Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category

Quora Answer: What’s the difference between modernism and postmodernism?

Oct 18 2014 Published by under Uncategorized

Modernism is essentially the idea that the new should supplant the traditional.

A good example of that is Fathers and Sons by Ivan Turgenev where the word Nihilism was first introduced. I have been reading Zarathustra’s Dionysian Modernism: Robert Gooding-Williams: 9780804732956: Amazon.com: Books
in which the idea is that Zarathustra is the quintessential modernist position in which the idea is to ever create new values, and new value creators.

But many claim that Friedrich Nietzsche is also the quintessential postmodern philosopher as well. But as with all things it is easier to say when they start than when they end. I listened to a lecture series on Feudalism and when it came to the question when did Feudalism end, the answer was about 1850. Wow that means that Feudalism lasted a lot longer than we might have thought.

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Quora Answer: Is Philosophy not for the layman? If yes, why is it so difficult for it to be simple?

Oct 18 2014 Published by under Uncategorized

Philosophy is simple in as much as it is about our highest concepts like what is Being, what is Existence, what is Cause, what is Moral, etc. But it is complicated by the fact that there are just so many ways of thinking about these highest concepts from so many perspectives AND if you try to think several of them at once there are many different ways of arranging them, and connecting them, and justifying their content in relation to the content of other higher concepts that the permutations are endless, and the number of different philosophical positions that have been taken in history if not endless are a very large number out of which we have selected a representative cannon about which we talk because these are the deepest views that people in our tradition have come up with about these things that are different and map out the kernel of the space of possibilities that can be agreed upon.

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Quora Answer: What is a good way to begin reading Nietzsche?

Oct 18 2014 Published by under Uncategorized

Check out: Amazon.com: The Good European: Nietzsche’s Work Sites in Word and Image (9780226452791): David Farrell Krell, Donald L. Bates: Books for some interesting context.

I am reading a book called Zarathustra’s Dionysian Modernism by Robert Gooding-Williams and it seems to me that is as good a place to start as any.

The first thing you really need to come to terms with is that Nietzsche’s philosophy is non-systematic, even anti-systematic, which basically means it is one huge mess, a gigantic puzzle. After Hegel and Kant this is a real relief, but on the other hand you can, and people do make about anything they want out of it. So finding good commentaries that make sense of some portion of it is well . . . extremely difficult.

Recently I read Nietzsche and the Philology of the Future by James I Porter and that filled in what was for me a really big blank in Nietzsche’s career, his academic life as a philologist. After reading that book I had a much better appreciation of where Nietzsche was coming from in terms of his discipline in academia which I had not really thought about before.

In terms of Genealogy a good book is Philosophical Genealogy in two volumes by Brian Lightbody where he contrasts Nietzsche and Foucault’s approaches to Genealogy.

Another interesting book I read recently is Zarathustra’s Last Supper: Nietzsche’s Eight Higher Men by Weaver Santaniello which got me interested in trying to re-approach Zarathustra again.

One thing that hit me reading Zarathustra over the last few days along with the Gooding-Williams book is his saying in it that people who write aphorisms in blood want not to be read but memorized. I think that is a particularly telling remark from Nietzsche on how he wants to be approached.

I had a class at UCI which was a year long reading seminar on Nietzsche under Martin Schwab [UC Irvine – Faculty Profile System] and that was really good because we read not just Nietzsche but some of his main commentators like Heidegger, and Deleuze. It helps to have someone who can guide you who actually has a fairly deep knowledge of the German context in which Nietzsche is writing and to warn about the pitfalls of the translations. That was a really great experience that consolidated my grasp on Nietzsche’s philosophy. Of all the books I read during that time the one Parkes: Composing the Soul: Reaches of Nietzsche’s Psychology: Graham Parkes: 9780226646879: Amazon.com: Books who came to talk to us impressed me the most. Nietzsche writes his philosophy through metaphors and Parkes explores the field of metaphors that Nietzsche uses, which is extremely interesting to see as a whole field.

There is no one way that is best to approach Nietzsche. You have to just start reading, and then read over and over, then read commentaries, then read again later after having gained some insight by trying to think it through on your own. What ever you think Nietzsche is saying, he is actually saying something deeper than that, that is guaranteed.

I wrote three  papers around that time that tried to use and capture some of what I learned:

Primal Ontology and Archaic Existentiality
Nietzsche’s Madness: thinking through darkness and light
Idea, Essence, Existence and Archetype (On Nietzsche, Jung and others)

See also Kent Palmer’s Homepage

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Quora Answer: What is modernity and is it a good thing?

Oct 18 2014 Published by under Uncategorized

I mention these books which I have not read just to show that there is a literature out there on modernity. It might be a good idea to consult it.

My concept of modernity is that it basically starts with Descartes and reaches its height with Kant and Hegel and then slowly starts to unravel, with the true danger sign being Nietzsche who was the precursor to the world wars in the early 20th century which transformed everything. Modernity is coeval with the colonialization of the world by the West which started to collapse once there was not much world to colonize any more and the colonial powers turned to war on each other in order to continue their expansion, which in fact merely caused the whole colonial regime to collapse in the sixties after the second world war. For me post-modernism and post-colonialism are just about the same thing.

Modernity is about the difference between the colonial powers and their colonies. What makes the colonial powers different and fit to rule their coloniies? Well it is obvious, we are modern and we are bringing the benefits of modernity to savages, which sounds very similar to the first justification, which was we  are christian and we are bringing the benefits of true religion to savages. Modernism however is coeval with secularism, the replacement of sovereignty with democracy, the emphasis on freedom, liberty and equality, in modern industrial states which are run by rational bureaucracies based on technical competence rather than just cronyism or nepotism. Many of these standards were set by Germany and Britain and then America for what is modern.

Modernism covers such a wide swath of history and is so recent it is hard to say whether it is good or not because it mixes nihilistically great good with great evil. It is good that we have broken out of sovereignty  But the disconnects and violence that this unleashed is surely evil. It is probably best to think of modernity and the rise of science and technology more of a fate than something good or evil. What we need to do is confront the implications of this fate for the world.

The culmination of modernity is the wars of ideology in the twentieth century which capitalist democracies won hands down. This was a terrible scorge on mankind which we are really still recovering from. What we are tying to do now is to convince ourselves that we are in a post ideological age and that we have gotten past those ideological wars. But I think Zizek is right when he says that what we think of as a post ideological world is really an intensification of ideology rather than the lack of ideology. Much of that ideology concerns global corporatism which is the newest sovereign challenge to democracy. The fact that we got out of the Two Hot and one Cold wars without a totalitarianism in the central european powers is quite amazing. We need to preserve that. Think if the Axis powers or the Communists had won, then everything today would be more or less like it is in China with their totalitarian system which is running their  capitalist transformation corruptly. Capitalism and Democracy are uneasy partners and not a particularly good system for running things, but just so much better than all the other alternatives that it is worth while fighting to keep our system in place as long as possible. The alternatives are even more horrific than the bubbling of our democracy and the out  of control antics of the capitalists who are exploiting everything in sight. The chaos of freedom is preferable to all the trains running on time.

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Quora Answer: How would you point out a logical fallacy of a prominent scholar, during a public conversation?

Oct 18 2014 Published by under Uncategorized

Point it out generally without mentioning the person who made the mistake.

Say something like: There are those who say X which implies Y, but of course X can be seen as an error, if you consider the following reasons based on the following assumptions.

Then of course they can come back at your own assumptions and reasoning, which in fact might be wrong.

You must take into account that if they are a prominent scholar they have been raked over the coals many times by many others, and there is a good chance that they have produced all kinds of arguments for their position by which they can defend it. There is a good chance that what you have come up with as a mistake has been brought up to them many times before. Thus the best thing to do is to say something like:

I may be mistaken but what about X which impies Y. And then if you do not get a reasonable answer that has sufficient backing with arguments, then you might want to suggest that they think about their position a bit deeper.

The best way to approach anyone is to say something like. I have similar thoughts that are parallel to yours but diverge in some respect, and I would like to explore the differences and similarities with your thoughts in order to learn more about my own thinking.

Then they will attempt to straighten you out, and you can judge for yourself whether their arguments are sound and persuasive. But the chances of getting them to admit a mistake are slim. However, the greatest minds are those who easily admit mistakes and relish finding the limits of their thought. The greatest minds are not those with the deepest thoughts or the most profound thoughts but which never change their mind and defend their positions to the death. The greatest minds are those who are poised for an opportunity to grow and learn and sieze that opportunity as soon as it appears. Of course, they will defend their positions until they are sure that what ever is suggested is genuinely better than their own thoughts on the subject, but once they discover that someone else has thought deeper than they have about the subject and are correct in their reasoning, then they embrace the change and move on to explore the new territory that is opened up for them by the constructive criticism of others.

As socrates said the greatest of us are those who know they don’t know, not those who think that they do know. Socrates discovered he was wisest because he knew he did not know the answers to everything. But in this journey of abandoning position after position where knowledge seemed secure but was discovered to be limited in some respect one develops wisdom, and that wisdom is really the most precious thing we can attempt to possess ourselves.

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Quora Answer: What is being?

Oct 18 2014 Published by under Uncategorized

This is a recap of various answers I have given to other questions which I will provide as a summary here.

Being is a very odd concept that is unique to Indo-European languages. And the fact of the anomalous character of Being within the universe of languages is its predominant characteristic, even though that has not played a role in the development of this concept up till now, because Indo-europeans were last to realize that other languages did not have this concept do to xenaphobia, ethnocentrism, racism, etc. If they noticed at all they took this fact as a sign of their superiority to all other peoples who had different languages and yet another reason to conquer, dominate through violence, or economics, as well as exploit, rape, pillage and exterminate them. Thus Being carries with it a lot of baggage with respect to how Indo-Europeans have comported themselves toward others throughout history. They are perhaps the most destructive people who have ever lived, and now they seem bent on destroying the planet. Thus it behooves us to try to understand the nature of this anomalous concept and try to consider the role it might have played in the history of a people who have always been bent on world domination.

The link as I see it is this. Being gives a fitness advantage to speakers of a language in which it exists because it allows linkages and synergies to be postulated that otherwise might be harder to do without this concept of a substance or sub-stratum common to radically different things, and this affects the ability to build syntheses which affects the ability to create a technological infrastructure. And since the Indo-Europeans have dominated on the basis of their technological infrastructure from the beginning of history it appears that this concept might play a pivotal role in their rise to domination and continued domination on the world stage.

Now if we take this premise as the basis for understanding the meaning of Being we get a very different view of what it might “be” and what it might mean that we would otherwise. It puts Ontology, which is the study of Being in a completely different light that we might have considered if we just studied it within the context of Western Philosophy without recourse to other traditions. The fact that other philosophical traditions, for instance Buddhism, is more sophisticated than that of Western philosophy does not get noticed because Western philosophers don’t bother to read anything outside their own tradition for the most part. And anything they might read outside their tradition gets co-opted into that tradition or orientalized. However, if we look at Western Philosophy from the outside via a genuine attempt to understand other sophisticated intellectual traditions as a standpoint for understanding the world, then we are starting with existence rather than Being, and then it is a very different task to understand the nature of Being that it would be to do so from within the Western tradition in which the absurdity of Being is ubiquitous and pervasive and in which there is no criterion for judging the value of Being because it is the criterion for judging everything else. Even the concept of God who is conceived as the “supreme being”, is subservient to Being itself. Western philosophy is extremely parochial. But to get some perspective on Being we must understand it from the outside, from other more sophisticated intellectual traditions which do not have Being as their main concept, and thus which allow us to get some perspective on Being. When we do that we find that Being is synonymous with illusion, a very potent form of illusion called in Hinduism Maya but called in Buddhism dukkah and in Islam dunya.

Once we have stepped outside the magic circle in which Being dominates and pervades all our thoughts we can begin to get some perspective on this concept and attempt to understand it better. So that when we come back into Western philosophy it is easier to understand how the tradition itself has struggled with this concept that is embedded in the language as their only tool for thinking the deepest thoughts. We are still locked in this encounter with Being from within our tradition, and probably the most important thing we can do is to attempt to engage in the struggle to understand Being because it affects every aspect of the world and our selves as we find ourselves within our world, and it pervades our worldview in ways that are difficult to imagine less well understand. Seen from the outside we are continually walking around in an extreme illusion that distorts everything we do, and this has profound effects that play themselves out on the world stage as we destroy other worlds and challenge other world-views that have their own illusions but not this extremely deep type of viral illusion that we find ourselves infected with from the very beginning and never manage to shake in our whole lives.

So what is Being? It is almost impossible to say because it is an extremely deep absurdity that we don’t notice because it is the air or water of our worldview in which we fly or swim and do not notice it. It is a kind of ether that is continually at play affecting our every thought and move, our very Being and our Becoming. The fact is that the only way to understand being is to attempt to come to the surface between Being and what others see which is existence. But that is very difficult because what we discover is that Being itself is striated into kinds and it is necessary to go up the ladder or stairway to nowhere that appears as the kinds of Being in order to try to get to the surface outside of Being, i.e. in existence. it is as if we were wandering around the Winchester House in San Jose, CA, and we found the stair way to nowhere that exists there, and we started going up those stairs. It appears that those steps end up just hitting the ceiling and that there is really no where to go up those stairs. But in fact when we actually take the last step we find ourselves having cross the threshold into existence, because existence is at the core of Being. Those stairs within our worldview are called the Meta-levels of Being which define different kinds of Being that are emergently different from each other. They were rediscovered by Continental Philosophy in the last century, but have always existed within our worldview as an inner possibility.

The way we take those stairs is to consider the meaning of seemingly meaningless repetitions of the term Being. For the most part we live on the suface of Being but what happens when we consider instead the Being of Being, what is that. Aristotle says Being qua Being when he wants to point to the essence of Being itself. What is the Being of Being? Well it turns out that there is a distinction within Being that allows us to understand that, and that is the distinction between the kind of Being that Parmenides talks about which is static (cf. Zeno), and the dynamic flowing type of Being that Heraclitus discusses which is known as Becoming. Interestingly when we go up a meta-level of Being we move from static Being to dynamic Becoming. Lets call this the difference between Pure and Process Being. When we look at our tradition we find that Heidegger makes this distinction in Being and Time between present-at-hand and ready-to-hand modes of being-in-the-world of Dasein. Since Heidegger there have been many popularizes of the idea that Being is not just static and eternal but dynamic and affected by time. In fact just as Space and Time can be seen to form a continuum in modern physics so too Being and Becoming can be seen as a corresponding continuum of an even higher level of abstraction than spacetime. Plato talks about this distinction between Being and Becoming and how what we really need is the idea of change and changelessness at the same time.

But once we admit that Being is not a homogeneous plenum as it has been conceived for most of the history of philosophy then we admit the possibility that there are different kinds of Being which are somewhat like the various phases of matter. So for instance we have solids, and liquids which are remarkably similar to Pure and Process Being. And by analogy there must be something like a gas, and the way that we get to that new emergent level of Being is to ask what is the Being of the Becoming of Being. By this route we get to what Plato in the Timeous called the Third Kind of Being. This of course is like the close encounter of the Third Kind but with something that is not alien but something that is so ubiquitous and normal that we take it for granted and never think about how strange it is. However, when we start to think about the third kind of Being, which we might call Hyper Being, we begin to see that Being is in fact very strange. Heidegger discovered it and called it -B-e-i-n-g- (crossed out), and Derrida took it up and called it Differance which means differing and deferring. Merleau-Ponty independently discovered it and called it the Hyper-dialectic between Being (as process defined by Heidegger) and Nothingness (as defined by Sartre). The fact that it is now known that Plato knew about it (cf Sallis Chorology) means that it is a part of our tradition that was there from almost the beginning and had gotten lost, but then was rediscovered when the idea that there were different kinds of Being surfaced in Continental Philosophy.  The reason it got lost within the tradition is that it is much harder to think than the idea that there is moving and transforming Being. There is in fact a kind of Being that is continually slip-sliding (Paul Simon) away, which like quicksilver cannot be held on to, and as you grasp it it transforms or vanishes (like the Old Man in the Sea when Menelaus grabs him or Theitis when Peleus grabs her). In fact we see that this kind of Being is very much the kind of Being that the continually transforming gods seem to have. But interestingly enough it is also the kind of Being that writing which is the basis for the preservation of our culture also has according to Derrida. He says that there is a prejudice against writing and for speech in our culture, and that this prejudice that suppresses writing gives writing the nature of Hyper Being, and this is intensified when writing becomes animated as it does in computer programming so that software becomes the first cultural artifact with this kind of Being.

Once we know that we are locked into a regress then we can begin to think about what is the next higher level of Being, which we will call Wild Being after Merleau-Ponty who realized that Hyper Being must have an opposite, but also realized that it was very difficult to think about because it is the Being of the Becoming of the Being of Becoming. It is Gregory Bateson in Steps to the Ecology of Mind that introduces us to the idea of the Meta-levels of Learning and who opens up the way to try to understand what learning is at meta-level 4. Merelau-Ponty was hit by a car before he could finish his work The Visible and the Invisible and so Wild Being did not have the philosophical impact it might have had if he had finished the book. But there were philosophers like Deleuze who were ready to explore this higher level of Being, and he concentrate on attempting to produce images of what a philosophy at this metalevel might be like. But this meta-level of Being is almost impossible to think. But like most things that are rare if we can lay our hands on it then it is very valuable because it gives us a perspective on the lower kinds of Being we would not have otherwise. And it is our only way forward to the final kind of being which is called Ultra Being which is a singularity of Being in existence.

What is important to us here is that if we keep going up this stairway to nowhere we hit a ceiling which is a singularity where Being comes to an end in existence. but if we think about the nature of that Existence we realize that we can consider existence under the interpretation of emptiness as do the Buddhists or under the interpretation of Void as do the Taoists, and thus what appears to be a singularity and a dead end is actually a release into the freedom of a nondual realm in which illusion vanishes. Illusion vanishes because the dualities on which illusion is based evaporate. Once we breakthrough into non-dual existence then we finally get some perspective on Being that is not possible otherwise. There we discover the existence that has been suppressed in our own tradition but which is the natural state of things in other non-indo-european languages. It is only at that point that we can actually perceive the meaning of Being vis a vis Existence. What we discover in that case is that actually Being has no meaning because all meaning flows from Existence. What there is in Being is significance, relevance, innuendo  but not real meaning.

My analogy for this is the Geode theory of meaning. Geodes are bubbles in sediment that waters run through and over eons the heavy metals and other materials crystalize out filling the bubble and creating beautiful crystaline structures within the bubble at its center which ultimately is empty. Being is like this bubble. There is originally a void in existence, the bubble in the sediment. But then the substance within the water precipitates out as crystaline substance within that void creating an empty center. But the sediment in that bubble that precipitates out forms layers. Outermost the layer looks like an ordinary rock. But then if we look beyond that rock we see that the rock is built up over time and has a certain dynamic that lays down the substance layer by layer within the bubble so as to create different sedimentations some of which become crystallization’s. The difference between the sedimentations and the cystalizations is in the nature of the minerals that are precipitated out given what is in the water at that specific location over eons. However, this remains hidden to us until we are so bold as to split open the Geode. At that point there is what we can call an expansion of the being-in-the-world of our projection to encompass the crystalline structure that has been created at the center of the Geode. When we cut it open it is revealed to us and we revel in the beauty of what nature can create hidden away within the earth. But as we open up more and more Geodes we start to realize that we are running out of geodes and thus there is a natural contraction of the geodes as a possibility for revelation within the world. Like other resources the geodes are finite and when we have exploited all of them for our own pleasure and amazement there will soon be no more to open and that wonderment will vanish from our experience. And then that brings us back to the singularity of the unopened Geode itself. We begin to think in a deep ecological fashion that we need to preserve unopened geodes because that is a pristine aspect of nature untrammeled by our exploitative natures. And eventually there is perhaps one geode preserved unopened which is a singularity to signify the original nature of all geodes as they were in the earth a mystery worth preserving, just existing without being exploited and having a value in itself beyond the value we confer though use of natural resources. Perhaps this is a contrived example but what it tires to show is that the meaning actually comes from the center of the geode, from its emptiness, that is enclosed within it. And this is true for everything  Meaning comes out of nondual existence, not out of the substantiveness of Being in all its kinds and phenomenological layers. The actual meaning of the Geode comes out of its unseen structure when it is unopened, out of its possible marvel, which as not been realized because it has not been opened. Meaning is deep ecological in nature, including our own. When we open up the geode then we get significance, we get relevance, we get reference as we compare this geode to all others and to other things. And the same thing is true of Being.

Being itself is like a geode. We mostly see the surface of it which is Pure Being. But occasionally our attention is drawn to its Becoming the fact that it is actually entangled with time. But seldom do we think of the fact that there is a deeper level which has to do with the opening up of Being, to see the inner structures that are continually transforming inside as difference of differing and deferring within itself with itself. It is this that produces the discontinuous and emergent transformation of Being within our tradition. It is this which is the basis for innovation and creativity of design within our culture. It is this which grounds the continual self-transformation of our technological infrastructure. But of course the expansion of being-in-the-world that gives us continually new affordances within our world, is matched by the contraction of being-in-the-world as we find  that the resources to exploit are running out like Helium which is a rare resource which we have wasted blowing up balloons for parties. We are heading toward a severe restriction of our being-in-the-world after we have wasted all the natural resources of our planet. Ultimately the illusion that drives us to exploit everything without end without cease until it is exhausted is just another existent within the world of many other finite existants. Our sickness is just one more sickness of the self that exists within the world. The only real difference is that this sickness is bent on destroying not just the planet but ourselves. It is what Freud called Thanatos the drive toward death. It is just one of many other drives that drive us unconsciously toward our own self destruction, like many other addictions. But this addiction is the one that is the ultimate terrorism because it threatens to take everyone else with us when we go.

The ultimate meaning of Being is the drive toward self-and planetary destruction that we are oblivious to but which is taking us toward planetary destruction  and which we cannot stop because it is within ourselves. When nothing is  left, when the emptiness is clearly all that exists then the meaning will be clear of the nature of this drive that encompasses us, encompasses all of us of what ever species we hale on this unique planet where life now abounds. It will probably still abound once we have destroyed ourselves by uncontrolled and overreaching hubris, but it will probably be only insect life or some other species that is more hardy and more diverse and more numerous than ourselves.

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Quora Answer: Is there a problem with radical hedonism as a means to happiness?

Oct 18 2014 Published by under Uncategorized

Hedonism is a severe reduction of what it is to be human to pain and pleasure. Basically it says that pleasure equals what is good and pain equals what is bad, or evil which ignores all the invisible aspects of existence that are implicit in our humanity. Plato calls these people the men of earth who only believe in what they can hold in their hands, i.e. they only believe in the sensible aspects of the world. Nietzsche calls them the last men, whose who are always blinking at what they see because they do not understand anything beyond what is immediately visible. He contrasts these with the uber mench who are those who are to come, for whom Zarathustra is waiting. Fundamentally there is a contrast between the Ubermench and those that are lost in transcendentals which do not exist. The ubermench are those who believe in immanent realities not illusory transcendental ones. Hegel calls the hedonists those who cling to “sense certainty” and do not understand philosophy at all, because all philosophy is about knowledge and wisdom which are things that are invisibles. So there is in fact nihilistic opposition between those immersed in sense certainty and those who are lost in ideals of illusions or ideologies which have no basis in reality. Nietzsche’s uber mench is one who tries to find a middle ground between these extremes who has within himself immanently the basis for valuing things that he creates for himself. The only real answer to this question has to be nondual, i.e. which sees value as coming neither from the Immanent nor the Transcendental. But Nietzsche thought there was a possibility of a mutation in humanity itself that would produce an immanent valuation criterion without reference to transcendentals.  Deleuze develops the same sort of position. We might call such a position a reflective hedonism, but that would still be a severe reductionism and contradictory when we think of other criteria like order, right, good and fate which are significant in our tradition as sources of the explanation of values.

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Quora Answer: What are some of the varied responses to the argument of immortal soul?

Oct 18 2014 Published by under Uncategorized

Aristotle in de Anima says that the Soul is Form.

There are four causes for Aristotle which are Form, Material, Efficient, and Final.

See Four causes and On the Soul

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Quora Answer: Given that the unexamined life is not worth living, could the argument be taken further by saying that the person who chooses to live an unexamined life, or adopts the idea that ‘ignorance is bliss’, is somehow less worthy of a life to begin with?

Oct 18 2014 Published by under Uncategorized

Reflection is embedded in life. I would argue that in reality there is no unexamined life. Part of consciousness itself is its reflective nature. As with so much of Plato there is an ironic side. When Socrates says that the unexamined life is not worth living, basically he is bringing up the question of whether it is possible to live an unexamined life. An unexamined life is actually not possible and is actually only death. So not only is it not worth living but it is impossible because only death can be completely unexamined by the person who dies. If you are living you are reflecting. But then the question is the depth to which you examine your life, and for most of us it is only in our passing thoughts about our own thinking which are themselves passing thoughts. But awareness engulfs those thoughts and that consciousness and that awareness is itself self-awareness fundamentally. See Antonio Damasio: Self Comes to Mind: Constructing the Conscious Brain: Antonio Damasio: 9780307474957: Amazon.com: Books. and

amazon.com

The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness: Antonio Damasio: 9780156010757: Amazon.com: Books

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Quora Answer: Is Transcendental Idealism equal to the thinking of “Law of Attraction”? Or am I misunderstanding Transcendental Idealism?

Oct 18 2014 Published by under Uncategorized

I think you are a little confused as to what Transcendental Idealism means. It basically means that mind comes first in our understanding of reality, and it is difficult to escape this truth because we only know what is real through our mind, so most philosophical traditions are idealist because it is difficult to imagine direct access to reality except through our minds. So as Bernstein says for Kant Transcendental Idealism is the royal road to Transcendental Realism. Actually there is no other road which is what Parmenides was trying to say at the beginning of our tradition. To Parmenides Non-Being and Appearances are not a road to reality. And Zeno tries to prove that with his paradoxes of motion. That more or less started things off in an idealist direction, and we have been going more or less in the same direction ever since, with a few notable exemptions. What is nice is that Borges makes fun of this idealism by taking it to extremes in his famous short stories. His work is a good introduction to the oddity of the idealist position. Basically all duals are traps. That is the point that Kant makes through the antimonies.

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