "make myself" believe something just because I want to. — Terrapin Station
Does getting caught up in a certain field last forever? Will this not too get bogged down in procedure? Perhaps we can all just be theoretical mathematicians/logicians/computer scientists/regular scientists and that will solve all our problems as we grapple with the esoteric nature of this or that logical statement or the next experiment? — schopenhauer1
I can hear anecdotes all day about how someone had this great experience, but just like the evening news that provides a heart-warming last segment, it's only a segment, and the news has to make decisions on what to edit, what to present, how to construct the narrative a certain way. How am I to know people do not just do that on a philosophy forum? Anecdotes can be like these segments, edited to make a whole life seem a certain way. — schopenhauer1
I don't think it's a "we" issue at heart. Most of the time I am glad to have been born. My consciousness of my freedom and my value-for-myself emerged with difficultly from the usual confusion of childhood and young adulthood. It sucks that this consciousness is so fragile. Give me 1000 years down here. Give me 100,000 years down here. That's the attitude I have when I am fascinated. At the moment, theoretical computer science is blowing my mind. It's the coolest shit I've ever seen. I wish I had read some of these books as a teenager. But better late than never.We are "condemned to be free" yet we inauthentically choose guidelines that help us with the procedural drudgery and mix it in with enough stimulation to get by. Does this lead to the conclusion that this general pattern of procedure and stimulation must be passed on and maintained? I am not sure. I do not see why this should be. What are we passing this on for? — schopenhauer1
The reasonable relativist is conscious that basic pre-rational investments close or open the possibility of various intellectual/moral positions. — visit0r
I've read that sentence at least six or seven times now, but I can't any sort of grasp on what the heck it might be saying, exactly. — Terrapin Station
Taken all together, I find in it a clear trend of progress, even if that progress is not smooth or consistent. — tim wood
Ah, yes. I feel like one of the lucky ones. I suppose most of us have our comforts, but I hate the idea of being robbed of the knowledge of my own freedom. And yet the beautiful drama of God waking up from the nightmare of not being God can only repeat if all souls are marched through Lethe every so often and installed in new bodies. For me this is metaphorical, but metaphorical is good enough.Amen, and yet alas! It's a long road, and for many - maybe most - not a good trip. — tim wood
And it's just here organized religion deserves credit, that is, the concept of god many of us find untenable. At its best it preserves/instructs in, hope and wisdom. — tim wood
What is a "pre-rational investment" first off? — Terrapin Station
This comes very close to my personal theology. That "god" refers to, can only refer to, human possibility, broadly considered — tim wood
In the sense you've written, how is our experience of god any different from any other experience? Just change "god" to "blue" or "pizza." Are you saying it is impossible for one person to understand another's experience of the world? — T Clark
If there's difference in our views in these posts, it appear to me that you're fixed in in the practical and the transient, a tumbleweeds sort of a value system, which understands itself as being no value system at all, but an illusion of one. — tim wood
My point is that while some (many) things are grounded via reference to something else, some standard, other things are grounded in reference to themselves. Perhaps I should say may be so grounded, but what I mean is when you get down to the bedrock of the matter, everything is so grounded. — tim wood
The nihilist says nothing matters, while it seems to me that only in traversing nihilism is real value found. — tim wood
Nor is there any narcissism,which, to reclaim some precision, is just a personality disorder. — tim wood
That is, calls into awareness a reality so vast that to mature thinking - and feeling - fear itself must dissolve in its presence. — tim wood
God is an experience that you need to have to understand what it is. One thing it's not is that it's not a being that you can communicate with or pray to, like the Christian concept of a God, but it's a collective sentience that brings everything together. — stonedthoughtsofnature
I don't hate this formulation, but I think it's a bit cute. It avoids the main issue with verbal sleight of hand. The scope of nihilism, as normally discussed, doesn't deal with things happening billions of years from now. It deals with human lives now and especially human values and institutions. — T Clark
I invite you to consider the absolute of the present moment (that is, the moments of your life). These moments are temporary with respect to passing time, but the moments themselves are permanent. If a thing is well done, or done as well the moment allows, and you know it, that's really all the epitaph that matters, Comparisons are conjectural, memory unreliable, only the moment is real; self reflecting on itself is the ultimate beauty and monument. — tim wood
Nihilism (I define here): the belief and attitude that ultimately nothing matters, nothing has any ultimate or absolute value or significance. — tim wood