I agree with this point. However, to move the argument forward, I think we all hit a wall. In all presentations about theism, determinism and the antithesis; we come to an “uncertainty” principle. We all reach this chasm in which the final proof is absent. I have heard you say before Sapientia “I don’t have to prove the antithesis”. I think you do – and – if you can’t “things” are uncertain. That is what we are left with – I call it the uncertainty principle. I wrote this in another thread:
— Thinker
I don't have to prove the antithesis unless that's my position. And yes, most things are uncertain. — Sapientia
God does not need us – quite the contrary – we need God. Or perhaps I should say we desire God.
— Thinker
Speak for yourself. — Sapientia
We are almost nothing to God – a speck of dust.
— Thinker
No, we're real. Even a speck of dust is real. That's more than can knowingly be said about God. God is almost nothing to me besides being an interesting talking point, a subject of enquiry into human psychology, and that sort of thing. God is not a crutch for me. — Sapientia
If our sun blows up – I doubt we will be missed. What is our consequence in the scheme of things?
— Thinker
Many theists would find the notion that God is destructible to be absurd, but there is reason to believe that God would die along with us. Some have said that he's already dead. In actually living my life, seizing the day is more important to me than the grand scheme of things. My concern is thisworldliness, rather than otherworldliness. — Sapientia
What can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence. And no testimony is sufficient to establish a miracle, unless the testimony be of such a kind, that its falsehood would be more miraculous than the fact which it endeavours to establish. — Sapientia
You wrote:
Sign language is a type of written language.
Gestures are not marks. — creativesoul
"Seeing self-contemplation" is a tricky way to talk. Self-contemplation happens in more than one way, and does so quite differently, depending of course, upon the complexity of agent involved the process of introspection. It is important to note here that self-contemplation cannot get exceed the scope of knowledge afforded to the creature by virtue of the complexity of it's thought/belief system. Self-conception - as we know it - requires written language, for it is an integral part of having a worldview. — creativesoul
I identify with the darthbarracuda school of philosophy, I think - maybe.
— Thinker
No, NO, NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO — darthbarracuda
darthbarracuda — darthbarracuda
Creatures without written language are always in the moment, and never thinking about being so. Such creatures are more than capable of attributing meaning to 'objects' of sensory perception by virtue of drawing mental correlations between them and/or themselves(their own state of mind). — creativesoul
We are endowed with this powerful thinking tool that can contemplate almost anything, chaos being one of them. So, the issue of whether the concept of order is innate or acquired is moot because we can imagine the antithesis of order. — TheMadFool
Glad - satisfied sounds mild - you should be ecstatic - the benefits would be more. You should be screaming from the rooftop - I am lucky. We would all laugh at you - but - you would be happier.
— Thinker
I find that naive for a few reasons. There isn't an on-and-off switch, and there are other important things besides happiness. I'd rather be a little less happy than be a gullible, crazy fool that's the butt of everyone's jokes. — Sapientia
It's not that difficult to understand. When one says "Well put, for simplicity's sake" it need be neither a compliment nor a put down. You see, both of those require a focus upon the author, whereas "Well put, for simplicity's sake" focused upon the content of the expression. — creativesoul
That doesn't follow from what was written. — creativesoul
It seems that your notion of cognition is not equivalent to my notion of thought/belief. On my view, not all stimulus/response situations involve thought/belief. Detection alone is insufficient for drawing mental correlations between 'objects' of physiological sensory perception and/or one's own state of mind. All such mental correlations constitute thought/belief formation. Simple cell organisms have no state of mind, for they do not have the complexity that seems obviously necessary for it. — creativesoul
You religious folks always give me a cult vibe. — Terrapin Station
Rather than "grateful," I should just be "joyful." — TheWillowOfDarkness
Gratitude outside causality, that is gratitude to no-one, is meaningless. It just the nihilistic neurosis-- that world and ourselves are meaningless in themselves, such that we would have to think nothing for allowing us to exist. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I don't believe in luck though. — Terrapin Station
Lucky/thankful not really. Glad/satisfied, yes. — Terrapin Station
Do you feel a servile obligation towards the socks on your feet?
Is remarking that life is good not enough?
What's the purpose behind making a gesture of gratitude toward a thing which cannot perceive it?
It seems nonsensical... — VagabondSpectre
"Luck" really only make sense if you are talking about causality, in the significance of how someone exists in one position rather than another, by circumstance and themselves, such they one way rather than another (e.g. a rich person is who "lucky" to be born into wealth, person belonging to a plentiful environment, etc.). — TheWillowOfDarkness
If you want a more direct answer than this you've got to define "luck". — VagabondSpectre
You do realize that my answer takes us right back through the entire universal history of causation to the big bang right? — VagabondSpectre
Do you thank the socks on your feet? Do you thank the air that you breathe or the water that you drink?
Do you thank the gravity of the earth and the earth's distance from the sun?
If not why not? — VagabondSpectre
If there's something specific you don't get, ask me. — Srap Tasmaner
I am not sure if that is a compliment – put down – or both?
Neither. — creativesoul
Do you think my explanation of the origin of meaning – cognition – language is cogent?
Yup. — creativesoul
Could you add some subtlety to my scenario?
Yup. — creativesoul
Do you have an alternate theory of how meaning arrived – cognition and language?
Nope. — creativesoul
Perhaps cognition should come before meaning – we must have had cognitive power first before we could derive associative meaning.
Perhaps they arise simultaneously. — creativesoul
I do not think that that question leads to greater understanding. Better to focus attention upon what cognition requires. What is the bare minimum criterion? What must be the case in order for cognition to happen? Does that include things that require other things? What is included within the set of necessary existential preconditions? — creativesoul
The above is steeped in language use that leaves me guessing. What is the word "that" referring to in the following?
"The actual is what we humans experience because that is what acts upon us, and what we act upon, as actual beings ourselves."
Of course objections may always be made on terminological grounds; that is due to the imprecision of language.
Language is certainly sometimes imprecise and can have many different results, that being but one. — creativesoul
Well put for simplicity's sake... — creativesoul
I gave you some suggested examples in that very post. There might be no explanation for why there is something rather than nothing. There might be no explanation for why the fundamental features of the world are the way they are. — Michael
the real problem is that it attempts to take us beyond what we can know. — Stanford Encyclopaedia of Philosophy
Poetry doesn't have a goal.
— Noble Dust
I think you are way off base here. Please reconsider this statement. — Thinker
Not "doing so", but wanting to do so. If we were able to we would, but we are not; so why should we want what we can't possibly have? That said, I think that in another way, every authentic work of art is an attempt to "answer" that question, or to speak to the question, at least. Why should we hope for a 'dry' analytical or discursive answer to the question, though. Would that not be to dishonour the question by trivializing it? — John
The artist doesn't change — Thinker
You argued that the artist doesn't change in relation to a work; I'm arguing the opposite and giving Baldessari as an example. — Noble Dust
I feel like I've dragged the discussion off-post. I'll let you guys have at it — T Clark
Ok, but even then, an artists perception of one of their works can change. John Baldessari burned all of his early work. — Noble Dust