The Philosophers

'" (KGW V 11 [211] Spring-Fall 1881).

This, exactly, is what VO accomplishes.
Nietzsche accomplished the first part, the dehumanization of nature, and VO is the naturalization of humanity into this new form.

The latter is the “more fundamental” (or one might say, in this light, further progressed, completed) transvaluation of valuing, to which I referred above.

I cannot agree with this if you mean that Nietzsche just accomplished the first part. Nietzsche neither just accomplished the first part nor was it just Nietzsche who accomplished the first part. The first part has been accomplished by modern natural philosophy as a whole: consider, for example, BGE 22, where Nietzsche only completes that philosophy, by interpreting the course of nature not as lawful but as lawless. “This world is the will to power–and nothing besides! And you yourselves are also this will to power–and nothing besides!” (WP) 1067): this is the same order as above.

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But, as I already implied at the end of my “The 4 Aeons” OP, Nietzsche does not end there. The humanization or anthropomorphosis of nature was an act of man’s will to power, of his self-valuing–his bestowing value in terms of himself. And perhaps VO will be the link between the Machiavellian age and a new pre-Homeric age: from modern natural science to a new natural religion.

It certainly provides the means for that - and there is no other idea that provides this.
After all this is the fruit of all philosophy, continental an analytical alike, and brings us back to a Heraclitean ethics, but with a refined idea of “fire”.

We had an interesting exchange about plasma and music recently. We need to talk about this more when we sit down again.

Sure. Just don’t under(e)st(im)ate the refinement of the Heraclituean idea of “fire”. We only have fragments left of Heraclitus, after all.

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The ultimate question about metaphysics is what we can say. The veracity of any metaphysics relies on its own notion of truth. Is value ontology true or not? That depends whether or not truth is connected to reality; whether or not, in short, we assume that reality can be truthfully expressed at all.

By us, yes. And I think we cannot entertain the concepts of “equality” and “inequality” by themselves, without the other.

I am not so sure of that. In fact, I think “inequality” is better represented as “difference”, which again is represented as “interaction” and so on, as “will to power” - the very logic that prohibits the conception of one thing without its antithesis is I think what needs to be questioned (in terms of its appropriate places and applications) very rigorously.

To me “prohibits the conception” sounds like a loaded way of putting it. In any case, I think that logic is the most fundamental value in Value Ontology: the value-positing formulated by it is the source of even the “self” of “self-valuing”.

It doesn’t help to rephrase “inequality” in terms seemingly less antithetical. “Unequal” simply means “not equal”; “different” simply means “not the same”; “interactive” means “active but not separately so”; “willing to power” means “not impotent to power”. The assertion that life is will to power implies that life is not not will to power.

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From my point of view, VM is the most probable M. But I think that, lest analytic philosophers and the like accusingly yell “M! M!” at us, we’d better emphasize its non-dogmatism, at least for the time being. In other words: “Yes, it is M! Yes, it is interpretation! Yes, it is a value!” The times demand that we insist on our own insistence, our own injustice; if we just insist on being right, we’ll probably be dismissed as ranters–at least until our dismissers, say, read Picht…

I have not been dismissed, but only respected by the wise and imitated by the envious.

Are those the only two options? Did I not dismiss you in the past? But does this mean that I wasn’t wise and was thereby envious? I can see how I wasn’t wise in this regard, but not how I imitated you.

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But yes, this is precisely because I make no secret about what I am: a lord of mind (Mannaz, Man), an incarnation of world-fire. It is I, a being of all consuming passion and royal honor, who have forged this, not some anonymous lab-coat.

Yes (though it’s ironic that it was you who quite brilliantly concluded, a couple of years ago, that the contemporary equivalent to the Medieval philosopher’s exoteric guise of the priest was that of the scientist/scholar; you then seemed more inclined than me to adopt that guise, but perhaps it’s now the other way round). However, it’s precisely this kind of assertion that, when not accompanied by a clear qualification, may well sound pathological: it reminds me of Nietzsche’s Ecce Homo. Now of course “clear” is a relative term, and to me it seems clear that you’re well aware of how it sounds. I however am now one of the few wise in that regard.

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No mediocre man could address the concept of value in such a majestic, naturalizing fashion. In this sense VO is a selecting device and only fit for our people – who are thereby defined.

But what about those in between the mediocre and such exceptions? Those who are potentially exceptional?

By the way, that part about “M! M!” was an allusion to a story about the logical positivists (Russell etc.). A bunch of them had got together and were trying to establish a completely logical philosophy. One of them was given the task of yelling “M!” whenever any of them suggested anything metaphysical. Soon, they changed this to yelling “not M!” when any of them suggested something non-metaphysical.

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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Thu Oct 10, 2013 11:54 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
This gets precarious. I can’t agree yet, I need to know more of the relation of these recent animations to the original problem. We still have to deal with the calibration of the space-time relation between the flashers and the clocks.

If the timing of the flashes has been calibrated in terms of this stations perspective in order to reach the middle point (as measured from the stations perspective) between two flashers, again seen from the stations perspective, then I agree. But I can’t see this correlate with the original train/station scenario, as that included other information.

As far as I understand, if the flashers have actually been calibrated to hit the trains clock simultaneously (thus if they actually do stop the clock), which is a given in the original problem but not part of these new animations, then, form the stations perspective, the flashers would appear to flash at different times.


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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Fri Oct 11, 2013 12:45 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Fixed Cross wrote:
If the timing of the flashes has been calibrated in terms of this stations perspective in order to reach the middle point (as measured from the stations perspective) between two flashers, again seen from the stations perspective, then I agree.
The defined scenario is that the flashers go off simultaneously such as to travel the distance Xs toward the station clock. Because the distance Xs is the same for both flashers (the clock is centered), and the photons must travel at the exact same speed as each other, they must meet at the station clock and stop it. The fact that the flashers were moving at the moment they flashed is irrelevant as per the theory.

Fixed Cross wrote:
But I can’t see this correlate with the original train/station scenario, as that included other information.

As far as I understand, if the flashers have actually been calibrated to hit the trains clock simultaneously (thus if they actually do stop the clock), which is a given in the original problem but not part of these new animations, then, form the stations perspective, the flashers would appear to flash at different times.
The flashers are not “calibrated to hit” anything. They merely go off simultaneously and at equal distance from each clock (perhaps even triggered by a pair of sidetrack arms). There is no “calibrating” involved.

The composite animes display what necessarily must follow given such a situation. Any clock not centered at the time the light reaches the center cannot be stopped.

Where is the confusion?
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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Fri Oct 11, 2013 1:40 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
The confusion is only due to the scenario being related to the train/station scenario. These are different scenarios.


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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Fri Oct 11, 2013 1:43 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
With what you’ve described here, I see no problem. The moving clock does not stop.


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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Fri Oct 11, 2013 2:08 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Fixed Cross wrote:
With what you’ve described here, I see no problem. The moving clock does not stop.
So I really DO have to draw a box around the moving flashers and clock???

You seriously can’t see the similarity between those???

The UPPER portion of the latter anime is the “station perspective”, the same one we were just discussing. The only difference is that in the first, the clock was “tossed” and in the other a train was carrying the clock and the flashers.
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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Fri Oct 11, 2013 2:26 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
No, the difference is that there is now suddenly an extra reference frame. Or did you mean for me to disregard the proposed trains perspective? (and if so why did you include the pic?)

If so, I still don’t see a problem. The clock does not stop.


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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Fri Oct 11, 2013 2:51 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Fixed Cross wrote:
No, the difference is that there is now suddenly an extra reference frame. Or did you mean for me to disregard the proposed trains perspective? (and if so why did you include the pic?)

If so, I still don’t see a problem. The clock does not stop.
We have ONLY been talking about the station perspective. And according to the station’s perspective, the train clock cannot stop. It won’t matter what anyone else’s perspective is. According to the theory of relativity, the train clock cannot stop.

And then the “problem” comes in when we change our perspective and look at the same scenario from the train as the station’s clock passes by.

The scenario is identical, merely reversed. Thus we can already tell that according to the train, it is the station’s clock that cannot stop. When the only premises of a logical sequence are definitions and a theory, and the conclusion is a contradiction, the theory is invalidated.
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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Fri Oct 11, 2013 3:03 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
oops, hold on.


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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Fri Oct 11, 2013 3:08 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I screwed up your post, pressing edit instead of quote. I think there is a sentence missing. If you could restore it, thanks. Sorry.


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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Fri Oct 11, 2013 3:28 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
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We have ONLY been talking about the station perspective.
Exactly. This means that relativity did not yet apply to the situation we had defined.

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And according to the station’s perspective, the train clock cannot stop. It won’t matter what anyone else’s perspective is. According to the theory of relativity, the train clock cannot stop.
Only if we only consider one aspect of relativity, which is the c does not depend on the speed of the object from which it is emitted as perceived from a perspective moving relative to this object.

The top down perspective moves in respect to the moving clock.

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And then the “problem” comes in when we change our perspective and look at the same scenario from the train as the station’s clock passes by.
Which is the same as the perspective of the emitter moving relative to the station, which I brought up earlier for that reason.

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The scenario is identical, merely reversed. Thus we can already tell that according to the train, it is the station’s clock that cannot stop.
If all four photons are seen to be emitted at the exact same moment. Relativity allows that, if they arrive at the clocks simultaneously (which is what the definitions state), they aren’t.

“Events A, B, and C occur in different order depending on the motion of the observer. The white line represents a plane of simultaneity being moved from the past to the future.”

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When the only premises of a logical sequence are definitions and a theory, and the conclusion is a contradiction, the theory is invalidated.
Relativity only states that definitions of time and space as valid in reference frame A is dependent on whatever is perceived as c from reference frame A.

“Event B is simultaneous with A in the green reference frame, but it occurred before in the blue frame, and will occur later in the red frame.”

So the definitions illustrated in the first four animations were all dependent on the stations reference frame.

If both clocks stop, then the photons from the station are seen to be emitted at a different time than the photons on the train. If all photons are seen to be emitted simultaneously and two of them meet each other at a point that proves to be the real location of either of the clocks, only one of the clocks can stop.


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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Fri Oct 11, 2013 11:34 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Fixed Cross wrote:
Quote :
We have ONLY been talking about the station perspective.
Exactly. This means that relativity did not yet apply to the situation we had defined.
All theories must always apply. And actually that was stated in Einsteins special relativity thesis. That was actually the whole underlying concern. Physics requires a set of laws that are not dependent upon the situation of the Earth moving through space at an unknown pace. Relativity was offered as a means to form laws/principles that would be accurate regardless of such space travel.

Fixed Cross wrote:
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And according to the station’s perspective, the train clock cannot stop. It won’t matter what anyone else’s perspective is. According to the theory of relativity, the train clock cannot stop.
Only if we only consider one aspect of relativity, which is the c does not depend on the speed of the object from which it is emitted as perceived from a perspective moving relative to this object.
Again, the underlying intent of relativity is to form a consistent set of laws. One of those fundamental laws that must always apply, is that the speed of light must always be measured as exactly the same no matter who is measuring it, moving or not.

We must always consider that one “law” whether others are involved or not. And by considering merely that one, we are already locked into a conclusion. That one law by itself demands that the moving clock does not stop if not at the center line when the light reaches it. But there are no other laws that would change the situation.

Fixed Cross wrote:
The top down perspective moves in respect to the moving clock.
It isn’t “moving” if it is “with respect” to it. That is what “with respect to it” means.

What you are calling the “top down perspective” is actually merely the perspective of both proposed reference frames together. In this scenario, the clocks either stop or they don’t. If you consider either perspective by itself, it is always the other clock that must not stop. That “top down perspective” is merely the forced conclusion for a single history. The individual perspectives would have to declare a different actual history than the other. But only one history can exist.

Fixed Cross wrote:
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And then the “problem” comes in when we change our perspective and look at the same scenario from the train as the station’s clock passes by.
Which is the same as the perspective of the emitter moving relative to the station, which I brought up earlier for that reason.
And I said that it would become relevant and this is where it becomes relevant - when you apply the exact same laws to the train’s perspective.

Fixed Cross wrote:
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The scenario is identical, merely reversed. Thus we can already tell that according to the train, it is the station’s clock that cannot stop.
If all four photons are seen to be emitted at the exact same moment. Relativity allows that, if they arrive at the clocks simultaneously (which is what the definitions state), they aren’t.
The time of the emission isn’t dependent upon when they reach their destination… unless you want to start reversing time and causality. That is “affirming the consequent” or “choosing the result and then declaring the initial state based upon it”.

The flashers flash at a particular moment. The photons have no idea where they are going to end up.

“Events A, B, and C occur in different order depending on the motion of the observer. The white line represents a plane of simultaneity being moved from the past to the future.”

The theory of relativity of simultaneity is ONLY about the appearances due to the time that it takes for light to travel to each observer. We are “above” that concern. We are not watching something that depends upon us seeing when the flashers “really flashed”. We are defining when they are to flash. The clocks are the “observers”. But in this scenario each of the observers must declare an alternate reality than the other ONLY if they accept relativity. But the clocks either stop or they don’t.

And besides that, we can easily remove any concern for simultaneity merely by having relevant things actually touch, such as the triggering of the flashers by touching arms at the side of the track. With zero distance involved, the entire simultaneity issue is void. BOTH frames would have to accept that the flashers were triggered at the same moment. The distance Xs would get involved in trying to set where the arms are to be located, but Xs is variable and can be anything as long as it remains the same Xs on both sides of the clock.

Time dilation, length contraction, and relativity of simultaneity are all irrelevant to this scenario with no consequences to the outcome.

And I don’t know which post or sentence you are referring to as getting screwed up. What was the sentence? Very Happy
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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Sat Oct 12, 2013 10:03 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster

So is the jury still out?

The decision is between;

A) Logic and mathematics = Relative is incorrect (or at least imprecise)
=>> self-honesty, self-harmony, rationality, independent thought, sight of the light

B) Illogic and vagueness = Relativity is true
=>> self-deceit, inner dissonance, irrationality, faith, blindness

C) Jury is still out

The choice and consequence is yours, as always.
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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Sat Oct 12, 2013 11:03 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
James S Saint wrote:
All theories must always apply. And actually that was stated in Einsteins special relativity thesis. That was actually the whole underlying concern. Physics requires a set of laws that are not dependent upon the situation of the Earth moving through space at an unknown pace. Relativity was offered as a means to form laws/principles that would be accurate regardless of such space travel.
Yes, this is why you have to make your definitions in terms of relativity in order to test relativity.
But you choose the objectivist way of defining a situation, which is an a priori negation of relativity.

Your definition states that both train and station are actually the same reference frame.

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It isn’t “moving” if it is “with respect” to it. That is what “with respect to it” means.
With respect to means in reference to, relative to.
Motion of an object is defined with respect to another reference frame. It is stationary with respect to itself, if it is not accelerating with respect to another object.

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What you are calling the “top down perspective” is actually merely the perspective of both proposed reference frames together.
Relativity was developed because such a perspective is impossible.
One can not have two different reference frames within one reference frame. A = A, thus also A ≠ (≠A).

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In this scenario, the clocks either stop or they don’t. If you consider either perspective by itself, it is always the other clock that must not stop. That “top down perspective” is merely the forced conclusion for a single history. The individual perspectives would have to declare a different actual history than the other. But only one history can exist.
Things are influenced by things in different orders; the sequence of events leading up to the present is different as registered by (having affect in) different reference frames.

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The time of the emission isn’t dependent upon when they reach their destination… unless you want to start reversing time and causality.
If the speed is fixed and known, and you decide on a time of arrival, the moment of departure you’re going to use is wholly dependent on that time.

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The theory of relativity of simultaneity is ONLY about the appearances due to the time that it takes for light to travel to each observer.
If that would be the case Copernican logic would suffice.

Because the speed of light is seen as the same from all reference frames, and other things are seen as moving with different speeds; in short because light behaves in a fundamentally different way than matter, all your calculations involving the travel of light are going to be inconsistent with calculations disregarding the speed of light.

Relativity involves the speed of light at the basis of every calculation about mass and energy, so as to never come to the conclusion that reality is inconsistent with itself.

The fact that light is perceived as traveling at equal speed from reference frames moving with respect to each other, is by the standards by which you’ve set your definitions, illogical.

So as I see it now, your only option is to prove that the speed of light is in fact not equal from all reference frames.

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And besides that, we can easily remove any concern for simultaneity merely by having relevant things actually touch, such as the triggering of the flashers by touching arms at the side of the track.
It’s interesting to look at the problem from that angle.

What I think would happen is that the station perspective perceives the photons on the train to be departing at a different time than the moment that the trigger connects. The time difference would be due to the fact that the speed of the train has to be converted into the perspective of the station, “valued in terms of”.

The experiential connecting to of a reference frame moving with respect to your own is an act that is influenced by the limits of propagation of affect.

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With zero distance involved, the entire simultaneity issue is void. BOTH frames would have to accept that the flashers were triggered at the same moment.
And yet they can not help perceiving each other as being influenced by it at a different moment.

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PostSubject: Re: Value Philosophy Sat Aug 29, 2015 3:54 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Capable wrote:
Regrettably I don’t have the time to adequately work through the posts so far and get up to speed entirely, so first I’d like to state my understanding of the basic categories at work here, to make sure I get what this is about.

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Value Philosophy: First philosophy is the positing of the metaphysics one values the most.
Value Metaphysics: Being is essentially Self-Valuing: beings exist inasmuch as they value themselves.
Value Axiology: Valuation is a rational value, as its disvaluation would disvalue itself, too.
Value Logic: Logic’s self-identical “A” is a value, and not necessarily a fact.
Value Ethics: It is just to consider things just, and unjust to consider things unjust.

Value philosophy designates an introductory state of philosophizing whereby one conceives one’s thought within the horizons of a metaphysical system or belief; this metaphysics, I am imagining could be either more or less well-defined and articulated (may at first consist only of a small number of metaphysical ideas in conjunction with a strong feeling of association/attraction to those beliefs), then would be a reflection of “what one values the most”, so perhaps at the time a person values the feeling of independence-freedom and also aspires to success in some way, ergo their metaphysics would firstly consist of a number of beliefs that reflect these values (maybe in this case they posit a metaphysics of will to power qua “success in one’s relations” and the value of effort/work to achieve goals; also by the first value the metaphysics at include notions of freedom and independence I.e. a “free will” or emancipatory undercurrent associated necessarily to reality)?

I think this is correct as far as it goes, though it’s not all there is to it. It reminds me of youtu.be/LvmSekZu__o 0:57-3:54. Value Philosophy does not designate just an introductory state of philosophizing. One can never completely transcend it; in the decisive respect one can never transcend it.

By the way, “first philosophy” is what Aristotle called metaphysics.

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Value metaphysics is stating the basic idea of self-valuing as FC conceived it. To be is to value oneself, to not value or to inadequately value oneself leads to no longer existing; “to exist” is defined simply as “successfully valuing in such ways as that which is doing the valuing is held in existence as itself, as such and such entity we say is that from and of which values are coming”, or perhaps also “to value means to exist”.

Yes. And note that Value Metaphysics is itself, following Value Philosophy, a metaphysics posited by those who value it more than any other metaphysics.

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Value axiology indicates the logic or rationale of valuing to be that of reality in so far as valuing oneself is necessary (to not value oneself leads to a loss of this “to not value”). All values are therefore and at their root or base, rational.

Actually, the only rational value I discern is the value of valuation itself. But insofar as valuing oneself means valuing oneself as a self-valuing and thereby valuing self-valuing itself, one’s self is indeed a rational value for oneself.

It may be helpful to note that, by “a value”, I mean “something one considers valuable”.

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Value logic, this one is more complex. I like this progression of categories into the idea of value and self-valuing, now we’re at a threshold it seems - “logic’s self-identical A is a value” means perhaps that the logical truisms and necessities such as A is A must be thought of not as “facts” but as “values” meaning they exist in the terms of the former categories here, namely that value is rational and self-necessitating because to not value (to not value well enough) precludes oneself from existing at all, thus precludes those values which one held from also existing. Logical postulates and truistic premises must be seen as the most basic, most universal or most necessary values, then.

To say these premises are “facts” would presumably, in the terms of the OP here, be to assert that they exist independent of the consequences which follow or do not follow from themselves; this would be an error, then. Even logic’s most necessary and undeniable premises must not be reified to a supposed status of objectivity or absolute independence-universality, in other words these logics are not primary but instead they represent something even more primary: the valuing consequences and conditions out of which those self-identical logics gain their presumed universal status.

Unless I’ve misunderstood that entirely…

To the contrary, I think you’ve understood it quite perfectly.

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Last one, value ethics: this seems to describe a culmination of the preceding categories, drawing a moral structure from the self-identical logic which we have previously grounded in the logic of self-valuing. That is just which follows from self-valuing, so what upholds one’s self-value through valuations adhering to the axiological structure and self-identical emergence; is morality then seen as deriving from self-identical logic and successful self-valuing? There is a distinction between saying that something is moral because it flows from a self-valuing proper self-identicalness, and saying that self-valuing requires that considering just things is just. How is morality understood in this categorical system?

Well, let me first point out that my list is by no means meant to be exhaustive: there may well be more than five items, there might even be less than five. The last item is in multiple ways a half-joke–one way being that I present it as a universal statement while it’s really a very personal statement (though the two are not necessarily mutually exclusive). Anyway, I think I can illuminate it a bit. From the “fact” that valuation is a rational value, I conclude that all things are just, as all things are valuation and nothing besides. You may want to compare my “The Philosopher King” thread’s OP, where I first formulated the fifth item: Heraclitus’ fragment 102 implies an equivocation of “just” and “beautiful” (or “noble”) and “good”. Everything is valuable, whether ethically or aesthetically or whatever other way. But one cannot live like that; or at least a human being cannot; or at least I personally cannot. How do I understand morality? As springing from one’s highest values. And one of my highest values is considering all things just. Therefore, I value the god extremely high and the wretch among human beings extremely low. The love of philosophy may be at odds with the love of wisdom.
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PostSubject: Re: Value Philosophy Sat Aug 29, 2015 4:39 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
So as I see it then, inserting strong values-standards into all manner of our (at least more significant) conceptual differentiations. As you see all things as just, because everything is self-valuing and to self-value is just (because to not self-value leads to non-existence) then justice (or goodness, or beauty) is seen to be enfolded directly into the essential reality of all things, the philosopher’s just task it then becomes to discover those moral relations and values-differentials.

Ill add more later, just wanted to get that down quick.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Value Philosophy Sun Aug 30, 2015 3:00 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Sauwelios wrote:
Metaphysics in the Aristotelian/Heideggerian sense is about beings as a whole or the Being of beings. In other words, it’s cosmology and ontology. This is the reason I gave above. Moreover, epistemology may also be regarded as metaphysics.

I generally consider epistemology to be metaphysics, yes - keep in mind that VO is concerned with right (irrefutable) knowledge of being, not being without knowledge about it, or without knowledge of knowledge about it. See beforethelight.forumotion.com/t1-ontology ; the last paragraph of the OP in particular.

In principle, “value metaphysics” is an accurate term for value ontology.

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Thus also, if N’s philosophy is will to power it is so (to N) under the conditions that the universe is will to power; one can not call N’s work will to power and claim ones own work is not, or at least not when one has understood what N meant.

I disagree. Thus in my Why I’m not a feminist thread, in my last reply to Uccisore, to which he never replied, I wrote:

You mention evidence, argumentation, and axioms as possible grounds [for moral stances]. But what would evidence be? Would it not have to be being spoken to by God or finding something written in the stars or something like that? As for argumentation, arguments ultimately rest on premisses, and those then have to be grounded on evidence or axiomatically. Lastly, an axiom is either just a postulate or a self-evident truth; and self-evident truth by definition depends on evidence: namely, self-evidence. So unless you have something good to offer instead of “or whatever” [he wrote: “evidence or argumentation or axiomatically or whatever”], the only alternative for morality’s being a matter of preference is revelation. This is exactly what I said in my OP.

Now as I said in that OP, whoever claims such revelation is in my view probably a madman or a liar or both. This is because I have, as far as I know, not experienced any such revelations whatsoever. In fact, I don’t see how a revelation would not require an infinite regress: each revelation would logically require another revelation to reveal that one’s interpretation of one’s experience as a revelation is not a misinterpretation… Bottom line: you’re preaching to a member of the choir, who however insists that we should emphasize our conditionality if we are not to seem pathological.

I have never given myself to conceive of a moral philosophy. For this reason mainly: I know that what is right for me is wrong for many, and vice versa.
What I can do is praise that which I think is good, do what I think is good, and this will be my morality, and others may or may not follow me. This is highly simplistic, but it is risky, for me, to venture into prescriptions for beings I may not understand.

See, a human is not principally different to my mind that, say, a cat. Like some one you know well, I generally trust cats more than I trust humans. A cat is a very accomplished form of self-valuing. If I set out to form a morality for humans, I might as well set out to form a morality for all animals. I can’t imagine I’d be fit for that.

Value philosophy, you say, is the practice of choosing the metaphysics that one values most. As a philosopher, my criterium for valuing a metaphysics is a) that I can not refute it (first condition) and b) that it applies effectively - i.e. that it grants power over what it analyzes.

Because I had found a flaw, something unexplained (perhaps you’ll recall our email discussion end 2010 “about love under will”, which was a prelude to the formation of the idea of self-valuing) in the will to power theory. VO makes the WtP hermetically, unquestionably true. This is why I value it primarily; my value philosophy is this: I am a philosopher, have intellectual consistency as my highest value, and thus am forced to value value ontology.

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In reliquishing that pretense, as you put it, the danger is that philosophy is reduced to mere Weltanschauungsphilosophie: see the first chapter of Leo Strauss’s final work (Weltanschauungsphilosophie means philosophy that is a Weltanschauung). In my “note” on that essay, I wrote:

In his discussion of aphorism 36 [of Nietzsche’s Beyond Good and Evil], Strauss says: “Precisely if all views of the world are interpretations, i.e. acts of the will to power, the doctrine of the will to power is at the same time an interpretation and the most fundamental fact”

Which is precisely why it is a fundamental fact; the two aren’t different aspects; it recognizes of itself that it is an interpretation, but recognizes it in such a way that this does not refute its absolute (human, verifiable, falsifiable) applicability.

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This reasoning can be applied as well to the existentialism from the first chapter. A Weltanschauung is literally a view of the world. Precisely if all Weltanschauungen are historical, historicism is at the same time historical and supra-historical: the philosophers are the step-sons of their time (paragraph 30 of the central chapter); philosophy is at the same time Weltanschauungsphilosophie and rigorous science. [The first chapter of the work is titled “Philosophy as Rigorous Science and Political Philosophy”.]

Value Philosophy is the synthesis of philosophy as rigorous science and Weltanschauungsphilosophie.

I do not acknowledge the difference. VO is a rigorous science and thus a reliable Weltanschauung. This is what matters to me as a thinker; now whether or not VO is a Weltanschauung, but whether or not it is a reliable one.

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Insofar as one is a philosopher, one seeks to be just, but also acknowledges or seeks to acknowledge one’s own necessary injustice. In fact, necessary injustice is itself just. But the philosopher’s necessary–natural–injustice drives him to “do justice” to all things by acknowledging their justice.

Here you get into a terrain I have never ventured. I see no necessary relationship of prescribed morality and natural behavior, except that it is (apparently) natural behavior to prescribe morality. Morality emerges from self-valuing, but not necessarily so. Knowledge comes first, but without perfect knowledge it would be impossible to produce a truly sound knowledge-based morality. So before VO, it was impossible to form a true philosophical morality. Perhaps with VO it is still impossible; the farthest I have come is my “self-valuing ethics”, which, as I now am finding out with the help of your books, is very much akin to the theories of Heraclitus and Anaximander. I am pleased to find this out - I am pleased to move beyond (back before) Socrates towards thinking trends of people that I value, whom I might like to “imitate” - Socrates represents to me the decay of philosophy into a plebeian art.

I know we have some battles to fight over that. Maybe we can use the Pentad to that end at one point.

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In your addendum to this, you say:

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I wanted to add this, that “A” = “A” is false in as far as “A” corresponds to anything besides “self-valuing”.

The only self-identical notion includes that of an equal difference to itself.

I’m not sure that I understand the last part. Do you mean that self-valuings are themselves composed of self-valuings?

Rather that their (id)entity is negatively reflected in their counterparts, and that this reflection is part of their (id)entity because it determines their environment. Basically it is saying that the positing of an entity only makes sense if there are entities amongst whom it is posited, an outside world. It is an argument for a pluralistic worldview. I.e. there is not one singular “will to power”, there is a general willing-to-power. The monster of energy has no heart. It would have to have an outside for that. I wonder if this clears that up.

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I’m also not completely clear about the first part. Do you mean “self-valuing” the gerund or “self-valuing” the (nominalized) participle? In German, “(das) Selbst-Wertschätzen” or “Selbst-Wertschätzendes” (not to mention the uncapitalized options)? Are you saying a self-valuing is or can be identical to itself, or the act of self-valuing?

The self-valuing of a self-valuing, qua self-valuing.

As you can see, there’s a reason I suggested you’d ignore that post in your response, it’s cognitive style is very much different and references Parodites. But, now that we’re there, the confusion is a result of being in the process of killing grammar so that god can be put to rest.

It is a superstition that nouns represent metaphysically different things than verbs. There is only activity. Any noun represents a ‘petrified verb’.

E.g.: A tree trees. A self-valuing self-values. Part of tree-ing is growing, and dying. But nothing, besides self-valuing itself, is necessarily part of self-valuing. It is the minimal notion, the only notion (that I know of) that is both sufficient and not prescriptive.

The notion only includes itself, but it includes more than one of itself. Thus the notion contains an ‘inner tension’, as Parodites might say.

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I meant to suggest that the reverse has the more drastic implications, represents a more fundamental transvaluation of values, namely of valuing itself; but of course it works only in concord with the view that lifeless matter is valuing, which is the first premise. In concord, these two ‘ends’ (implications) of the logic help to redefine “consciousness”, a term which has misled man into believing that it is what separates us from the rest of nature, whereas it is simply our way of doing what all of nature does.

Consciousness is a form of (self-)valuing, not vice versa. I think we agree here.

So do I, and I find this paragraph excellent.

Thanks.

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Note that the now refuted idea of consciousness has much to do with the moral dualism of Zoroaster and the Abrahamic religions: consciousness was defined as the gift whereby man could distinguish right (gods will) from wrong (the devils will).

In this sense “consciousness” is the very same illusion as “free will” (and belongs to the non-Aristotelean meaning of “metaphysics” that rule somewhere “beyond”).

I don’t follow this last bit. How is it the same? Couldn’t one be able to see the difference yet not be able to resist one’s “evil” urges? And couldn’t one have free will yet not be able to tell right from wrong?

Right, I suppose that possibility accounts for basically the entire history of religion.

The point I might have made better is that consciousness was once framed in moral terms; and that its institution (it being recognized collectively) likely emerged on moral terms as well; that is to say, before it was recognized collectively, it was likely a very terrifying and monstrous phenomenon. Man came a long way out of madness, because mind, it seems to me, must originally have been quite mad.

Not that this is necessary for value metaphysics to apply; this is all speculative.

My theories on consciousness and morality both are speculative; My theory on being is not. This is why I have trouble even conceiving of a bridge between the two.

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This nonteleological Übermensch is basically what Seung has called the Spinozan Übermensch. But he says there is also the Faustian Übermensch, who is equally ineradicable. The Faustian Übermensch believes in free will whereas the Spinozan Übermensch believes in determinism. But the antithesis of nonteleology is not necessarily free will but just will. Yet are “will” and “free will” not a tautology?

Yes. And “freedom” means the same as well.

Yes, at least in any positive sense I can think of.

Good that we agree, as this is a rather crucial point; will = freedom.

I could see this as a working political concept. I suspect that people will appreciate its profundity, even if many will dislike its implications. (It will work better than “might is right”, which includes a moral premise, which makes it untrustworthy as an equation).

(I do not believe morality can be formulated using equations. It must be asserted in terms of what people want; “people” both in general and in reference to the thinkers who set out formulating a morality. )

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I can not speak to the Faustian and Spinozean types except in broad strokes, for example, I connect the Faustean to Blake, and the Spinozean to Schopenhauer. But the highest path is to lose sight of the difference between the two, between a deterministic universe and free will; to understand will (as in a relatively strong will to power) as that which is both determinator of the world, and bestower of freedom on that determinator.

Crucial insight: determinating is being-free (to oneself).

Well, it is the co-determinator of the world, which world consists entirely of such co-determinators. And the will is “free” in that, if there were no other wills (if that could in theory be the case), it would be absolutely strong. 'Tis, so to say, a case of many unstoppable forces being resisted by each other…

But absolutely strong - “free” - to do what? If a thing is alone, there is nothing to overpower; there is no way to exist; Hence, again the ‘cleaved reality implied by the singular concept’ of self-valuing.

In the singular case, the entity is rather absolutely constrained (in non-valuing).

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Nietzsche accomplished the first part, the dehumanization of nature, and VO is the naturalization of humanity into this new form.

The latter is the “more fundamental” (or one might say, in this light, further progressed, completed) transvaluation of valuing, to which I referred above.

I cannot agree with this if you mean that Nietzsche just accomplished the first part. Nietzsche neither just accomplished the first part nor was it just Nietzsche who accomplished the first part. The first part has been accomplished by modern natural philosophy as a whole: consider, for example, BGE 22, where Nietzsche only completes that philosophy, by interpreting the course of nature not as lawful but as lawless. “This world is the will to power–and nothing besides! And you yourselves are also this will to power–and nothing besides!” (WP) 1067): this is the same order as above.

Interesting, very interesting - I consider N’s phenomenology to be a radical break with the natural philosophies up to that point.
I perceive the will to power doctrine as a veritable antithesis of Newtonean cosmology; it does away with the notion of cosmic harmony, of its 'perfect balance and unity (its godly nature); In scientific terms, WtP prescribes to Relativity and Quantum Physics. VO, which is WtP advanced, explains and harmonizes both of these immaculately, if I may say so.

I see VO as the first truly natural science; as the first exact formulation based on a truly natural world-view.

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Just don’t under(e)st(im)ate the refinement of the Heraclituean idea of “fire”. We only have fragments left of Heraclitus, after all.

Of course. And what we do have is very much refined, which is in fact why I refer back to it. I suppose what I meant is: with an evolved view of fire; most of all I refer to the gain in knowledge of chemistry, which is a field that would be radically potentiated by VO. (I’ve considered taking it up as an academic study for this reason)

Bluntly: Self-valuing logic is the logic of fire. All entities are thus “fires”, “plasma’s”.

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It doesn’t help to rephrase “inequality” in terms seemingly less antithetical. “Unequal” simply means “not equal”; “different” simply means “not the same”; “interactive” means “active but not separately so”; “willing to power” means “not impotent to power”. The assertion that life is will to power implies that life is not not will to power.

I disagree here - I maintain there is a marked difference in semantic substance between “Not impotent to power” and “willing to power”.

In this sense I take language more literally, less logically, less on faith; I do not believe that one can manipulate any phrase without altering its real, synthetic, understood meaning. “This chair is red” is not the same at all as “this chair is not not red”. To treat language as if it is mathematics is one of the errors Nietzsche set out to correct - Heidegger represents to me the refinement of the recognition of this task, but VO represents Heideggers never attained goal; an exact formulation of non-mathematical being.

Central to this possibility is the recognition of the central word in all of language - the word that includes the meaning of all other words; “value”.

This is probably the most controversial point I’ve been making, trying to make since 2011: there is a rank order of words. Words are very different species, and I do not mean the categories as we are taught in school. There are very different species among nouns and verbs. “Value” and “Valuing” are, so to say, king-words; their meaning rules over the meaning of other words.

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I have not been dismissed, but only respected by the wise and imitated by the envious.

Are those the only two options?

By no means. But I meant to illustrate that I have no reason to doubt my politics. You are case in point; thew fact that you, of all people, recognize my work and its value (given that it claims Nietzsche’s heritage), this means that I can not have made too grave mistakes in how I present my philosophy.

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But yes, this is precisely because I make no secret about what I am: a lord of mind (Mannaz, Man), an incarnation of world-fire. It is I, a being of all consuming passion and royal honor, who have forged this, not some anonymous lab-coat.

Yes (though it’s ironic that it was you who quite brilliantly concluded, a couple of years ago, that the contemporary equivalent to the Medieval philosopher’s exoteric guise of the priest was that of the scientist/scholar; you then seemed more inclined than me to adopt that guise,

At that point I was vet much weakened, and I was hypothetically entertaining the idea of such a role in terms of our mutually attempted, tentative framework of political philosophy, which was all in terms of Humanarchy. In my writing I’ve always represented the head of Zeus, which is to say Pallas Athena; and I will never actually be able to present a lab-coat, and I will also never want to hide myself. If someone ends up killing me for being too dangerous, I’ll be in good company.

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No mediocre man could address the concept of value in such a majestic, naturalizing fashion. In this sense VO is a selecting device and only fit for our people – who are thereby defined.

But what about those in between the mediocre and such exceptions? Those who are potentially exceptional?

Capable and I have concerned ourselves with such people in the first years. Sometimes they turn out to be brilliant, but do so on their own accord, and rather in spite of our intended diplomacies. For the most part, people are nowhere near ready to commit to a form of thinking this comprehensive, a form that draws so much of themselves into their thoughts.

Understanding VO requires a great degree of freedom from hypocrisy. “Our people” are foremost the Frank (and free-to-themselves).

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By the way, that part about “M! M!” was an allusion to a story about the logical positivists (Russell etc.). A bunch of them had got together and were trying to establish a completely logical philosophy. One of them was given the task of yelling “M!” whenever any of them suggested anything metaphysical. Soon, they changed this to yelling “not M!” when any of them suggested something non-metaphysical.

I will let my imagination wander about what these non-metaphysical suggestions might have been, in good old Vienna, where this philosophy was born.

And really, this is something I want and expect for us - a physical stronghold. I want philosophy to wear a crown. It must inspire envy in the unwashed. Death to the ascetic form of the philosopher as outcast. I want the philosophers to have lovers, to own castles – I want them to thrive. The Othala of my politics: the luxury wherewith the philosopher may surround and adorn himself, as representing the esteem in which society holds him; this will be the mark of ascending culture. It is precisely the superior role of the philosopher that needs to be recognized if a culture is to be serious at all.

Very central to our task is thus the freedom from shame because of our pride. If I can not speak for you here, then hear this: very central to my task is to not be ashamed of my pride. Let others be ashamed of their lack if it, their lack of reason for it!

And let them withdraw into the shrubbery, and gossip; rather that they stay far away than that they disturb the glorious company I can afford to keep in this exalted condition, which, when explicitly cultivated, is an effective means to keep away the sordid. If I comported myself modestly, I would find myself unbearably pretentious, and a hypocrite. It is nature’s way of isolating, selecting.

My antitheses are Hume and Socrates.


" The strong do what they can do and the weak accept what they have to accept. "

  • Thucydides

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PostSubject: Re: Value Philosophy Sun Aug 30, 2015 5:51 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Sauwelios wrote:
Capable wrote:
Regrettably I don’t have the time to adequately work through the posts so far and get up to speed entirely, so first I’d like to state my understanding of the basic categories at work here, to make sure I get what this is about.

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Value Philosophy: First philosophy is the positing of the metaphysics one values the most.
Value Metaphysics: Being is essentially Self-Valuing: beings exist inasmuch as they value themselves.
Value Axiology: Valuation is a rational value, as its disvaluation would disvalue itself, too.
Value Logic: Logic’s self-identical “A” is a value, and not necessarily a fact.
Value Ethics: It is just to consider things just, and unjust to consider things unjust.

Value philosophy designates an introductory state of philosophizing whereby one conceives one’s thought within the horizons of a metaphysical system or belief; this metaphysics, I am imagining could be either more or less well-defined and articulated (may at first consist only of a small number of metaphysical ideas in conjunction with a strong feeling of association/attraction to those beliefs), then would be a reflection of “what one values the most”, so perhaps at the time a person values the feeling of independence-freedom and also aspires to success in some way, ergo their metaphysics would firstly consist of a number of beliefs that reflect these values (maybe in this case they posit a metaphysics of will to power qua “success in one’s relations” and the value of effort/work to achieve goals; also by the first value the metaphysics at include notions of freedom and independence I.e. a “free will” or emancipatory undercurrent associated necessarily to reality)?

I think this is correct as far as it goes, though it’s not all there is to it. It reminds me of youtu.be/LvmSekZu__o 0:57-3:54. Value Philosophy does not designate just an introductory state of philosophizing. One can never completely transcend it; in the decisive respect one can never transcend it.

By the way, “first philosophy” is what Aristotle called metaphysics.

First principles, then.

I listened to that lecture clip… admittedly I almost stopped listening when he started talking about not knowing how to know the difference between dogs and human beings. Maybe he was being facetious or something.

In terms of “science” never being able to get rid of pre-scientific “common sense” thinking, you are paralleling this to Value Philosophy (VO in your terms) being a ground from which other philosophies or sciences or whatever are unable to ever really remove themselves? If this is the case and you square VO (the idea of self-valuing) with a kind of basic, introductory or “first principles” approach, I would say you have a simple view of what self-valuing means to FC and me. But I am speculating here, it is a stretch for me to engage this and try to understand what you mean… if you can elaborate that may help.

On his idea of historicism…in the sense that one cannot validate variously different epochal presuppositions or historically-evolved/dependent premises. Sure, if you simply ask “what do political philosophers mean by “a good society”?” it seems like there is a kind of unbreachable abyss between epochal, cultural or even individual ways of ideating philosophy or value. But that is just a very simplistic way of approaching these issues. Everything is a “function of the times”, certainly. But the times are also a function of things working beyond those times, we have moments in the world interacting with each other in very complex ways, some of them causal-direct and others more chaotic, random or daemonic in their logic. Even so, any given time/place is not some Gestalt-like existence from which people are supposedly philosophizing and living as if out of some absolute reductivity to that given time/place, as if history and future both reduce to any given present moment culture, society, ideas, technology, or whatever else aspect of the times we want to consider philosophically interesting. At best, this idea of historicism is saying something incredibly obvious as to border on the banal, while at worst is saying something that effectively cuts down the entire possibility of philosophy before it even begins – reducing man to a mostly empty mere image of philosophy wherein semantic games and mere conceptual reversals or “interesting observations” substitute for authentic philosophical work.

Taking the (in one sense, certainly given and accurate) idea of historicism as a reason to structurally disembowel the entire philosophical task and spirit before it even gets started, even under the guise of a supposedly critical and non-naive intent, is really the opposite of what we ought to be doing. I’m guessing that I probably have a much bigger problem with contemporary philosophy than you do.

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Value metaphysics is stating the basic idea of self-valuing as FC conceived it. To be is to value oneself, to not value or to inadequately value oneself leads to no longer existing; “to exist” is defined simply as “successfully valuing in such ways as that which is doing the valuing is held in existence as itself, as such and such entity we say is that from and of which values are coming”, or perhaps also “to value means to exist”.

Yes. And note that Value Metaphysics is itself, following Value Philosophy, a metaphysics posited by those who value it more than any other metaphysics.

The problem here is with the concept of value itself, that valuing can be more or less conscious, “intended”, also it can be more or less philosophically interesting. The idea of valuing is sort of a catch-all term which prevents it from being exhaustibly understood in any easy way; hence why FC was able to turn the notion upon itself and form a ‘vicious circle’ like a black hole, a concept able to draw so many things around and into itself. The very vagueness and inexhaustibility of the notion of value is its strength as a philosophically-useful idea. But it requires an equally philosophically-inspired approach, and for that I cannot really do well with statements like “a metaphysics posited by those who value it more than any other metaphysics.” I mean no one sits around and draws up a list of all metaphysics they know and then ranks them in terms of which they value more and less, thereby concluding rationally that the one on top is the one most valued by themselves. Not that Im saying you are approaching it in such a crude manner, but the very idea that a metaphysics which one posits is thus posited because one values it more than any other metaphysics, is… almost too trustically simple to really be saying anything interesting, to me at least. But again please elaborate so I can better grasp your position.

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Value axiology indicates the logic or rationale of valuing to be that of reality in so far as valuing oneself is necessary (to not value oneself leads to a loss of this “to not value”). All values are therefore and at their root or base, rational.

Actually, the only rational value I discern is the value of valuation itself. But insofar as valuing oneself means valuing oneself as a self-valuing and thereby valuing self-valuing itself, one’s self is indeed a rational value for oneself.

It may be helpful to note that, by “a value”, I mean “something one considers valuable”.

That’s good, because it does seem this is getting lost in linguistic confusions, but if we are talking about concrete valued things we can understand this here. To say a value is rational is to say it has a rationale or logic whereby one is justified to hold that value, justified in one sense or another. It may be rational to value being alive, it may also be rational to value dying; it may be rational to value loving another person, or it may be rational to avoid loving others and live alone; it may be rational to value a successful career and wealth, or it may be rational to value a minimal standard of living and a modest job. The situations, individuals involved and all pertinent contexts dictate which values will fall where and how.

Thus, to me, it makes little sense to say that “the only rational value I discern is the value of valuation itself”. I assume by this you mean “the only objectively [non-context-dependent] rational value I discern is the value of valuation itself”. But again, what is that really intended to accomplish? What is added to our understanding or conversation-investigation here by this? I would much rather dig into the concrete values themselves and think in terms of individuals, situations, and contexts rather than try to locate some seemingly absolute-objective, purely formal-categorical criterion by which we might semantically ground the term ‘value’, pertaining to the meaning of rationality and valuing.

I like to move upward, I do not much like to stick to low or simple levels of thinking, and in that sense I don’t usually try to search for the “most adequate idea” except as an exercise in formal expansion of my own conceptual categories, an expansion which I put to use in decidedly different and opposite kinds of investigations.

And I realize there is a language barrier between you and I, in terms of how we write (and probably also think) philosophy, so bear with me if that is the gist of the issue here.

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Value logic, this one is more complex. I like this progression of categories into the idea of value and self-valuing, now we’re at a threshold it seems - “logic’s self-identical A is a value” means perhaps that the logical truisms and necessities such as A is A must be thought of not as “facts” but as “values” meaning they exist in the terms of the former categories here, namely that value is rational and self-necessitating because to not value (to not value well enough) precludes oneself from existing at all, thus precludes those values which one held from also existing. Logical postulates and truistic premises must be seen as the most basic, most universal or most necessary values, then.

To say these premises are “facts” would presumably, in the terms of the OP here, be to assert that they exist independent of the consequences which follow or do not follow from themselves; this would be an error, then. Even logic’s most necessary and undeniable premises must not be reified to a supposed status of objectivity or absolute independence-universality, in other words these logics are not primary but instead they represent something even more primary: the valuing consequences and conditions out of which those self-identical logics gain their presumed universal status.

Unless I’ve misunderstood that entirely…

To the contrary, I think you’ve understood it quite perfectly.

This distinction between values and ‘facts’ is not really as interesting to me, because I don’t conceive of facts in the same way, it seems. For that matter I probably don’t think about value or values the same way either. But I’m glad to know I understood your meaning here.

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Last one, value ethics: this seems to describe a culmination of the preceding categories, drawing a moral structure from the self-identical logic which we have previously grounded in the logic of self-valuing. That is just which follows from self-valuing, so what upholds one’s self-value through valuations adhering to the axiological structure and self-identical emergence; is morality then seen as deriving from self-identical logic and successful self-valuing? There is a distinction between saying that something is moral because it flows from a self-valuing proper self-identicalness, and saying that self-valuing requires that considering just things is just. How is morality understood in this categorical system?

Well, let me first point out that my list is by no means meant to be exhaustive: there may well be more than five items, there might even be less than five. The last item is in multiple ways a half-joke–one way being that I present it as a universal statement while it’s really a very personal statement (though the two are not necessarily mutually exclusive). Anyway, I think I can illuminate it a bit. From the “fact” that valuation is a rational value, I conclude that all things are just, as all things are valuation and nothing besides. You may want to compare my “The Philosopher King” thread’s OP, where I first formulated the fifth item: Heraclitus’ fragment 102 implies an equivocation of “just” and “beautiful” (or “noble”) and “good”. Everything is valuable, whether ethically or aesthetically or whatever other way. But one cannot live like that; or at least a human being cannot; or at least I personally cannot. How do I understand morality? As springing from one’s highest values. And one of my highest values is considering all things just. Therefore, I value the god extremely high and the wretch among human beings extremely low. The love of philosophy may be at odds with the love of wisdom.

I understand this, but it isn’t the way I look at it. I don’t believe in pre-valuingly rationalizing ‘what we value’ either generally or concretely, I don’t think a person is capable of that and, if they were, it would amount to a kind of robotization of consciousness.

Values are spontaneous, irrational, they are excessive in Parodites’ sense of the word excess. They point the ways inward… they are not building blocks on which to create a certain/secure mind. Of course there is a sense in which it is quite true that “everything is valuable” and equally there is a sense in which what you say about not being able to live that way is very true; but what does this tell us about our human psychology, and further about the nature and structure of consciousness generally? I’m not seeking after conveniently irrefutable platitudes (I’m not saying that is necessarily what you are doing, but again, our respective approaches and languages are very different, it seems. That difference is either fundamental, in which case I would say you are merely seeking after conveniently irrefutable platitudes as a substitute for genuine philosophy, or the difference is more superficial and rooted in conversational difficulties in which case I think we can come to some agreement eventually, at least in theory. In any case I’m suspending judgment as to the nature of the differences between our respective approaches, and I hope something useful can emerge).


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Value Philosophy Sun Aug 30, 2015 8:40 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
This is where the Pentad can be put to use.
I can hardly believe we’ve not seen this before.
Why did we try to have discussions different from the more difficult one, of formalizing value ontology canonically? Because I was not ready, for one - and for various other reasons.

But the Pentad is designed specifically to engage as a group of disparate wills and intellectual languages into a coherent process of not dialectic, but something deliberately created as an alternative, - of the same kind, but perhaps more effective in disclosing the sort of truth that is actual truthfulness, not mere observation. To see the perspectives in reference to each other as a representation of a world. Antitheses are required - but lesser, and greater antitheses.

In Chinese Medicine, the Pentadic ordering of the organs (and their intertwining meridians, a system so complex no western man would even muster the patience to make conscious its entire infrastructure, but I give first hand testimony that that system works transformatively like nothing else I’ve seen) gives rise to two destructive orders and one procreative one. Therefore it seems sensible that we now conclude from these two chemical reactions, that you both - Capable and Sauwelios - should not border on one another in the order.

A definitive and reciprocal No between two members of a larger group could well be the beginning of most Earthly orders. My efforts could be seen as sickly consensus seeking, or as healthy will-to-organism-establishing, but they can best be understood as betraying a love for alchemy. It is somewhat dangerous to take on faith the merit of my faith in the outcome of a molecular bond; it may well turn out to be an explosive.


" The strong do what they can do and the weak accept what they have to accept. "

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PostSubject: Re: Value Philosophy Sun Aug 30, 2015 5:13 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
1.

Fixed Cross wrote:
Sauwelios wrote:
Metaphysics in the Aristotelian/Heideggerian sense is about beings as a whole or the Being of beings. In other words, it’s cosmology and ontology. This is the reason I gave above. Moreover, epistemology may also be regarded as metaphysics.

I generally consider epistemology to be metaphysics, yes - keep in mind that VO is concerned with right (irrefutable) knowledge of being, not being without knowledge about it, or without knowledge of knowledge about it. See beforethelight.forumotion.com/t1-ontology ; the last paragraph of the OP in particular.

Knowledge of knowledge about it is what epistemology is about, but that need only be part of metaphysics if the nature of knowing is (co-)determined by the nature of being. Now I do not see how it could not be, but that does not mean that all metaphysicians have seen it like that, and thereby that epistemology is always a part of metaphysics.

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Thus also, if N’s philosophy is will to power it is so (to N) under the conditions that the universe is will to power; one can not call N’s work will to power and claim ones own work is not, or at least not when one has understood what N meant.

I disagree. Thus in my Why I’m not a feminist thread, in my last reply to Uccisore, to which he never replied, I wrote:

You mention evidence, argumentation, and axioms as possible grounds [for moral stances]. But what would evidence be? Would it not have to be being spoken to by God or finding something written in the stars or something like that? As for argumentation, arguments ultimately rest on premisses, and those then have to be grounded on evidence or axiomatically. Lastly, an axiom is either just a postulate or a self-evident truth; and self-evident truth by definition depends on evidence: namely, self-evidence. So unless you have something good to offer instead of “or whatever” [he wrote: “evidence or argumentation or axiomatically or whatever”], the only alternative for morality’s being a matter of preference is revelation. This is exactly what I said in my OP.

Now as I said in that OP, whoever claims such revelation is in my view probably a madman or a liar or both. This is because I have, as far as I know, not experienced any such revelations whatsoever. In fact, I don’t see how a revelation would not require an infinite regress: each revelation would logically require another revelation to reveal that one’s interpretation of one’s experience as a revelation is not a misinterpretation… Bottom line: you’re preaching to a member of the choir, who however insists that we should emphasize our conditionality if we are not to seem pathological.

I have never given myself to conceive of a moral philosophy.

Though that discussion was about moral stances, my quote from it was not necessarily about such stances. Then again, perhaps there is a way in which stances are always moral stances. More on this below.

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For this reason mainly: I know that what is right for me is wrong for many, and vice versa.
What I can do is praise that which I think is good, do what I think is good, and this will be my morality, and others may or may not follow me. This is highly simplistic, but it is risky, for me, to venture into prescriptions for beings I may not understand.

But don’t you claim to understand all beings in their most fundamental nature? As self-valuings? This, then, may be the grounds for a general morality.

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See, a human is not principally different to my mind that, say, a cat. Like some one you know well, I generally trust cats more than I trust humans. A cat is a very accomplished form of self-valuing. If I set out to form a morality for humans, I might as well set out to form a morality for all animals. I can’t imagine I’d be fit for that.

My girlfriend has a highly idealized view of cats. Anyway, what’s at issue here is the view of man as “the not yet fixed, not yet established beast” (BGE 62). Surely there is an obvious difference between humans and other animals, as Capable so fervently notes. As I quoted and wrote in my “The West. A Straussian metanarrative” thread’s OP, there is

“a humanity that, though it belongs to man as man, is not open to every man, since what he is necessarily he is not necessarily unless he knows that that is what he is necessarily. Without that knowledge he can be enchanted and made subject to perfect rule[.]” (Benardete, The Bow and the Lyre, page 87.)

“What Hermes does with the moly is to show Odysseus its nature (phusis): ‘It was black in its root, and its flower like milk; the gods call it moly, but it is hard for mortal men to dig up, but the gods can do everything.’ If the decisive action is the showing forth of its nature and not the revelation of its divine name, as if it were a magical charm, then the moly in itself is irrelevant. What is important is that it has a nature, and the gods’ power arises from the knowledge of its nature and of all other things. To dig up the moly is to expose to the light its flower and its root; they belong together regardless of the contrariety in their colors. It is this exposure and understanding of the nature of things that is difficult but not impossible for men. Odysseus, then, would be armed with knowledge. This knowledge saves him from Circe’s enchantment. Her enchantment consists of transforming a man into a pig, with its head, voice, bristles, and build, but the mind (noos) remains as it was before. His knowledge, then, is the knowledge that the mind of man belongs together with his build. They are together as much as the root and flower of the moly. There cannot be a change in one without a corresponding change in the other. Menelaus’s encounter with constant becoming, in which there are no natures, must have been an illusion. ‘There is in your breast,’ Circe tells Odysseus, ‘a mind that does not admit of enchantment’ (10.329).” (Benardete, op.cit., page 86.)

As most men do not know this unity, they are basically beasts, but since they can know it in theory, one can housebreak them solely with one’s logos.

::

Now Orpheus, of whom Bacon said that he “may pass by an easy metaphor for philosophy personified” (Wisdom of the Ancients, “Orpheus, or Philosophy”), was able to (opera-)housebreak even big cats with his lyre and voice:

“[B]y the […] sweetness of his song and lyre he drew to him all kinds of wild beasts, in such manner that putting off their several natures, forgetting all their quarrels and ferocity, no longer driven by the stings and furies of lust, no longer caring to satisfy their hunger or to hunt their prey, they all stood about him gently and sociably, as in a theatre, listening only to the concords of his lyre. Nor was that all: for so great was the power of his music that it moved the woods and the very stones to shift themselves and take their stations decently and orderly about him.” (ibid.)

To be sure, though, Bacon interprets this as follows:

“[Philosophy,] applying her powers of persuasion and eloquence to insinuate into men’s minds the love of virtue and equity and peace, teaches the peoples to assemble and unite and take upon them the yoke of laws and submit to authority, and forget their ungoverned appetites, in listening and conforming to precepts and discipline; whereupon soon follows the building of houses, the founding of cities, the planting of fields and gardens with trees; insomuch that the stones and the woods are not unfitly said to leave their places and come about her.” (ibid.)

This Orpheus did after having failed at natural philosophy; but ultimately he also failed at “philosophy moral and civil” (ibid.). Perhaps we Value Philosophers, then, having succeeded at the former, may also succeed at the latter. (Our success however is the culmination of modern natural philosophy as a whole.) In any case, Bacon interprets Orpheus’s second failure as follows:

“But howsoever the works of wisdom are among human things the most excellent, yet they too have their periods and closes. For so it is that after kingdoms and commonwealths have flourished for a time, there arise perturbations and seditions and wars; amid the uproars of which, first the laws are put to silence, and then men return to the depraved conditions of their nature, and desolation is seen in the fields and cities. And if such troubles last, it is not long before letters also and philosophy are so torn in pieces that no traces of them can be found but a few fragments, scattered here and there like planks from a shipwreck; and then a season of barbarism sets in, the waters of Helicon being sunk under the ground, until, according to the appointed vicissitude of things, they break out and issue forth again, perhaps among other nations, and not in the places where they were before.” (ibid.)

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Value philosophy, you say, is the practice of choosing the metaphysics that one values most. As a philosopher, my criterium for valuing a metaphysics is a) that I can not refute it (first condition) and b) that it applies effectively - i.e. that it grants power over what it analyzes.

Well, “choosing” sounds too rational (more on this in my forthcoming reply to Capable). But yes, philosophy, too, is a will to power.

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Because I had found a flaw, something unexplained (perhaps you’ll recall our email discussion end 2010 “about love under will”, which was a prelude to the formation of the idea of self-valuing) in the will to power theory.

In BGE 36, Nietzsche says that “will” can of course only work on “will”–and not on “matter”. Methinks the explanation you required was how will could work on will–how a will can relate to, or recognize, other wills; you weren’t satisfied with the answer, “they simply are compatible”.

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VO makes the WtP hermetically, unquestionably true. This is why I value it primarily; my value philosophy is this: I am a philosopher, have intellectual consistency as my highest value, and thus am forced to value value ontology.

What I would add to this, though, is: you value–are forced to value, necessarily value–seeing yourself as a philosopher, as having intellectual consistency as your highest value. In my view it’s only this addendum that perfects the virtuous circle.

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In reliquishing that pretense, as you put it, the danger is that philosophy is reduced to mere Weltanschauungsphilosophie: see the first chapter of Leo Strauss’s final work (Weltanschauungsphilosophie means philosophy that is a Weltanschauung). In my “note” on that essay, I wrote:

In his discussion of aphorism 36 [of Nietzsche’s Beyond Good and Evil], Strauss says: “Precisely if all views of the world are interpretations, i.e. acts of the will to power, the doctrine of the will to power is at the same time an interpretation and the most fundamental fact”

Which is precisely why it is a fundamental fact; the two aren’t different aspects; it recognizes of itself that it is an interpretation, but recognizes it in such a way that this does not refute its absolute (human, verifiable, falsifiable) applicability.

Yes, I think we agree here.

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This reasoning can be applied as well to the existentialism from the first chapter. A Weltanschauung is literally a view of the world. Precisely if all Weltanschauungen are historical, historicism is at the same time historical and supra-historical: the philosophers are the step-sons of their time (paragraph 30 of the central chapter); philosophy is at the same time Weltanschauungsphilosophie and rigorous science. [The first chapter of the work is titled “Philosophy as Rigorous Science and Political Philosophy”.]

Value Philosophy is the synthesis of philosophy as rigorous science and Weltanschauungsphilosophie.

I do not acknowledge the difference. VO is a rigorous science and thus a reliable Weltanschauung. This is what matters to me as a thinker; now whether or not VO is a Weltanschauung, but whether or not it is a reliable one.

Surely it is more than just reliable. Any Weltanschauung or Weltanschauungsphilosophie is reliable. Thus Strauss writes:

“Yet ‘we cannot wait’; we need ‘exaltation and consolation’ now; we need some kind of system to live by; only Weltanschauung or Weltanschauungsphilosophie can satisfy these justified demands. Surely philosophy as rigorous science cannot satisfy them: it has barely begun, it will need centuries, if not millennia, until it ‘renders possible in regard to ethics and religion a life regulated by purely rational norms,’ if it is not at all times essentially incomplete and in need of radical revisions. Hence the temptation to forsake it in favor of Weltanschauungsphilosophie is very great. From Husserl’s point of view one would have to say that Heidegger proved unable to resist that temptation.” (Strauss, “Philosophy as Rigorous Science and Political Philosophy”, quoting from Husserl’s “Philosophy as Rigorous Science”.)

This is why it is of paramount importance to establish a Value Ethics or Value Religion.

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Insofar as one is a philosopher, one seeks to be just, but also acknowledges or seeks to acknowledge one’s own necessary injustice. In fact, necessary injustice is itself just. But the philosopher’s necessary–natural–injustice drives him to “do justice” to all things by acknowledging their justice.

Here you get into a terrain I have never ventured. I see no necessary relationship of prescribed morality and natural behavior, except that it is (apparently) natural behavior to prescribe morality. Morality emerges from self-valuing, but not necessarily so. Knowledge comes first, but without perfect knowledge it would be impossible to produce a truly sound knowledge-based morality. So before VO, it was impossible to form a true philosophical morality. Perhaps with VO it is still impossible; the farthest I have come is my “self-valuing ethics”, which, as I now am finding out with the help of your books, is very much akin to the theories of Heraclitus and Anaximander. I am pleased to find this out - I am pleased to move beyond (back before) Socrates towards thinking trends of people that I value, whom I might like to “imitate” - Socrates represents to me the decay of philosophy into a plebeian art.

I know we have some battles to fight over that. Maybe we can use the Pentad to that end at one point.

Initially the fifth item in my list said that the philosopher was impelled to act in a certain way–a “just” way–towards all who made him possible–which ultimately means all beings. So it was a morality solely for the philosopher himself. But other people need a morality at least as much as the philosopher does. Therefore, the philosopher must be unjust, not just towards himself but to all other people as well. The perfect synthesis of desired justice and necessary injustice–the perfect imperfection with regard to justice–seems to me to be the paradox expressed in my fifth item: a hierarchical society that (exoterically) holds the Heraclitean god in the highest regard.

I recommend you read Nietzsche’s unfinished 1873 book, Philosophy in the Tragic Age of the Greeks. It’s included in KSA 1 (Die Geburt der Tragödie u.a.).
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PostSubject: Re: Value Philosophy Mon Aug 31, 2015 1:08 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Sauwelios wrote:
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I know that what is right for me is wrong for many, and vice versa.
What I can do is praise that which I think is good, do what I think is good, and this will be my morality, and others may or may not follow me. This is highly simplistic, but it is risky, for me, to venture into prescriptions for beings I may not understand.

But don’t you claim to understand all beings in their most fundamental nature? As self-valuings? This, then, may be the grounds for a general morality.

How? The conundrum is that self-valuings contradict each others “rights”.
I think that Ideal Capitalism (The type Ayn Rand envisions and recognized in a certain era) is more or less the definitive “general morality”; namely, ‘let everyone try to advance himself’ with some fundamental restrictions on infringing on others attempts to do the same.

It being general however, forces it to infringe on many individual moralities.

I wonder if you’ve read my “self-valuing ethics” threads here and on H. These, so far, represent my attempts to formulate general ethical principles.

As the Presocratics understood as well, “war” (conflict (of interests)) is the only universal agent of “justice”.

I do not believe that there can be a morality that protects people from what they’d consider ‘evil’; morality is a very dominating kind of will to power and, when it is generalized, always means compromise of individuals.

Imposing morality is thus, as Nietzsche and others have observed, itself immoral.

I could thus only justify a general morality that represents my values, that at least does not infringe upon me. In this sense I would be no different than any tyrant. The difference could be qualitative, not essential; I might be able to rob humans of less integrity than a general law-giver would.

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See, a human is not principally different to my mind that, say, a cat. Like some one you know well, I generally trust cats more than I trust humans. A cat is a very accomplished form of self-valuing. If I set out to form a morality for humans, I might as well set out to form a morality for all animals. I can’t imagine I’d be fit for that.

My girlfriend has a highly idealized view of cats.

I’m not so sure that they need to be idealized to be regarded as higher self-valuings than the average human. They are magnificent, cunning and innocent all together, and certainly not without consciousness or sophisticated self-awareness. Regard the cat at 10:13 and tell me that this creature is more alike to the snake it taunts than to the person filming him. If you will, I will not agree. There is perhaps not even a difference between higher consciousness and pride. Philosophy may simply be the highest human pride.

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Anyway, what’s at issue here is the view of man as “the not yet fixed, not yet established beast” (BGE 62). Surely there is an obvious difference between humans and other animals, as Capable so fervently notes.

Surely. And yet, Capable agreed with me before that it makes no sense to speak of a human species. There are too many differences. I think even you may still underestimate the greatness of the differences between human constitutions and inclinations; I would go so far as to say that their being animals is the main thing that connects them.

What human consciousness means in general? Nothing. I know that no one will ever know the sort of experience my consciousness produces. I’ve never experienced anyone describing something resembling my inner world.

My natural morality would apply to all self-valuings, and in such a way as to rank them in terms of courage, intelligence and beauty and such qualities, rather than ‘human’ and ‘non human’. But this is my personal value set.

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As I quoted and wrote in my “The West. A Straussian metanarrative” thread’s OP, there is

“a humanity that, though it belongs to man as man, is not open to every man, since what he is necessarily he is not necessarily unless he knows that that is what he is necessarily. Without that knowledge he can be enchanted and made subject to perfect rule[.]” (Benardete, The Bow and the Lyre, page 87.)“What Hermes does with the moly is to show Odysseus its nature (phusis): ‘It was black in its root, and its flower like milk; the gods call it moly, but it is hard for mortal men to dig up, but the gods can do everything.’ If the decisive action is the showing forth of its nature and not the revelation of its divine name, as if it were a magical charm, then the moly in itself is irrelevant. What is important is that it has a nature, and the gods’ power arises from the knowledge of its nature and of all other things. To dig up the moly is to expose to the light its flower and its root; they belong together regardless of the contrariety in their colors. It is this exposure and understanding of the nature of things that is difficult but not impossible for men. Odysseus, then, would be armed with knowledge. This knowledge saves him from Circe’s enchantment. Her enchantment consists of transforming a man into a pig, with its head, voice, bristles, and build, but the mind (noos) remains as it was before. His knowledge, then, is the knowledge that the mind of man belongs together with his build. They are together as much as the root and flower of the moly. There cannot be a change in one without a corresponding change in the other. Menelaus’s encounter with constant becoming, in which there are no natures, must have been an illusion. ‘There is in your breast,’ Circe tells Odysseus, ‘a mind that does not admit of enchantment’ (10.329).” (Benardete, op.cit., page 86.)

As most men do not know this unity, they are basically beasts, but since they can know it in theory, one can housebreak them solely with one’s logos.

This is also what Mannaz means. But can all men, in theory, know this unity? Why? This would assume a top down design of man, where no man is brutish, retarded, uninterested, unwilling to not be beast, ill raised, cowardly, or otherwise impaired; no, Mannaz is the end-aim, and it is not an aim that could be prescribed for all of humanity without doing injustice to most.

But perhaps this is what you are driving at. A general cruelty in favor of a Mannaz-elite.

Yes, sometimes man is adequate to this standard, but it is a rarity. I often feel forced to comport myself as an animal, ape-type, when I interact with humans. Hardly any human is able to communicate with me directly under “Mannaz” - imagine the solace I’ve found by developing this common speak among somewhat perfected minds - yes this is what value ontology is! A language that can only be learned by experienced, polished and radically confident minds. It is a language in which I can finally speak my mind in terms of the things I have always experienced, but which no one else seemed to be able to conceive.

Now I can push beyond the limits of what people are used to be thinking, using this new metaphysical grammar to rip apart the old perimeter of consciousness.

All the sages that have tried what I have accomplished – but I listened to them very well. Make no mistake! VO is as much the end product of East Asiatic metaphysics (which require practice of detachment) as it is of Western Natural Philosophy. The Hermetic Kabbalah has culminated in it as well; self-valuing can be read as the formula of Daath; standing forth from the abyss, the way in which “I am that I am” becomes particular.

But let’s not go too deep into that here.

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Now Orpheus, of whom Bacon said that he “may pass by an easy metaphor for philosophy personified” (Wisdom of the Ancients, “Orpheus, or Philosophy”), was able to (opera-)housebreak even big cats with his lyre and voice,

“[B]y the […] sweetness of his song and lyre he drew to him all kinds of wild beasts, in such manner that putting off their several natures, forgetting all their quarrels and ferocity, no longer driven by the stings and furies of lust, no longer caring to satisfy their hunger or to hunt their prey, they all stood about him gently and sociably, as in a theatre, listening only to the concords of his lyre. Nor was that all: for so great was the power of his music that it moved the woods and the very stones to shift themselves and take their stations decently and orderly about him.” (ibid.)

To be sure, though, Bacon interprets this as follows:

“[Philosophy,] applying her powers of persuasion and eloquence to insinuate into men’s minds the love of virtue and equity and peace, teaches the peoples to assemble and unite and take upon them the yoke of laws and submit to authority, and forget their ungoverned appetites, in listening and conforming to precepts and discipline; whereupon soon follows the building of houses, the founding of cities, the planting of fields and gardens with trees; insomuch that the stones and the woods are not unfitly said to leave their places and come about her.” (ibid.)

This Orpheus did after having failed at natural philosophy; but ultimately he also failed at “philosophy moral and civil” (ibid.). Perhaps we Value Philosophers, then, having succeeded at the former, may also succeed at the latter. (Our success however is the culmination of modern natural philosophy as a whole.) In any case, Bacon interprets Orpheus’s second failure as follows:

“But howsoever the works of wisdom are among human things the most excellent, yet they too have their periods and closes. For so it is that after kingdoms and commonwealths have flourished for a time, there arise perturbations and seditions and wars; amid the uproars of which, first the laws are put to silence, and then men return to the depraved conditions of their nature, and desolation is seen in the fields and cities. And if such troubles last, it is not long before letters also and philosophy are so torn in pieces that no traces of them can be found but a few fragments, scattered here and there like planks from a shipwreck; and then a season of barbarism sets in, the waters of Helicon being sunk under the ground, until, according to the appointed vicissitude of things, they break out and issue forth again, perhaps among other nations, and not in the places where they were before.” (ibid.)

In all this interpretation I am missing the Lyre. It does not seem right to me at all that this is translated into philosophy, at least not in moral philosophy. There is a strong tie between music and mathematics, but philosophy, until now, has not been exact like that.

Until now - Indeed because of its exactness, it is possible that value ontology can function musically.

If this is the case, it may indeed be possible for it to “command soundness” - and to unite and the spirit of music.

In this sense, I believe in ethical rulership; music touches, is able to touch the threshold between aesthetics and ethics; and aesthetics are directly related to logic, and also more directly than ethics to self-valuing. Aesthetics are generally more objective; this is why advertising works to command and tame people; they are more easily convinced by aesthetically focused messages than ethically focused ones. Ideally of course, the message is both; Ambitious art (often or always) strives to merge aesthetics and ethics; True Detective being a good example of how far the aesthetics can be pushed to emphasize the ethics.

I understand if this last bit does not solicit much of a response from you.

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Because I had found a flaw, something unexplained (perhaps you’ll recall our email discussion end 2010 “about love under will”, which was a prelude to the formation of the idea of self-valuing) in the will to power theory.

In BGE 36, Nietzsche says that “will” can of course only work on “will”–and not on “matter”. Methinks the explanation you required was how will could work on will–how a will can relate to, or recognize, other wills; you weren’t satisfied with the answer, “they simply are compatible”.

Correct.
Investigating the maxim “Love is the law, love under will” was one of the ways in which I tried to crystallize my evolving position with regard to this problem.

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VO makes the WtP hermetically, unquestionably true. This is why I value it primarily; my value philosophy is this: I am a philosopher, have intellectual consistency as my highest value, and thus am forced to value value ontology.

What I would add to this, though, is: you value–are forced to value, necessarily value–seeing yourself as a philosopher, as having intellectual consistency as your highest value. In my view it’s only this addendum that perfects the virtuous circle.

But that speaks for itself; there is no free will involved, I am forced to be what I am by what I am. But I happen to actually be it; that is to say, I actually am capable of producing real thought. I do not agree that this is common to man, not remotely so, and not likely to ever be; I am not a humanist in this sense.

I am rather convinced that in order to improve the moral conditions of humanity, humans need to improve the conditions of the weaker species that rely on their mercy. Because there is no absolute threshold between humanity and animality, and that is putting it very mildly.

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Any Weltanschauung or Weltanschauungsphilosophie is reliable. Thus Strauss writes:

“Yet ‘we cannot wait’; we need ‘exaltation and consolation’ now; we need some kind of system to live by; only Weltanschauung or Weltanschauungsphilosophie can satisfy these justified demands. Surely philosophy as rigorous science cannot satisfy them: it has barely begun, it will need centuries, if not millennia, until it ‘renders possible in regard to ethics and religion a life regulated by purely rational norms,’ if it is not at all times essentially incomplete and in need of radical revisions. Hence the temptation to forsake it in favor of Weltanschauungsphilosophie is very great. From Husserl’s point of view one would have to say that Heidegger proved unable to resist that temptation.” (Strauss, “Philosophy as Rigorous Science and Political Philosophy”, quoting from Husserl’s “Philosophy as Rigorous Science”.)

This is why it is of paramount importance to establish a Value Ethics or Value Religion.

Can you summarize that argument without quotes? As it is I do not see how your conclusion logically follows. I’ve read it six or seven times.

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Initially the fifth item in my list said that the philosopher was impelled to act in a certain way–a “just” way–towards all who made him possible–which ultimately means all beings. So it was a morality solely for the philosopher himself. But other people need a morality at least as much as the philosopher does. Therefore, the philosopher must be unjust, not just towards himself but to all other people as well. The perfect synthesis of desired justice and necessary injustice–the perfect imperfection with regard to justice–seems to me to be the paradox expressed in my fifth item: a hierarchical society that (exoterically) holds the Heraclitean god in the highest regard.

I do not think that there is or will or must be such a thing as The people. Peoples need moralities. Arabs need Allah. Teutons need Wotan. Never must these two be reduced to each other, melted into a General Man. That could after all only be the Last Man.

We need to cultivate (I am perilously cultivating) our type. I do not mean our race, but I do quite literally mean a specific physiological type.

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I recommend you read Nietzsche’s unfinished 1873 book, Philosophy in the Tragic Age of the Greeks. It’s included in KSA 1 (Die Geburt der Tragödie u.a.).

That seems like a good idea. I had no idea it existed. These lectures on the Pre-Platonic Philosophers are brilliant. N’s earlier work may be superior in its usefulness from now on than his later work, which was the basis for the ontology but presents commands and political views which may not be as sound as his more detached observations coming out of his vigorously fruitful investigations into the ancient world.


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PostSubject: Re: Value Philosophy Mon Aug 31, 2015 5:33 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Capable wrote:
Sauwelios wrote:
Capable wrote:
Regrettably I don’t have the time to adequately work through the posts so far and get up to speed entirely, so first I’d like to state my understanding of the basic categories at work here, to make sure I get what this is about.

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Value Philosophy: First philosophy is the positing of the metaphysics one values the most.
Value Metaphysics: Being is essentially Self-Valuing: beings exist inasmuch as they value themselves.
Value Axiology: Valuation is a rational value, as its disvaluation would disvalue itself, too.
Value Logic: Logic’s self-identical “A” is a value, and not necessarily a fact.
Value Ethics: It is just to consider things just, and unjust to consider things unjust.

Value philosophy designates an introductory state of philosophizing whereby one conceives one’s thought within the horizons of a metaphysical system or belief; this metaphysics, I am imagining could be either more or less well-defined and articulated (may at first consist only of a small number of metaphysical ideas in conjunction with a strong feeling of association/attraction to those beliefs), then would be a reflection of “what one values the most”, so perhaps at the time a person values the feeling of independence-freedom and also aspires to success in some way, ergo their metaphysics would firstly consist of a number of beliefs that reflect these values (maybe in this case they posit a metaphysics of will to power qua “success in one’s relations” and the value of effort/work to achieve goals; also by the first value the metaphysics at include notions of freedom and independence I.e. a “free will” or emancipatory undercurrent associated necessarily to reality)?

I think this is correct as far as it goes, though it’s not all there is to it. It reminds me of youtu.be/LvmSekZu__o 0:57-3:54. Value Philosophy does not designate just an introductory state of philosophizing. One can never completely transcend it; in the decisive respect one can never transcend it.

By the way, “first philosophy” is what Aristotle called metaphysics.

First principles, then.

I listened to that lecture clip… admittedly I almost stopped listening when he started talking about not knowing how to know the difference between dogs and human beings. Maybe he was being facetious or something.

Well, it’s really easy to take Strauss out of context. (I would, in fact, recommend that you listen to the first segment as well.) Here he is introducing political philosophy and its contemporary status to a class of students. He’s not saying he doesn’t know the difference between dogs and human beings, but that he doesn’t know it scientifically, or not in the first place scientifically. He knows it (in the first place) from common sense.

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In terms of “science” never being able to get rid of pre-scientific “common sense” thinking, you are paralleling this to Value Philosophy (VO in your terms) being a ground from which other philosophies or sciences or whatever are unable to ever really remove themselves? If this is the case and you square VO (the idea of self-valuing) with a kind of basic, introductory or “first principles” approach, I would say you have a simple view of what self-valuing means to FC and me. But I am speculating here, it is a stretch for me to engage this and try to understand what you mean… if you can elaborate that may help.

I never said anything about a basic, introductory or “first principles” approach; that’s just what you’re reading into it. Now in part you’re right, as Value Philosophy is all-comprehensive and thereby also encompasses basics. But what I’m saying is that Value Philosophy teaches that one can never really get beyond value-positing. There are not necessarily any facts; there may only be values. And even this is not necessarily a fact, but perhaps only a value.

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On his idea of historicism…in the sense that one cannot validate variously different epochal presuppositions or historically-evolved/dependent premises. Sure, if you simply ask “what do political philosophers mean by “a good society”?” it seems like there is a kind of unbreachable abyss between epochal, cultural or even individual ways of ideating philosophy or value. But that is just a very simplistic way of approaching these issues. Everything is a “function of the times”, certainly. But the times are also a function of things working beyond those times, we have moments in the world interacting with each other in very complex ways, some of them causal-direct and others more chaotic, random or daemonic in their logic. Even so, any given time/place is not some Gestalt-like existence from which people are supposedly philosophizing and living as if out of some absolute reductivity to that given time/place, as if history and future both reduce to any given present moment culture, society, ideas, technology, or whatever else aspect of the times we want to consider philosophically interesting. At best, this idea of historicism is saying something incredibly obvious as to border on the banal, while at worst is saying something that effectively cuts down the entire possibility of philosophy before it even begins – reducing man to a mostly empty mere image of philosophy wherein semantic games and mere conceptual reversals or “interesting observations” substitute for authentic philosophical work.

Taking the (in one sense, certainly given and accurate) idea of historicism as a reason to structurally disembowel the entire philosophical task and spirit before it even gets started, even under the guise of a supposedly critical and non-naive intent, is really the opposite of what we ought to be doing. I’m guessing that I probably have a much bigger problem with contemporary philosophy than you do.

Yes, this was exactly Strauss’s criticism of historicism. For Strauss was for political philosophy and thereby against historicism as well as against positivism. He’s just giving an account of these opponents of political philosophy here; he’s not endorsing them, to the contrary. Still, I think he chooses–and at any rate I choose–historicism over positivism, because historicism is capable of overcoming itself–in fact, into something more scientific even than positivism. Thus in my second reply to Fixed Cross, I quoted from my own “Note on the First Chapter of Leo Strauss’s Final Work”:

In his discussion of aphorism 36 [of Nietzsche’s Beyond Good and Evil], Strauss says: “Precisely if all views of the world are interpretations, i.e. acts of the will to power, the doctrine of the will to power is at the same time an interpretation and the most fundamental fact” (paragraph 8 of the central chapter of the work). This reasoning can be applied as well to the existentialism from the first chapter. A Weltanschauung is literally a view of the world. Precisely if all Weltanschauungen are historical, historicism is at the same time historical and supra-historical: the philosophers are the step-sons of their time (paragraph 30 of the central chapter); philosophy is at the same time Weltanschauungsphilosophie and rigorous science. [The first chapter of the work is titled “Philosophy as Rigorous Science and Political Philosophy”.]

Husserl opposed positivism with his phenomenology. Heidegger then turned this phenomenology into existentialism or Weltanschauungsphilosophie (philosophy reduced to the attempt to conceptualize a Weltanschauung or to give it a logical elaboration or, more simply, to give it the form of science). But the realization that historicism–the view that all views are relative to their place in space-time–must view itself, too, as a historical view, far from thereby invalidating itself, actually asserts itself as the most rigorously scientific view of which a historical being is capable.

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Value metaphysics is stating the basic idea of self-valuing as FC conceived it. To be is to value oneself, to not value or to inadequately value oneself leads to no longer existing; “to exist” is defined simply as “successfully valuing in such ways as that which is doing the valuing is held in existence as itself, as such and such entity we say is that from and of which values are coming”, or perhaps also “to value means to exist”.

Yes. And note that Value Metaphysics is itself, following Value Philosophy, a metaphysics posited by those who value it more than any other metaphysics.

The problem here is with the concept of value itself, that valuing can be more or less conscious, “intended”, also it can be more or less philosophically interesting. The idea of valuing is sort of a catch-all term which prevents it from being exhaustibly understood in any easy way; hence why FC was able to turn the notion upon itself and form a ‘vicious circle’ like a black hole, a concept able to draw so many things around and into itself. The very vagueness and inexhaustibility of the notion of value is its strength as a philosophically-useful idea. But it requires an equally philosophically-inspired approach, and for that I cannot really do well with statements like “a metaphysics posited by those who value it more than any other metaphysics.” I mean no one sits around and draws up a list of all metaphysics they know and then ranks them in terms of which they value more and less, thereby concluding rationally that the one on top is the one most valued by themselves. Not that Im saying you are approaching it in such a crude manner, but the very idea that a metaphysics which one posits is thus posited because one values it more than any other metaphysics, is… almost too trustically simple to really be saying anything interesting, to me at least. But again please elaborate so I can better grasp your position.

I don’t mean it consciously like that. I may, as English is not my native language, unintentionally have given the wrong impression, or you may have projected that meaning into my words; probably a bit of both. In any case, I rather mean it in the “truistically simple” sense–which however I don’t consider uninteresting, because I am indeed, as you go on to say, more concerned with basics or foundations than you.

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Value axiology indicates the logic or rationale of valuing to be that of reality in so far as valuing oneself is necessary (to not value oneself leads to a loss of this “to not value”). All values are therefore and at their root or base, rational.

Actually, the only rational value I discern is the value of valuation itself. But insofar as valuing oneself means valuing oneself as a self-valuing and thereby valuing self-valuing itself, one’s self is indeed a rational value for oneself.

It may be helpful to note that, by “a value”, I mean “something one considers valuable”.

That’s good, because it does seem this is getting lost in linguistic confusions, but if we are talking about concrete valued things we can understand this here. To say a value is rational is to say it has a rationale or logic whereby one is justified to hold that value, justified in one sense or another. It may be rational to value being alive, it may also be rational to value dying; it may be rational to value loving another person, or it may be rational to avoid loving others and live alone; it may be rational to value a successful career and wealth, or it may be rational to value a minimal standard of living and a modest job. The situations, individuals involved and all pertinent contexts dictate which values will fall where and how.

Well, that’s not what I meant. I meant “rational” strictly in the sense of human reason, of formal logic–as you go on to suggest.

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Thus, to me, it makes little sense to say that “the only rational value I discern is the value of valuation itself”. I assume by this you mean “the only objectively [non-context-dependent] rational value I discern is the value of valuation itself”. But again, what is that really intended to accomplish? What is added to our understanding or conversation-investigation here by this? I would much rather dig into the concrete values themselves and think in terms of individuals, situations, and contexts rather than try to locate some seemingly absolute-objective, purely formal-categorical criterion by which we might semantically ground the term ‘value’, pertaining to the meaning of rationality and valuing.

I like to move upward, I do not much like to stick to low or simple levels of thinking, and in that sense I don’t usually try to search for the “most adequate idea” except as an exercise in formal expansion of my own conceptual categories, an expansion which I put to use in decidedly different and opposite kinds of investigations.

And I realize there is a language barrier between you and I, in terms of how we write (and probably also think) philosophy, so bear with me if that is the gist of the issue here.

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Value logic, this one is more complex. I like this progression of categories into the idea of value and self-valuing, now we’re at a threshold it seems - “logic’s self-identical A is a value” means perhaps that the logical truisms and necessities such as A is A must be thought of not as “facts” but as “values” meaning they exist in the terms of the former categories here, namely that value is rational and self-necessitating because to not value (to not value well enough) precludes oneself from existing at all, thus precludes those values which one held from also existing. Logical postulates and truistic premises must be seen as the most basic, most universal or most necessary values, then.

To say these premises are “facts” would presumably, in the terms of the OP here, be to assert that they exist independent of the consequences which follow or do not follow from themselves; this would be an error, then. Even logic’s most necessary and undeniable premises must not be reified to a supposed status of objectivity or absolute independence-universality, in other words these logics are not primary but instead they represent something even more primary: the valuing consequences and conditions out of which those self-identical logics gain their presumed universal status.

Unless I’ve misunderstood that entirely…

To the contrary, I think you’ve understood it quite perfectly.

This distinction between values and ‘facts’ is not really as interesting to me, because I don’t conceive of facts in the same way, it seems. For that matter I probably don’t think about value or values the same way either. But I’m glad to know I understood your meaning here.

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Last one, value ethics: this seems to describe a culmination of the preceding categories, drawing a moral structure from the self-identical logic which we have previously grounded in the logic of self-valuing. That is just which follows from self-valuing, so what upholds one’s self-value through valuations adhering to the axiological structure and self-identical emergence; is morality then seen as deriving from self-identical logic and successful self-valuing? There is a distinction between saying that something is moral because it flows from a self-valuing proper self-identicalness, and saying that self-valuing requires that considering just things is just. How is morality understood in this categorical system?

Well, let me first point out that my list is by no means meant to be exhaustive: there may well be more than five items, there might even be less than five. The last item is in multiple ways a half-joke–one way being that I present it as a universal statement while it’s really a very personal statement (though the two are not necessarily mutually exclusive). Anyway, I think I can illuminate it a bit. From the “fact” that valuation is a rational value, I conclude that all things are just, as all things are valuation and nothing besides. You may want to compare my “The Philosopher King” thread’s OP, where I first formulated the fifth item: Heraclitus’ fragment 102 implies an equivocation of “just” and “beautiful” (or “noble”) and “good”. Everything is valuable, whether ethically or aesthetically or whatever other way. But one cannot live like that; or at least a human being cannot; or at least I personally cannot. How do I understand morality? As springing from one’s highest values. And one of my highest values is considering all things just. Therefore, I value the god extremely high and the wretch among human beings extremely low. The love of philosophy may be at odds with the love of wisdom.

I understand this, but it isn’t the way I look at it. I don’t believe in pre-valuingly rationalizing ‘what we value’ either generally or concretely, I don’t think a person is capable of that and, if they were, it would amount to a kind of robotization of consciousness.

Values are spontaneous, irrational, they are excessive in Parodites’ sense of the word excess. They point the ways inward… they are not building blocks on which to create a certain/secure mind. Of course there is a sense in which it is quite true that “everything is valuable” and equally there is a sense in which what you say about not being able to live that way is very true; but what does this tell us about our human psychology, and further about the nature and structure of consciousness generally? I’m not seeking after conveniently irrefutable platitudes (I’m not saying that is necessarily what you are doing, but again, our respective approaches and languages are very different, it seems. That difference is either fundamental, in which case I would say you are merely seeking after conveniently irrefutable platitudes as a substitute for genuine philosophy, or the difference is more superficial and rooted in conversational difficulties in which case I think we can come to some agreement eventually, at least in theory. In any case I’m suspending judgment as to the nature of the differences between our respective approaches, and I hope something useful can emerge).

Well, you and I may disagree on the nature of genuine philosophy. I consider political philosophy essential to it, and this is one reason why I’m concerned with solid foundations. My current ILP signature is an example thereof.
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PostSubject: Re: Value Philosophy Tue Sep 01, 2015 2:55 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Great, I’m glad to know I did miss some of your intended meaning then. The more difficult part is trying to find a common ground between our views and “ways of thinking”. I’m more or less extrapolating your position from the limited stuff I’ve read here. Maybe FC can step in and offer a synthesis whereby our positions can better approach each other, since he knows both our views well enough now.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Value Philosophy Tue Sep 01, 2015 6:43 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I don’t think I’m qualified to represent either of your positions. One thing I can see in you both that I do not share is your tendency to conceptually isolate the human species, as something which is fundamentally different from other species, due to a type of consciousness. I do not hold to that position, having known humans to be no less automatic in their responses than animals, and seeing in human language an extended jungle. The task of philosophy as I see it is to tame this jungle, to make possible a truly representative conceptuality. Before VO, the existential grammar, the self-valuing logic, in which Heidegger is fully resolved (and for which Heidegger is in no small part responsible) language was only a dream. Nietzsche was like Man who woke up in fits out of that dream, and screamed, as Man to himself: “Wake up!” “Had this dream stopped?” Comparable to Jungs image of early 20th century Europe as Wotan waking up from a bad sleep.

In my case, my family history is instrumental to the suffering I tend to inflict on myself - I have learned early on that the world is war, but also that being in the world which is war brings out infinite kindness. This contrast is the mystery to solve if politics is to matter; the fact of war, cruelty and indifference as general world shaping conditions, in combination with the fact of kindness, love, generosity and such things as world-allowing conditions. The qabala says of this that consciousness resolves them and specifically as the crucified king, the child and the throned king. Where we three are united is the notion of embracing suffering. All three of us have suffered our minds to an extent that binds us, even though we might ultimately never bring more together than the understanding that existence is always positing itself as value, that this is what “value” means. It is not so much vague, as simply covering everything that matters.

Philology is an empirical science, only under the rarest of circumstances compatible with metaphysics; metaphysics ideally results from empirical work with representation, is not to be posited a priori to it. If we cease to posit a object-subject relations, “the world becomes flesh” - we see how humanity evolved by its use of the word, human struggles to use the word in such a way that it works for rather than against them; and this is still in all humans the dominant struggle.

In philosophy, the word “value” has constantly caused confusion and not clarity. It was perhaps the most persistent ‘demon’. The hammer wants to always attack the greatest enemy first.

Philosophizing with the hammer, we tore the elusive term value out of the sky, fixed it on the cross, and then saw it resurrected as the image both of the eternal intelligence and the mortal flesh.

Anaxagoras, according to Nietzsche, was the first to not posit an element as the first cause of being. Between Heraclitus and him there lives a dynamic idea of fire, friction, strife as primordial justice; and intelligence itself, which is what Anaxagoras saw as the root and origin of all things. Self-valuing is that primordial intelligence.

Capable, do you still have that mathematics?


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PostSubject: Re: Value Philosophy Tue Sep 01, 2015 7:34 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I slightly edited the post above.

I would like to formally state the obvious fact that I do understand the actual difference between what humans are capable of doing and what all other animals are capable of.

My issue is with the assumption that the class of beings that causes technology and culture includes all humans. This assumption obscures very interesting things.

Naturally this is a sensitive subject. It is a subject in which Israelis are quite interested. Ironically, the Jews have been the only ones to continue the discipline of breeding.

I haven’t thought about Israel for a long time, which is very healthy. But now that we are in the domain, I must note the relationship between Leo Strauss and Israel.

Different from the German-American-Israeli axis of historical power, the European continental soul allows for slower developments and more rooted, earthed language.

The stars are progressing in their fixed course. Physics is based on astronomy, the science of prediction. Rituals… always involve the Sun, moon or the visible planets. But let us hold rituals to Uranus!! This planets course is some 84 years, more or less a human lifetime. But also to Saturn.

The hard task master and the rider of the lightning together form the belt of fertility. New rituals, it’s the only way. N knew this well. So did Morrison. The only way to get to people, to get into their hearts, is to synchronize these hearts to the same clock of passions. We have Christmas and New Years, we also need summer feasts.

Spring Break!!

But the ancient mysteries were in fact always deeply sexual, perhaps the is simply no other way to collective sensibility than through the collectivized senses; it might explain the ways we have chosen for our collective human endeavors; or rather, in this context, it might be chosen as a purpose for the current trend toward public sexual expression, which itself is non teleological and only the result of less restrictions on the ‘mating mind’.

Raw forces are powerful sources, and with an eye to ‘all that matters is the quantum of power that one is’ - it is cowardice to ignore the elephant in the room. Our world is becoming more and more sexualized, and perhaps this is the very thing we need to kindle into the public mind a sensible thinking. Eros is a heated form of self-valuing, I would say, a plasmic state, which is infectious like fire, living in the loins and wearing the girdle of mirth, joy and thought go hand in hand, this is where we should make our camp.

But it’s only a suggestion, in the dark between two worlds.


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PostSubject: Re: Value Philosophy Tue Sep 01, 2015 9:02 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
2.

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In your addendum to this, you say:

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I wanted to add this, that “A” = “A” is false in as far as “A” corresponds to anything besides “self-valuing”.

The only self-identical notion includes that of an equal difference to itself.

I’m not sure that I understand the last part. Do you mean that self-valuings are themselves composed of self-valuings?

Rather that their (id)entity is negatively reflected in their counterparts, and that this reflection is part of their (id)entity because it determines their environment. Basically it is saying that the positing of an entity only makes sense if there are entities amongst whom it is posited, an outside world. It is an argument for a pluralistic worldview. I.e. there is not one singular “will to power”, there is a general willing-to-power. The monster of energy has no heart. It would have to have an outside for that. I wonder if this clears that up.

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I’m also not completely clear about the first part. Do you mean “self-valuing” the gerund or “self-valuing” the (nominalized) participle? In German, “(das) Selbst-Wertschätzen” or “Selbst-Wertschätzendes” (not to mention the uncapitalized options)? Are you saying a self-valuing is or can be identical to itself, or the act of self-valuing?

The self-valuing of a self-valuing, qua self-valuing.

As you can see, there’s a reason I suggested you’d ignore that post in your response, it’s cognitive style is very much different and references Parodites. But, now that we’re there, the confusion is a result of being in the process of killing grammar so that god can be put to rest.

It is a superstition that nouns represent metaphysically different things than verbs. There is only activity. Any noun represents a ‘petrified verb’.

Not so sure about killing grammar, but other than that, yes, I agree. A being is a Self-Valuing (ein Selbst-Wertschätzen).

The sole counterargument I can think of to the third item in my list is that one’s own valuing may be fundamentally different from another’s. But insofar as it is, one cannot relate to it at all: this is the basic premise of VO. Thus VO corroborates my third item: as you imply, insofar as “A” stands for “Self-Valuing”, “A = A” is true. It is part and parcel of self-valuing to project one’s own essence into the other–to epistemically assimilate the other’s essence.

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E.g.: A tree trees. A self-valuing self-values. Part of tree-ing is growing, and dying. But nothing, besides self-valuing itself, is necessarily part of self-valuing. It is the minimal notion, the only notion (that I know of) that is both sufficient and not prescriptive.

The notion only includes itself, but it includes more than one of itself. Thus the notion contains an ‘inner tension’, as Parodites might say.

How is self-valuing not prescriptive? Or rather, how are growing and dying, for instance, prescriptive? Or, if these aren’t, what kind of insufficient prescriptive notions are you thinking of?

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This nonteleological Übermensch is basically what Seung has called the Spinozan Übermensch. But he says there is also the Faustian Übermensch, who is equally ineradicable. The Faustian Übermensch believes in free will whereas the Spinozan Übermensch believes in determinism. But the antithesis of nonteleology is not necessarily free will but just will. Yet are “will” and “free will” not a tautology?

Yes. And “freedom” means the same as well.

Yes, at least in any positive sense I can think of.

Good that we agree, as this is a rather crucial point; will = freedom.

I could see this as a working political concept. I suspect that people will appreciate its profundity, even if many will dislike its implications. (It will work better than “might is right”, which includes a moral premise, which makes it untrustworthy as an equation).

(I do not believe morality can be formulated using equations. It must be asserted in terms of what people want; “people” both in general and in reference to the thinkers who set out formulating a morality. )

I think I understand. Freedom is a value but the word does not contain a(n explicit) value judgment; “justice” contains an explicit value judgment but does not necessarily refer to a value (something valuable): I could call something worthless “just” and freedom “worthless” without (explicitly) contradicting myself or otherwise speaking nonsense.

In Zarathustra 2.2, Nietzsche writes:

“All feeling suffereth in me, and is in prison: but my willing ever cometh to me as mine emancipator and comforter.
Willing emancipateth: that is the true doctrine of will and emancipation–so teacheth you Zarathustra.”

But in 2.20, he writes:

“Will–so is the emancipator and joy-bringer called: thus have I taught you, my friends! But now learn this likewise: the Will itself is still a prisoner.
Willing emancipateth: but what is that called which still putteth the emancipator in chains?
‘It was’: thus is the Will’s teeth-gnashing and lonesomest tribulation called. Impotent towards what hath been done–it is a malicious spectator of all that is past.
Not backward can the Will will; that it cannot break time and time’s desire–that is the Will’s lonesomest tribulation.” (Common translation.)

According to Seung, the Spinozan Übermensch overcomes this by willing the eternal recurrence, that is to say by embracing absolute determinism. For that the will is a prisoner of the past means that it is determined by the past.

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I can not speak to the Faustian and Spinozean types except in broad strokes, for example, I connect the Faustean to Blake, and the Spinozean to Schopenhauer. But the highest path is to lose sight of the difference between the two, between a deterministic universe and free will; to understand will (as in a relatively strong will to power) as that which is both determinator of the world, and bestower of freedom on that determinator.

Crucial insight: determinating is being-free (to oneself).

Well, it is the co-determinator of the world, which world consists entirely of such co-determinators. And the will is “free” in that, if there were no other wills (if that could in theory be the case), it would be absolutely strong. 'Tis, so to say, a case of many unstoppable forces being resisted by each other…

But absolutely strong - “free” - to do what? If a thing is alone, there is nothing to overpower; there is no way to exist; Hence, again the ‘cleaved reality implied by the singular concept’ of self-valuing.

In the singular case, the entity is rather absolutely constrained (in non-valuing).

Indeed. But the question is if there is not some way in which the will is irresistible–in which a self-valuing is a self-cause.

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Nietzsche accomplished the first part, the dehumanization of nature, and VO is the naturalization of humanity into this new form.

The latter is the “more fundamental” (or one might say, in this light, further progressed, completed) transvaluation of valuing, to which I referred above.

I cannot agree with this if you mean that Nietzsche just accomplished the first part. Nietzsche neither just accomplished the first part nor was it just Nietzsche who accomplished the first part. The first part has been accomplished by modern natural philosophy as a whole: consider, for example, BGE 22, where Nietzsche only completes that philosophy, by interpreting the course of nature not as lawful but as lawless. “This world is the will to power–and nothing besides! And you yourselves are also this will to power–and nothing besides!” (WP) 1067): this is the same order as above.

Interesting, very interesting - I consider N’s phenomenology to be a radical break with the natural philosophies up to that point.
I perceive the will to power doctrine as a veritable antithesis of Newtonean cosmology; it does away with the notion of cosmic harmony, of its 'perfect balance and unity (its godly nature); In scientific terms, WtP prescribes to Relativity and Quantum Physics. VO, which is WtP advanced, explains and harmonizes both of these immaculately, if I may say so.

I see VO as the first truly natural science; as the first exact formulation based on a truly natural world-view.

N’s phenomenology is a radical break with the remnant of Platonism in the natural philosophy of his times.

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Just don’t under(e)st(im)ate the refinement of the Heraclituean idea of “fire”. We only have fragments left of Heraclitus, after all.

Of course. And what we do have is very much refined, which is in fact why I refer back to it. I suppose what I meant is: with an evolved view of fire; most of all I refer to the gain in knowledge of chemistry, which is a field that would be radically potentiated by VO. (I’ve considered taking it up as an academic study for this reason)

Bluntly: Self-valuing logic is the logic of fire. All entities are thus “fires”, “plasma’s”.

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It doesn’t help to rephrase “inequality” in terms seemingly less antithetical. “Unequal” simply means “not equal”; “different” simply means “not the same”; “interactive” means “active but not separately so”; “willing to power” means “not impotent to power”. The assertion that life is will to power implies that life is not not will to power.

I disagree here - I maintain there is a marked difference in semantic substance between “Not impotent to power” and “willing to power”.

In this sense I take language more literally, less logically, less on faith; I do not believe that one can manipulate any phrase without altering its real, synthetic, understood meaning. “This chair is red” is not the same at all as “this chair is not not red”. To treat language as if it is mathematics is one of the errors Nietzsche set out to correct - Heidegger represents to me the refinement of the recognition of this task, but VO represents Heideggers never attained goal; an exact formulation of non-mathematical being.

Central to this possibility is the recognition of the central word in all of language - the word that includes the meaning of all other words; “value”.

This is probably the most controversial point I’ve been making, trying to make since 2011: there is a rank order of words. Words are very different species, and I do not mean the categories as we are taught in school. There are very different species among nouns and verbs. “Value” and “Valuing” are, so to say, king-words; their meaning rules over the meaning of other words.

It is true that there is a marked difference in semantic substance between “not impotent to power” and “willing to power”. “Impotent to power” is a term Nietzsche’s uses for “not willing to power”. But I think the rest of what you say is kind of besides the point. You cannot really transcend the law of non-contradiction–the (implicit) concept “not”.

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I have not been dismissed, but only respected by the wise and imitated by the envious.

Are those the only two options?

By no means. But I meant to illustrate that I have no reason to doubt my politics. You are case in point; thew fact that you, of all people, recognize my work and its value (given that it claims Nietzsche’s heritage), this means that I can not have made too grave mistakes in how I present my philosophy.

Still, that depended on the chance event of my obtaining a copy of Picht’s book, which had been recommended to me by Lampert. If you’re going to keep depending on such things, you may at least want to sing a hymn to Nemesis.

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But yes, this is precisely because I make no secret about what I am: a lord of mind (Mannaz, Man), an incarnation of world-fire. It is I, a being of all consuming passion and royal honor, who have forged this, not some anonymous lab-coat.

Yes (though it’s ironic that it was you who quite brilliantly concluded, a couple of years ago, that the contemporary equivalent to the Medieval philosopher’s exoteric guise of the priest was that of the scientist/scholar; you then seemed more inclined than me to adopt that guise,

At that point I was vet much weakened, and I was hypothetically entertaining the idea of such a role in terms of our mutually attempted, tentative framework of political philosophy, which was all in terms of Humanarchy. In my writing I’ve always represented the head of Zeus, which is to say Pallas Athena; and I will never actually be able to present a lab-coat, and I will also never want to hide myself. If someone ends up killing me for being too dangerous, I’ll be in good company.

In Hades, yes…

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No mediocre man could address the concept of value in such a majestic, naturalizing fashion. In this sense VO is a selecting device and only fit for our people – who are thereby defined.

But what about those in between the mediocre and such exceptions? Those who are potentially exceptional?

Capable and I have concerned ourselves with such people in the first years. Sometimes they turn out to be brilliant, but do so on their own accord, and rather in spite of our intended diplomacies. For the most part, people are nowhere near ready to commit to a form of thinking this comprehensive, a form that draws so much of themselves into their thoughts.

Understanding VO requires a great degree of freedom from hypocrisy. “Our people” are foremost the Frank (and free-to-themselves).

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By the way, that part about “M! M!” was an allusion to a story about the logical positivists (Russell etc.). A bunch of them had got together and were trying to establish a completely logical philosophy. One of them was given the task of yelling “M!” whenever any of them suggested anything metaphysical. Soon, they changed this to yelling “not M!” when any of them suggested something non-metaphysical.

I will let my imagination wander about what these non-metaphysical suggestions might have been, in good old Vienna, where this philosophy was born.

And really, this is something I want and expect for us - a physical stronghold. I want philosophy to wear a crown. It must inspire envy in the unwashed. Death to the ascetic form of the philosopher as outcast. I want the philosophers to have lovers, to own castles – I want them to thrive. The Othala of my politics: the luxury wherewith the philosopher may surround and adorn himself, as representing the esteem in which society holds him; this will be the mark of ascending culture. It is precisely the superior role of the philosopher that needs to be recognized if a culture is to be serious at all.

Very central to our task is thus the freedom from shame because of our pride. If I can not speak for you here, then hear this: very central to my task is to not be ashamed of my pride. Let others be ashamed of their lack if it, their lack of reason for it!

And let them withdraw into the shrubbery, and gossip; rather that they stay far away than that they disturb the glorious company I can afford to keep in this exalted condition, which, when explicitly cultivated, is an effective means to keep away the sordid. If I comported myself modestly, I would find myself unbearably pretentious, and a hypocrite. It is nature’s way of isolating, selecting.

My antitheses are Hume and Socrates.

I agree with this. Thus in my last psychedelic trip, after reflecting on the question whether Strauss’s or Nietzsche’s political philosophy is wiser at this point, I wrote this to you (in Dutch):

I think we should risk it and no longer hide philosophy’s world-affirmation, as Strauss still thought, but bring it to publicity in its full glory–magnificence, splendour–, even though we thereby risk the most complete wipeout of every trace of there ever having been philosophy on earth–the whole tradition, for example the fragments of Heraclitus. And who knows whether, if we provoke such a cataclysm, there will not afterwards be people who shall embrace the fragments of, for example, Nietzsche’s works as sayings, proverbs, folk-lore. I think that, if man is still not ready for the truth regarding philosophy, he may just as well be decimated. But let us initially try not to incite him to envy (invidia) but to jealousy, zealousness–try to incite him to zealously strive for our heights, or at least higher heights than his normal level, and for making such heights possible. In order that mankind may one day, as Nietzsche puts it in I think Richard Wagner in Bayreuth, as a whole look forward to its necessary down-going, just as I now look forward to my down-going.

::

“As the sun set on Homer’s world Socrates prepared its rise on Plato’s. He knew the immensity of what he was doing; he prostrated himself before Adrasteia knowing that a time would come when Adrasteia would condemn him in order to raise what would succeed him–condemn him as he found it necessary to condemn Homer.” (Lampert, How Philosophy Became Socratic, pp. 336-37.)


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PostSubject: Re: Value Philosophy Sat Sep 05, 2015 8:23 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Here is the elephant in the room, Baudrillard knew it: humans today are quite capable of worthy earth valuing such as Eros, they do it every day on MDMA in raves. This simply isn’t enough.

Nietzsche knew that the reason they go no further is a cowardice more than a blindness.

It is futile to will society to assume worth as human. Most important pop artists tried and the best eventually killed themselves.

Nietzsche knew that old rituals will not do. People are wise to some essential part of them, and anyway, nothing is worthier than evolution.

The elephant in the room has only been called out by Sawelios because only he is naive enough to see it as relatively simple, or thinks it is a matter of willing society to assume worth as human: politics. Actually, there is no political philosophy, philisophy’s only politics is to ensure its continuance.

But a politics for the philosophers, this is a task most worthy.

People will be people. This conclusion was wrought out by FC earlier, but I wanted to point out that what a philosopher must do, the reason Capable is so important to me, is ensure the politics of philosophy always supercede the politics for philosophers.

Orpheus civilizing nature is Zarathustra if he had not been up on a mountain but in a forest. Welcome to philosophy, would you like a glass of water?
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Do you agree that automorphism is integral to Value Philosophy?
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PostSubject: Automorphism. Sat Sep 05, 2015 3:24 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Integral to what I call Value Philosophy or Value Metaphysics, what others call Value Ontology, is what I will henceforth call automorphism. The concept is a correction of “anthropomorphism”, which already contains a blatant automorphism. After all, “man” (ho anthropos) is an abstraction, a generalization; I’m not a human being, but rather a human being, to me, is a being that is like me in an essential manner. And it’s integral to Value Philosophy to posit that all beings automorphize. This positing is, of course, itself also an automorphism.


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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Sat Sep 05, 2015 4:59 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Wow, you beat me to it.

Except you have more balls, you consider this as an ontological event, worthy of its own name, indeed central to your entire understanding of ontology.

I guess this is the injustice you keep bringing up? But then, one would need a justice. I myself use evolution as the term here.

Justice is the interest of the strong, after all.
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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Sun Sep 06, 2015 7:58 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Pezer wrote:
Wow, you beat me to it.

Except you have more balls, you consider this as an ontological event, worthy of its own name, indeed central to your entire understanding of ontology.

I guess this is the injustice you keep bringing up? But then, one would need a justice. I myself use evolution as the term here.

Justice is the interest of the strong, after all.

Thanks. And yes, you’re right about injustice. Also, your last comment seems helpful for understanding what you mean by “evolution”. Evolution has often been associated with “the survival of the fittest” (which in Dutch is rendered as “the right of the strongest”; perhaps it’s similar in your own native language). But evolution only entails the survival of the fittest in a very specific sense. Even if one understands “survival” as “genetic survival” (that is to say, as reproduction as well as survival), fitness is relative to the environment. For example, the fact that the last generation of dodos did not reproduce while the contemporary generation of chickens did does not mean the latter was in any sense stronger than the former; in the same environment, those chickens might have lasted even less long than those dodos. Likewise, if the creatures that live on the earth’s surface were suddenly teleported to the surface of the sun, the fitness of all of them would be reduced to a number tantamount to zero (and even if one should keep track of their survival in nanoseconds, the factors determining their survival would be different: for instance, how large and how resistant to flame instead of how fast and how furry). Considerations such as these are examples of what I call “justice” (doing justice to the dodo, for example).


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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Sun Sep 06, 2015 9:06 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I think that justice is compassion almost, certainly pity, a missunderstanding of the things that are really there to be valued.

Evolution, like so many concepts from so many unworthy masters, was freed from Darwin by Nietzsche (look up his anti-Darwin aphorism in Twilight of the Idols). A so to speak aristocratic conception of evolution would simply have it be the process by which life is, came to be and shall be in the abscence of a creator god. The answer to the problems beings encounter in the evolutionary process (survival, as Nietzsche said, being one of the shittiest and least cool problems) and, often enough, the germs of the problems themselves come from inward, in being a place conformed by out and unified by previous experience of what we call, what is life.

It’s fun becuase, rather than being a despairingly long process of conflict to arrive at a righteous end, it is a never-ending process which end is the conflict itself, the betterment and fruitfulness of it.
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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Sun Sep 06, 2015 1:54 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Pezer wrote:
I think that justice is compassion almost, certainly pity, a missunderstanding of the things that are really there to be valued.

Evolution, like so many concepts from so many unworthy masters, was freed from Darwin by Nietzsche (look up his anti-Darwin aphorism in Twilight of the Idols). A so to speak aristocratic conception of evolution would simply have it be the process by which life is, came to be and shall be in the abscence of a creator god. The answer to the problems beings encounter in the evolutionary process (survival, as Nietzsche said, being one of the shittiest and least cool problems) and, often enough, the germs of the problems themselves come from inward, in being a place conformed by out and unified by previous experience of what we call, what is life.

It’s fun becuase, rather than being a despairingly long process of conflict to arrive at a righteous end, it is a never-ending process which end is the conflict itself, the betterment and fruitfulness of it.

As I’ve argued in my “Nietzsche contra Darwin?” thread, Nietzsche fundamentally misunderstood Darwinism and actually agreed with it.

Nietzsche was not against compassion or pity, but only against active compassion or pity (“the compassion [or: pity] of the deed”, as he called in in section 2 of The Antichrist).

“The opulent Cleopatra called ‘Culture’ ever again casts the most priceless pearls into her golden beaker: these pearls are the tears of compassion [Mitleiden] for the slaves and for the slaves’ misery. The gigantic social crises of the present have been born from modern man’s pampering, not from the true and deep pity [Erbarmen] for that misery[.]” (Nietzsche, “The Greek State”.)

“Modern man’s pampering”: that is to say, his impotence not to act on his feelings. My justice, on the other hand, is not active pity, as it does not seek to save species from extinction or anything. However, it’s one thing to let species go extinct, but another thing to say that that’s because they’re weak, inferior, etc.


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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Sun Sep 06, 2015 3:20 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
The aristocrat feels no compassion, he relates to the human state of “slaves.” Compassion is rather to feel and relish pain of others. It is not just that a man suffer, it is just that he stop suffering. It is evolutionarily inevitable that we all suffer, it is wastefull to see potential in a lower man and leave it. It is celebratable excess to wonder about the potential of a man already up to his neck in sweat, blood and tears. What potential is found depends on the value of the man searching for it.

Darwin’s theory is that the main directive is not to die, both in body and, as you say, in lineage. This is… Is this what you are putting into question? Nietzsche was very much against this. Evolution is all there is to life, can you sit there and tell me that mere survival is all there is to life? How wretched that would be… I might be aroused to celebrate you! Maybe I, a son of this pampered society, am too cynical for the true aristocracy which would have looked down on you if this is the case. I remember the way actual aristocrats I knew looked down on people, but no, deep down it was celebration of life. “You belong there and I belong here.”

But let’s leave aristocrats for now and focus on philosophers. Passive compassion, by its very passivity, has nothing to do with justice. No, you are not weak, not free of excess… What you feel is not justice… It is asthetics! You see beauty in tragedy. This is well enough, very much not suited for survival btw. The dodo was quite beautiful, maybe even more so than the chicken! I see the germs of a problem here…
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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Mon Sep 07, 2015 4:21 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Sauwelios was very early on in my ‘career’ one of the few who understood evolution as an ex post facto law; it’s quite obvious, but still most people think that evolution has an actual aim, as if it is an entity. It has neither aim nor outcome; it is outcome, and an aim, of a conscious being, might be to be part of it.

Even in the case of actual entities, having an aim is entirely impossible in the absence of consciousness. Survival is the result of what must be seen as arbitrary conditions prescribing arbitrary ‘fitnesses’; what tended to come out on top was not necessarily physically strong or intelligent, but simply happened to a) not be immediately killed soon and b) be chosen to mate with. None of this could have been the ‘goal’ of an unconscious being.

Rather than that survival is the goal of evolution, it is evolution; that which has evolved is that which has survived.

Sex is a good example. Most people think that the formal telos of sex is procreation. But this is only the outcome; the tendency to engage in sexual contact surely had nothing to do with some early sexual organisms premonition of rearing offspring. Telos only comes into play with consciousness.


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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Mon Sep 07, 2015 4:33 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Survival is not evolution, it is an excess of evolution. A bi-product. Like offspring is an excess of sexuality.

It would be silly to assume that survival does not play a directive role in evolution now and then, like Zizek says, unimaginable catastrophy after unimaginable catastrophy. But equating survival with evolution is like equating a Picasso with ink. How banal…
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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Mon Sep 07, 2015 4:42 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
A practical way of better grasping the disjointedness of ontology and teleology, of being and formal (or known or held) aims, is to study ones own aims, in comparison with the outcomes of ones actions.

It is only under specific circumstances that aim and outcome tend to correspond.

In small, routine tasks, the correspondence is regular. But in case of “real goals”; ambitions, conscious aims that drive human through entire lives, the aim is usually only an agent for activities that bring forth very different results. As John Lennon said, life is what happens to you when you while you’re making plans; so is evolution what happens while entities are going about their entirely pointless business of self-valuing, which is not projected into time, but rather direct expression of what one is.

A goal presupposes that one is actively selective about what one is, that one expresses only portions of ones power that one expects to lead to this aim/ In reality, power sets goals; we can be ascribed only those aims which we are capable of attaining, and we can only set those goals which we imagine being capable of attaining; these two are of course very different.

The feeling of power versus the actual potential, this is an as yet unresolved duality within the Nietzschean will to power model; the feeling of power represents the potential to act, but the actual potential represents the potential to attain something. The former is not teleological and real, the latter is teleological and exists only ex post facto.


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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Mon Sep 07, 2015 4:56 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
What has evolved must have survived, so survival is required for evolution. It’s quite inevitable. Somethings requirement can not be rightly called its by-product.

It is an analytical truth that evolution can not exist without survival; as true as ‘a red ball is red’. But indeed, it is only a synthetic truth, and at best a half-truth at that, that survival can not exist without evolution. We can imagine and even produce counter examples; there are primordial bacteria that have no need of evolving.

However, in as far as we are addressing evolution, we are speaking of the evolution of life, not of the dead. Survival is implicit in evolution.

The problem is with the word “fittest”. Evolution is rather “survival of the most fortunate”.

Nietzsche’s less popular expressions deal with the role of luck and coincidence in all good things.

It can help to be strong or to have moral integrity, it can also hurt. It depends on the environment.

Lastly, it will, per self-valuing, in cases be more fortunate to perish than to survive. So to posit fortune as the agent is incorrect too; let’s keep it at fate.


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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Mon Sep 07, 2015 4:59 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Indeed, evolution is indifferent to individuals’ ambitions. Its forces are otherwise.

I think an answer exists to debanalizing the problem of survival in evolution. See, it is not a matter of who is more fit to survive, but who is able to and effectively gets water. Water has its own dynamics on organic beings, so even when got, any prescribed aim is vulneable to the realness of it.

Thales of Milates, ladies and gentlemen. Knew his shit.
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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Mon Sep 07, 2015 5:06 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Anyway, fate, getting water, this is not what makes evolution interesting.

That is my problem with justice. Automorphism is a beautiful event, one with many awe inspiring relations of power. To see it is a philosopher’s prerrogative, and this gives way to celebrating the philosopher!

My question is not whether the competition for Water produces what kind of being. My question is how do we get philosophers water!
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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Mon Sep 07, 2015 5:33 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Pezer wrote:
Anyway, fate, getting water, this is not what makes evolution interesting.

That is my problem with justice. Automorphism is a beautiful event, one with many awe inspiring relations of power. To see it is a philosopher’s prerrogative, and this gives way to celebrating the philosopher!

My question is not whether the competition for Water produces what kind of being. My question is how do we get philosophers water!

As you’ve repeatedly expressed, BTL is quite instrumental in this.

Philosophy is after all water to the philosopher; and to practice philosophy it is useful to have other philosophers around - and to keep out the non-philosophers.

BTL’s self-valuing is quite exemplary; non philosophical entities have a lot of trouble self-valuing in its region, but it draws philosophical ones.

I won’t claim it draws “the philosophical type” but it certainly works well as a value standard-setter.

Plato had above his door some harsh banishment of those who weren’t initiated into mathematics. If we can learn anything from Plato it’s from his politics, which were always aimed to secure the position of the philosopher.

It would be very good to found an “Academy”; a physical place where philosophers may freely dwell. It would be a good move to explicitly separate philosophy from academia by creating a new Academy.

But we need foremost to realize how far we already have advanced, how much terrain we now have to roam and how many people have been irreversibly touched by the idea of self-valuing; verily it is like a life-form that is a disease for the weak and a medicine for the strong.

It is not unlikely that I will at one point be able to create such a physical locus; since Capable and I set out working together, originally a great part of which was developing politics for philosophers, this tree has grown tremendously, through all sorts of human-all-too-human resistance.

I am generally more optimistic about these things than I let on. But it is perhaps not unwise to make it clear how close I sense we are to a fold in the fabric, having crossed which, we’ll be working with entirely different coordinates; coordinates that are oriented on our own star.


" The strong do what they can do and the weak accept what they have to accept. "

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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Mon Sep 07, 2015 6:54 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Hunting down water is like philosophizing itself. A dojo? Money. Money? Society. Society? Change. Change? Etc. All of these questions have a number of other interconnections. For instance, academic work? Restriction. Restriction? More resources. More resources? Restriction.

I have been following this thread at serious risk to my life for the last two years.

Bah, I’m more optimistic than I let on too.
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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Mon Sep 07, 2015 8:53 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
That is all good and well… Have you seen, the documentary “jodorowski’s dune”? The reason Alejandro seems like a fucking madman when he pitches to his team is that people still have jobs and things… Hell, even his own team went on to make great but comparably banal movies like Alien.

Transcendentalism has not cought up with life. Ambitionalism is still kind of stuck in the master morality age that spawned it, people have groceries to buy and grandmas to appease.

I even tend to decide on the conclusion that they can not be included, but only made to serve new masters as Marx said they used to be made to. Maybe Marx’s childish rage makes us not see how he saw a lot that was real and true. The world is a big massive unwieldy mass ball. It cannot be directed with a pool cue. Truth is not enough, or rather too much.

These people are more elemental than incidental. On the subject of aristocrats, it is to their credit that they deep down appreciated the efforts of slaves, that they saw them as a basic part of the whole. Not as good though inferior, or tolerable, or damned or stupid, but as much a part of glory as a general, as much a part of beauty as the top asthetitians. The most sophisticated thought was integrally indebted to slaves.

In this, fuck it, hollistic way does a philosopher need to re-establish his position with respect to society.

If we love evolution, we love: that its products need not be enjoyed by all individual humans, but by the gods, and only hence benefit even the lowest man. Did you ever see the look of a structrurally poor man who lived through golden aristocratic times? As much nostalgia and pride as Napoleon must have had in that island.
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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Mon Sep 07, 2015 11:59 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Pezer wrote:
The aristocrat feels no compassion, he relates to the human state of “slaves.”

Was Nietzsche not an aristocrat? And, even insofar as he was not (he was not called “von Nietzsche”, for instance), was he not most noble? And insofar as he was noble but not an aristocrat, does it matter what “aristocrats” feel?

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Compassion is rather to feel and relish pain of others.

“Relish”? Is this a cynical view of compassion, or did you mean a different word, or am I missing something? Please explain.

Quote :
It is not just that a man suffer, it is just that he stop suffering.

According to the “compassionate” or in general? If the latter, you and I do not mean the same thing by “justice”. I’m not talking about justice in any popular sense of the word. I’m talking about philosophical justice, in the highest sense of the word “philosophical”.

Quote :
It is evolutionarily inevitable that we all suffer,

Yes: not just for “sentient” beings, but, according to Value Philosophy as I understand it, in some way for all beings, however “rudimentary”.

Quote :
it is wastefull to see potential in a lower man and leave it.

But is waste or wastefulness bad? As I wrote in a draft last week:

I’m not concerned with lowering the cost [at which the West exists] so much as magnifying the waste. I mean, if waste is seen to be magnificent, is it really a waste? […] But can it really be magnificent if it is not? Must the highest privilege not be exempt from all responsibility? […] Noblesse oblige: privilege obliges one to enjoy it in full. And perhaps one enjoys one’s privilege most fully only in enjoying one’s liberty not to enjoy it in full?

The latter are some more variations on the theme of the justice of injustice and the injustice of justice.

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It is celebratable excess to wonder about the potential of a man already up to his neck in sweat, blood and tears. What potential is found depends on the value of the man searching for it.

I don’t follow the last sentence. Don’t you mean “values”? I mean, the values the man holds? Or do you mean the value the man possesses, as in “this thing is worth ten dollars”?

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Darwin’s theory is that the main directive is not to die, both in body and, as you say, in lineage.

Well, I’m not completely sure about the man Darwin himself, but insofar as Darwin was a Darwinist in the sense of present-day Darwinism, his theory was not that there was any directive at all. Darwinism is a modern scientific theory, and as such it’s descriptive and not prescriptive (normative); it does not make value judgments, only judgments of fact. By this I don’t mean that there are no value judgments within modern science, which would be impossible, but that it describes, for instance, the evolution and eventual extinction of the dodo but does not say that any of it is good or bad.

Instincts may be considered “directives”, but by no means all evolution depends on instincts, and even they ultimately come about undirected, unless it be in the sense that there are directives in all existence, all beings, no matter how “rudimentary”.

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This is… Is this what you are putting into question? Nietzsche was very much against this. Evolution is all there is to life, can you sit there and tell me that mere survival is all there is to life? How wretched that would be… I might be aroused to celebrate you! Maybe I, a son of this pampered society, am too cynical for the true aristocracy which would have looked down on you if this is the case. I remember the way actual aristocrats I knew looked down on people, but no, deep down it was celebration of life. “You belong there and I belong here.”

But let’s leave aristocrats for now and focus on philosophers. Passive compassion, by its very passivity, has nothing to do with justice. No, you are not weak, not free of excess… What you feel is not justice… It is asthetics! You see beauty in tragedy. This is well enough, very much not suited for survival btw. The dodo was quite beautiful, maybe even more so than the chicken! I see the germs of a problem here…

How do you know what I feel and see?


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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Mon Sep 07, 2015 12:38 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
How do I know?

If no man is less than nothing and you are after noblesse, it follows that you are missunderstanding your instincts as to the elements of evolution because of a tyranical (I will concede, noble) need to bend modern academia to philosophical reason.

Thus, you see the evidence Darwin and Darwinists show for why life is as it is and you make excuses that allow both for you to fit in with them, masters of modern academia, and them to not really mean what they are saying.

Let’s take your perspective: they are not dictating that life exists so that animals don’t die and have offspring, they are describing how not dying and having offspring is the driving force for the development of life.

Then you say it is just that dodos are cool even if they didn’t survive these forces.

Meesees only beauty and definetly a will to escape the dumb tyranny of Darwin. But you try to call philosophy beyond evolution and use the name justice or injustice to account for extra-evolutionary forces.

Honestly, I think your justice and injustice are strength and weakness, a la Nietzsche, and agree that a noble spirit may delight in the poetry of weakness, its beauty, as much as strength.

Understand this and automorphism will escalate in value for your self-valuing action: nothing in life is outside of evolution. Not even Noblesse. Otherwise, wait for it…

it would not survive.
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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Tue Sep 08, 2015 12:57 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
The only real ‘driving force of life’ is excess. Every ontic being (retains at least a little consistency-congruity in time and space) is a groupie to some range and frequency of excessive profusion.

Life doesn’t care about survival, just as survival doesn’t care about life.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Tue Sep 08, 2015 1:46 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Let’s assume that chairs are conscious. What would we call it if chairs made a “philosophy” which reduced everything about life and being a chair to the factory manufacturing processes, compositions of different kinds of wood and nails, and economic profit and sales forces that led to humans making chairs? We would laugh at such a philosophy, we would laugh at the absurd myopia and narrow-minded ignorance of the chairs. What would we call it still, if chairs outlived the human race and in 100,000 years from now still held to such a philosophy as exclaimed all those old production processes and economic forces of humanity that chairs have long-since moved away from? We would call such a philosophy even more idiotic.

I’m waiting for a sign that we are ready to consider our reality. The best parts of Nietzsche are where he tries, although ultimately fails, to raise his eyes. But usually I see people liking Nietzsche for all the wrong reasons.

Just because he happens to be the first philosopher doesn’t mean he was, relatively speaking (not relative to all the non-philosophers that came before and still keep coming after him, but I mean relative to REAL philosophy), a particularly great one. He was good enough for his role, namely as I just said, of being the first philosopher. Let’s valorize and understand him from that view only, and then move on already.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Tue Sep 08, 2015 2:07 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I have my Pentad post ready. I think we have satisfactorily greeted and and discussed, the prelude is done.
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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Tue Sep 08, 2015 2:21 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Great, feel free to create the new topic for this in the Pentad forum, I’m looking forward to it.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Tue Sep 08, 2015 1:05 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Pezer wrote:
How do I know?

If no man is less than nothing and you are after noblesse, it follows that you are missunderstanding your instincts as to the elements of evolution because of a tyranical (I will concede, noble) need to bend modern academia to philosophical reason.

Thus, you see the evidence Darwin and Darwinists show for why life is as it is and you make excuses that allow both for you to fit in with them, masters of modern academia, and them to not really mean what they are saying.

Let’s take your perspective: they are not dictating that life exists so that animals don’t die and have offspring, they are describing how not dying and having offspring is the driving force for the development of life.

Then you say it is just that dodos are cool even if they didn’t survive these forces.

Meesees only beauty and definetly a will to escape the dumb tyranny of Darwin. But you try to call philosophy beyond evolution and use the name justice or injustice to account for extra-evolutionary forces.

Honestly, I think your justice and injustice are strength and weakness, a la Nietzsche, and agree that a noble spirit may delight in the poetry of weakness, its beauty, as much as strength.

Understand this and automorphism will escalate in value for your self-valuing action: nothing in life is outside of evolution. Not even Noblesse. Otherwise, wait for it…

it would not survive.

I’m not sure what you mean by “if no man is less than nothing”, but you seem to say that you think I’m someone relatively noble who’s looking for noblesse in others, and that, in order to see something noble in Darwin(ists), I have to willfully misconceive of them. If this is more or less what you’re saying, my counter will be the question: Is the true the same as the noble? I think “modern academia”, as you call it, or modern science and scholarship in general, is something relatively noble; however, I’m not looking to it for nobility but for truth–correspondence to reality. I think that, within the mechanistic paradigm of modern natural science, Darwinism is true. Now Darwinism’s main mechanism, the theory of natural selection, teaches the following. Suppose that the members of a same-species group of animals that live in the same place in space-time are represented by marbles, and their environment is represented by a person. Some of the animals are represented by a blue marble, others by a green marble, and others still by a blue-and-green marble. Now suppose the person has too much stuff in his house and needs to get rid of some stuff. He really likes blue, but doesn’t really like green. He therefore gets rid of the green marbles, keeping only the blue ones and the blue-and-green ones. Now suppose that the person changes, that with regard to taste in colours he becomes a different person. He now really likes green but doesn’t really like blue. And at the same time he again happens to have too much stuff in his house. Now he gets rid of the blue marbles, keeping only the blue-and-green ones. Thus two consecutive environments have naturally selected the animals represented by the blue-and-green marbles. This says nothing about whether they were better than the ones represented by the blue marbles and by the green marbles. I think doing justice to the latter requires that one recognises this; I don’t think it’s unjust that the latter went instinct, I don’t want to save species from extinction. If after reading this you still think I misunderstand or make excuses or try to escape from anything, please explain.


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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Tue Sep 08, 2015 2:03 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
OK then, not noblesse but truth.

Truth is also a part of evolution, otherwise, wait for it…

it would not survive.

Let’s call truth a marble that can change colors. The person might choose this or that color, and the marble will have to change with or hide from the person. If it is ever caught, it dies.

Now, is the death of this marble more interesting than the process whereby it chooses colors?

Let’s say you think so, but some people that you fear prefer to wonder about the color processes. You want these people out!

You show, with ample use of death pictures, that the only thing going on is the death. That even the colors only respond to who the person decides to dispose of. Shazam! You have used their intrigue for the color processes to convince them that it is less interesting then the death mechanism. Any man wanting to join their well funded group would have to say: “my, look at that color! I wonder what had to die to make it? After all, nothing else makes it.”

If such a person were to discover a rivetting color mechanism such as automorphism, he would have to excuse himself: “but this is not evolution! Only philosophy…!”
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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Wed Sep 09, 2015 7:15 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Pezer wrote:
OK then, not noblesse but truth.

Truth is also a part of evolution, otherwise, wait for it…

it would not survive.

Well, what do you mean by “truth” here, then? The will to truth? Yes, the will to truth has evolved and will therefore most probably go extinct sooner or later, but that’s not what I meant. I’m not interested in modern science’s will to truth, but in the truth discovered by it–the fact of evolution, for example.

Quote :
Let’s call truth a marble that can change colors. The person might choose this or that color, and the marble will have to change with or hide from the person. If it is ever caught, it dies.

Now, is the death of this marble more interesting than the process whereby it chooses colors?

Let’s say you think so, but some people that you fear prefer to wonder about the color processes. You want these people out!

You show, with ample use of death pictures, that the only thing going on is the death. That even the colors only respond to who the person decides to dispose of. Shazam! You have used their intrigue for the color processes to convince them that it is less interesting then the death mechanism. Any man wanting to join their well funded group would have to say: “my, look at that color! I wonder what had to die to make it? After all, nothing else makes it.”

If such a person were to discover a rivetting color mechanism such as automorphism, he would have to excuse himself: “but this is not evolution! Only philosophy…!”

Not if philosophy comprehends the truth of evolution. But yes, even then philosophy is not beyond evolution. It has evolved. It is the product of evolution. But even saying this is making a metaphysical claim. Evolution, the theory of evolution, is a product of philosophy–this is all we know. It is a value, and not necessarily a fact. We don’t know with absolute certainty whether it’s a fact that there is only valuation. This is the necessary injustice I speak of–the automorphism even and especially of Value Philosophy. “Especially”, because Value Philosophy affirms its own automorphism. And “even”, because Value Philosophy is the most probable view of the world. All this from my point of view, of course.


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PostSubject: Re: Automorphism. Wed Sep 09, 2015 10:23 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
For a man with a snake eating its tail as a presentation card, you seem to have a lot of trouble with the idea that the truth is a part of evolution, and only truth can contain that.

Tell me, if the snake is eating its tail, what point of view other than yours can find more of a fact than yours?

Wherefore probability?

How can fact supercede or precede point of view?

What process can be anything but the process of evolution?
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PostSubject: Discontinuity in Nietzsche Sun Sep 20, 2015 8:58 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
What was disconttinuous in Nietzsche was that he tested the limits of all thought. On the controversy of whether Nietzsche was a philosopher, as philosophy was to him one of many elements of thought to be struggled with, we must conclude that he was not.
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PostSubject: Re: Discontinuity in Nietzsche Sun Sep 20, 2015 9:18 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I don’t think philosophers struggle with philosophy. I think they struggle with the animal flux, to subjugate it in its terms.
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PostSubject: Re: Discontinuity in Nietzsche Mon Sep 21, 2015 12:28 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
The fire flux.
But this is philosophy.

By my beard, and his, this teaching to be deeper than one had thought, is this not philosophy?


" The strong do what they can do and the weak accept what they have to accept. "

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PostSubject: Re: Discontinuity in Nietzsche Mon Sep 21, 2015 12:42 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Yes, I guess that’s what Capable means by him being the first philosopher. As he said: before and after.

But he struggled with things that philosophers shouldn’t have to struggle with. I’m convinced he was a demolisher, he was the no.

The yes is what he allowed. And its implications go beyond philosophy, there was an extra-philosophical tyranny. I think that what we are struggling with with Sawelios is beyond philosophy.

Nietzsche was first a psychologist, he went into the psychology of philosophy. But he talked about a type, which he was, that went up and down Jacob’s ladder at his pleasure. Philosophy occupies certain rungs. He accessed those rungs through psychology, thus some mistake him for a moral philosopher (what a small perception).

As philosophy was refined from Aristotle’s all encompasingness, so philosophy must be refined by philosophers from Nietzsche’s. They are more specialized in those rungs, they must see psychology as below philosophy. This he proto-wanted.
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PostSubject: Re: Discontinuity in Nietzsche Mon Sep 21, 2015 1:35 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
No, you are right.

What Nietzsche saught wasn’t refinement per se, it was a straight line.

But a straight line arranges things around it, and not only philosophy.
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PostSubject: Re: Discontinuity in Nietzsche Mon Sep 21, 2015 2:01 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Rather this:

That Nietzsche’s discovery was philosophy, and all else must be in its service, including for non-philosophers, for reasons that philosophy discovers in the animal flux.

Soil. Funk. Below and beyond philosophy, at one and the same time.
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PostSubject: Re: Discontinuity in Nietzsche Fri Oct 16, 2015 2:39 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
The Nietzschean no and yes are applicable in many other places also. We can’t know what it means to be for or against something until we also understand the position opposite that “something”, to formulate our no required for our yes.

That can be difficult as Nietzsche found out, because a huge part of the organism’s biology and psychology are tied into values-declarations almost automatically, so that positive or negative connotations of need or feeling or expectation appear in almost everything. Thus there exists for these positions invisible “no” conditions that cannot easily be seen. Philosophy is daemonic because we must push past values and feelings and needs in order to arrive at a middle-point where both the object itself and its most perfect opposition are brought together in a single moment of consciousness, because only by doing so can we truly cause both polarized ideas to influence each other.

The forced position that compels no and yes to encounter each other authentically, and we will always know if the encounter is authentic because it will be radically new to us, the force of the insight and feeling that comes out of the clash. If the encounter is mundane and fits within established expectations and feelings- or values-parameters then the encounter wasn’t complete or original, but merely a kind of re-configuration of existing perspectives.

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PostSubject: On Parts Fri Feb 19, 2016 4:59 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Philosophy of The Whole is a lie. Even when we look at some coherent whole, it is itself a part.

This is why Will to Power. There will never be a whole, our strive for coherence is not a path with ends but constant willing to power. We strive for and achieve part after part, and coherence between parts. This is the greatest pleasure, for us who have tasted it. The will to end, to whole, is the most bewildering thing to us, as the infinite multiplicity is more than any thing we were ever promised about wisdom, more wealth than whole seeking could ever conceive, and its beauty is that it is not better because it is more pleasurable, this it is, but because it is self-evidently true. Thus it is not even better, but simply true, and whole and end seeking becomes simply a wanton obstacleization, a bother, a cancer in the sense that it does not heed health, a true annoyance.

Let us diagnose, then. So far, I have seen no other treatment than what Nietzsche described, death. To help the end-seeker find end.

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PostSubject: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Sun Jun 19, 2016 4:53 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Ideas are simple. Use words sparingly to denote ideas, unless you’re writing fiction. Is philosophy fiction? Is Science fiction?
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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Sun Jun 19, 2016 5:10 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Truth is at once simple and infinitely complex; entities tend to integrate only that to which they feel akin. Most people confronted with delicate philosophical reasoning across several pages will be repelled, unable to integrate, digest. The silly ones among them will project their failure on the writer, and assume that, because they could not appreciate, the text is simply ‘too complex’.

Another matter is elegance. Some philosophers were able to convey complex idea in rather simple terms. Problem with that is that their ideas were usually misunderstood - simplified by simpler minds.

Personal: a problem is that in my own mind, VO is a logic that is beyond simple; it is entirely obvious. It is in fact so clearly the case that it applies everywhere that, to put it into words, is already making it far more complicated than it is. And yet, the implications of its application are so vastly complex that the brain starts producing neural connections at the mere anticipation of working it through.

Simplicity for the sake of a pleasant read or an easy ‘ah yes true!’ is an epicurean taste, unrelated to intellectual conscience.


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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Sun Jun 19, 2016 6:02 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
We disagree then. Some philosophers are romantics; I am not one of them.

Ideas entertain me or not, epicurean if you must insult.

Remember, thoughts are my addiction. Most thoughts are fleeting. Most ideas fizzle. Unnecessarily long reads blow.

Intellectual conscience comes across as snobbery. I am not one of them either.

If keeping ideas simple offends your sensibilities, I’ll keep my simplicity to myself.
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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Sun Jun 19, 2016 9:38 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
That’s it?

All you have to say is that you don’t like long texts? It seems like a waste of time for the both of us.

Feel free to make a point. Be as concise as you must.
It’s strange to be insulted that someone who hosts a forum for prolific writers does not agree with your OP.


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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Sun Jun 19, 2016 10:01 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Specifications on how prolific one ought to be is logical in your eyes? You have issues with my not feeding your mind enough?

I was asked here. Obviously, in error by “prolifictariats.”
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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Mon Jun 20, 2016 6:13 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Quote :
Specifications on how prolific one ought to be is logical in your eyes?

Does this contain reference to something in particular? I can’t find it.

You may have expected me to lick your ass because you showed up. Sorry about that. That’s not how we do things here.


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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Mon Jun 20, 2016 7:10 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
No offense - Im just making it clear that diplomacy goes out the door as soon as you step into this place. Only merit counts here.

At the very least I assume that you understand that merely stating a preference for short texts does not qualify on any level as philosophy.

None of the regular posters here puts any stock in controlling their temper. If you cant enjoy that, if you prefer the backhanded insinuations common on other forums then feel free to leave.

Im still hoping there is something you can add to this place. Fortunately I have no problem with short texts.


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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Mon Jun 20, 2016 8:07 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
My point was simplicity keeps logic obvious. K.I.S.S.

My terms at this time: Don’t play dumb. Don’t make me cranky. Kissing of my ass must occur once every blue moon.

Wading through a shit-ton of text is a waste of my patience, ensuring crankiness.
Not answering my questions is playing dumb which causes immediate crankiness.

Your terms?
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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Mon Jun 20, 2016 3:34 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Hi-D wrote:
Is philosophy fiction? Is Science fiction?

What if I say yes?

viewtopic.php?f=1&t=175698


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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Mon Jun 20, 2016 3:36 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
My terms: balls.

I don’t care about commentaries. I care about attempts to alter the course of evolution.

Nothing in genetic biology is simple. Neither is philosophy capable of operating on simple principles.

+To think means to risk ones animal nature.+

Is that simple enough?


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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Mon Jun 20, 2016 5:21 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
"My terms: balls.

I don’t care about commentaries. I care about attempts to alter the course of evolution.

Nothing in genetic biology is simple. Neither is philosophy capable of operating on simple principles.

+To think means to risk ones animal nature.+

Is that simple enough?"-FC

Your stance on one’s animal nature?
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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Mon Jun 27, 2016 4:15 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
FC,

A reply to my question in the above post would be helpful. Also what does hi-jacking the universe mean?
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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Tue Jun 28, 2016 7:24 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Do you mean this?

Quote :
Your stance on one’s animal nature?

I dont mean to be a dick, but I honestly have no idea what you’re asking me.

Perhaps mylady would consider using a few more words?

At least try to make your thoughts discernible somewhat.


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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Tue Jun 28, 2016 8:44 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Is being human, the physical being, all you essentially are? Then, what’s going on in genetic biology that would lead to your next statement about “thinking risks one’s animal nature”? Another question from above~hi-jacking the universe meaning what? When you have time, will you finish my astrology chart reading?
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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Thu Jun 30, 2016 6:09 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Nevermind about the natal chart expansion I requested. Busy reading the chart myself. You were very kind in what you revealed.
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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Fri Jul 01, 2016 5:08 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Hi-D wrote:
Is being human, the physical being, all you essentially are?

All we are is the whole life.
We’ve got a weird notion of physicality. There is no such thing, science has revealed this a hundred years ago, as an ‘object’. There are only relativistic quanta. Real substance is always process, never ‘stuff’. ‘Stuff’ is just a delay of process.

Process, on the other hand, could be made of god knows what. My solution is that it is made of valuing, which is ultimately the only verifiable thing - what Ive basically done is converted the human mind to the universe.

In any case, what we experience that we are, is mostly what we are, I should say. Our body is physical. We live in a physical world. We are physical. But that means we are processes that intertwine with changing arrays of trillions of other processes at all times.

Quote :
Then, what’s going on in genetic biology that would lead to your next statement about “thinking risks one’s animal nature”? Another question from above~hi-jacking the universe meaning what? When you have time, will you finish my astrology chart reading?

I mean that the coherence of the instincts, those reactions about which we dont think, for which we do not prepare, is at risk of being disturbed once we start thinking. This does not mean that we sacrifice our animality, but that it becomes much more difficult to be a functional, happy animal.

Regarding the chart - it was in public, I’m not about to put someones soul-dirt out there for the trolls - but what I said must have been sincere.


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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Fri Jul 01, 2016 10:59 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Once, you wrote that you made your own soul. What is your soul and how did you make it? This is serious business to me. Using your balls, start a thread with your explanation.

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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Sat Oct 12, 2013 11:46 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I was wrong to mention Copernican relativity.


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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Sat Oct 12, 2013 12:37 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I have a possible solution:

In the Paradox’ situation, the one moment when the two are together in one reference frame is the moment where the flashes go off. But the next instant, the situation no longer exists, and the train is a different reference frame than the station, thus appearing skewed. For the anime to make sense, both train and station have to move, and they both have to transform in dimensions so as for the photons to reach the clocks at the same time.


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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Sat Oct 12, 2013 12:50 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
In the anime, the only constants should be the speed of the photons and the distance they are traveling. All the physical components have to bend in order to remain simultaneous. Their distance to the light has to remain constant with the speed by which this distance is bridged and the amount of time elapsed between flash and clock.

From this perspective, it is not the photon that is seen to reach the clock, but the clock that is seen to bend towards the photon to reach it as soon as appears logical from the reference frame.

The reason that the objects bend whereas there is no acceleration is that there are two velocities at the same time, which is essentially the same thing as an acceleration.

An object in a linear acceleration equals two different reference frames overlapping in one object.


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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Sat Oct 12, 2013 12:55 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
“An object in a linear acceleration equals two different reference frames overlapping in one object.”

Hence, Newtons Laws.


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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Sat Oct 12, 2013 1:35 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
So was that a (B) or a (C)?

Fixed Cross wrote:
James S Saint wrote:
All theories must always apply. And actually that was stated in Einsteins special relativity thesis. That was actually the whole underlying concern. Physics requires a set of laws that are not dependent upon the situation of the Earth moving through space at an unknown pace. Relativity was offered as a means to form laws/principles that would be accurate regardless of such space travel.
Yes, this is why you have to make your definitions in terms of relativity in order to test relativity.
But you choose the objectivist way of defining a situation, which is an a priori negation of relativity.

Your definition states that both train and station are actually the same reference frame.
Please listen to this very carefully, because you seem to be thinking in a very common internet and the population in general’s way. You are enacting your own accusation.

I have defined only that which relativity accepts as its premise. One cannot accept the consequences or conclusion that are based upon a premise as another premise if it is that premise itself that is in question. In this case, the relativity of simultaneity is a consequence of the presumed theory of the constant speed of light. It is the presumed consistency of the speed of light that has brought about this conundrum.

The theory basically states that IF light has a constant speed, events might be SEEN/PERCEIVED as simultaneous events or not due to the time it takes for the light to reach the observer (in this case, the clocks) and despite whether they actually were simultaneous as a history record could prove one way or another. The time it takes for the light to reach the clocks is what we are discussing. So I can not assume the consequential theory of simultaneity if it is the premise of simultaneity that I am testing, else I would be guilty of “affirming the consequent” and forcing the logic into a circular meaningless reasoning (also known as “begging the question”).

IF both clocks stopped, then they could both accept the simultaneity issue. But you are suggesting that they are required to stop and thus force the simultaneity issue to declare that the flashers did not do as they have been defined as doing (denying a prior premise). You are arranging that it is impossible for two flashers to simultaneously flash.

I have defined;

  1. photon dependent stop-clocks - Relativity allowed.
  2. equal distance from a common center seen by EACH frame independently - Relativity allowed.
  3. a moving frame emitting photons - Relativity allowed.
  4. physically touching triggers for the flashers - Relativity allowed
  5. brief alignment of a moving and a fixed stop-clock - Relativity allowed.
  6. the consistency of the speed of of light for every observer - Relativity Required.
    and
  7. two frames accepting the indispensability of the same simultaneous event, the flashing of both flashers - Relativity allowed under the circumstance of zero distance involved (fixed physical touching - the arms triggering the flashers).

Your argument is that IF the relativity of simultaneity is a reality due to the consistency of the speed of light being true, and not merely a perception issue (which is the only thing that Einstein proposed, that it would be a perception issue), then the triggering of the flashers cannot ever be made simultaneous. But that is saying that the physical touching of the arms and the flashers took place when they were not physically touching. That would constitute a non-local event, which relativity does not support and Einstein seriously refused. Non-local touching would violate everything in every ontology because “local” is defined by “nearness to touching”.

In both frames, the flashers physically touch their trigger at the same moment simply because the distance Xs is fixed for BOTH frames. And it doesn’t matter what Xs is nor even if it is seen as different for one frame than the other, as long as the clocks are centered. That is very easily arranged and has been proposed as the situation. Length dilation can be used to ensure that the train length is properly compensated.

So in effect, what you are saying is that IF the consistency of the speed of light is true, the flashers cannot be made to be triggered together under any circumstances even though they are both definitely being triggered by the same physical event for both frames of reference.

And you are in effect, conflating two separate debates and using the presumption of one to justify the other. So before we proceed;

Do you accept that it is impossible for the flashers to be actually triggered together because the clocks will not experience the light reaching them at the same time? That is denying definition, obvious logic, and practical ability for sake of affirming the consequent.

A) Accept
B) Don’t accept
C) Other?

Fixed Cross wrote:
Quote :
What you are calling the “top down perspective” is actually merely the perspective of both proposed reference frames together.
Relativity was developed because such a perspective is impossible.
One can not have two different reference frames within one reference frame. A = A, thus also A ≠ (≠A).
The “top down perspective” is merely a comparison of the two frames in order to compare the historical event of the clocks either stopping or not stopping to the proposed predictions of the reference frames. It is merely the process of logical comparison of two proposed stories. Hardly impossible.

The mind ALWAYS considers multiple reference frames in order to assess truth… ALWAYS. It has no choice. It cannot think at all without doing that. Logic or reasoning is an entirely different frame of reference (the frame of the conceptual) than visual experience (the frame of the physical perception). The mind is ALWAYS examining both frames in an effort to verify or correct error in either. If a person sees something that is too illogical, they lose their orientation and in extreme cases actually pass out as the mind shuts down.

Fixed Cross wrote:
Quote :
In this scenario, the clocks either stop or they don’t. If you consider either perspective by itself, it is always the other clock that must not stop. That “top down perspective” is merely the forced conclusion for a single history. The individual perspectives would have to declare a different actual history than the other. But only one history can exist.
Things are influenced by things in different orders; the sequence of events leading up to the present is different as registered by (having affect in) different reference frames.
There can only be one actual history. Or did you want to debate too? Cool

Fixed Cross wrote:
Quote :
The time of the emission isn’t dependent upon when they reach their destination… unless you want to start reversing time and causality.
If the speed is fixed and known, and you decide on a time of arrival, the moment of departure you’re going to use is wholly dependent on that time.
Look at that. YOU declared the result as a necessity, a defined result and then deduced that the flasher CANNOT both flash together because if they did, the theory wouldn’t be correct = “affirming the consequent”. But the flashers most definitely can be arranged to have no choice but to flash together from the perspective of BOTH frames.

Fixed Cross wrote:
Relativity involves the speed of light at the basis of every calculation about mass and energy, so as to never come to the conclusion that reality is inconsistent with itself.
Yet fails.

Fixed Cross or Whoever wrote:
So as I see it now, your only option is to prove that the speed of light is in fact not equal from all reference frames.
That is exactly what I am doing. All you have to do is be honest with yourself and keep examining ALL of the details without prejudice.

Fixed Cross wrote:
Quote :
And besides that, we can easily remove any concern for simultaneity merely by having relevant things actually touch, such as the triggering of the flashers by touching arms at the side of the track.
It’s interesting to look at the problem from that angle.

What I think would happen is that the station perspective perceives the photons on the train to be departing at a different time than the moment that the trigger connects. The time difference would be due to the fact that the speed of the train has to be converted into the perspective of the station, “valued in terms of”.

The experiential connecting to of a reference frame moving with respect to your own is an act that is influenced by the limits of propagation of affect.

Quote :
With zero distance involved, the entire simultaneity issue is void. BOTH frames would have to accept that the flashers were triggered at the same moment.
And yet they can not help perceiving each other as being influenced by it at a different moment.
As you noted, perception and logic don’t always agree. That is why you must choose which is going to be your ontology. If perception is your “god”, then… you will believe whatever someone else arranges for you to believe. That is the entire intent of a GREAT deal of global mysticism being used right now. The film The Matrix was all about that very concern.

Fixed Cross wrote:
In the Paradox’ situation, the one moment when the two are together in one reference frame is the moment where the flashes go off. But the next instant, the situation no longer exists, and the train is a different reference frame than the station, thus appearing skewed. For the anime to make sense, both train and station have to move, and they both have to transform in dimensions so as for the photons to reach the clocks at the same time.
Again, trying to “affirm the consequent”, justify the premise rather than test it; “so as for…” = “so that we can accept the premise being tested, we must alter the defined situation into a skew.” (which actually wouldn’t work anyway).

Realize that by definition a frame cannot be moving with respect to itself. We are examining what a theory requires each frame to theorize as factual. So we must look at each as though each was not moving and see what each would theorize concerning the other, given the premise that the speed of light is constant for all observers. But still, we cannot insist that the relativity of simultaneity is a justification for its own premise.

What is being argued is that;
If A, then B.
And
If B, then A is acceptable.

But then we see that B doesn’t seem to be true.

Then saying;
Because B (insisting on its truth), then A is acceptable and other premises (not under test) must be denied.

Isn’t it simpler to just accept that even though relativity is closer to being accurate than the older “constant time” theory, it still isn’t quite Holy Gospel?

Also realize that we could easily place another fixed clock slightly above the train clock so that the same light that stops one would stop the other… IF either actually stopped. But the fixed clock perspective would have to realize that the train clock is no longer directly under it when the light stops the fixed clock. That would force the fixed clock frame to conclude that light is NOT constant speed, because it affected something at a different distance than the distance it traveled to get to the fixed clock.

It takes this thing forever to allow me to post and/or edit. Each time you post while I am trying to post, it takes another 4-5 minutes to tell me that you have posted and ask me if I want to change my post… requiring yet another 4-5 minutes. Every button click to log on, reply, edit, refresh, or anything requires an additional 4-5 minutes waiting.
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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Sat Oct 12, 2013 2:41 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I did not mean a nonlocal event. I was just questioning the actual setup of that mechanism, which part of it pertains to the one and which to the other frame. But I’ve found a way to simplify the problem so that I can more clearly see the difficulty.

There could be just one set of flashers, either on the station or in the train or in any other place, flashing two photons into the train and two into the station, right at the moment the two clocks are at equal distance to the flashers.

If the speed of light is constant from each frame, then what matters only is that the light is seen from within a reference frame, not that it emitted from an object that is moving along within it.

Any moment a light is seen to be emitted, it becomes part of the viewers reference frame.

Do you agree to this?

I’m sorry for the posting malfunctions. I honestly have no idea how to disinfect the site from advertising probes or other such beings.


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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Sat Oct 12, 2013 2:56 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
And if I am away when you’ve posted a response, then I just want to go ahead and say that I’ve been waiting for you to explain why light can be perceived at different speeds. Whereas this precise problem keeps eluding me (and I hope to change that with the simplification) I can see that if one has an objectivist bottom up perspective of what light, matter, time and motion are in terms of a logical origin, then the speed of light must also bend to this logic and vary in different contexts.

I assume that with absolute time you mean the number of instants of infinitesimal PtA-change.


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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Sat Oct 12, 2013 3:37 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Fixed Cross wrote:
There could be just one set of flashers, either on the station or in the train or in any other place, flashing two photons into the train and two into the station, right at the moment the two clocks are at equal distance to the flashers.
That isn’t a “could be”. That was the originally defined situation. There are only two flashers and as we agreed, it doesn’t matter if they were moving when they flashed as long as they flashed while exactly centered.

Fixed Cross wrote:
If the speed of light is constant from each frame, then what matters only is that the light is seen from within a reference frame, not that it emitted from an object that is moving along within it.

Any moment a light is seen to be emitted, it becomes part of the viewers reference frame.

Do you agree to this?
Well, not too sure. “Part of the reference frame”? What does that mean? Light can never be “part of” any reference frame other than its own.

The light being “seen” is not what makes the light real. The light isn’t seen until it happens to encounter the observer. You can’t say that the light didn’t exist merely because the observer didn’t see it. And more importantly when he saw it becomes the entire issue. It had to exist BEFORE he saw it. And it had to come from a distant source at “Xs” distance.

He knows the source and his distance to that source. But he also knows what triggers the flasher. So when he finally sees the light, he knows that the trigger device has already triggered and moved. He could calculate how far the trigger device should have moved based on the speed of light, the speed of the train-to-station, and the distance from the source. And he knows that the trigger device had to be at exactly Xs distance from himself when the flasher was triggered. He knows his velocity compared to the station and thus the trigger device’s velocity. And he knows that the station clock is no longer aligned with himself and thus cannot experience the same light event at that same moment that he has.

He is forced to conclude that light cannot be traveling at the same rate for both himself and the station.

I need to go for a short while again… Be back a little later.

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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Sat Oct 12, 2013 8:14 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Fixed Cross wrote:
And if I am away when you’ve posted a response, then I just want to go ahead and say that I’ve been waiting for you to explain why light can be perceived at different speeds. Whereas this precise problem keeps eluding me (and I hope to change that with the simplification) I can see that if one has an objectivist bottom up perspective of what light, matter, time and motion are in terms of a logical origin, then the speed of light must also bend to this logic and vary in different contexts.
I think that I missed that post earlier.
…and don’t go rushing to judgment on that “objectivist” label on me just yet. Until you understand the depth and scope of RM, it really can’t be placed into such labels. Subjectivism has it’s place too.

I’m not sure to which you are referring when you say “light can be perceived…”. Are you referring to the RM understanding? Or something involving these Relativity animes?

Fixed Cross wrote:
I assume that with absolute time you mean the number of instants of infinitesimal PtA-change.
That is pretty much it… a few more details. Because you can deduce an immutable fact concerning a propagation rate in a theoretical absolute vacuum (even though such a vacuum cannot really exist), you can then develop a standard in comparison to it.

It is like knowing that whatever combination of anything you do, you have to end up with a final answer of 2Pi (for example of a circumference to diameter immutable ratio). Such a provable fact would allow you to design numerous devices of a variety of types, “adding up” any affects involved with any of them and then see how close you got to 2Pi. If your device was to give a diameter reading, but it didn’t come out with the proper 2Pi ratio, you know that something isn’t compensated yet. Any error has to be rationally compensated or removed. Thus you end up with a variety of means for knowing how far off from an absolute standard you are.

Measuring propagation and specifically “time” (being merely a measurement itself) is a little more tricky. Measuring time dilation is measuring how much your measuring is different than someone else’s measuring. I just extend that to how much physical reality requires, regardless of anyone’s measuring. RM provides an absolute grounding for physics (which around here, I guess we could never get to).

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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Sat Oct 12, 2013 9:34 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Time dilation and length contraction have been experimentally verified. How do you explain that if relativity/the constancy of c is wrong?


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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Sat Oct 12, 2013 11:59 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Capable wrote:
Time dilation and length contraction have been experimentally verified. How do you explain that if relativity/the constancy of c is wrong?
Capable, I take it that you haven’t been reading along, or at least not very well. You are aware of only two time theories (or so it seems), the Newtonian “constant time” original concept and the newer “Relativity time” concept. And you are apparently presuming that I am trying to defend that older “constant time” concept against the newer “Relativity time” concept. But the truth is that I am NOT speaking on behave of, and defending your past, “ancient history” older theories. YOU are speaking on behave of and defending MY past ancient history theories for sake of what is “the new revelation” to you, even though to me, it is ancient history.

Imagine that you were to magically teleport back 2000 years. You find that you have to live there and you get to know a bunch of Roman citizen Christians. They are talking about the new savor and how the world is going to be SO much better now that “we have it all resolved”. As far as they are concerned the game is finally over. The new kingdom has come. And when you say anything, they immediately Presume that you are trying to defend one of those OLD dark-age things. Obviously you are not one of their enlightened members because you aren’t displaying proper faith.

You, knowing how things are going to take place in their future but having no means to convince them that you know, decide to try to teach them a few things that you know WILL be relevant to them in the hard times to come (which they don’t really believe are going to be hard times). So you can’t go into WHY you know anything, you have to simply get them to understand the reasoning involved in something that perhaps will prevent WW1. You can’t even mention a “world war”. They would immediately know that you are nuts and might try to drill out that demon within your head. “Nations in Europe all at war??? What nations??? Rome already owns the world and now with the Holy Roman Empire and our savior, there can be no wars. Are you totally nuts?” they would reply.

So instead, avoiding all of that, you simply try to explain perhaps some business tactic or social reform strategy so that you can persuade them toward avoiding a war that YOU know is coming, but they could never believe such a thing.

They keep insisting on how the world is now saved and there is no need to worry about such non-sense social reforms and business strategies. The Church will take care of ALL of our needs and problems. The new clergy have it all figured out with the aid of our savior.

So perhaps instead you get in with some “heretics” who are all in favor of bringing down the Holy Roman scourge dictatorship. They are far more interested in social reform and business tactics. But you still can’t go telling them about why you know what you know. Else they will certainly not believe a single word you say.

With your newer friends, you try to explain the strategies by explaining the details of its logic. You try to convince them of the viability of something that you know damn well works because of your own history. But that doesn’t make an argument for them. You have to convince them in their own terms - “the gods” that they know determine all things.

You don’t mention their gods much, but it seems that every time you try to explain something they insist that you learn of their gods, else you are obviously merely an uneducated fool. They want to fix things, but they KNOW that they have to do it with their god’s permission, proper sacrifices, proper rituals, and really bad attitudes toward all the right people now that they discovered that Zeus has anew wife (what you didn’t even know THAT???).

Now realize that those people are what you look like to me. I don’t give a flying fuck what your “Science” is going to discover over the next 50 years. I couldn’t care less because to ME, it is ancient history so far back that I don’t even have records that far back and certainly not of such trivial details.

You are trying to defend your “gods” to someone so far into your future that he can’t even remember the names of your gods. Yet you keep thinking that he is trying to defend those even OLDER, pre-new-age gods.

I am explaining something that is provably wrong about YOUR current gods, who you think are the “newer, shiny, saving of the world” gods (aka Secular Science). I already know how utterly ridiculous your “new-age” gods are. They are not new to me. Not because of how good and proper those even older gods were, but because of what is discovered centuries from your present.

What has been “proven” in your century is merely that the newer god, “relativity” is MORE accurate than that older god “constant time”. I don’t doubt that for a second.

Catholicism was more accurate than the Roman panacea too.

If you can’t accept that you really DO have a future wherein all of what you believe today is much improved and thus there is discoverable fault in what you currently believe (and discoverable BY YOU, not merely them thar genuses in tha Vatican), you will not be able to learn anything more than what everyone else is going to know anyway. Nor do anything that isn’t going to happen anyway.

Relativity has a flaw. It can be updated and by YOU.
Why would you even care to try?
So as to divert a WW3 that you can’t even imagine.
Or simply to learn a little more real truth without having to fade into history as one of those ancient superstitious old farts that were so primitive as to actually believe in that old relativity myth.

That is how I explain it.
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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Sun Oct 13, 2013 3:46 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Nice rant. None of that applies to me, it is merely your presumption. Surprising, because you seem to have this huge issue with presumption yet toward me it is all that you ever do.

I noticed you also didn’t answer my question. Saying “x is more accurate than y” does not EXPLAIN x.

You aren’t being honest here.


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“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Sun Oct 13, 2013 5:58 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
What Capable was asking is how time dilation and length contraction fail to account for what’s really happening, if they’ve been used with such empirical success. Whatever that reply was meant to convey, it did not include an answer.

Because I neither want to inconvenience you nor witness Capable being made out to be a superstitious believer for asking a practical question, I’ve posted my reply here in the old Stopped Clock Paradox thread on ILP.


" The strong do what they can do and the weak accept what they have to accept. "

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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Sun Oct 13, 2013 6:57 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster

I even bolded it for you.

James S Saint wrote:
What has been “proven” in your century is merely that the newer god, “relativity” is MORE accurate than that older god “constant time”. I don’t doubt that for a second.
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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Sun Oct 13, 2013 8:08 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I didn’t miss that. It was the only sentence, you’ll have to admit that, that was to the point of the question.

And still, it is only a claim. You’re asking for a lot of faith.
I have constantly given this faith, but it’s not unreasonable that people would ask for verifiable facts before they would trust your judgment.

All these things you say about impending doom, and RM’s capacity to avert it, what is the reader supposed to do with that? What can one do with it, besides put blind faith in a future explanation?


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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Mon Oct 28, 2013 7:13 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I saw that I had posted this on the wrong thread earlier…

The security issue has cleared up (for a while).

Quote :
To the man who thinks for himself, the Lorentz transformation (that I have explained many times at this site) is both trivial and in this case irrelevant. You are free to use the Lorentz or any other transformation you want. You will end up with the same paradox.

The intent of all theories, especially one proposed to be as universal as Relativity, is to allow two people, perhaps generations or millions of miles apart, to each accurately predict something such as to know the truth of tomorrow based upon the theory.

This type of scenario is the kind of situation that reveals errors in theories simply by establishing a situation in which the two people can use the exact same theory yet predict opposing results (the station vs the train). The Relativity theory fails its very purpose.

The options for resolve are NOT “Newtonian” vs “Relativity”. Those were simply the last two with which you are familiar. To me such is like proposing Heliocentricism vs Geocentrism. Neither is entirely correct even though within the limits of measure long ago, they each “appeared to be” correct.

The issue is not whether there is an objective universe. The issue is consistency in prediction, coherency. If a theory causes two people to predict incoherent results, the theory is incoherent and thus is not “true” despite how accurate it might seem for a while.

Light is something that can be sent from one person to another unsuspecting person and cause measurable results gained by both people. Thus light is something independent of both the sender and the receiver other than being able to be sent and received.

Specific flaws were made in establishing the notion that the speed of light must always appear to be the same constant. But it is pointless to try to discuss such errors if it can’t be agreed that the theory fails. It would be like arguing that Christianity has an error in a scripture when its advocate cannot admit to any flaw.

Religions are not for dispensing truth, but for persuading into compliance, whether for good or bad.

The idea of light being independent of its source came from a theory that was deemed erroneous (whether it really was or not). Lorentz’s aether theory is what proposed the independence of light’s propagation. That part of his theory has been proven to be true by both empirical and logic methods. But the proposal that the propagation of that same light would be dependent upon the lights destination would seem a bit absurd, yet that is what Relativity is actually proposing.

But more importantly, it is by considering the different possible theories (not merely the one handed to you) that you can resolve this puzzle in such a way that both observers would predict the same result and thus serve the purpose that theories are intended to serve.

Every theory throughout man’s history has been wrong, it stands to reason that the trend has not changed. The reason is because of those who refuse to think without emotional interference. And I am not proposing that be changed. I am merely seeing how true it really is and interested in the prospects concerning those who can think more clearly even in today’s “oncoming dark age”.

This scenario indicates that the propagation speed of the light cannot actually be dependent upon the observer’s perspective, because in considering that theory, a contradiction arises. So explore the other options.

“What if it really wasn’t? What might bring a consistent prediction by both parties?”

Be the theorist, not merely the repeated meme.
Discover the NEXT theory “before the light” of the next dawn.
But the speed with which it reaches you really does depend upon you in this case.
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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Wed Nov 13, 2013 3:21 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
My issue has been with honesty, which is to say the methods used to produce arguments and responses. Perhaps a certain degree of indirectness or withholding is needed by the RM-ist in the dissemination of RM. This is partially the case with VO, as well. A leap of faith is required, initially, to get the subject out of the old (broken/limited/incorrect) state of thinking and “feeling” (motive-potential).

Considering time dilation effects as measured by science, this seems not to conflict with RM (or with VO) in the sense that affects are subject to PtA, always, and are the emergence of PtA’s; if one sufficiently alters PtA and “the situation” in which affects coalesce, those affects must change.

If then the situation were altered adequately from another situation, and the two situations were then brought together again, the affects in one might not “match up” with those in the other, even if prior to the alteration they had “matched up”.

SR is not saying that “laws of nature” are actually changing (and where it does say that space/time is “warping” that is just a mystification and improper use of language, of course), it is proposing that things like velocity and acceleration (relative movements, which are perhaps accounted for in RM as changes/influences of affects to other affects) can affect those laws, and that those changes/affections can be “permanent” in the matter which was changing. To me, this makes good sense within RM, given that matter/particles are like the memories of affects, and affects are given by the PtA/situations in which they form and exist.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Fri Nov 22, 2013 11:33 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Actually;
Einstein 1911 wrote:
The author unjustifiably stated a difference of Lorentz’s view and that of mine concerning the physical facts. The question as to whether length contraction really exists or not is misleading. It doesn’t “really” exist, in so far as it doesn’t exist for a comoving observer; though it “really” exists, i.e. in such a way that it could be demonstrated in principle by physical means by a non-comoving observer.[18]
—Albert Einstein, 1911
That was enough to allow those who love to mystify to declare that “space really does bend and is responsible for physical effects due to that bending”. He was stating that it “really” exists in the sense that you will perceive it that way when you try to measure it. His simultaneity issue is similarly merely a perception.

And prior to that, in his published theory, he stated;
Einstein 1905 wrote:
Examples of this sort, together with the unsuccessful attempts to discover any motion of the earth relatively to the “light medium,” suggest that the phenomena of electrodynamics as well as of mechanics possess no properties corresponding to the idea of absolute rest. They suggest rather that, as has already been shown to the first order of small quantities, the same laws of electrodynamics and optics will be valid for all frames of reference for which the equations of mechanics hold good.1 We will raise this conjecture (the purport of which will hereafter be called the “Principle of Relativity”) to the status of a postulate, and also introduce another postulate, which is only apparently irreconcilable with the former, namely, that light is always propagated in empty space with a definite velocity c which is independent of the state of motion of the emitting body. These two postulates suffice for the attainment of a simple and consistent theory of the electrodynamics of moving bodies based on Maxwell’s theory for stationary bodies. The introduction of a “luminiferous ether” will prove to be superfluous inasmuch as the view here to be developed will not require an “absolutely stationary space” provided with special properties, nor assign a velocity-vector to a point of the empty space in which electromagnetic processes take place.

The theory to be developed is based—like all electrodynamics—on the kinematics of the rigid body, since the assertions of any such theory have to do with the relationships between rigid bodies (systems of co-ordinates), clocks, and electromagnetic processes. Insufficient consideration of this circumstance lies at the root of the difficulties which the electrodynamics of moving bodies at present encounters.
But;
A) Rigid bodies do not exist, nor can they
B) The stationary frame, (the “metaframe”) actually is necessary and not “superfluous” unless you merely want an estimate.
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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Thu Nov 28, 2013 3:53 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
How do you define the meta-frame if indeed it cannot actually “exist” in the sense that affects exist? And how does the MCR and the speed of affect relate to the meta-frame?

Meta-frame seems almost like an assumption we make, like the idea of non-existence; having the idea is necessary for the purposes of logic and understanding, but the idea never refers to anything that actually exists or could ever exist. Almost like the number zero, then… zero affect is literally impossible since “existence is affect”, but the concept of zero affect seems to define the meta-frame, and this defined concept would perhaps be necessary as part of calculations to determine physical values in RM.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Thu Nov 28, 2013 11:53 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Capable wrote:
How do you define the meta-frame if indeed it cannot actually “exist” in the sense that affects exist?
As you say, the meta-frame is the concept of absolute nothingness in the same way that 0 means none. Note that even in Relativity, zero is zero for everyone, moving or not. The Lorentz equations do not make zero into anything but zero. And that zero value is a necessary reference from which real values arise even though absolute zero can never exist. Likewise, the metaframe is a necessary reference frame wherein not merely number values don’t exist, but truly nothing exists including any and all substances. And likewise, that absolute nothingness is common for all people, all perspectives, and all universes.

RM:AO is built from that absolute nothing reference frame, the “meta-frame”. There can be very many perspectives and ways of seeing things from above, but from RM:AO’s metaframe there can be only one view looking back up. Convert any perspective into RM:AO and then convert that into any other perspective you want and it will translate accurately. The motion of the observer becomes irrelevant.

Similarly when translating one computer language into another, a meta-language is usually used. Language A gets converted into language M and then language M gets translated into any and every language. In the early 80’s I was inspired to design my own meta-language for that purpose and really, really, should have, but didn’t. The meta-language is never used directly, so in a since, it doesn’t exist. But it is a common reference for all computer languages.

Every mind also has a type of meta-language involved in every thought process. And in every mind that meta-language is exactly the same even though the output; spoken language, pictures, motions, and so on are all different for different people.

Every understanding must have a fundamental reference that serves as its ontologically defined basis. Current physics uses EM fields, gravity fields, particles, bendable space, and so on. RM:AO uses absolute nothingness, absolute infinity, potential to affect, and affect from which all things arise.

Capable wrote:
and this defined concept would perhaps be necessary as part of calculations to determine physical values in RM.
Exactly.

Capable wrote:
And how does the MCR and the speed of affect relate to the meta-frame?
I’m not sure what you are asking. The opposite of absolute nothingness is absolute infinity (or rather absolute infinite mass). That is the polar opposite reference which causes the MCR to “exist” (conceptually and physically). All of reality must exist between absolute zero and absolute infinity because neither of those can exist and nothing can exist outside of those. In single cardinality physics those are accepted as merely zero and infinity. So in physics, you and all things exist midway between zero and infinity.

In RM:AO higher and lower cardinalities are also used. In RM:AO you exist between one infinitesimal and infA (the first order cardinality of infinity). Any change in potential (“affect”) that requires more than an infA amount of change within an infinitesimal amount of time (the MCR) cannot achieve it and thus the affect is delayed in time causing inertia, something that cannot freely move. It is from that occurrence that all matter forms and without which the universe could be nothing but an ocean of EMR.

Last edited by James S Saint on Fri Nov 29, 2013 10:37 am; edited 1 time in total
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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Fri Nov 29, 2013 10:36 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Rational Metaphysics ≡ Definitional Logic + Science Methodology

Science cannot tell you what is true, only what is demonstratively false.
Rational Metaphysics tells you only what is true, not what might be false.

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PostSubject: Re: Rational Metaphysics Wed Jan 22, 2014 9:07 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
James S Saint wrote:

As you say, the meta-frame is the concept of absolute nothingness in the same way that 0 means none. Note that even in Relativity, zero is zero for everyone, moving or not. The Lorentz equations do not make zero into anything but zero. And that zero value is a necessary reference from which real values arise even though absolute zero can never exist. Likewise, the metaframe is a necessary reference frame wherein not merely number values don’t exist, but truly nothing exists including any and all substances. And likewise, that absolute nothingness is common for all people, all perspectives, and all universes.

Do you suggest that the meta-frame is accessible from within the universe? That if we ‘move enough stuff out of the way in an area of the universe/dig deep enough “within”’ we will be touching that which exists outside of the universe? That is to say, if the entirety of reality is only this universe of familiar (and maybe yet to be discovered material and field) matter and energy and fields that swirls in its quantum and classical paradigms we term the universe, exists in an infinite in all direction spatial vat of absolute pure nothingness, and that though even space itself may be an energetic manifold that makes it a lot more of a somethingness then nothing, it can be pierced to come across the true nothingness that lies beneath?

Now, if that is true, I still think Einstein would be correct in implying that, not only is there no way for us to consistently use that meta frame as a post of measurement, but, I suppose semi related to that statement, everything we do and can measure, is not of the meta nothingness, but of something, and it is all moving, thus all measurements of this stuff will be relative to their and the measurers motion.

And I saw you guys may have been discussing length and time contraction before. I personally think length contraction results from optical illusion. And I think time contraction results from mathematical symbolism of the concept of ‘time’. Which is the measurement of stuff, and how that stuff changes, how its energy decays, or vibrates related to other forms of energy. I believe the concept of time dilation has to do with the decreased amount of stuff an object can do if it reaches the finish line in a race first. lol, though I really dont know, because I feel that it is said objects that move faster experience more time, this is something I cant grasp and therefore agree with yet. If we imagine 2 cars racing on a flat road, they are racing 1 mile. 1 car constantly goes 100 miles an hour (represents a particle, or object, or space ship approaching the speed of light), the other car constantly goes 1 mile an hour. Mark, get set, go. They will travel the same distance of space, but take different amounts of time, the faster car will experience less time in that event of a shared history, in that event the faster car will ‘age less’ because it will have completed the task faster. What am I failing to grasp with time dilation? I have seen the videos of the photon clocks and such.

Also, with the idea of cryogenic freezing of bodies. Everything remains preserved, as if ‘time has stopped, or avoided’, the energy cannot decay, its vibration slowed. If they can be revived in 1,000 years, to the conscious observer it would be as if a second has passed (if they were not consciously dreaming for examples purposes), in affect, time traveling into the future.

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PostSubject: Forms of the Self (—toward a value physics) Sun Jul 10, 2016 12:35 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
The self is “something that is having an experience”, the “having” is in the “being a self”. Self is like an extra category that got added on top of everything else going on experientially, a super-unity kind of memory, and a limit. The limit is functional as what falls within vs. outside of the limit, which translates into what we experience consciously and what unconsciously affects us. Becoming more self-aware means converting more unconsciousness into consciousness, but it also means becoming aware of how this conversion process poses limits to both consciousness and unconsciousness, which leads to inner laws as categorical differences within progressive self-awareness.

Forms of the self include all feelings, motive-inclinations and reactions, beliefs and cognitive sets, methods of reasoning and application of heuristics and algorithms, and memories. Memories are contents of consciousness that become forms of consciousness, that become forms to a given moment of consciousness. Methods of reasoning and application of heuristics and algorithms are hard-wired genetic or social tendencies to process information in certain ways, favoring certain values over others. Beliefs and cognitive sets are like memories, they are contents that become forms, only not merely memory contents but active vitalizing contents of the present moment of consciousness, an emergent combination of memory and methods of reasoning. Motive-inclinations and reactions are externalizing drives to act by locating the energy of conscious experiences and factors of experience and discharging it from those locations, causing it to immediately animate the body somehow. And lastly, feelings are collections of proprioceptive self-sensation of various physiological changes that occur in repeatable, stable patterns in the presence of certain stimuli, either physical stimuli, mental stimuli, abstract or ideal stimuli, real or imagined stimuli, including even stimuli we aren’t even aware that we are present to.

Feelings are the closest to what we call emotions, since an emotion is a reconstitution of a chain of meaning with respect to feelings; feelings are not only collections of self-sensations of physiological changes occurring in repeatable, stable patterns but also include the further meaning that is attached to those feelings, what is technically not included in the feeling and acts as an external content to it, a content that can be variable from one person to another or from one moment to another in the same person. That external content is a phenomenology that is rooted socially-historically as pure meanings prescient to human being and as just the Fact of such meanings, which pure being of the meaningful is technically what we mean when we speak of emotions; emotions are this being plus the feelings (as defined above) that constitute the emotion in time and space. The emotion in space is the plurality of feelings structural to an emotion; the emotion in time is the relation between the spatial components and the phenomenological meaningful/Factual.

There is no “one self”, the self is a bunch of various, fluid changing, and categorically different kinds of experiences, structures and tendencies that are all co-occurring together in a body. The mind is a crystallization of these sort of co-occurring aspects in the body coupled with relations to truths (meanings/Facts), while the self is a crystallization of those aspects, experiences, structures, etc. which are formative for the mind. Without a mind there is no self, without a body there is no mind.

The self is plural and multitudinous, hence why so much religion and psychopathology and philosophy are all focused on simplifying the self’s self-experience as the many forms of the self seen in a narrower range than they actually exist in. The supposed value is to simplify things so that a “one self” is able to appear; this is faulty logic, since the self is never one self and is always “many”, and it is always the case that this “many” is emergently producing a semblance of a One. One-ness is operational, derivative, illusory, and stabilizes the plurality of the many, but the one-ness can never replace the many, no matter how much Buddhist meditation one does, no matter now much insanity and sado-masochistic pain and criminality one engages in, and no matter how much Nietzsche one reads. The self is the self, and the many is the many, and the “one” is this “many is the many” and nothing besides. Therefore those above methods of attempting to simplify into one-existence the forms of the self are simply secondary consequences of the “one as the many as many” attempting to further self itself into existence out of its own plurality, which plurality it must end up dismissing and contradicting, resisting for the sake of an emergent self become “conscious” to itself. The conscious self that lacks understanding of the nature of the self and of the nature of the forms of the self is going to be driven by inclinations to resist and fight against its own plurality in order to stabilize its conscious image of itself, since that image lacks a more accurate understanding of what the self really is.

Every form of the self “orbits” every other form of the self; there is shared gravity; every “many of the many” in the self values others in terms of itself and self-values itself in terms of its relations to the others, thus can only indirectly self-value itself in terms of the whole of which it is a part. The whole does not exist in the same way that parts exist, therefore the parts are faced with a categorical limit beyond which they typically cannot pass. Each form gives gravity to the other forms to which it relates, and each form is pulled and pushed by each other form to which it has formed a relation. The idea of the will to power is here, but the true reality of the self is not located in the emergent will to power that appears and acts as if it were a One, but rather is the true reality in the forms of the self, in the constitutive experiences, perspectives, tendencies, feelings, aspects, forms, contents, bodies, histories, all of the smaller more singular entities that swirl together in collective orbit of self-relation in order to give rise, out of that activity, to the phenomenon of the self.

A lesson for philosophers, then: the self cannot dissolve itself in the forms out of which it is composed, since those forms cannot dissolve themselves in the self which they ultimately give rise to, for they give rise to it; neither can the self take possession of its forms and simplify itself into singular existence beyond the mandate of its forms, for the self is only the plurality of its forms and nothing besides. All attempts to either of these methods are merely psycho-philosophical methodologies of the phenomenology of what it means to be a self as the plurality of the forms of the self, the “many as many”, and therefore such attempts are always secondary, partial, and act as limitations of the conditions out of which they come and which the act cannot know, as a kind of banality that seeks to live as pure error, which ultimately and always in the end is not possible.

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PostSubject: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Sun Jun 19, 2016 4:53 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Ideas are simple. Use words sparingly to denote ideas, unless you’re writing fiction. Is philosophy fiction? Is Science fiction?
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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Sun Jun 19, 2016 5:10 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Truth is at once simple and infinitely complex; entities tend to integrate only that to which they feel akin. Most people confronted with delicate philosophical reasoning across several pages will be repelled, unable to integrate, digest. The silly ones among them will project their failure on the writer, and assume that, because they could not appreciate, the text is simply ‘too complex’.

Another matter is elegance. Some philosophers were able to convey complex idea in rather simple terms. Problem with that is that their ideas were usually misunderstood - simplified by simpler minds.

Personal: a problem is that in my own mind, VO is a logic that is beyond simple; it is entirely obvious. It is in fact so clearly the case that it applies everywhere that, to put it into words, is already making it far more complicated than it is. And yet, the implications of its application are so vastly complex that the brain starts producing neural connections at the mere anticipation of working it through.

Simplicity for the sake of a pleasant read or an easy ‘ah yes true!’ is an epicurean taste, unrelated to intellectual conscience.


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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Sun Jun 19, 2016 6:02 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
We disagree then. Some philosophers are romantics; I am not one of them.

Ideas entertain me or not, epicurean if you must insult.

Remember, thoughts are my addiction. Most thoughts are fleeting. Most ideas fizzle. Unnecessarily long reads blow.

Intellectual conscience comes across as snobbery. I am not one of them either.

If keeping ideas simple offends your sensibilities, I’ll keep my simplicity to myself.
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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Sun Jun 19, 2016 9:38 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
That’s it?

All you have to say is that you don’t like long texts? It seems like a waste of time for the both of us.

Feel free to make a point. Be as concise as you must.
It’s strange to be insulted that someone who hosts a forum for prolific writers does not agree with your OP.


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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Sun Jun 19, 2016 10:01 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Specifications on how prolific one ought to be is logical in your eyes? You have issues with my not feeding your mind enough?

I was asked here. Obviously, in error by “prolifictariats.”
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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Mon Jun 20, 2016 6:13 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Quote :
Specifications on how prolific one ought to be is logical in your eyes?

Does this contain reference to something in particular? I can’t find it.

You may have expected me to lick your ass because you showed up. Sorry about that. That’s not how we do things here.


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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Mon Jun 20, 2016 7:10 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
No offense - Im just making it clear that diplomacy goes out the door as soon as you step into this place. Only merit counts here.

At the very least I assume that you understand that merely stating a preference for short texts does not qualify on any level as philosophy.

None of the regular posters here puts any stock in controlling their temper. If you cant enjoy that, if you prefer the backhanded insinuations common on other forums then feel free to leave.

Im still hoping there is something you can add to this place. Fortunately I have no problem with short texts.


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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Mon Jun 20, 2016 8:07 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
My point was simplicity keeps logic obvious. K.I.S.S.

My terms at this time: Don’t play dumb. Don’t make me cranky. Kissing of my ass must occur once every blue moon.

Wading through a shit-ton of text is a waste of my patience, ensuring crankiness.
Not answering my questions is playing dumb which causes immediate crankiness.

Your terms?
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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Mon Jun 20, 2016 3:34 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Hi-D wrote:
Is philosophy fiction? Is Science fiction?

What if I say yes?

viewtopic.php?f=1&t=175698


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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Mon Jun 20, 2016 3:36 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
My terms: balls.

I don’t care about commentaries. I care about attempts to alter the course of evolution.

Nothing in genetic biology is simple. Neither is philosophy capable of operating on simple principles.

+To think means to risk ones animal nature.+

Is that simple enough?


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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Mon Jun 20, 2016 5:21 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
"My terms: balls.

I don’t care about commentaries. I care about attempts to alter the course of evolution.

Nothing in genetic biology is simple. Neither is philosophy capable of operating on simple principles.

+To think means to risk ones animal nature.+

Is that simple enough?"-FC

Your stance on one’s animal nature?
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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Mon Jun 27, 2016 4:15 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
FC,

A reply to my question in the above post would be helpful. Also what does hi-jacking the universe mean?
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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Tue Jun 28, 2016 7:24 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Do you mean this?

Quote :
Your stance on one’s animal nature?

I dont mean to be a dick, but I honestly have no idea what you’re asking me.

Perhaps mylady would consider using a few more words?

At least try to make your thoughts discernible somewhat.


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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Tue Jun 28, 2016 8:44 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Is being human, the physical being, all you essentially are? Then, what’s going on in genetic biology that would lead to your next statement about “thinking risks one’s animal nature”? Another question from above~hi-jacking the universe meaning what? When you have time, will you finish my astrology chart reading?
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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Thu Jun 30, 2016 6:09 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Nevermind about the natal chart expansion I requested. Busy reading the chart myself. You were very kind in what you revealed.
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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Fri Jul 01, 2016 5:08 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Hi-D wrote:
Is being human, the physical being, all you essentially are?

All we are is the whole life.
We’ve got a weird notion of physicality. There is no such thing, science has revealed this a hundred years ago, as an ‘object’. There are only relativistic quanta. Real substance is always process, never ‘stuff’. ‘Stuff’ is just a delay of process.

Process, on the other hand, could be made of god knows what. My solution is that it is made of valuing, which is ultimately the only verifiable thing - what Ive basically done is converted the human mind to the universe.

In any case, what we experience that we are, is mostly what we are, I should say. Our body is physical. We live in a physical world. We are physical. But that means we are processes that intertwine with changing arrays of trillions of other processes at all times.

Quote :
Then, what’s going on in genetic biology that would lead to your next statement about “thinking risks one’s animal nature”? Another question from above~hi-jacking the universe meaning what? When you have time, will you finish my astrology chart reading?

I mean that the coherence of the instincts, those reactions about which we dont think, for which we do not prepare, is at risk of being disturbed once we start thinking. This does not mean that we sacrifice our animality, but that it becomes much more difficult to be a functional, happy animal.

Regarding the chart - it was in public, I’m not about to put someones soul-dirt out there for the trolls - but what I said must have been sincere.


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PostSubject: Re: Ideas: Complexity Simplified Fri Jul 01, 2016 10:59 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Once, you wrote that you made your own soul. What is your soul and how did you make it? This is serious business to me. Using your balls, start a thread with your explanation.


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PostSubject: Hypothesi indeterminatum. Sun Feb 26, 2012 3:01 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I created this fallacy when reading Charles Sanders Peirce. I call it “hypothesi indeterminatum.”

He used it to vindicate the existence of God, but I realized it could be used in a quite contrary way.

“The hypothesis of God is a peculiar one, in that it supposes an infinitely incomprehensible object, although every hypothesis, as such, supposes its object to be truly conceived in the hypothesis. This leaves the hypothesis but one way of understanding itself; namely, as vague yet as true so far as it is definite, and as continually tending to define itself more and more, and without limit.”

When I say “There is a gold nugget at the bottom of my coffee cup” the object of the conception, a gold nugget, is contained in the hypothesis. This conception “gold nugget” is defined, and the hypothesis aims to elaborate its definition, namely through the determination of rather or not it is in fact at the bottom of coffee cup. For this reason the hypothesis is either true or false.

When I say “There is a God” this is very different. The object of the conception, God, is said to be infinite and is therefor undefinable. The object of the conception is not contained in the hypothesis. That means there is no element of truth or falsehood to it. Not only can you not determine rather it is true or false, it simply doesn’t have truth or false value. Saying “There is a God” is the same as saying “drgdgadgfrg” ie. gibberish, or speaking a line from a poem. It doesn’t have any conceptual value, ie. truth or falsity. At best the statement expresses a feeling within the person speaking it, while in the worst case it amounts to mere gibberish.

In order for a hypothesis to be true or false, the hypothesis must contain the object of its conception within it. To contain it, the object must be first of all finite and second of all, at least some number of its finite attributes must be known and recorded. The true or false value is merely an elaboration of that object of the conception. In the first example I gave, the fact that a gold nugget is found or not found at the bottom of my coffee cup is attached, after the determination, to the object of the conception as another one of its finite attributes, ie. in addition to a gold nugget’s chemical component, weight, etc. This extension of the attributes is “understanding.” An infinite object cannot be conceptualized, and cannot be contained by any hypothesis which concerns it. Therefor its attributes cannot be elaborated, nothing about it can be understood, and no true or false value can be realized with regard to it.

This is how I know there is no God. The concept God is gibberish. Several things may be dealt with by this fallacy, such as the freedom of the will, because it implies an infinite self-determination.


A sik þau trûðu

Nisus ait, “Dine hunc ardorem mentibus addunt,
Euryale, an sua cuique deus fit dira cupido?”

Have the gods set this ruling passion in my heart,
or does each man’s furious passion become his god?

  • Virgil.

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from time to time be present.-- Antonin Artaud
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PostSubject: Re: Hypothesi indeterminatum. Sun Feb 26, 2012 3:32 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
If you know Spinoza, this is a way of pointing out that an idea does not correspond to any ideatum, that an idea has no reality to which it corresponds, of which it is about.

In order to contain an infinite object within the conception of a hypothesis you would have to show a true interpositum between the idea and ideatum, which Spinoza could never demonstrate and did not believe existed, which is itself infinite in some way.

When I say “A gold nugget is at the bottom of my coffee cup” the ideatum, the object of the conception, is the gold nugget, and the idea, the thing that contains it within the hypothesis, is a finite series of attributes like the weight of the gold nugget, its color, etc. When I determine rather the hypothesis is true or false, another attribute gets added to it, and I “understand” something about it. The idea is not clarified, it is extended.

Perhaps a clever theologian could appeal to the “fee will” as itself an infinite interpositum which makes my ideating of the ideatum “God” possible and allows its infinite object to be contained in some hypothesis.


A sik þau trûðu

Nisus ait, “Dine hunc ardorem mentibus addunt,
Euryale, an sua cuique deus fit dira cupido?”

Have the gods set this ruling passion in my heart,
or does each man’s furious passion become his god?

  • Virgil.

It is not opium which makes me work but its absence, and in order for me to feel its absence it must
from time to time be present.-- Antonin Artaud
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PostSubject: Re: Hypothesi indeterminatum. Sun Feb 26, 2012 5:46 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Your argument also strikes me as quite close to ignosticism, the notion that before we begin talking about this God, its properties or its truth or falsity we need to know what we mean by “God”. Ignosticism simply states that this word really doesn’t mean anything at all, and even if it does mean something to an individual, there is really no attempt made to relate this or communicate this sufficiently with others. When people use the word “God” they have no idea what they mean, nor do they really care to. Of course a whole host of vague associations pops into mind, infinite, all-knowing, whatever. But the limitless, infinite nature of these supposed attribuites, as you say, negates the entire conceptual value of the notion altogether.

At best we can say that the notion of God functions within the consciousness and its system/s of concepts and meanings as a sort of regulative feature, a symbol/image mediating with respect to meaning and either emotive value or social function/expectation, or both. In other words, when a certain situation is constructed in such and such a way, the consciousness invokes the symbol-image of “God”, an empty concept, in order to address or “solve” (ignore, will-away) an otherwise problematic aspect of that situation or moment of experiential consciousness.

At face value this functional role of the God-concept is not “illogical” per se, since it is utilized to more or less successfully navigate situational/experiential problems with a degree of success. Of course the notion IS highly irrational as a concept, and as you say, not even rising to the level of possible truth or falsehood. One must question the psychological need so common among humans to make use of such ‘empty concepts’ in the face of the possibility of actual thinking.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Hypothesi indeterminatum. Sun Feb 26, 2012 5:57 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
The “idea” of God is incoherent, ie. is not an idea. I agree though, it helps people navigate experiential problems… It only does that though, because people are not able to understand the nature of their experiential problems. When they use the word God they have an unconscious conception of something that might actually be meaningful, but the only thing they can consciously produce is non-ideational god-speak. In order to clarify their problem, they have to apply the fallacy I just described to their entire philosophy, gradually annihilating anything that distorts or renders impossible the determination of truth and falsehood.


A sik þau trûðu

Nisus ait, “Dine hunc ardorem mentibus addunt,
Euryale, an sua cuique deus fit dira cupido?”

Have the gods set this ruling passion in my heart,
or does each man’s furious passion become his god?

  • Virgil.

It is not opium which makes me work but its absence, and in order for me to feel its absence it must
from time to time be present.-- Antonin Artaud
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PostSubject: Re: Hypothesi indeterminatum. Sun Feb 26, 2012 5:59 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Basically when people don’t know what they’re talking about with regard to a problem, they make up an infinite object like free will or God and use it as a placeholder. When they figure out what they’re talking about they go back and apply new attributes to this placeholder, which becomes more or less a symbol or sign, but is still not an idea, and cannot ever be, because it is impossible to contain conceptually in a hypothesis.

At this point I would implore those who use such signs to simply take the attributes they have retroactively added to them, and make up an actual concept which inherently includes that set of attributes so that it can be used in different hypotheses without incurring the fallacy I demonstrated, ie. so we can talk about it rationally. Thus free will would become simply will, God would become the idea of absolute or objective good, etc.


A sik þau trûðu

Nisus ait, “Dine hunc ardorem mentibus addunt,
Euryale, an sua cuique deus fit dira cupido?”

Have the gods set this ruling passion in my heart,
or does each man’s furious passion become his god?

  • Virgil.

It is not opium which makes me work but its absence, and in order for me to feel its absence it must
from time to time be present.-- Antonin Artaud
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PostSubject: Re: Hypothesi indeterminatum. Sun Feb 26, 2012 6:18 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I can attack the idea of God in another way.

How can there be any unity of an infinite set of attributes? How can there be a unity of an infinite difference?

If there is no such unity among God’s infinite attributes, then it is impossible to speak of God because God has no particular being. God is not a particular thing. There is no commonality to unite his attributes and make him a specific entity. An infinite series of attributes cannot be applied to a single concept or entity, because it is impossible to derive a commonality from an infinite set of things. The larger the set of attributes the more difficult it is to find the commonality to unite them and thus derive a conception of a specific thing, with God it is impossible.


A sik þau trûðu

Nisus ait, “Dine hunc ardorem mentibus addunt,
Euryale, an sua cuique deus fit dira cupido?”

Have the gods set this ruling passion in my heart,
or does each man’s furious passion become his god?

  • Virgil.

It is not opium which makes me work but its absence, and in order for me to feel its absence it must
from time to time be present.-- Antonin Artaud
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PostSubject: Re: Hypothesi indeterminatum. Thu Sep 08, 2016 10:44 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
This fallacy you mention here also applies to the analytic/metaphysical thinkers i have been talking with from time to time. They want to have their cake and eat it too, as you put it they want to speak about something without actually speaking about it, without being clear. This single fallacy seems to be a critical point in these analytic/metaphysical structures of thought.

When we speak about something, we convert a portion of reality into a statement which just means we create conceptual objects to represent something about reality, anything at all we want to know or talk about, and render those concepts in language somehow. When, for example, someone tells me that they accept the meaning of “ice” and “melt” and fully stipulate to all the determinate chemical, molecular etc. properties and laws that are what those mean, but then turn around and say that you could put an ice cube in an 10,000 degree oven and it might not melt, there is a deep confusion going on in their thinking.

A further confusion is forced into the open when you press them more, because they might admit, as this guy did to me tonight, that the ice cube will always melt in that oven, but nonetheless this isnt determinate or necessarily so because the ice cube contains in its “agency” the “power” to not melt; namely, the ice cube sometimes doesnt melt, therefore this fact is mistaken by the metaphysical/analytic as if the ice cube possesses some intrinsic capacity of not-melting which could manifest at any time. They have divorced the meaning of “not melting” from their operational use of the linguistic expression for the (now empty) concept of “not melting”, and they do this because it allows them to seem like they are keeping contingency open against necessity.

And a still further confusion on their part: the admittance that even though if the ice didnt melt in the oven and we could always ask of the not-melted ice “why did it not melt?” they still claim this doesnt mean that determination/necessity is the case. I found a very nice way of cornering him on this: I asked “so if the ice doesnt melt, then why didnt it melt?” His answer: “The ice didnt melt because the ice contains the agent power of the capacity for not-melting.” I am absolutely fucking serious, that is exactly what this guy said. And he wasn’t some neophyte, he was somewhere high up in academia well-read on many books and current thinkers, versed in all the terminology and arguments, and yet deep down his mind is fundamentally broken in this way.

Someone should write a detailed treatise about how to fix these kinds of fallacies in people.

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PostSubject: The idiocy of analytic thinking Mon Feb 15, 2016 4:44 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Quote :
Kripke uses it as a concrete demonstration of (his interpretation of) Wittgenstein’s rule-following considerations, framing them as a skeptical paradox. The problem is, if you have never added together numbers higher than 50, all your additions are compatible both with taking “add” to mean “mathematical plus” and with taking “add” to mean “quus”. It may be that everyone asking you to add things together has really been meaning you to quus them all along, and you’ve been plussing them. It’s only when we deal with numbers over 50 that we start to see that plus and quus are different, and the question arises of which rule we are meant to follow when we are told to “add”, and we discover whether we have been following the same rule as everyone else. But more than that, in what way is it true that we have been quusing when they have been plussing, because in what have they following the plus rule rather than the quus rule? Not because of what they did, since what they did was compatible with both rules. And not because of what they thought, because it’s possible that they never even considered what they would do when dealing with numbers over 50 (have you ever consciously considered how you would answer 547+789? Maybe you would answer ‘5’. You probably wouldn’t, but that fact doesn’t come from what you have consciously thought before about what you would do in this situation). And of course you can’t try to explain by using other rules (like ‘x+y means give the yth successor of x’), because those rules are themselves subject to the same ambiguities, and indeed in the case of mathematical rules are just restatements of the problem in other words (‘the successor of x’ is no less ambiguous than ‘x+1’).
So how are we ever able to learn, and use correctly and in the same way as everybody else, rules that cover an infinite number of different circumstances, when we can only learn from a finite number of circumstances, and when an infinite number of eventually-conflicting rules are compatible both with our finite experiences and with any attempt to describe the rule in language?

What is analytic thinking? Essentially it is a deliberate removal of a given appropriate range of meaning/context and of ‘information’ from acts of consciousness, usually these acts of consciousness being what are called thoughts. The specter is raised that the analytic error could easily also apply to literal acts, not just speech (which is easy to see) but also behavior, movement, motivation, and feeling. The analytic method exemplifies a near-fundamental problem of human consciousness: the fact that we are capable of extracting objects rationally-perceptibly means that we can also extract from objects other objects within them (typical abstract-conceptual thinking) but which is also possible to objectify-extract away a critical component of that object, to “cut out the heart” of the object in our rational (or again, behavioral or otherwise) analysis and act. When the rational extraction yields the falsification of that from which the object extracted came, certain logical and psychological phenomena appear or become possible to appear as a result; one test of honesty and of the capacity for honesty is whether or not these newly-appearing phenomena are sensible to a mind and whether or not, if they are sensible, one responds to and prioritizes these phenomena. These are the signs of intellectual honesty which simply indicate the methodology of consciousness before the possibility of the presencing of an error. Over time the methodology here will become either more or less honest, which is to say more or less sensitive and self-directed toward error. The method of analytic thinking is based on the fact that the larger methodology with respect to how to approach and deal with possibly-sensible errors has over time cornered itself into a rut, wherein the fundamental error is repelled both in form and in the specifics of the given situation and problem, and what is most interesting is that as a result of this fact other facts appear: that the refusal of the fundamental error yields a proliferation of more superficial errors which gravitate to themselves their own ‘fundaments’, their own acting as if they were fundamental (not just to the erroneous analysis in question but to the form of such analyses, and even to analysis as such). In this way conception is broken apart and fragmented, and it becomes the task of the analytic thinker to attempt to “mend back together” these fragments, however he cannot do so for the simple reason that the breaking-apart itself is the very absence of that which would allow for the fragments to be brought back together. The psychological devolution and series of devolutions arising from the original fundamental error is unable to be recovered by any derivative order or end within that same series.

I have made it one of my tasks to analyze and expose analytic thought, although this is a somewhat depressing task and perhaps I could be concerned with greater things rather than mucking around like that. The reason I am interested however is because this analytical problem has infected, in the sense that I wrote about magical-pathological infection of triadic sign systems, much of philosophy today. One reason for the easy spread of this infection is related to how well analytic thinking is able to function smoothly within capitalist systems, not the least of which being how well it acts to further and lend an image of credibility (threshold-ignorance vis a vis pre-emptive catalytic stasis) to empiricism and scientific work today. The philosophical vacuum in which such work takes place is able to be ignored more effectively by the addition of a little “analytic philosophy”, which demonstrates one of the effectivenesses of the original error of analytic method, and also as psychological type.

I am becoming more convinced that pathological personalities in philosophy, and in science (which is to say, in the deliberate absence of the philosophical qua intellectual effort) are caused by this analytic infection. The infection may exists even if the awareness to identify it with analytic thought is not there, and even if the person themselves has no idea what analytic thought is – such an awareness would be required to understand their fundamental, original error from which they are vainly trying to extricate themselves. The mind is inherently, naturally noble and always attempts to right itself, like a spinning top that actively fights gravity and friction, but the lack of proper tools and the continued presence of harmful and insane environments (think ILP) makes recovery effectively impossible. So the error continues to divide and propagate, leading to the emergence of whole worlds of psychological motivations and incentives to cover over errors either as form or content and to painting-over this cover with new images of meaning and thought. In the example quoted above, this painting-over as image has taken the form of the possibility of infinite deduction inherent to speculative reason as such. In other words: the analytic trick is to conceive an image for themselves (i.e. a “paradox” or logical problem) in which their own thought is reflected back to them under the form of impossibility for that thought to recognize itself in that reflection, thereby further obscuring the operations that lie in possibility for touching upon and resonating with one of those ‘errors that conceives its own fundament’. By making refusal structural, the analytic thinker ensures that every act of approach will slip away into void, thus the world of images of the refusal is extended over time to include multiple and different kinda of contents capable of arresting voids within simulations of pre-existing ‘relations of meanings’. It is perhaps in those relations of meanings, the justification per se of the image-world as such, where the only hope for recovery from analytic infection resides.

Please contribute anything you can to the critical understanding of analytic thinking and ways to both avoid and correct it. Its structure and operation must be exposed to help save philosophy at this point ; although philosophy itself could never be affected by idiocies such as are represented by analytic ‘thought’ there is the danger that new minds in the field become swept up within analytic pathology and become lost forever, rather than conversely had they discovered real philosophy and so become capable to contribute something to history and to the great human task.


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“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: The idiocy of analytic thinking Tue Feb 16, 2016 7:19 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
A noble task, but a very dirty one - the idiocy you so well expose is discouraging, it is rather hard, if not almost impossible to believe that there are people who take analytic philosophy seriously, and not as some sort of morose joke on the capacity for arbitrariness of the human brain.

Whenever I am confronted with analytic thinking I cringe and throw away the book or throw myself away from the screen or the conversation - or if in company I like to respect (as company) I smirk and whistle a bit, and make some visceral comment - that is to say, something Nietzsche, or Parodites might have said - a painful fact about consciousness. A glorious, true fact but something that carries to the heart and causes laughter and anguish and silence and stammering.

The idea that through the word as such, meaning can be found, derived or established, is such a fatally helpless impulse that I can only marvel at the distance that, apparently, exists between tradition and sanity - and I can not deny that belief in an omnipotent creator, as silly as this belief can be understood to be, is at least life-serving in some way, or can be made to be - whereas outright stupidity of belief in language-as-such as creator is neither life-serving nor in any way redeemable. It is not even life-destroying. It is only life-deflating and brings about a virtual absolution of the human mind from its origins. But perhaps this is the entry-key, Capable. Perhaps this weakness is so neutral in its will that it can only be taken up as an instrument.

Consider the world as a gigantic herd that is begging for direction. And consider its means of communication to be the purified absolution of being that is analytic philosophy as its consequences reverberate through the herd and tune the peoples ears to its demands and givens. Now then if you have control of the language that speaks such value-configurations, and if you have a slyness, admittedly, then… well then the possibilities are limitless.

“Possibility” - of what?
An aim, considered; one step further than prudent, ; - there is the possible thought of impregnating China, in order to force the west, by tougher aesthetic-ethical (‘higher self?’) competition, to overcome its feebleness, which allows it to take stock in the power of the word to astound the mind that is not up to the potential of grammar.

Semantically, China is Marxist; and what is more, in China, language is transmitted through means of directer sensory representation; their symbolic characters, of which there are several thousands, all representing more or less directly, at least recognizably their visual origin, their object.

It would be a challenge; One should learn much from the lands of the rising sun. Who knows what tools one may find to apply - and do what was set out - recreate language so as the represents the speculative ethics of Parodites’ 2011 language - the fact that language is itself an ethics is wonderful; that ethics is speculative is masterful.

Mastering life through language demands a master-language, which means a language that commands not only mans notions but also the way he arrives at them; his motions. The language might be seen as explicitly interactive. It may adapt violently to the person who speaks it.

A self-inserting or self-imposing movement that is able to cohere itself in the fabric of the usurped code. For example; Tatsumakisenpukyaku; this phrase among others, lingers in my memory because its origins had shaped for some years my mind, and strewn its seeds across the mind. Similarly, Nietzsche was able, and so was Kierkegaard, and all visceral philosophers, to scatter terms into the minds of man, and Marx was even able to cohere into the chaotic terms of man into a movement, violently chaotic and personable, particular to the extreme, in spite of or naturally rather as a counterbalance to the fact of its general application to radiant instincts that so often are give no mirror-receptor; no medium to cohere self-valuing, so that only raw instinct and flimsy social contracts can bring them into calm sustenance of the ideal… which creeps into the fibers of the soul of man, his speech.

Infuse, inseminate, inject, infect mans speech with the notions we hold high; the end not only justifies the means, the means have created the end. (Now the cyclops leaves the others and enters his cave and eats the last of Odysseus men. His lair must be kept clean.)


" The strong do what they can do and the weak accept what they have to accept. "

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PostSubject: Re: The idiocy of analytic thinking Wed Feb 17, 2016 4:14 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I too used to think about the creation of a new language, and then I realized that this was already taking place in what is called philosophy (good philosophy), and perhaps an interesting semi-parallel in modern “leet speak” and jargon/colloqualisms-like trends; these are like two opposing poles of development in which language is getting stretched and tested. Languages and organisms evolve, language is a technology of life, like eyes or a mobile body, these are all appendages and extensions of ‘the organism’, of consciousness/self.

The total neutrality of the analytic method, as you point out, I agree could be turned against analytic method and used for the ends of philosophy, indeed this is probably what is already happening and what always happens anyway— the elaboration of the technical means and various permutations of surface arrangements that are inevitably put to use by life and meaning, the surface bound to the depths it actively denies (and must deny, qua ‘surface’).

I don’t much try to break into analytic minds anymore, since I’ve tried this so many times to realize the futility there; but I was able to probe enough times and deeply to come to understand the structural nature of analytic thought, both cognitively and emotionally-psychologically. These analytics really have no objective self-view, nothing stands to them as a mirror reflecting back to them what they are, probably because the whole discipline has become so extensive and suffused with a pseudo-prestige and image of authenticity that respectability bestows. Plus the complex intellectualist-logical games played by analytics serve as endless fancies and distractions by which efforts they become convinced that what they are doing is synonymous with philosophy and though as such.

Psychoanalysis is good because it gets inside of the relationship between self and its externalizations, between meaning and word, act snd symbol. Phenomenology and existentialism are also implicitly structured with this in mind, hence their nobility among the various methods of philosophizing. Pragmatism, utilitarianism and positivism are all simply shades of the surface-elaborations that strive to conceive meaning in the void. A massive unification and corrective synthesis is needed to both analytically reveal the error of analytic thought as well as philosophically reveal the direct and real relationship that analytic method bears to real philosophy. That is basically my task, to contribute toward these two ends.

Philosophy rightly remains indifferent to analytic games, but that doesn’t mean large numbers of people including students aren’t tricked into those games, losing their soul in the process. I contend as I mention in the OP that all the various pathologies and errors of personality in either philosophers or otherwise could theoretically be traced to some form of “analytic assumption”, as you say the assumption that language as such yields meaning per se. This also ties into the error of modern capitalism, or rather this error of capitalism is one more derivation of merely analytic fallacy.

In terms of controlling or coordinating en mass the activities of countless people who blindly follow these errors, I am not so interested; what use trying to rule or control unintelligent herds that can’t even comprehend or be counted on for anything? I have no interest in trying to use the ignorance in people, my interest is in truth itself and in spreading truth as anti-ignorance as far as it can possibly permeate into people and the world. I personally also think that the desire or will to control and utilize ignorance or low, enslaved elements/people is another form of the “analytic error”, namely a kind of degeneration of hope and spirit into activities and supposed ends misaligned and categorically counter to that spirit and hope, which spirit/hope is only truth, after all.

If we use people then we capitulate to the very fact that they remain in a state of being able to be used like that; in other words, a ‘capitalization’ as opposed to a truth-movement. Perhaps a necessary endeavor to some degree, but not one I can reconcile to the means and ends of philosophy.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: The idiocy of analytic thinking Sat May 14, 2016 3:08 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Based on my sampling of “philosophers” I’ve talked to online over the last couple of years, and what I’ve read in articles, it seems that only 1-5% of these people understand how to think properly-- the rest are to some stage lost in the insanity that characterizes so-called analytic philosophy. The rare person who can clearly see and think through these convoluted, deliberately confusing and confounding “ideas” and “arguments” in this analytic philosophy usually doesn’t have much interest in analytic philosophy or in laying out its errors systemically to help correct the problems, usually because they have better things to be doing with their time.

The rest of 90%+ of philosophers are insane, meaning they think that idiocies like “if two things have the same name, and believe they are the same, then are they really the same?” actually counts as interesting philosophical work. You cannot reason with these people, simply because they have no working reason at all. I can see clearly into their reasoning and thought-process exactly where their insanity is, but there is seemingly no way to fix it.

Analytic philosophy has apparently won. It already dominates in US philosophy and it offers an approach that seals away a person from reality, creating a fake experience in place of truth and cutting off any possible routes of escape. I don’t have the energy or time to properly write out a clear program and explanation for how to help these people; I wish I did, and if I had perhaps an entire year of free unhindered work and space/time I am certain that I could achieve this task, by making a detailed study of analytic philosophies and breaking it down from the larger perspective, from the vantage of truth. But I don’t have that opportunity, and even if I did it most of these “philosophers” would remain happily ensconced in their little pseudo-intellectual non-realities, content with the hubristic vanity of their world-wide academic circle jerk as Bukowski called it.

So anyway, with that statement of facts laid out now, I declare that I will be devoting myself to more important matters, or at least to matters that interest me personally and for which I actually have enough space, time and energy to pursue and complete. I hope that someday another true philosopher is able and willing to expose this unprecedented madness that has infected modern philosophy so completely.


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“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: The idiocy of analytic thinking Mon May 16, 2016 5:15 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
On a similar note, I seem to have some pathological obsession with discussing philosophy with analytic thinkers… I think on some level I am trying to break through their insanity, I want to witness a miraculous transition on their part, from unreality to reality, or from lower reality to higher reality. I’ve never seen this occur, which maybe makes me even more obsessed somehow in looking for it.

These analytics are the most inhuman monsters you could ever meet. They have excoriated their own souls, in such a complete way that they have no recognition leftover whatsoever that this is what they have done.

The simple fact alone that this is possible is terrifying. Is this what academia is for now?


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“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: The idiocy of analytic thinking Mon May 16, 2016 5:41 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
There is a deep connection between “working” (employment) and analytic thinking. I don’t yet know all the full scope of the logic of this, but I know that it is based on suffering-made-value.

Employment presupposes suffering-made-value, otherwise typical employment/jobs would be impossible. This is categorically different than the kinds of corporeal or human-social sufferings we know are necessarily woven into the fabric of our human lives.

Analytic philosophy was produced as the attempt at justification of the suffering-made-value that became incidentally necessary for employment in the modern world. Anyone who is a “worker” (me included, of necessity I am afraid) and especially anyone who is a “full time worker” (again, unfortunately includes me) is necessarily and de facto “analyticized” to some or other degree in their philosophy and thought. This explains my observation in the previous post, my obsession with talking to analytic philosophers… I am unconsciously trying to work through and overcome this error in myself.

This is true (" Anyone who is a “worker” and especially anyone who is a “full time worker” is necessarily and de facto “analyticized” to some or other degree in their philosophy and thought") based on the simple fact that if one were totally free of the insanity-error of analytic philosophy, then employment/having a "job"would be absolutely, completely impossible.


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“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: The idiocy of analytic thinking Wed May 18, 2016 5:09 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
This is fucking brilliant.


" The strong do what they can do and the weak accept what they have to accept. "

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PostSubject: Re: The idiocy of analytic thinking Wed May 18, 2016 5:17 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
This is the most devastating insight.


" The strong do what they can do and the weak accept what they have to accept. "

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PostSubject: Re: The idiocy of analytic thinking Sat May 21, 2016 1:48 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Society has labels for people who are on either end of the extreme… on the one hand you have people who are not analyticized or very minimally so, society calls these people artists, or “mentally ill”; on the other side you have people who are maximally analyticized, society calls these people CEOs, senior managers, marketing consultants, etc. The labels correspond to whatever role in the world these different kinds of people are able to have by social sanction.

Most people are somewhere in the middle, and have a kind of inner war with their humanity. Technological rationality would like to reorganize that humanity of theirs into something “productive”, while that humanity resists this to whatever extent it can (usually only unconsciously/instinctively).

Maybe this war isn’t always bad, it does help define boundaries and isolate the scope and effectiveness of powers. If the world has become a giant “analytic” machine then humanity needs scores of people actively struggling with and translating this analyticization back and forth between their humanity, to the always only partial gain of either. The absolute polarity and difference between humanity (includes true philosophy) and analytic philosophy bends somewhat to the daemonic active inter-relation between the two, at least given the kind of world and societies we happen to inhabit at this present moment in time/history.

Human being (again including true philosophy) will ultimately succeed in re-inscribing this analytic trend back into the fold of truth, but imagine the sheer power and depth of being/life that would be needed to achieve this. The impulse to divide into artificiality and falsify for the sake of a convenient simplicity and psychological denial system is very potent, as alluded to by the quote in my signature right now. This is a great warring daemonism of self-valuing pushing being up into higher and more sophisticated tectonics. Make no mistake, the entire world is a massive hurricane; Jupiter’s red spot… a grand contesting of “wills” and natures, human being and the analytic chief among these powers. Based on what I see deep into truth, life and other people I would place my bets on human being, on this one particular mode of truth, which is by every manner of falsification and moral confusion/conflation presently attempting to win for itself a more active, immediate, authentic and ethical existence. All true work in art or philosophy (including politics) is working for this end, whether or not it realizes this fact-- but politics has a more difficult time of it, since the world-forms, the great machinery and weapons of war, come down hardest and first on the political.


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“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: The idiocy of analytic thinking Thu Sep 08, 2016 10:14 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I would like to update that, upon another long conversation with an analytic thinker, I can see the depth of their fallacious way of thinking.

Analytic metaphysics in particular here. The idea that we can divorce determination (necessity) from causation in order to rescue free will, is this other guy’s position. He thinks that causation is still meaningful without necessity and within contingency; his specific argument: “Things could always have been otherwise than they were, even if they are always the way they are and not otherwise; therefore causation is the case but so is contingency”. His ‘reasoning’ rested heavily on modal logical contortions.

I am not kidding. You can read an article he linked me too where some modern philosophers are talking about this: academia.edu/20883864/Causat … Your_Enemy

In this article they attempt to separate necessity out of causation, rather than accept that freedom and determinism are entirely compatible. This position of theirs rests on the idea of a fundamental contingency regardless of what actually takes place and why. This “and why” is even more significant of an error on their part, because they can accept all the logical, physical, natural laws, etc. reasons for why something happens, and accept that it will always happen like that, but will also still claim that it could have been otherwise due to the “agency power” within the thing itself which makes the not doing what it didnt do a contingent fact, contingent upon the ‘power of the agent’ because the agent has the “capacity” that might or might not be “freely realized”, and this is totally without regard to the logical or physical-material causes behind the thing or act in question.

Yeah. I am seriously not making any of this up.

The funny part is that in that article above, the authors dont even want to deal with the “compatibilist” idea that freedom and determinism-necessity are compatible, they just acknowledge that this is one possible argument but then say this argument isnt good enough because we want “real libertarian free will”, which is somehow “stronger” in their view than the “compatibilist” idea. Lol.

Ok I have reached my saturation point for this bullshit. Time for a cigarette.


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“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: The idiocy of analytic thinking Thu Sep 08, 2016 11:18 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
You know I actually made it halfway through that article I just linked. Go ahead and try it. This is what passes for high work in academic philosophy now.

There is barely even a single coherent argument anywhere in there; its full of endless “conclusions”, unacknowledged shifts of perspective and imprecise meaning of terms used, categorical fallacies, openly undefended assertions, and vague moralistic statements such as claiming that one thing is better than another without any criteria or further explanation of that.

Goddamnit.

What the fuck is wrong with the human species, that it can produce the following in the year 2016:

Quote :
The Mumford and Anjum account adds significantly to this view insofar as it offers an alternative account of causal production in which it involves a sui generis modality of tendency or dispositionality. Causes tend or dispose to their effects with varying degrees of strength in different cases. They often succeed in producing those effects but, even when they do so, they did not through any necessitation. Mumford and Anjum (2011: ch. 3) have an antecedent strengthening argument for this conclusion. A test of necessity is offered. Where A genuinely necessitates B, then as long as you have A, then still B even if C, for any C. In other words, you should be able to add anything else to the situation in which A occurs and you will still get B, if A really does necessitate B. This does not seem to be the case in natural causal processes, which can be prevented from realising their usual effects if something else – an interferer – is added. Hence, dehydration typically produces a headache: but not if a paracetamol is taken. Even where an effect is indeed produced, this form of argument still holds. Had some further factor, C, been added to the cause, it might well not have produced its effect, B. So even there, we cannot say that B was necessitated by its cause.

If you ever doubt your resolve against academic philosophy, just recall the above paragraph.


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“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: The idiocy of analytic thinking Wed Sep 14, 2016 4:59 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Analytic ‘philosophy’ is bullshit. Just wanted to make sure that was clear.

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PostSubject: How does ideology operate? Wed Sep 21, 2016 3:23 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
First I’ll turn to Zizek for a short introduction on this issue:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SkSV4xyKkds[/youtube]


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PostSubject: Re: How does ideology operate? Wed Sep 21, 2016 3:49 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
One of my working definitions of ideology lately has been to see ideology as the collapse of the self (or thought, or reason) into its contents. By this I mean something clear and very precise, but it’s a little difficult to explain in words; essentially what happens is that the mind, which always posits many ideas and concepts and operates by valuing these in various combinatory ways, stops that value-process at the level of contents-ideas in active combination and instead descends to the level of the contents of those concepts-ideas, as if a content in question were actually the concept and idea toward which it contributes. Ideology is well known to be the fact that thinking stops and “brute facts” are asserted in the place of any former or possible critique. Appeal to brute facts is anti-rational and opens the way for pathology to grip the mind because of how the content without its proper form (the proper form of a content is, in this case, that concept and idea toward which it contributes) immediately dissociates from any form “above” itself (forms in reason) and makes itself freely available to act as a surrogate form for other things, namely for other contents.

This is how a feeling can link directly into a pre-conceptual content in order to generate what looks like a concept and idea but is in fact nothing at all like a concept and idea, it only shares a superficial image with conception and likewise reason is impossible to replicate at that level of the pure image. This loss of reason is the form of the pathological, while the content of the pathological is simply whatever false content-links are directly forged at the pre-conceptual level. Thesw contents must still be grounded in something, so that lacking any rational conceptual structures in which to meaningfully participate they instead find a loose grounding in other contents, in direct associations of proximity and power.

The issue of proximity is easy enough to understand, but what about the issue of power? This power is a power of the false linkage to release another content (including a feeling) into direct expression extra-rationally or I should say pre-rationally. Suddenly the mind experiences a freeing of inner contents (feelings, inclinations, biases, justifications, images and memories, desires, etc.) directly and as if “by magic”, without any need for a rational order or meaning to it all. This form of subjectivity can become intoxicating, indeed it is the cause of many problems including religious insanity, trolling behaviors, and of course ideological thinking. This is what I mean by saying that the mind/thought/reason collapses into its contents: reason is suspended as being no longer useful or necessary since direct stimulation of various subjective-conscious contents of experience can be obtained simply by adhering to an open-ended, non-critical process of “mental ejaculation”. And it isn barely even mental, more like simply low-key immediate subjectivity experience with minimal context or extended meaning.

I see this kind of ideology at work in both the political left and right in the US. I see it in Trump, although I could side with Zizek and say that Trump is nowhere near as bad as someone like Cruz in whom this pathological ideology has become complete and reason completely silenced. In Trump at least there is some extension beyond the ideological sphere into the real world of meanings and reason, even though as far as I can tell those extensions are flimsy at best. Trump still had his reason but it is playing the role of servant to his ideological “purity”, and this purity of being entirely ideological is what is required to win votes from the right-wing side of politics now in the US (it also helps the left-wing to invoke pure ideologies, and Obama is a master at this; I believe Obama has rational structures extended from his ideology similar to how Trump does, in fact I think for Obama his ideological purity is actually a secondary function of that reasoning, yet he hides the reasoning and more often defers to the ideology sphere. Why? Because it works… Because as Zizek also said, most people do not want real democracy but to have the appearance of choice while also subtly being told how to vote; most people want to be able to act as if they do not know the harsh truths of the world, and democracy is like a large zone separating people from those truths. This is a “proper” function of democracy and Obama defers to this function, this is partly the cause for his evasions and lies and especially his use of ideology when he could instead have used reason. Trump and the politicos right wing, on the other hand, have abandoned this deferment to the proper role or democracy and instead decided to shove unwanted truths on people as a form of psychological breakdown and appearing to be a power-player. I would argue that it is because they have lost true power, by totally capitulating to pure ideology and abandoning reason as such, that now they are becoming the ones going for the shock value sucker punch to the gut approach).


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: How does ideology operate? Wed Sep 21, 2016 9:34 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
This descent into the pure contents of consciousness admits of degrees; as one begins the descent away from form and reason proper one first enters the ideological realm… if one keeps descending one becomes a religious or political fanatic of some kind, a true irredeemable ideologue… keep going still deeper into the contents as such, and one arrives at psychotic mental illness of delusional and hallucinatory schizophrenia.

As the contents of experience (experience’s many multi-part conditions) are progressively allowed to take over the central governing mechanisms of subjectivity-consciousness one becomes further detached from reason’s formal (speculative transcendental, ontologically driven) power and isolated contents and their pure often irreducible logic increasingly overdetermine the actualizing self. We all see things imaginatively that overlap our real sensory experience, we all hear voices in our head, we all have strange flashes of mad or paranoid or irrational thoughts, but proper rational formal consciousness keeps all that in check by blending it seamlessly into the larger subjectivity-patterns of hierarchical contents contributing to the meta-perspectives which in turn comprise true ideas and emotions (ideas are the summative meta-perspectivizing process of a certain kind of contents, emotions are that same process but for different kinds of contents).

With a descent too far into content as such (loss of reason) ideas and emotions both begin to break apart into their constitutive content-pieces. Ideology is technically a mild from of schizophrenia.

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PostSubject: Metaphysics of Freedom Mon Sep 26, 2016 12:17 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
We all know intuitively that we are absolutely determined in what we do, but knowing this doesnt mean we know what we “should” do before we do it, therefore we are thrust against the limit of our knowledge with respect to the intuition of those determinations which impose upon us in any given moment of thought, feeling or action, i.e. we gain the freedom of choice, which is a kind of self-apotheosis at the subjective level, a process of progressive understanding as peeling back layer upon layer of our ignorances… the necessity of making a “choice”.

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PostSubject: Christological Mon Oct 10, 2016 3:53 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I am going to take a term that Zizek uses at least once, Christological, and use it from now on to distinguish the logic of the Christian metaphysical from Christianity as religion or even from Christianity as historical event. The system of Christianity is different from the logic underpinning it, the system at best manifests this logic materially in the world and at worst just represents this logic indirectly as a sort of gesture or image.

Zizek’s point here was that the logic of Christianity is deeply Hegelian in how Christianity created a space for human meaning beyond the cultural symbolic order, beyond the dynamics of the family and beyond the state. Christ was this kind of radically contingent event, Christ as man, through which a larger metaphysical symbolic possibility was realized in so far as the contingency is required to allow the necessary “absolute” structure to function in real life; a distinction he makes here is between two forms of society and governance: the modern state of the rule of experts and technocratic bureaucracy, versus the older monarchies where experts existed more in the background and did the real work of understanding and crafting policies and actions for the king or leader figure to simply sign. He claims that Hegel’s point is that’s society needs an empty figurehead at the top in order to enact governance in a more human way, that the direct rule of experts or direct popular vote is s tyranny of positivity that can only work well when supplemented with the radically negative figure of the leader whose job is to fail to understand the policies and actions that he signs into law.

He uses a line from Lacan: “madness is not only the beggar who believes he is a king, it is also the king who believes he is a king.” This is profound. The real logic of necessity is only able to act as governance and intelligent actions and will if there is a kind of empty symbol for this action and will, because of the distance required between the true rationale behind an act and the act itself. The psychoanalytic term here is symbolic castration, which means the irreducible (in so far as we remain truthful as subjectivities) gap in subjectivity between what we are to ourselves, our inner experience and self, and what we are to others, our roles in society, the function we have to others and how others perceive us. I am not fully convinced that this gap is totally irreducible because instead of trying to reduce it “downward” toward the conditions of the gap itself we can instead reduce it “upward” in philosophical and artistic activity. We can try to change our world to reflect our “inner truth” and gain proper recognition by that standard, but perhaps even this is a form of castration as well, an external rather than internal castration.

The Christological formula was to introduce radical negativity into humanity at the intersection between individual and state/society and between individual and other people. It was no longer enough to have this ideal of perfectly filling out our social role and position in peaceful harmony with our state or culture; Zizek notes how he went to China and asked them about the nature of their state communist administration of capitalism, and was told that they have abandoned the idea of communism for a more practical peaceful homogeneity between individual and society, where everyone knows their proper place and role and is genuinely happy and self-actualized in fulfilling that place-- “sure”, Zizek replies, “we ourselves in Europe also have a term for this ideal state of peaceful social harmony of perfect functioning of individuals and social role, it’s called corporate fascism”.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Christological Mon Oct 10, 2016 4:07 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
His point is that we should defend Europe and US against this contemporary critique that goes something like “Europe/US are oppressive colonial powers of hegemony that tyrannize “local peoples” and cultures”, we shouldn’t defend the imperialism but we should defend the Christological gap within the proper human subjectivity, a gap that always makes utopian perfection whether as the naive communist idea or as corporate fascism impossible.

The idea of communism is simply that eventually the need for wage-labor work would fall away due to this work being taken over by machines. Since the need to work in the common social economic sense of “having a job” is still always the case, communism is only a distant vision of a possible future where the symbolic castration would no longer govern sociopolitical affairs. But of course this is also naive in so far as machinery can only remove physical materials labor and cannot actually remove mental and emotional labor. Capitalism today has pushed work-labor into the immaterial realm as society is more and more overtly defined by this inner logic of human subjectivity wherein the distance required between oneself and one’s actions or “image of oneself” functioning in society is still irreducible. The “human element” is the required contingent factor of imperfection and unpredictability around which capitalism’s drive for necessity and perfection (homogeneity, absolute control and prediction) rotates.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Christological Mon Oct 10, 2016 4:20 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Interestingly this idea is almost the exact opposite of Plato’s vision of politics given in The Republic. The supposedly wise leader who sees himself as fully embodying his role as political leader without any remainder is only another kind of tyranny, Zizek makes reference here to Stalin as a perfect example; the people will always treat the political leaders as if they had some sort of divine wisdom and as if they are in fact synonymous with the role they occupy, and the gap between the leader and his role is rendered invisible; but when the leader himself acts as if this gap didn’t exist, when the leader truly believes that he is this role himself, that is is king, then we must only get another form of absolute tyranny.

Democratic republics today in US and Europe have partially solved this problem by making the position of leader an empty role that is filled only temporarily by various elected officials. In this way the justification for being in that role is no longer the supposition that the leader has some divine or perfect mandate justifying his occupying that role, because now we all know that the leader is simply whoever is chosen by a majority of the people. The leader may still pathologically associate themselves literally with the role they play, thereby forsaking their humanity and pushing the gap of symbolic castration deeper into repression, but now there is always the threat that this facade will be exposed as a sham, for the simple reason that there now exists a mechanism for selecting leadership that is entirely beyond the leader himself. The leader must submit himself to the imperfections and contingency of the will of the people as hypostasized into a single “majority vote”, and this is a necessary remainder of political leadership that works against pathological associations of leaders with their roles. The king who REALLY BELIEVES that is IS king, this is the problem that the Christological formula militates against.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Christological Mon Oct 10, 2016 4:23 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Zizek also here makes the point with regard to Plato, that a hypothetical perfectly just society would be an absolute terror.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Christological Mon Oct 10, 2016 4:48 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I find this a good reading of Christianity. To my own great cheerfulness, I am instantly grounded in opposition to this formula of government; as a philosopher-legislator, I believe in philosopher-kingship, in direct logos-to-praxis downward, with the hirded help of whatever experts are necessary for any given context.

Zizek expresses here the pure negativity in terms of human will that Christianity represents; the simple ontic inability of regulating his species, and his species representing nonetheless his will.

Now, that philosophy is coming home, which means back to its throne, this system becomes obsolete, and a true horror. Now that god is dead and humans are being born into sanity again, the time has announced itself where we need proper leadership, a commander, who knows what he is doing, unlike any ‘experts’… who are after all specialists, and can thus by definition not know politics, which is comprehensive.

It is time for positive leadership again - we humans arent anylonger ashamed of our drives, which is why we could not have direct leadership - we had to hide our drives form ourselves, make this strange circuitry outside of ourselves, to exclude ourselves from our will, which was sinful to us, but needed to be done anyway. This is why the king was an illusory figure, his role is to hide shame and guilt, and for this he needs to be transcendent, or to forge a psychoanalytic term: sublime-perverse. The apparatus we are now about to vote out of power is thus sublime-perverse kingship, president Obama probably the most sublime-perverse human to ever ‘rule’; be entirely powerless, and ignorant about ‘his’ domain while speaking the ruling logos, blindly superimposing the given mediating matrices of shame and guilt on society to regulator its will into narrow, puny paths that can be controlled; man under god was simply a harvesting machine without a pilot, so he needed a great artifice of government.

In this world to come now, we need self-valuings, individuals, who are actual humans, and can know what the humans in the world really need now; apparently the time has come, where we can be proud enough, sane enough, un Christian enough to take our fate into our own human hands.

‘Masters of the Earth’, Nietzsches greatest project, to which the notion of the Superman and the ER is but a small catalyst… to open the paradigm to this very mastership is our task as philosophers before the light.


" The strong do what they can do and the weak accept what they have to accept. "

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PostSubject: Re: Christological Mon Oct 10, 2016 6:34 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
So if I’m correct here what you’re saying is that the problem isn’t really the fact of symbolic csstration and its repression, but actually the problem is sublime-perverse drive-confusion they can only be organized in terms of a leader/spiritual teacher? I agree it is possible to have truly wise leaders. So I agree that the problem isn’t that leadership is always unwise qua leadership, he problem is more like how utterly rare it is to have leaders who are wise (and sane), as well as how to tell the difference. In Plato’s system there is no real mechanism for preventing the inevitable rise of an unwise/insane leader. I suppose the other way around this problem of the rarity of wisdom in leadership is for the people to grow in their own wisdom. That seems to be what you’re saying?

While it’s easy to be cynical and dismiss that idea, I do happen to agree. “The people” should keep raising their standards of life and in so doing come closer to a need for truth both in life’s beautiful gifts as well as in the ennui that follows achieving quality of life with regard to material need. The ennui of “rich white America” that is a well known side effect of capitalism here can be seen as a kind of breeding ground for an elevated standard to come, for the need for truth.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Christological Mon Oct 10, 2016 11:24 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
" Zizek’s point here was that the logic of Christianity is deeply Hegelian in how Christianity created a space for human meaning beyond the cultural symbolic order, beyond the dynamics of the family and beyond the state. "

My problem with this in general is reading Christianity independently from the Judaic underpinning from which it evolved. The basic idea in Judaism is that the mundane affairs of family life are themselves vehicles through which the divine re-participates in the creation; that one can literally lower and raise the universe simply by being a good father or wife, etc. So if the emergence of Christ is read against that more ancient theological background, Christ does not represent the opening of a symbolic possibility beyond the mundane reality of state and family life, but rather, an inversion of that symbolic order; in Judaism, man expresses the divinity latent in nature through good acts, while, after Christ, that latent divinity is no longer latent, it is actual, thus “the kingdom of heaven is within you.” Agape or the spirit of god, brotherly love, becomes the main focus of worship- and man expresses divinity through that, rather than by fulfilling stifling and static social roles deemed as good in the Judaic tradition. So Christ is not an empty signifier between god and man here or a radical negativity, rather, he expresses the divine actualization or radical positivity of humanity as agape or love, so that man no longer needs to relate himself to God through the established forms of society/ “filling their proper place” in Judaism (symbolically castrating himself) in order to express the divine. Christ removes the distance between man and the divine. Neither Christ or God exist as the radical negativity of the other; they are both negated on the basis of a mutual affirmation, so that the affirmation can be reified through the Christ-God’s death as agape or brother love. This love or agape allows things like family life and the mundane affairs of living to become active rather than passive expressions of the divine as they were in Judaism: that is the fundamental gift of Christ. And this is my system. Two being(s) are irreducible and cannot be brought into a negative relation to one another- because they are both affirmations of Being, that is, positivity, as Christ and God; negative reflection * isolates the positive core which they share by negating them both at the level of the symbolic- hence it wasn’t god and man that died on the cross, it was the god-man and god; finally that positivity is reified, or reproduced in a new form.

  • [ For Holderlin, all knowledge stems from an original division by reflection within athesis
    through which Being is positioned as an intellectual intuition, that is, not as identity, but
    as a transcendental relation between the subject and object that cannot be synthetically
    unified within consciousness, and whose specification can therefor only take the form of
    tragic poeticism, an aesthetic of the mourning introduced into the Eden of nature with the
    fall of man into reflection and immanence. In my view, because man can reproduce
    intellectually his own lack, through what I call negative-reflectivity, he must be initially
    divided from himself in pre-reflection. This lack is man’s Being. The transcendental
    relation of subject and object becomes in this view an immanent relation between man’s
    consciousness and the Being of that consciousness, with the reproduction within
    consciousness of the lack representing the reification of the Being of consciousness- a
    reification of the transcendent object missing in a Nature mournful over the absence of
    the divine.]

In other words: Christ does not provide a radical possibility beyond the mundane, family etc. Christ allows the mundane to be expressed as the radical metaphysical possibility.

A similar inversion politically is possible. Man does not express his will positively by relating it to law under a king; man expresses law by positively relating his will to a leader. The idea is that law itself is not a passive symbolic structure but an active real structure. Both the individual and the leader are pure affirmations of a basic ontos, law; the structure of the new polis serves to negate them both so that the positive core they share can be isolated and reified in a new form, as “the people,” a political category that was only properly articulated in America and which represents law in its activity rather than passivity.


A sik þau trûðu

Nisus ait, “Dine hunc ardorem mentibus addunt,
Euryale, an sua cuique deus fit dira cupido?”

Have the gods set this ruling passion in my heart,
or does each man’s furious passion become his god?

  • Virgil.

It is not opium which makes me work but its absence, and in order for me to feel its absence it must
from time to time be present.-- Antonin Artaud
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PostSubject: Re: Christological Mon Oct 10, 2016 12:48 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Capable wrote:
So if I’m correct here what you’re saying is that the problem isn’t really the fact of symbolic csstration and its repression, but actually the problem is sublime-perverse drive-confusion they can only be organized in terms of a leader/spiritual teacher? I agree it is possible to have truly wise leaders. So I agree that the problem isn’t that leadership is always unwise qua leadership, he problem is more like how utterly rare it is to have leaders who are wise (and sane), as well as how to tell the difference. In Plato’s system there is no real mechanism for preventing the inevitable rise of an unwise/insane leader. I suppose the other way around this problem of the rarity of wisdom in leadership is for the people to grow in their own wisdom. That seems to be what you’re saying?

I believe only in nominal control, I believe that arms should be in the hands of privates, always. Never a monopoly on violence by an institution. That is my philosophical idea, and with this idea I try to come to rule. I think of philosophy as supreme - and of myself supreme only in as far as I philosophize - go inward. I cant bopth be supreme and command downward; but I can cast possibilities to the mind, which are paths and destinies. I see Greece as having come into being as such, and I continue this line with a joy that is incomparable to any other, the very joy of philosophy.

I do not take philosophy or wisdom as possibilities, but as givens, now on Earth, this moment, this opportunity, us together- and who knows all the others - to me there is nothing abstract about philosophical rulerships ambition, it is purely personal, about values, and self-valuing.

A tyranny is collectivism; the collective is united by a sublimated passion mixed with fear. But our form is self-valuing, the fire itself that builds the entity.

Quote :
While it’s easy to be cynical and dismiss that idea, I do happen to agree. “The people” should keep raising their standards of life and in so doing come closer to a need for truth both in life’s beautiful gifts as well as in the ennui that follows achieving quality of life with regard to material need. The ennui of “rich white America” that is a well known side effect of capitalism here can be seen as a kind of breeding ground for an elevated standard to come, for the need for truth.

Yes, teaching is the only form of government there has ever existed - we’ve forgotten this as we became the greatest power.


" The strong do what they can do and the weak accept what they have to accept. "

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PostSubject: Re: Christological Mon Oct 10, 2016 1:41 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Parodites wrote:
" Zizek’s point here was that the logic of Christianity is deeply Hegelian in how Christianity created a space for human meaning beyond the cultural symbolic order, beyond the dynamics of the family and beyond the state. "

My problem with this in general is reading Christianity independently from the Judaic underpinning from which it evolved. The basic idea in Judaism is that the mundane affairs of family life are themselves vehicles through which the divine re-participates in the creation; that one can literally lower and raise the universe simply by being a good father or wife, etc. So if the emergence of Christ is read against that more ancient theological background, Christ does not represent the opening of a symbolic possibility beyond the mundane reality of state and family life, but rather, an inversion of that symbolic order; in Judaism, man expresses the divinity latent in nature through good acts, while, after Christ, that latent divinity is no longer latent, it is actual, thus “the kingdom of heaven is within you.” Agape or the spirit of god, brotherly love, becomes the main focus of worship- and man expresses divinity through that, rather than by fulfilling stifling and static social roles deemed as good in the Judaic tradition. So Christ is not an empty signifier between god and man here or a radical negativity, rather, he expresses the divine actualization or radical positivity of humanity as agape or love, so that man no longer needs to relate himself to God through the established forms of society/ “filling their proper place” in Judaism (symbolically castrating himself) in order to express the divine.

Yes, this is also in line with what I was trying to say, although I probably expressed it inadequately. “Christ does not represent the opening of a symbolic possibility beyond the mundane reality of state and family life, but rather, an inversion of that symbolic order”, in fact I think these two things are the same thing: the opening of the (new) symbolic possibility beyond the mundane is equal to the inversion of the (old) symbolic order as such. The old order it is taken as a givenness and meant to symbolize God itself, directly as you say, but when Christ inverted this formula he placed the symbolic itself at the heart of human being because, once freed from the old tyranny of God-symbolizing, the reality behind the older symbolic order, the family and social relations, etc., was freed into more direct being. Christ divorces humans from being inextricably, unconsciously bound up in social and family relations and thereby Christ frees that in those relations which was actually real and always there to begin with. The old order which bound everything up tightly together had obscured this truer reality. This is why Christ was not saying we should seriously hate our parents and brothers and sisters in order to love Christ, in that famous saying of his, it isn’t meant to be taken literally like that. He was saying that we are now free to love beyond the bounds of what had formerly been (falsely) called love. Love didn’t really exist before Christ. Love is radical distance which respects its other as itself categorically, as an immediate metaphysical truth, like with what you say about mutual affirmation I think.

Essentially, the philosophical rational notion of equality among categorical partners. All human beings are, potentially, categorical partners in this way. Christ was not saying that all people are equal, he was saying that all people equally share the same category and regardless of how things actually turn out in practice. And this equalization of the human race under the same category is at the metaphysical level replacing the old idea of God: God in pre-Christ is just the stand-in concept for the supposed absolute reality of the “big Other”, whereas God in post-Christ is the proper distance from that Other so we can start to form real relations with the actual others in our immediate lives. That is how I see it anyway.

Quote :
Christ removes the distance between man and the divine. Neither Christ or God exist as the radical negativity of the other; they are both negated on the basis of a mutual affirmation, so that the affirmation can be reified through the Christ-God’s death as agape or brother love. This love or agape allows things like family life and the mundane affairs of living to become active rather than passive expressions of the divine as they were in Judaism: that is the fundamental gift of Christ.

I agree. I think this is also Zizek’s point with his reading of Hegel and Christianity that I was talking about in the OP here.

Quote :
And this is my system. Two being(s) are irreducible and cannot be brought into a negative relation to one another- because they are both affirmations of Being, that is, positivity, as Christ and God; negative reflection * isolates the positive core which they share by negating them both at the level of the symbolic- hence it wasn’t god and man that died on the cross, it was the god-man and god; finally that positivity is reified, or reproduced in a new form.

  • [ For Holderlin, all knowledge stems from an original division by reflection within athesis
    through which Being is positioned as an intellectual intuition, that is, not as identity, but
    as a transcendental relation between the subject and object that cannot be synthetically
    unified within consciousness, and whose specification can therefor only take the form of
    tragic poeticism, an aesthetic of the mourning introduced into the Eden of nature with the
    fall of man into reflection and immanence. In my view, because man can reproduce
    intellectually his own lack, through what I call negative-reflectivity, he must be initially
    divided from himself in pre-reflection. This lack is man’s Being. The transcendental
    relation of subject and object becomes in this view an immanent relation between man’s
    consciousness and the Being of that consciousness, with the reproduction within
    consciousness of the lack representing the reification of the Being of consciousness- a
    reification of the transcendent object missing in a Nature mournful over the absence of
    the divine.]

In other words: Christ does not provide a radical possibility beyond the mundane, family etc. Christ allows the mundane to be expressed as the radical metaphysical possibility.

I think your view and the Zizek-Hegelian view are essentially the same here. “In my view, because man can reproduce
intellectually his own lack, through what I call negative-reflectivity, he must be initially
divided from himself in pre-reflection. This lack is man’s Being.” --this is pointing to the psychoanalytic insight that the concept of symbolic castration is also saying: “Lacan turns Freudian castration into “symbolic castration.” The latter, rather than being a real or imagined scene in which a specific threat to bodily integrity is issued, designates the dual somatic and psychical discombobulating effects upon the premature human animal caused by insertion into and subjection to surrounding socio-symbolic contexts, of being made to depend on the foreignness [distance, lack, unknowable] of signifiers and everything they bring with them.” (Plato.sanford.edu).

The human being already lacks something, even before it is a human being, and this lack manifests itself as a gap within thinking whereby that which in fact determines this thinking is, initially, entirely obscured from thinking itself; we cannot think our thinking directly, but even more problematically we cannot think the base of thought itself. Philosophy is the only cure for this that I know of. Psychoanalysis is on par here, because psychoanalysis is basically a system for producing philosophical insights in people who are not philosophers.

But note that in your above description there are two lacks: there is the original lack, and then there is the lack in thought that arises because of the original lack; thought is a reflective process that reproduces the original lack first indirectly and then, finally in the finished philosopher, directly. Any true philosophy must always take stock of this original lack through its direct conscious understanding of the lack in thought, because philosophy proceeds from a high precipice of thought-substances and gradually works its way back down through these and to the ground; philosophy must build up its mountains of concepts and ideas only so that philosophy can gain the possibility of climbing back down through these to return to the original ground, a ground that was only possible to even glimpse, let alone ultimately grasp, because we had to first build the massive mountain from which perspective and height we could finally see this ground. This is also Hegel’s idea of absolute recoil: the “fall” (original sin) that by falling creates that from which it is a fall. There was no perfect original Absolute, no pure state of grace, no initial utopia; we actually create this ‘perfect state’ only because we fall from it. In positive philosophical terms: only because we build the mountain away from the ground do we become able to actually see the ground qua ground, to even become aware of its existence (and therefore our own existence, too).

Quote :
A similar inversion politically is possible. Man does not express his will positively by relating it to law under a king; man expresses law by positively relating his will to a leader. The idea is that law itself is not a passive symbolic structure but an active real structure. Both the individual and the leader are pure affirmations of a basic ontos, law; the structure of the new polis serves to negate them both so that the positive core they share can be isolated and reified in a new form, as “the people,” a political category that was only properly articulated in America and which represents law in its activity rather than passivity.

I am not sure what you mean here, are you saying that human being is the realization of a purely rational-logical structure (“law”), a kind of metaphysical Being that becomes real through the human beings that have been formed according to it? Please elaborate this point so I can grasp better what you mean.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Christological Mon Oct 10, 2016 8:13 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I thnk what P is sayinng is more simple; in general I think that the “Trumpian” position is toward more simplicity, and away from metaphysical differentiations of man from man; as I read it, P is simply saying that a leader does not have to be a symbolic-metaphysical representation of a process that is not entirely human, at least not entirely fed by true humans, positive beings - but that a leader can simply be a strong man that is actually worthy of being followed, because he does good stuff. I at least think that this is what we need to be getting back to - the system, and I don’t mean the corporate system but the philosophic-metaphysical system, is failing us.

A strong leaders is not a fuhrer. I am also a leader, here, as are the both of you. We command respect in each other, and in ones less advanced, and there is no principle of law or humanity or society that we obey to indirectly; we simply know how to value, and express ourselves directly, most directly of all to those in charge of whatever matters. I tend write so that politicians can make sense of it, and I know we’re being seen. Tough this is just the beginning, this thing we do here is government of the future, no less - there is absolutely no more conscientious and human agency active on the planet than this, I am sure. In happy case, we may have some equals. But we dont need them, we have enough here to make another round of ‘Founding Fathering’, pretty soon.

We have ethics. That is what, to my mind, Hegel and Marx negated. They did not start from the generative logic of the individual, therefore they necessarily disacknowledge the individual, and his logos.

I’d like to focus on that point, that Hegel did not put forth the self-valuing principle before he started juggling around with these archetypes supposedly referring to humans.


" The strong do what they can do and the weak accept what they have to accept. "

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PostSubject: Re: Christological Tue Oct 11, 2016 3:53 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Lacan’s Lack is the lack of a primary object in eroto-genesis. The consequent dependency on foreign signifiers is different than the negativity or lack I imagine. For, in Lacan, the subject is split from itself- it cannot rise up to the category of representation beyond reflection so no primacy objectification appears in erogeneity:

[ … the Lacanian model- a model which is all based on the idea
that erogeneity remains nebulous and that no definite primacy ever develops between the
anal, oral, genital, etc. stages. For him each libidinal circuit merely “rotates” around a
center of gravity without ever attaining any object, generating a subjective awareness of
the impulse only at the completion of each cycle, which splits the subject into conscious
ego and unconscious.]

For me, the subject is split not from itself but from the Object, namely in pre-reflectivity. With reflectivity, the ego represents its division from the Object (the shadow of the real) as itself. This auto-representation is my version of Holderlin’s intellectual intuition. The basic lack lies in the fact that the act of representation always cleaves the subject from its object, until it reproduces its own negativity as its object in transcendental specification, that empty object taking the form of the god-idea. In the mortis imago or image of death, it perfectly represents this division from the Object and finds its representation. This representation is the material of the symbolic order, human civilization and culture. The death anxiety and erotic pathos appears with it:

[ In pre-reflectivity,
as in the Greek consciousness, the self exists for the world beyond itself, and
kenotically experiences the unity of subject and object as its own self-emptying into
creation or representation, reading itself back into the forms it has liberated from the
dance of ages as from out of the text of the old pantheon, but in reflectivity it begins to
exist for itself and mirrors its own separation from things in the image of death, death
which is a final separation of subject and object, and of objects themselves from one
another, losing the capability of representing its deepest interior contents, becoming
secretive to use Kierkegaard’s terminology and aware of the hidden, nameless God of
Abraham, in whose abyss it finds something of its own emptiness. The moment the ego
associates itself in pre-reflection as the subject of a specific object, namely a metonym, so
a loss occurs, a fall from grace, and the potency of organo-affective unity is transformed
by the attempt to fill the narcissistic wound from the basic life-force into a negative
kinesis, a thanatos or tension which the ego attempts to push out of consciousness in
reflectivity by reproducing the empty ego-object of the metonym for new objects, a task
for which Eros emerges, until the whole kingdom of the body is precipitated as a series of
metonyms in erogeneity. ]

As that representation or symbolic order becomes more evolved throughout the derivations of the epistemes, the self is finally convinced that it is this representation of its division from the object, its division from Being or basic negativity to use philosophic terms.

[The narcissistic wound imposed by the catastrophe of Nature, which
births the real-ego in the pre-reflective infantile progression, ie. the psyche or
psychoanalytic subject, brings with it the death-anxiety which serves as the motive of
somatic regression insofar as the transcendent wish of the reflective childhood
progression has not successfully reproduced its own empty object, for it is upon the basis
of this object, ie. the mother-figure, that the negative kinesis of libidinal tristia generates
the ideal specification of the ego, ie. dike or the philosophical subject, … ]

So this post-reflective or representable self essentially exists as an articulation of the very forces whose tension gives rise to it. :

[ … the episteme is therefor much
like the tautegory of Schelling in that it represents (in my logic, it reproduces through
negative reflectivity) the very conceptual oppositions that gives rise to it. ]

[As in Schelling, for this subject Being is seen as merely
the temporary object of resistance against which the finite self sets itself against itself in
reflectivity and develops into de-objectified geist, the Spirit that can be known only in its
objectless activity, like the Atemwende or respiration and expiration of spirit and flesh, a
counter-word set against Ousia like that uttered by Lucile in Danton, accounted in Celan’s
Meridian as indicative of the self that goes out beyond itself to seek itself, to seek its
deobjectified geist.

While thanatos aims to return the ego to the peace of inorganic existence, a pre-reflective
unity that never existed even in memory, a wish expressed unconsciously by the vision of
heaven, nirvana, etc., Eros would aim ultimately to express the totality of human nature, a
project jeopardized insofar as erotic pathos has regressed into the furious defense of the
god-ego in primary narcissism, in the face of Death and reality, leading to the self’s
fragmentation and both the suspension and preservation of feeling- if only in a kind of
death, holding love back from extinction yet also from life, to recall Freud’s Mourning
and Melancholy. The task of Eros recalls that of Schelling’s lost identity for whose
existence the identity of the self is only a symptom, in that Love, too, is a symptom for all
that love has lost, cannot accomplish and has failed to gain. ]

The ego in my writing is similarly created by the very problem of representation which the existence of the ego creates.

To articulate the self without that illusion of representation- the illusion of the real or the ego, requires a break in the dialectic (which is what I mean by “reproducing the negativity of thought as the object of thought, as thought’s transcendent signification.” )-

[ Yet for the very same reason that Eros has no place for the time of pleasure’s
arrival, it has no place for the recognition of death, for death which opens the white-lilied
heart of love and steals the breath from the gasping lightning, whose thunder never peals
over the gorge torn open in the flesh of longing: one’s death confesses one’s love, but
one’s love cannot confess one’s death. ]

– requires an act of love through which alone death can be psychically incorporated, for the mortis imago or image of death within which the ego represents itself to itself in the shadow of the real, is only a kind of reflective fabrication preventing man from establishing his true positive orientation:

[ Love is a break in the dialectic, for love is the negation not of
the negation but of the ideal whose content is affirmed through the negation, for the
negation is our own self, or the intact body that is repaired by being broken apart- for it
was made whole by means of the loss of what was most integral to it. ]

And when I mentioned “the people” as a political category that was first articulated in American constitutional philosophy, I meant that it serves there a similar purpose that agape served Christ, as a break in the dialectic.


A sik þau trûðu

Nisus ait, “Dine hunc ardorem mentibus addunt,
Euryale, an sua cuique deus fit dira cupido?”

Have the gods set this ruling passion in my heart,
or does each man’s furious passion become his god?

  • Virgil.

It is not opium which makes me work but its absence, and in order for me to feel its absence it must
from time to time be present.-- Antonin Artaud
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PostSubject: Re: Christological Tue Oct 11, 2016 11:02 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
“The People” is not actually a category, as it isn’t juxtaposed against something that negates it. It is a direct address of… well, the people. There isnt another way of addressing people.

We could say they are juxtaposed with the government, but the government is of and by the people, only therefore, for the people. They are the same substance, but their selfvaluing excess (moral values) are pressed upwards by self-valuing difference which seems close to what you mean with antidialectic, rather than resolved into each other, and rather than that the people and government are resolved by each other, like in a categorivcal divided society is the case, time and time again.

Capital has both ruined and increased aristocracy - if I am totally definitive about my aim, it is to restore aristocracy ad a fluid system defined by osmosis, namely (economic) equality before the law, and simply allowing for industries to create wealth and a positive inequality, that causes the Dream.

The most genius thing a nation ever did was the identify with the term Dream. What Magicians. The identification of values with that state certainly induces a lot of alpha wavelength, and causes pure fluidity, and a very functional irrationality; it completely dampens the need for morality. Of course, this only goes for free spirits. The others do seem to not carry the burden of flux, of self-responsibility, very well – but the United States will nevertheless determine the fate of the world into the next centuries - pride is essential. Pride is what activated Marxism - it made Communism, and that was good. But as soon as it was given the means to embody a System, Stalin and Mao were more or less exact logical operators of that logic; the history of Stalins purges of the original revolutionary generation is the most palpably theoretical dialectical materialism after Mao’s Great Leap Forward. The strange thing is that indeed the very theory of Marx exudes a pride - the same with Hegel. Most philosophies are more subdued in this, less pre-emptively imposing, more of a lure to the right kind of lovers. Marx does not include the notion of love, which is just a very pure and potent, challenging selfvaluing, into his calculations, which makes them all categorically false… (kek)

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PostSubject: Self-valuing: a theoretical examination Wed Sep 28, 2016 2:26 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
The two main dialectical (expressed as two sides in contrast and conversation with each other) paradigms in philosophy at the metaphysical (onto-epistemological) level have for a long time been: being vs. becoming, and materialism vs. idealism. One great thing about the VO idea of self-valuing is that it jumps over both of these paradigms. It’s like these paradigms break down completely under the assertions of VO. I want to create an analogy here to how edified logic breaks down typical paradoxes in philosophy of logic:

The Cretan paradox of speaking “All Cretans are liars” when one is a Cretan oneself. This is supposed to produce a paradox because if one is oneself a Cretan and proclaims honestly that all Cretans are liars then one has spoken a truth, thus refuting the original claim that is spoken, so that it becomes impossible to express the claim without refuting it. This is clearly among the more stupid things produced by philosophy. I only mention it because of how the supposed paradox literally dissolves when we push just a little deeper into it: what does “are liars” mean, that all Cretans never always only speak the truth, or that all Cretans are always lying? The latter of course is required for the paradox to even make sense, and yet as we move to this latter position on the meaning of “are liars” in equal measure the situation becomes literally meaningless: all Cretans are always lying? Everything spoken is a lie, no non-lies are ever spoken? Everything is supposedly a lie therefore nothing truthful can be said-- this is nonsense, more importantly it isn’t a paradox at all, it is just a stupid way of constructing a thought experiment. If someone always lies then they cannot tell a truth, but then by some magic you say “A ha but here they may have said a truth!” you’re just refuting your own premise that the person always lies. It’s unfortunate that this sort of thing persists as “philosophy”.

“A is never B
But some thing here of A looks like a B (because I subtly refuted my own principle of A in my formation of B)! Paradox!”

Idiotic.

So anyway, just as the paradox dissolves once we really examine what is meant by the terms in the premises, namely the paradox only exists because of a deliberately vague use of concepts, I think the typical dialectical paradigms in philosophy also dissolve once VO proposes its core idea of self-valuing. Self-valuing doesn’t claim to know what a self is or what beings are, they could be “material” or they could be “ideal”, they could be “being” or they could be “becoming” but in any case whatever they are they are always a self-valuing, something which holds itself in existence precisely because it “values” itself as itself, namely interprets interactions in such a way that it always holds itself as the standard for those interactions. The idea is deeper than the typical philosophical categories here; “what being really is” is suspended because we don’t really care about that right now, we say that no matter whatever we might say being is, we already know that it is self-valuing. Although VO does not go the “extra” step and claim that being is self-valuing and nothing besides which is a huge strength on the part of VO, as I see it. The false metaphysical leap is avoided, suspension of judgment is imposed just so that a core truth can reign free regardless of however anyone wants to describe or define “what beings really are”. We may not know what they are, but by strict logic we can know that regardless of what they are, they self-value. This is one reason why self-valuing is superior to N’s will to power, because N makes that metaphysical leap when he doesn’t need to (when it isn’t justified to do so).


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Self-valuing: a theoretical examination Wed Sep 28, 2016 3:20 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Hegel’s idealism is interesting, as far as I’ve been able to tell so far by reading him directly and going on Zizek’s readings of Hegel, because of how material is governed by the ideal yet the ideal both rises out of the material and is not reducible to the material. As materials organize they become governed by ideal relations as the ideal is for the material its universality, but not just “its” universality, rather universality as such. The material becomes capable of expressing through itself something that is entirely non-material.

This is the essential contradiction. The original “split in being”, because the material could never truly become ideal just as the ideal could never truly become material, although the idea acts as if it were material in so far as the ideal, by coming through the material, interacts directly with the material to organize it in new ways. Said in my terms, consciousness is literally its own contents but in such a way that consciousness cannot be reduced to those contents; the contents construct consciousness by filling it in but do not describe consciousness at the formal level, rather the filling in of consciousness, its reality, takes place within the bounds of the universal become “material” for being able to interact directly with material on the material level, through instantiating as materials.

Hegel says in PS that even if beings (human beings) work only at the level of the direct contents (materials) of their consciousness and deny their universality they are still in fidelity to that universality for the simple reason they their contents always already express that universal, and the universal is realized by realizing contents at the content level. The very fact that we are “interested in” some object or event that is not-us is the fact that this object or event has already been assumed in our own contents in sudh a way that universality is seen in it, and works itself through us in it or through it in us. But the truly moral dimension comes when this consciousness turns its always already realizing universal as its direct (universally denying) content-fidelity into a direct object itself, namely another content of consciousness; at this point consciousness gets a hold of itself within itself in a new way, grasping universals as such or “philosophic ideas” and the material of the contents of consciousness are now organized again in new ways. So the universal now can live through those contents in a wholly new and different way.

I’m not very far yet in my understanding of Hegel’s system here, but what I see so far is powerful indeed. I am going to fathom these depths alongside Parodites’ daemonic and Fixed’s VO. Another interesting thing I notice is that people talk about how Hegel never really wrote about the dialectic for which he is so famous, yet when I read Hegel this dialectical logic can be seen everywhere in him; this must separate good from bad philosophers, true philosophers from mere scholars of philosophy since the latter point to the “mistake” that we credit to Hegel this idea of the dialectical development when in fact he never said that, yet the former such as Zizek and Marx are able to extract this critical logic from Hegel even as Hegel never explicitly lays it out-- Hegel lays it out indirectly, as if following his own logic of how the ideal universalized materials through those materials which can never become ideal themselves.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Self-valuing: a theoretical examination Thu Oct 27, 2016 4:59 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
This is extraordinary.

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PostSubject: Working Through The Logic Thu Jun 23, 2016 9:40 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Does logic make assumptions? If so, what are they and are they justifiable? Let the investigation begin.

Okay Capable, add your best definition of logic so I have something to work with that we can both agree on.
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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Fri Jun 24, 2016 10:23 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Logic is simply the conceptual recognition of necessity as such. Logical systems and languages (formal logic, math, linguistic grammar) unfold from this.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Sat Jun 25, 2016 4:23 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I would add that logic requires an artificial discontinuity; the idea that there is an existential interval between observed situations.
This discontinuity is directly related to the law of identity, which posits an artificial homogeneity between observed situations.

These two somewhat opposite ‘symptoms’ arises from not knowing what we mean with ‘is’ or ‘=’ or ‘being’.


" The strong do what they can do and the weak accept what they have to accept. "

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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Sat Jun 25, 2016 9:18 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
CP,

Sorry, but the animosity I feel towards that definition you keep reiterating (ILP all over again) makes me combustible. There she blows!

I’ll retrieve a few online definitions to get me going.

FC,

How can “not knowing what we mean with ‘is’ or ‘=’ or ‘being’” but cause tremendous issues/miscalculations?

So logic accounts for the positives(perceptions), but what about the negatives? How are “unknowns” regimented into logic’s framework? To me, that is a big question. If identifiable in the definitions, then that is the first assumption I’ll be checking in to. If logic leaves no room for possibilities, they do not exist, which leads to not knowing a plethora on down the line. Hopefully this does not involve maths. Did I mention that I hated school after the 4th grade? Oh, and this place feels like a tomb. Just saying.

Need those definitions first to get the proverbial ball rolling.
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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Mon Jun 27, 2016 4:01 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Definitions of LOGIC:

Google Definition

log·ic
ˈläjik/Submit
noun
noun: logic
1.
reasoning conducted or assessed according to strict principles of validity.
“experience is a better guide to this than deductive logic”
synonyms: reasoning, line of reasoning, rationale, argument, argumentation
“the logic of their argument”
a particular system or codification of the principles of proof and inference.
“Aristotelian logic”
the systematic use of symbolic and mathematical techniques to determine the forms of valid deductive argument.
plural noun: logics
the quality of being justifiable by reason.
“there’s no logic in telling her not to hit people when that’s what you’re doing”
synonyms: reason, judgment, logical thought, rationality, wisdom, sense, good sense, common sense, sanity; informalhorse sense
“this case appears to defy all logic”
the course of action or line of reasoning suggested or made necessary by.
“if the logic of capital is allowed to determine events”
2.
a system or set of principles underlying the arrangements of elements in a computer or electronic device so as to perform a specified task.
logical operations collectively.

Mirriam-Webster Definition
Full Definition of logic
1
a (1) : a science that deals with the principles and criteria of validity of inference and demonstration : the science of the formal principles of reasoning (2) : a branch or variety of logic (3) : a branch of semiotics; especially : syntactics (4) : the formal principles of a branch of knowledge
b (1) : a particular mode of reasoning viewed as valid or faulty (2) : relevance, propriety
c : interrelation or sequence of facts or events when seen as inevitable or predictable
d : the arrangement of circuit elements (as in a computer) needed for computation; also : the circuits themselves
2
: something that forces a decision apart from or in opposition to reason
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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Mon Jun 27, 2016 4:04 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Wiki

Rival conceptions of logic[edit]
In the periodic of scholastic philosophy, logic was predominantly Aristotelian. Following the decline of scholasticism, logic was thought of as an affair of ideas by early modern philosophers such as Locke and Hume . Immanuel Kant took this one step further. He begins with the assumption of the empiricist philosophers, that all knowledge whatsoever is internal to the mind, and that we have no genuine knowledge of ‘things in themselves’. Furthermore, (an idea he seemed to have got from Hume) the material of knowledge is a succession of separate ideas which have no intrinsic connection and thus no real unity. In order that these disparate sensations be brought into some sort of order and coherence, there must be an internal mechanism in the mind which provides the forms by which we think, perceive and reason.
Kant calls these forms Categories (in a somewhat different sense than employed by the Aristotelian logicians), of which he claims there are twelve:
Quantity (Singular, Particular, Universal)
Quality (Affirmative, Negative, Infinite)
Relation (Categorical, Hypothetical, Disjunctive)
Modality (Problematic, Assertoric, Apodictic)
However, this seems to be an arbitrary arrangement, driven by the desire to present a harmonious appearance than from any underlying method or system. For example, the triple nature of each division forced him to add artificial categories such as the infinite judgment.
This conception of logic eventually developed into an extreme form of psychologism espoused in the nineteenth by Benno Erdmann and others. The view of historians of logic is that Kant’s influence was negative.
Another view of logic espoused by Hegel and others of his school (such as Lotze, Bradley, Bosanquet and others), was the ‘Logic of the Pure Idea’. The central feature of this view is the identification of Logic and Metaphysics. The Universe has its origin in the categories of thought. Thought in its fullest development becomes the Absolute Idea, a divine mind evolving itself in the development of the Universe.
In the modern period, W. V. Quine (1940, pp. 2–3) defined logic in terms of a logical vocabulary, which in turn is identified by an argument that the many particular vocabularies —Quine mentions geological vocabulary— are used in their particular discourses together with a common, topic-independent kernel of terms.[1] These terms, then, constitute the logical vocabulary, and the logical truths are those truths common to all particular topics.
Hofweber (2004) lists several definitions of logic, and goes on to claim that all definitions of logic are of one of four sorts. These are that logic is the study of: (i) artificial formal structures, (ii) sound inference (e.g., Poinsot), (iii) tautologies (e.g., Watts), or (iv) general features of thought (e.g., Frege). He argues then that these definitions are related to each other, but do not exhaust each other, and that an examination of formal ontology shows that these mismatches between rival definitions are due to tricky issues in ontology.
Informal and colloquial definitions[edit]
Arranged in approximate chronological order.
The tool for distinguishing between the true and the false (Averroes).[2]
The science of reasoning, teaching the way of investigating unknown truth in connection with a thesis (Robert Kilwardby).
The art whose function is to direct the reason lest it err in the manner of inferring or knowing (John Poinsot).
The art of conducting reason well in knowing things (Antoine Arnauld).
The right use of reason in the inquiry after truth (Isaac Watts).
The Science, as well as the Art, of reasoning (Richard Whately).
The science of the operations of the understanding which are subservient to the estimation of evidence (John Stuart Mill).
The science of the laws of discursive thought (James McCosh).
The science of the most general laws of truth (Gottlob Frege).
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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Fri Jul 01, 2016 6:27 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Quote :
1.
reasoning conducted or assessed according to strict principles of validity.
“experience is a better guide to this than deductive logic”

This is already perfectly sufficient to point to value ontology.

  1. Its validity is derived directly from the very root of the concept valid. (From value - from Latin valere, ‘to be worth’, ‘to be well’, ‘to be strong’)

  2. It pertains only to experience and never deduces away from it. A value can not be interpreted in other terms than experience. This is to say: “value” is the one term of language by which man is not able to escape consciousness of himself. All other terms provide means for delusion, value does not. Why it’s so god damned scary to the superficial, and repulsive to the repulsive.


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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Fri Jul 01, 2016 10:47 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster

If I’ve helped your VO cause before I’ve even begun my investigation of logic, then I work miracles. Happy that you’re happy.

Made some revisions to my ontology over at SickSadWorld forum, wherein VO may find a perspective foundation. It’s imperative to conquer “What is consciousness?” Processes are what’s occurring, but in what order? Consisting of what? JSS didn’t like my explanation of motion/movement being “it.” While I wouldn’t say process is synonymous with motion/movement or change even, they are similar enough for general relations.
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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Fri Jul 01, 2016 11:07 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
" MM’s Ontology

To me, reality simplified is made entirely of varying types of energy at varying speeds producing all objects.

What is the essence of existence? Movement

What is the essence of sentience? Emotional Energy (or GLUE…I’ll add clever later)

Emotional Energy= Intentional Movement towards Experience

Intentional Movement is creative force.

Experience is intersection or interaction.

Creative Force consists of patterned synergies of will and coherency.

The infinitely active impetus for creative force is the patterned synergies of will and coherency towards infinite intersections/interactions which is what all reality shares.

Actually, will and expansion were the terms I had chosen; I dropped the expansion albeit it makes sense in terms of pure object oriented reality, but I can do better to define creative force. I’m trying to define sentience, not physical reality as an observable.

I can’t stay stuck on the physical aspects of reality. To stay there, is to stay there. Possibilities are needed, not probability based scientific theories.

I’ve already scrapped expansion. Anentropy? Stability? I don’t buy it. Let’s say for arguments sake we’re “in” infinity; we’re an eternal part of it’s system. What is it that keeps us going (concepts that keep us going, not physical necessities)? We are entities of process, of processing who need data input (thoughts in an emotional context). When we literally shed our skin, what is left?

Type 1: Physical “static” reality (rock, dirt, water, planet)—>Type 2: Physical “non-static” reality (life-forms)—>Type 3: non-physical “static” reality (transcendental “forms”?)—> Type 4: Non-physical “non-static” reality(energy of pure consciousness?)—>Physical “static” reality—>yada, yada, yada, loop indefinitely in any direction.

Static is patterned motion type 1.<—Needs modifications/defining

Everything consists of energy. It’s all in motion. Forget particles. There is no thingness; that’s illusion.

Being is redundant. Everything is in that state already whether we can “see/identify” it or not. Perhaps my terms sound traditional in terms of physical associations you are already familiar with, but I’ve defined them differently in the MM ontology.

Motion is “it”. "

sicksadworld.forumotion.com/t133 … s-ontology

My gut reaction is positive.

My question is “what moves?” but this is not to mean “you are wrong”, at all.The strongest part of your formulation of your ontology so far is, to my mind, the part about emotional energy.
I would like to see this expanded. You are good at this. It is a value-paradigm where you are powerful.

By advising you this I mean to say: I concur that this is useful to me, too - especially in that particular sense.
We need to get to a new way of navigating reality.

When I say value you might as well say emote - and when I say self-value you might say emote creatively and intelligently.


" The strong do what they can do and the weak accept what they have to accept. "

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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Fri Jul 01, 2016 1:21 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
“Creative Force consists of patterned synergies of will and coherency.”

Edit above:curiosity rather than coherency.

Without an emotional baseline such as ‘curiosity’ covering raw thinking processes which can develop into the values of other emotions, there is no change occurring. It’s like will without reasoning; emotions form the basis of our reasoning. How to prove that emotions form the basis of our reasoning? The seed emotion would have to be curiosity.
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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Fri Jul 01, 2016 2:01 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Correct.
Curiosity is an openness to valuing -
the outside world might - is expected to - contain values.

Curiosity is necessary for organic self-valuing.


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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Fri Jul 01, 2016 2:38 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Hi-D wrote:
“Creative Force consists of patterned synergies of will and coherency.”

Edit above:curiosity rather than coherency.

Without an emotional baseline such as ‘curiosity’ covering raw thinking processes which can develop into the values of other emotions, there is no change occurring. It’s like will without reasoning; emotions form the basis of our reasoning. How to prove that emotions form the basis of our reasoning? The seed emotion would have to be curiosity.

It helps to understand what emotions are: pure value. I mean value itself, not the object of value. This is very hard to put into words.

Technically we have no words to describe what value is itself. We can only speak in approximations. Our languages are superfluities to value itself. But this is not God; these “before-words” commune with each other, there is an entire world inside this: emotions are the entry-gates into that world, a world without speech. This is why emotions are pure qualities and belie description.

If you want to talk of “an emotion” you can use many words and concepts, but those are not the emotion itself. A pure value defies all gods and all wills, because gods and wills are made of values; and the most pure wills and gods are made of ONLY values, and absolutely nothing besides.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Fri Jul 01, 2016 4:02 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Funny thing about a pure emotion (For example: Peace) from my experience is that primary emotions are combinations of lesser value emotions (Joy and Love). The feel of a primary emotion such as Peace, feels pure in its simplicity (like an a-ha moment) but extraordinary in power, in it’s presence as an energy in it’s own right. There is a hierarchy of emotions, many of which I have not experienced yet.

I cannot wrap my head around an emotion being pure value, but give me time. While I marinade, why don’t you guys wrap your head around the idea of movement manifesting reality. If Will is a type of moving energy and the hierarchy of emotions are other forms of energy which coalesce into different patterns that then interact/intersect to form form.

I’m rambling.
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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Sat Jul 02, 2016 2:24 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Philosophy needs to break down the emotions by phenomenological-existential method to really get in them and understand what they are, but this isn’t easy because of how emotions aren’t made of words (the reason that emotions are not made of words is because words are made of emotions); it’s something I’ve been trying for a while now, this detailed psycho-ontological-existential-phenomenological analysis and breakdown of emotions on their own terms (not any kind of materialistic reductive positivistic analysis, of course), but with only limited success so far.

I agree there are hierarchies of emotions but I also think that emotions are pure qualities in their own right, and therefore belie hierarchy because each emotion had something of its own true essence and inexpressible self-quality. So the hierarchy of emotions is actually two hierarchies, or one hierarchy operating on two principles or standards: 1) that some emotions are built from other emotions or that some emotions are more pure or intense expressions of other emotions (such as maybe anger → rage), and 2) that non-emotional standards and consequences can act as the means by which emotions are organized and arranged into hierarchy (for example using will, or power, or creative achievement, or existential authenticity, or courage… These things can act as separate non-emotional grounds on the basis of which emotions are organized into hierarchies and relations based on the degree to which an emotion achieves and assists that other standard).

This also changes from situation to situation, for example in some instances certain emotions might be most effective at achieving a given goal, while in other situations different emotions may be called for to achieve that same goal; or, in the same situation, different goals will require different emotions.

In terms of expeiencing different and new emotions, this is something Parodites has written about and something that his own philosophy can explain and account for, and predict. I’m not an expert on this aspect of his thought though, although I know it is connected to the psychic-ontological structure of the Self as “real and ideal ego” and how the line dividing real from ideal (unconscious from conscious, as I understand it) can move and change, forcing different patterns and organizations of the excess behind all consciousness which, in turn, leads to the production of different and new emotions. But again, you would have to ask him about it to get a clearer answer.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Sat Jul 02, 2016 7:57 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Parodites,

Capable has referred me to you and your work regarding emotions. May I study your work? If so, where?

CP,

Just wish to be clear that emotions are forms of energy that are subtle/muted in the physical arena but pure/undiluted elsewhere.

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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Tue Aug 23, 2016 1:30 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
So much for slacking. Logic is all that exists. Nothing escapes a logic, just an understanding. So logic is misconstrued, but how and where. I know why, we’re morons.

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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Sun Oct 23, 2016 4:33 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
At ILP, jerkey introduced me to the Mobius Strip concept. With all the stupid deja vus and precog dreams, THE LOGIC at play is not our own and that alien logic has been throwing me into loops that I’m tired of frankly.

In the ILP thread ilovephilosophy.com/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=190801, I have indirectly voiced my opinion on the hidden hardware, which is the soul (not to be confused with Spirit), that needs a reckoning into existence for if this “tidbit” is what is holding us back or looped, it’s going to have to be dealt with by somebody who isn’t bedazzled by scientific contraptions.

FC, awhile ago I asked you for information as to the nature of what was happening to which I named specific individuals at that hub which was also named. I never received a reply. Something one way or the other, any honest answer would have been adequate. You failed me and perhaps the next trip around you will face what my questions concern.

JSS may have to expand his horizons or play your game of ducking the issue at hand.

Just realize that with every loop, I’m less pleasant.
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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Sun Oct 23, 2016 10:37 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Hi-D wrote:
So much for slacking. Logic is all that exists. Nothing escapes a logic, just an understanding. So logic is misconstrued, but how and where. I know why, we’re morons.

Well, not all of us are. Hehehe.
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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Sun Oct 23, 2016 10:41 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Hi-D wrote:

FC, awhile ago I asked you for information as to the nature of what was happening to which I named specific individuals at that hub which was also named. I never received a reply. Something one way or the other, any honest answer would have been adequate. You failed me and perhaps the next trip around you will face what my questions concern.

I guess that just goes to show that we can’t always get what we want.
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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Tue Oct 25, 2016 4:29 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Hi-D wrote:
At ILP, jerkey introduced me to the Mobius Strip concept. With all the stupid deja vus and precog dreams, THE LOGIC at play is not our own and that alien logic has been throwing me into loops that I’m tired of frankly.

In the ILP thread ilovephilosophy.com/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=190801, I have indirectly voiced my opinion on the hidden hardware, which is the soul (not to be confused with Spirit), that needs a reckoning into existence for if this “tidbit” is what is holding us back or looped, it’s going to have to be dealt with by somebody who isn’t bedazzled by scientific contraptions.

FC, awhile ago I asked you for information as to the nature of what was happening to which I named specific individuals at that hub which was also named. I never received a reply. Something one way or the other, any honest answer would have been adequate. You failed me and perhaps the next trip around you will face what my questions concern.

JSS may have to expand his horizons or play your game of ducking the issue at hand.

Just realize that with every loop, I’m less pleasant.

Suck my dick a few times then we’ll see.


" The strong do what they can do and the weak accept what they have to accept. "

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PostSubject: Logic Wed Oct 26, 2016 12:08 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I’ll share whatever I know about logic.

We’ve got classical logic and intuitionistic logic, which varies in that in intuitionistic logic the law of excluded middle and the principle of double negation are not tautologies, and reductio ad absurdum fails to remain a valid approach to construct proofs as a consequence. All proofs are required to be constructive as in if one is arguing the existence of something, then an algorithm for it’s construction should be implicit in the proof.

Logic unfortunately, like the rest of mathematics, is based on the same Hilbert like axiomatic system. We have to take certain propositions for granted, as an example, modus ponens ({Px →Qx, Px} ⊢ Qx). Or the formula

∀ x : (Px → Qx) → (∀ x : Px → ∀ x : Qx)

has to be treated as a logical axiom. One could argue about their validity in a metalanguage, but I have never attempted it.

The axiomatization of a logical system can be done in multiple ways (as in one could ad libitum choose different sets of axioms but end up with the same logic).

A good property which we desire of any logic to have is completeness and soundness, which establish that one can syntactically derive a proof of a proposition if and only if it’s a semantically valid sentence.

After sufficient amount of bootstrapping, we get fancy meta theorems like the deduction theorem, reductio ad absurdum etc.


Yours Sincerely,
Anirban Mondal
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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Wed Oct 26, 2016 12:39 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
anirban.metal wrote:

A good property which we desire of any logic to have is completeness and soundness, which establish that one can syntactically derive a proof of a proposition if and only if it’s a semantically valid sentence.

And we don’t need to know much math for that.
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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Wed Oct 26, 2016 9:36 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Sisyphus wrote:
Well, not all of us are. Hehehe.

Well, that’s it, the nature of consciousness found above in “Hehehe.”

Sisyphus wrote:
I guess that just goes to show that we can’t always get what we want.

Destiny is a want? Why not frame that in the brilliant logic of “Hehehe” hall of fame?

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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Wed Oct 26, 2016 10:28 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Hi-D wrote:
Sisyphus wrote:
Well, not all of us are. Hehehe.

Well, that’s it, the nature of consciousness found above in “Hehehe.”

Well, if a person can’t laugh then I would suggest that they have a very negative and boring life.

Sisyphus wrote:
I guess that just goes to show that we can’t always get what we want.

Destiny is a want? Why not frame that in the brilliant logic of “Hehehe” hall of fame?

There is no such thing as destiny. It’s a man made concept without any support. And hind-sight doesn’t count. That’s called history and it’s written in stone.

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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Sat Oct 29, 2016 9:53 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
We are for all intents and purposes up against an alien logic that has locked us in its box and its time for a reckoning to break out of its box. This will be figured out with or without any of your contributions.
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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Sat Oct 29, 2016 11:55 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Enjoy.
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PostSubject: Re: Working Through The Logic Sun Oct 30, 2016 3:44 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
anirban.metal wrote:
I’ll share whatever I know about logic.

Hello Anirban, great post.

I’m going to go into one aspect of what you bring up here - I’ll be able to give some indications of what I wish to do with logic.

Quote :
We’ve got classical logic and intuitionistic logic, which varies in that in intuitionistic logic the law of excluded middle and the principle of double negation are not tautologies, and reductio ad absurdum fails to remain a valid approach to construct proofs as a consequence. All proofs are required to be constructive as in if one is arguing the existence of something, then an algorithm for it’s construction should be implicit in the proof.

Logic unfortunately, like the rest of mathematics, is based on the same Hilbert like axiomatic system. We have to take certain propositions for granted, as an example, modus ponens ({Px →Qx, Px} ⊢ Qx). Or the formula

∀ x : (Px → Qx) → (∀ x : Px → ∀ x : Qx)

has to be treated as a logical axiom. One could argue about their validity in a metalanguage, but I have never attempted it.

The axiomatization of a logical system can be done in multiple ways (as in one could ad libitum choose different sets of axioms but end up with the same logic).

A good property which we desire of any logic to have is completeness and soundness, which establish that one can syntactically derive a proof of a proposition if and only if it’s a semantically valid sentence.

After sufficient amount of bootstrapping, we get fancy meta theorems like the deduction theorem, reductio ad absurdum etc.

Value Ontology as we use it here has use of intuitionistic logic, that is to say that the notion of Truth is shifted from the outcome of the formula, to the mechanism of the formula itself.

The process, the way by which data is gathered into coherence, into a logical ‘object’, is that very ‘object’, prior to its specific content. The object, or ‘logical inevitability’ is thus presumed, or postulated empty and a priori as a necessary outcome, before the relevant data sets are led into that outcome.

We do this because in all cases of representation of knowledge, the ‘object’ is brought into being arbitrarily, haphazardly, and ‘accidentally’ almost - simply because there is no other way of representing.

But VO replaces ‘object’ and ‘truth’ and ‘result’ and ‘fixed value’ and ‘Constant’ and more with ‘self-valuing’, meaning an active agent, that enters into our logical faculties and processes as an active element, to which we respond - the formula is the axiomatic but truth to which the mind gives further substance.

The work of constructing a formal logic is predominantly problematized by the fact that ‘self-valuing’ is the only ‘empty’ value - there aren’t any variables except direct derivatives such as ‘valency’ - thus the process is changed and the concept ‘variable’ has taken on an entirely different meaning - after all, being itself is now a variable, whereas only Being as Logically Soundly Spoken is axiomatic, fixed, and operative.

I am not schooled in the terms of formal logic but all the more in its application, due to an early background in theoretical astrophysics, which is a field that posits, simply by observing reality, a lot of logical conundrums that, within themselves, contain proper logical propositions, that have not been yet derived, or made. Reality gives birth to logic, and value ontology is a logic without any presumptions of values, or constants, except the entirely unavoidable epistemic axiom that a statement of fact is itself a phenomenon, which’ ground does not need have anything to do with the ground to the fact it states.

It is a logic to contextualize logical formula and logically arrived-at truths within a logic about logic, or a logic about statements. It thus potentiates logical processes, as the very mechanism of its logic assembles all other types of logics and semantic substances its own context.

Obviously this method is entirely unconventional and ‘rogue’ -
it does not give a shit about line around concepts or languages.

Welcome to Before the Light, anyway,
a bit belated but certainly meant.

FC

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PostSubject: Proof of self-valuing Mon Nov 14, 2016 4:43 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Humans respond more to their beliefs about reality than they do to reality itself.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Proof of self-valuing Mon Nov 14, 2016 5:15 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Exactly right… hence why their belief is as real as the reality they are ignorant of - after all, their belief causes them to act, and these actions amount to reality.

Weirdly thus, beliefs are entirely real, even if their content may be total bullshit. Same with Gods - they drive people, and are thus totally real.


" The strong do what they can do and the weak accept what they have to accept. "

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PostSubject: Re: Proof of self-valuing Mon Nov 14, 2016 11:00 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I must, with sadness, agree.
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PostSubject: Re: Proof of self-valuing Wed Nov 16, 2016 4:17 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Fixed Cross wrote:
Exactly right… hence why their belief is as real as the reality they are ignorant of - after all, their belief causes them to act, and these actions amount to reality.

Weirdly thus, beliefs are entirely real, even if their content may be total bullshit. Same with Gods - they drive people, and are thus totally real.

cCh
scratch But are beliefs, in actuality,real? People believe in a Judaic/Christian God. But can you say that one really exists?
Does a belief make it so?

Perhaps beliefs are real in the same sense that an auditory or visual hallucination is but if examined further, it becomes something entirely different.

Quote :
their belief causes them to act, and these actions amount to reality.

Unfortunately this is true. But it doesn’t make the belief that was acted on as having any basis in reality except as perception and interpretation, wrongly conceived of.

I suppose that the question: "What can be considered as ‘real’ enters in here.


Each of our lives is a part of the lengthy process of the universe gradually waking up and becoming aware of itself.

Philosophy is the childhood of the intellect, and a culture that tries to skip it will never grow up."

“If I thought that everything I did was determined by my circumstancse and my psychological condition, I would feel trapped.”

Thomas Nagel
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PostSubject: Re: Proof of self-valuing Wed Nov 16, 2016 6:13 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Arcturus Descending wrote:
Fixed Cross wrote:
Exactly right… hence why their belief is as real as the reality they are ignorant of - after all, their belief causes them to act, and these actions amount to reality.

Weirdly thus, beliefs are entirely real, even if their content may be total bullshit. Same with Gods - they drive people, and are thus totally real.

cCh
scratch But are beliefs, in actuality,real? People believe in a Judaic/Christian God. But can you say that one really exists?

You misread.

I said that the belief is real. Not the content of the belief. Read my post again please. Its not long and very clear. Belief causes people to act n a certain way. Thus, that belief exists.

Furthermore, I dont believe in “true belief” vs “false belief”. A belief is per definition a not knowing.

Quote :
Quote :
their belief causes them to act, and these actions amount to reality.

Unfortunately this is true. But it doesn’t make the belief that was acted on as having any basis in reality except as perception and interpretation, wrongly conceived of.

I suppose that the question: "What can be considered as ‘real’ enters in here.

Or rather “what do you believe can be considered as ‘real’”. And why you believe that.


" The strong do what they can do and the weak accept what they have to accept. "

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PostSubject: Re: Proof of self-valuing Wed Nov 16, 2016 12:36 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Fixed Cross wrote:

I said that the belief is real. Not the content of the belief. Read my post again please. Its not long and very clear. Belief causes people to act n a certain way. Thus, that belief exists.

I had a hard time with this when I first started interacting on internet forums. My problem was that I couldn’t establish in word what my understanding was regarding “beliefs”.

Yes, beliefs are real in the individual’s mind. But what is believed may be nothing more that illusion and/or delusion. But the belief still remains real.

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PostSubject: Re: Proof of self-valuing Wed Nov 16, 2016 3:56 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Cause and effect: a person believes he can fly, but he cant. So he runs out of the window and dies. The belief has killed him. Id say that belief was pretty real. He was just wrong, but people being wrong is a pretty fucking real thing.


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PostSubject: Re: Proof of self-valuing Wed Nov 16, 2016 4:01 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
And by the way yes that really does happen. A fellow tried it above the garden next to my room when I was 20. So I have learned that idiotic beliefs are realer than brilliant insights sometimes. Because an insight doesnt necessarily lead to action. What’s even worse, often a brilliant insight is too comprehensive to be implemented in any other than a stupid way.

This is why Islam keeps winning, it’s just easy to believe all that and then die soon and gladly. Its just a path of little resistance, that has as its main generator a lust for the feeling of partaking in omnipotence. I can assure you it is a powerful drug Christianity in all its passion cant attain to the comprehensiveness of an Allahic release. To pour ones entire soul out, a heroin like relief.

Precisely like todays liberals: they feel entitled to the entire world and to the death of all those who feel differently, and this coincides in both cases with an absolute shutdown of thought.


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PostSubject: Re: Proof of self-valuing Wed Nov 16, 2016 11:10 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Yeah, points well made. I’m not much of a “belief” kind of guy. I prefer proof gathered from experience. So, from your above, we have experience that man cannot fly. So don’t try it.

And really, if our belief defies the natural processes of nature/man then we should discard that belief. Religions are based in faith and beliefs without proof. And yes, Islam is worse than Christianity.

Self-valuing includes valuing the processes of nature. If we ignore the nature of the universe we are in fact placing false value on our self.
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PostSubject: Re: Proof of self-valuing Thu Nov 17, 2016 2:47 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Yes, but remember that believing isn’t only about the obvious content of the belief, it is also about the act itself of believing, what this means and why it is possible at all, and even the belief-contents are more complex than simply a direct relation to reality/nature or not. Human subjectivity comes before human belief; by this I mean that beliefs are symptoms, not fundamental. This is why judging people for their religious or politically beliefs is just a kind of pathological madness and not compatible with philosophy. Beliefs are secondary expressions of more primary processes, subjective process and historical process and existential process for example.

Many beliefs are justified only in how they A) link feelings together and justify/express feelings in certain ways, and B) form shared common connections and grounds between people. Beliefs regulate self-psychological and social phenomena, and this is often the more primary function of the belief than simply to render a decision about “what is real”. This is something that I notice atheists often miss, and why atheists are often so dull and non-philosophical; atheists often think of belief only as a kind of scientific fact-content expressing, the atheist will say “well if a belief doesn’t match with reality/nature then it must be rejected”---- not so. The at least equal function of belief to this are the deeper psycho-subjective and social implications of beliefs, namely the atheist is disregarding an entire scope of the value of beliefs.

And remember too that we often know things which we haven’t formulated clearly into “a belief”, and we also often act on knowledge that isn’t “a belief” but another kind of knowledge, such as pre-conceptual or instinctive or feeling-based action. What we call a belief is a very very small part of the overall process by which human beings act, have knowledge, and subjectively function and grow further into existence. What is meant by philosophical honesty and “soul” is far larger than what I said meant by “belief”. And in fact, under philosophy we see beliefs are transformed into a totally different quality, because the “belief” and its associated contents are paired more and more with those other subjective and knowledge ranges, and also with other equally deepening beliefs, thus filling out the inner mental universe as linking idea to idea and feeling to feeling, and idea to feeling and feeling to idea, until the old ideological method of believing that is common for most people just falls away and is replaced with authenticity of being.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Proof of self-valuing Thu Nov 17, 2016 2:54 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
If the atheist has his way and removes all beliefs that are “not true”, this would remove far more than just a bunch of untrue belief-contents. Also you have to remember that most people aren’t in a position to need to make 100% accurate true or false determinations all the time, our beliefs are simply not needed to be that computer-like and scientific most of the time. Atheistic despise for untrue beliefs, usually religious beliefs, is actually a form of analytic thinking that is deeply pathological and anti-philosophical when taken to this extreme, namely when applied out of context and beyond its mandate. We aren’t computers, and life isn’t a series of empirical tests performed in a lab. The scientific-atheistic, analytic mindset just isn’t required beyond a limited role it plays, and certainly should not be allowed to replace the deeper soul-regions of the human, most of which are still beyond the possibility to even speak about or “believe or disbelieve” in.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Proof of self-valuing Thu Nov 17, 2016 4:24 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Fixed Cross wrote:
Arcturus Descending wrote:
Fixed Cross wrote:
Exactly right… hence why their belief is as real as the reality they are ignorant of - after all, their belief causes them to act, and these actions amount to reality.

Weirdly thus, beliefs are entirely real, even if their content may be total bullshit. Same with Gods - they drive people, and are thus totally real.

cCh
scratch But are beliefs, in actuality,real? People believe in a Judaic/Christian God. But can you say that one really exists?

You misread.

I said that the belief is real. Not the content of the belief. Read my post again please. Its not long and very clear. Belief causes people to act n a certain way. Thus, that belief exists.

Furthermore, I dont believe in “true belief” vs “false belief”. A belief is per definition a not knowing.

Quote :
Quote :
their belief causes them to act, and these actions amount to reality.

Unfortunately this is true. But it doesn’t make the belief that was acted on as having any basis in reality except as perception and interpretation, wrongly conceived of.

I suppose that the question: "What can be considered as ‘real’ enters in here.

Or rather “what do you believe can be considered as ‘real’”. And why you believe that.

No, FC, I didn’t misread it. A belief is only “real” to the individual but not necessarily real. This is why I asked “what is real” or what can be determined to be real?
If one’s belief does not turn out to be true, fact, than it isn’t real. Just so much fluff.

How is the belief any different than the content? Aren’t they one and the same thing? If I’m wrong, explain. I can’t see the distinction between the belief and its content.

False belief is what turns out to not be based in fact.
What I meant b y true belief is belief which becomes real, in other words knowledge, by accident. One didn’t believe because they “knew”, that’s knowledge, one only believed because they chose to believe, to have faith in something they could not know.
Thjere is belief and then there is knowledge.

Perhaps we need Wittgenstein to explain this.
I know what you’re trying to say though that a belief is real. But on the other hand, if someone believes in elves, can it be said that that belief has any bearing in “reality”?


Each of our lives is a part of the lengthy process of the universe gradually waking up and becoming aware of itself.

Philosophy is the childhood of the intellect, and a culture that tries to skip it will never grow up."

“If I thought that everything I did was determined by my circumstancse and my psychological condition, I would feel trapped.”

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PostSubject: Re: Proof of self-valuing Thu Nov 17, 2016 5:18 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Arc, youve failed.

Bye.


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PostSubject: Re: Proof of self-valuing Thu Nov 17, 2016 11:21 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Arc is pointing out the already stipulated to distinction between content of belief and believing itself, perhaps without realizing it. There isn’t disagreement here, just lack of precision to define.

Believing: the act of having belief.
Content of belief: what is believed.
Reality in terms of believing: what consequences or results follow from a believing.
Reality in terms of content of belief: the degree to which a belief’s contents are true without regard to the reality in terms of believing. (So called objective reslity of the belief)

Let’s say I believe I can fly by diving from a building. It is objectively untrue that I can fly by leaping from a building, therefore the content of the idea is untrue. We might say the reality of the content of the belief is lacking. However, when I jump and fall and die, those are actions and consequences in reality, therefore the believing itself was real in so far as its effects were real, regardless of the reality of the belief’s contents.

To the point about belief versus knowing: A) yes a belief can be defined as an absence of knowing ergo what is not known must instead be merely “believed”, but also B) what we call “believing” can alternately be defined as simply a strong affirmative stance toward something already known, in which case I can know that when I drop my cup it will fall; but the sheer force or affirmation of this knowledge of mine, based on induction and on understanding some physics, causes me to believe that if I drop a cup it will fall. The “belief” here is only an indication of the force or affirmation behind a given known thing and before the fact of the thing’s occurring (namely tied to a future-predicting), and C) saying “I believe the cup will fall” is just habit of language, which really means “I know the cup will fall”.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Proof of self-valuing Thu Nov 17, 2016 2:11 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Capable wrote:
Yes, but remember that believing isn’t only about the obvious content of the belief, …

No disagreement with what you said here. I didn’t express myself well in that post above. Next time I’ll do better.
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PostSubject: Re: Proof of self-valuing Thu Nov 17, 2016 2:18 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Capable wrote:
If the atheist has his way and removes all beliefs that are “not true”, this would remove far more than just a bunch of untrue belief-contents. Also you have to remember that most people aren’t in a position to need to make 100% accurate true or false determinations all the time, our beliefs are simply not needed to be that computer-like and scientific most of the time. Atheistic despise for untrue beliefs, usually religious beliefs, is actually a form of analytic thinking that is deeply pathological and anti-philosophical when taken to this extreme, namely when applied out of context and beyond its mandate. We aren’t computers, and life isn’t a series of empirical tests performed in a lab. The scientific-atheistic, analytic mindset just isn’t required beyond a limited role it plays, and certainly should not be allowed to replace the deeper soul-regions of the human, most of which are still beyond the possibility to even speak about or “believe or disbelieve” in.

No argument. But I will point out that I’m not an angry Atheist. I just don’t hold to beliefs that I find serve no useful purpose for me. Useful/useless is an important concept for me. It is an attempt to reduce the amount of judging of things and people.

I’ve not mentioned it here yet but I prefer to live spontaneously as often as I can. Just do what feels natural. No, I don’t want to have a computer brain.
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PostSubject: Re: Proof of self-valuing Fri Nov 18, 2016 3:23 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Fixed Cross wrote:
Arc, youve failed.

Bye.

Ouch.
But you’re correct. I will concede to your argument.
It’s always a good thing when I come to realize that I am NOT thinking out of the box and that I have a blind spot.


Each of our lives is a part of the lengthy process of the universe gradually waking up and becoming aware of itself.

Philosophy is the childhood of the intellect, and a culture that tries to skip it will never grow up."

“If I thought that everything I did was determined by my circumstancse and my psychological condition, I would feel trapped.”

Thomas Nagel
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PostSubject: Re: Proof of self-valuing Fri Nov 18, 2016 3:49 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Capable,

Quote :
Arc is pointing out the already stipulated to distinction between content of belief and believing itself, perhaps without realizing it. There isn’t disagreement here, just lack of precision to define.

True but what I failed to do is to realize that there is not only physical reality but also immaterial or ethereal reality (if I’m using the correct words). That is the nature of belief’s reality - it is immaterial though it stems from the material brain to the mind to thought.
If I am to “see” my thoughts as having “existence” on some other level of reality, then I must also realize that belief is “real” too - is some kind of thing.
I see the flower - it is a material thing so it is real but so is the scent of that flower a reality.

I was so focused on “false” belief, that I equated that with belief itself having no true reality. I was blind-sided.

Quote :
Believing: the act of having belief.
Content of belief: what is believed.
Reality in terms of believing: what consequences or results follow from a believing.
Reality in terms of content of belief: the degree to which a belief’s contents are true without regard to the reality in terms of believing. (So called objective reslity of the belief)

True. That all points to belief as being part of reality.
What is the saying - “Something cannot come from Nothing”.
As FC and yourself pointed out - belief has “existence” because of cause and effect consequences, et cetera.
The material world and its influence brings it into existence.
I had to remember, to realize tat “reality” itself is not always physically tangible.

Quote :
Let’s say I believe I can fly by diving from a building. It is objectively untrue that I can fly by leaping from a building, therefore the content of the idea is untrue. We might say the reality of the content of the belief is lacking. However, when I jump and fall and die, those are actions and consequences in reality, therefore the believing itself was real in so far as its effects were real, regardless of the reality of the belief’s contents
.

Yes, I get that now. Again, I was more focused on the content of belief as cancelling out the reality of belief.
I can hardly believe that I’ve been in a philosophy forum all of this time, 8 years, and thought that way. Absurd.

Quote :
To the point about belief versus knowing: A) yes a belief can be defined as an absence of knowing ergo what is not known must instead be merely “believed”,

…taken on faith.

Quote :
but also B) what we call “believing” can alternately be defined as simply a strong affirmative stance toward something already known, in which case I can know that when I drop my cup it will fall;

But wouldn’t that still be called “knowing”?

Quote :
but the sheer force or affirmation of this knowledge of mine, based on induction and on understanding some physics, causes me to believe that if I drop a cup it will fall. The “belief” here is only an indication of the force or affirmation behind a given known thing and before the fact of the thing’s occurring (namely tied to a future-predicting), and C) saying “I believe the cup will fall” is just habit of language, which really means “I know the cup will fall”.

C) But would you really say “I believe” in this instance? The only time you might I believe in this situation would depend on perhaps how precariously slow to the edge of something the cup was, no? I’m not quibbling here - sometimes we can only believe and times we can know.

There is always two sides to the coin, at least figuratively speaking. I’m glad that this happened. It’s a reminder to me of how I often think.


Each of our lives is a part of the lengthy process of the universe gradually waking up and becoming aware of itself.

Philosophy is the childhood of the intellect, and a culture that tries to skip it will never grow up."

“If I thought that everything I did was determined by my circumstancse and my psychological condition, I would feel trapped.”

Thomas Nagel
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PostSubject: Re: Proof of self-valuing Tue Nov 29, 2016 5:17 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Arcturus Descending wrote:
Capable,

Quote :
Arc is pointing out the already stipulated to distinction between content of belief and believing itself, perhaps without realizing it. There isn’t disagreement here, just lack of precision to define.

True but what I failed to do is to realize that there is not only physical reality but also immaterial or ethereal reality (if I’m using the correct words). That is the nature of belief’s reality - it is immaterial though it stems from the material brain to the mind to thought.
If I am to “see” my thoughts as having “existence” on some other level of reality, then I must also realize that belief is “real” too - is some kind of thing.
I see the flower - it is a material thing so it is real but so is the scent of that flower a reality.

I was so focused on “false” belief, that I equated that with belief itself having no true reality. I was blind-sided.

I see you’ve understood now Arc. So Im going to make it slightly more complex.

The term “false belief” actually never had any meaning for me because to me, all belief is “false” - i.e. “Belief” implies the absence of knowledge… which, in a certain way, makes it ‘false’ to believe, period. So belief is basically false to begin with. But that doesnt make the action fo believing less of a reality, as it grounds your actions, and these are real.

An action cant be “false”.

This is not a value judgment- the falsity of belief, i.e. of not-knowledge experienced as certainty, can lead to good things. We can believe a situation is better than it is and based on that belief, act with good spirits, and actually improve the situation.
Based on illusion, we can change reality for the better.

This is the great paradox of knowledge versus wisdom.

Quote :
Quote :
Believing: the act of having belief.
Content of belief: what is believed.
Reality in terms of believing: what consequences or results follow from a believing.
Reality in terms of content of belief: the degree to which a belief’s contents are true without regard to the reality in terms of believing. (So called objective reslity of the belief)

True. That all points to belief as being part of reality.
What is the saying - “Something cannot come from Nothing”.
As FC and yourself pointed out - belief has “existence” because of cause and effect consequences, et cetera.
The material world and its influence brings it into existence.
I had to remember, to realize tat “reality” itself is not always physically tangible.

Quote :
Let’s say I believe I can fly by diving from a building. It is objectively untrue that I can fly by leaping from a building, therefore the content of the idea is untrue. We might say the reality of the content of the belief is lacking. However, when I jump and fall and die, those are actions and consequences in reality, therefore the believing itself was real in so far as its effects were real, regardless of the reality of the belief’s contents
.

Yes, I get that now. Again, I was more focused on the content of belief as cancelling out the reality of belief.
I can hardly believe that I’ve been in a philosophy forum all of this time, 8 years, and thought that way. Absurd.

These are all relatively new insights.
In fact Ive not ever seen them formulated as straightforwardly as I do - often this comes across my path as my task, to rigorously formulate ideas that have been half-born by good, but soft minds.

Quote :
Quote :
To the point about belief versus knowing: A) yes a belief can be defined as an absence of knowing ergo what is not known must instead be merely “believed”,

…taken on faith.

Faith, or in the childs or artists case, imagination.

Schopenhauers idea of “will and imagination” might be interesting for you to look into.

Quote :
Quote :
but also B) what we call “believing” can alternately be defined as simply a strong affirmative stance toward something already known, in which case I can know that when I drop my cup it will fall;

But wouldn’t that still be called “knowing”?

A scientist will often say “I believe” when he means “I know”. It’s a way of covering the theoretical possibility of things going the other way by some yet undiscovered law, of which a true scientist is always aware.

A true scientist will, when he knows that he really knows something, be quite marveled. He knows how rare true knowledge is, how few things are truly certain.

Hume has explored this domain of almost-certainty, or what, with a stretch, we may perhaps term “true belief”; i.e. belief that has been verified, over and over again, so for it to become knowledge, even if the cause is not understood.

“True certainty” vs “false certainty”: in the former, the cause of the thing that is certainly the case is understood; i.e. it is understood why the thing is certainly the case. A false certainty can occur when it appears a thing is simply always the case, but one does not know why.

Quote :
Quote :
but the sheer force or affirmation of this knowledge of mine, based on induction and on understanding some physics, causes me to believe that if I drop a cup it will fall. The “belief” here is only an indication of the force or affirmation behind a given known thing and before the fact of the thing’s occurring (namely tied to a future-predicting), and C) saying “I believe the cup will fall” is just habit of language, which really means “I know the cup will fall”.

C) But would you really say “I believe” in this instance? The only time you might I believe in this situation would depend on perhaps how precariously slow to the edge of something the cup was, no? I’m not quibbling here - sometimes we can only believe and times we can know.

There is always two sides to the coin, at least figuratively speaking. I’m glad that this happened. It’s a reminder to me of how I often think.

These moments of change in the machinery of ones thought, that is what philosophy is made of. Be proud of your capacity to make such changes. It’s rare.

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PostSubject: Meaning Wed Nov 30, 2016 12:58 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I am working on the hypothesis that meaning is a literal, tangible, “physical” substance. This is per tectonics, of course. The brain is little more than a very sensitive recording instrument – it records meanings, and by virtue of how the rest of the body is also connected into the hub of the brain, the body becomes activate directly by meaning—namely, as “humanity”.

This is Logic 101 of the future philosophy.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Meaning Wed Nov 30, 2016 1:48 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Time for truth to surface.

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HOEWHwrSHXU[/youtube]

“The Deceived”

Disintegration constituents to decompose of the parts
A malformation utopia systematic unity can’t be achieved

Be numb to all the things
That force you to frame

[We are the deceived
Lost in the foreseen]

To wait for aforementioned dreams time will only tell
Tell that the promised have been failed

Behold your fellow man through centuries of control
Adhering to the decrees of a manufactured god


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Meaning Wed Nov 30, 2016 3:34 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
It’s sort of funny to be 100-200 years ahead of the curve. Oh well.

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KT_Z0ABYeqk[/youtube]


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Meaning Wed Nov 30, 2016 3:40 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster

To staying ahead of the curve.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Meaning Wed Nov 30, 2016 11:48 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Capable wrote:
I am working on the hypothesis that meaning is a literal, tangible, “physical” substance. This is per tectonics, of course. The brain is little more than a very sensitive recording instrument – it records meanings, and by virtue of how the rest of the body is also connected into the hub of the brain, the body becomes activate directly by meaning—namely, as “humanity”.

This is Logic 101 of the future philosophy.

While this may be true I suggest that it is only at the individual level and can never be used as a generalized statement. Just like dreams, they are real for the dreamer only.
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PostSubject: Re: Meaning Thu Dec 01, 2016 2:38 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
It is true at the level of individual brains, and since we all have those it is therefore true for all of us.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Meaning Thu Dec 01, 2016 3:13 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Capable wrote:
It is true at the level of individual brains, and since we all have those it is therefore true for all of us.

I think you just cheated but I’m not going to say anything.

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Arcturus Descending
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PostSubject: Re: Meaning Thu Dec 01, 2016 3:51 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Capable

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I am working on the hypothesis that meaning is a literal, tangible, “physical” substance.

I think that meaning can be equated with “belief” - in the sense that it is also “real” but still intangible.
How do you see meaning as a physical substance? One can say that meaning issues from the mind and the emotions - they are “real” but are they physical? Do they have actual form (well perhaps yes) but real substance?

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The brain is little more than a very sensitive recording instrument – it records meanings, and by virtue of how the rest of the body is also connected into the hub of the brain, the body becomes activate directly by meaning—namely, as “humanity”.

Little more than? After millions of years, it is “little more than”? Mad Yes, they are recording instruments also… but little more than? Nothing complex about it? This physical reality which many call “the final frontier”?
Is it the brain which records meaning or is it the mind by way of the human experience/memories/patterns, et cetera, which does that?

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This is Logic 101 of the future philosophy.
Philosophy of the Mind?

I can though greatly appreciate those who have their own hypotheses which they are working on.


Each of our lives is a part of the lengthy process of the universe gradually waking up and becoming aware of itself.

Philosophy is the childhood of the intellect, and a culture that tries to skip it will never grow up."

“If I thought that everything I did was determined by my circumstancse and my psychological condition, I would feel trapped.”

Thomas Nagel

Last edited by Arcturus Descending on Thu Dec 01, 2016 3:57 am; edited 1 time in total
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PostSubject: Re: Meaning Thu Dec 01, 2016 3:56 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Sisyphus wrote:
Capable wrote:
It is true at the level of individual brains, and since we all have those it is therefore true for all of us.

I think you just cheated but I’m not going to say anything.

It’s not cheating, it’s true. The brain is just a very sensitive organic computer, it responds to and records meaning. At first it does this “unconsciously” as creating hardwired instincts that solidify genetically via natural selection, basically just so the organism can survive long enough to procreate; but later in humans the brain becomes so sensitive and with the help of an externalized brain-surrogate model (language) starts to respond to meaning directly, which means to facts directly and to the significance of things. This allows us access to knowledge and ultimately to what is called consciousness.

The brain doesn’t create meaning, and meaning is not “in the brain”, rather the brain is simply a device capable of registering and reorganizing itself (neural structures) in terms of meaning (facts, larger significances). Ultimately this is all that consciousness really is.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Meaning Thu Dec 01, 2016 7:21 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Okay. My mind is at peace regarding this thread once again. I started thinking you were making inferences that I totally disagree with (universal consciousness). I had thought that you were too scientifically minded to be doing anything like that.

But then, I will add that some instincts are common within nearly all of the members of a species. But we each will attach individual meaning to our experiences just as we do regarding our dreams.
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PostSubject: Re: Meaning Thu Dec 01, 2016 11:32 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Capable wrote:
The brain doesn’t create meaning, and meaning is not “in the brain”, rather the brain is simply a device capable of registering and reorganizing itself (neural structures) in terms of meaning (facts, larger significances). Ultimately this is all that consciousness really is.

Consciousness is more than what occurs solely in the brain of experience gathering intel.
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PostSubject: Re: Meaning Wed Feb 01, 2017 12:50 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Thrasymachus wrote:
I am working on the hypothesis that meaning is a literal, tangible, “physical” substance. This is per tectonics, of course. The brain is little more than a very sensitive recording instrument – it records meanings, and by virtue of how the rest of the body is also connected into the hub of the brain, the body becomes activate directly by meaning—namely, as “humanity”.

This is Logic 101 of the future philosophy.

In as far as we speak of things this is meaning itself, and what we chase in life is meaning. But is breath meaning?
The Chinese live it as such. The breath of life - in Latin, breath is “spiritus”.

The Holy Breath.

There is no such thing as “spirit” in Latin -
the holy spirit is literally the holy breath.

What is the holy breath?

This?

s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/73 … fea265.jpg

“That for which they seek is that which searches.”


" The strong do what they can do and the weak accept what they have to accept. "

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PostSubject: Re: Meaning Wed Feb 01, 2017 1:00 pm Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Because holiness is the meaning of meaning itself.

We give things meaning so that ultimately they can be hallowed, and we will hallow ourselves and be made holy thereby, and what is holy is everlasting.

I call this “standard” and “consistency” and “gold” and it comes about through heavy, elemental collisions.
From such heavy elements that don’t corrupt, the electrical currents are liberated into beauty.

The Soul is not made out of gold but woven between it.
Silver, therefore, is more substantial to the soul - the mother metal…
But Gold, trace from one owner to the next, and you shall find one of two things; loyalty or betrayal.

There is no middle path with gold and heed all ye who wear it the demons inside, for they will be magnified.

This is not artificial.

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PostSubject: Illogic of retaliatory beliefs Tue Mar 14, 2017 1:36 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Islam and liberalism share in common the fact that if you disagree with these beliefs, then those who hold them will retaliate against you, often in open violence; and even if not in physical violence then certainly in words, attitude, and with an intent to discredit you and/or cause you harm.

If you are a conservative you must hide this fact from your employer, for example, because in many cases you will lose your job if they find out. This is a well known fact in America, and while there are exceptions they are just that, exceptions. Liberal-leftism has taken cultural hold here, in entertainment and media, in politics and jobs, in the social stratosphere of norms, and a conservative is far less likely to state outright his beliefs than is a liberal, because the liberal’s beliefs are socially-sanctioned and protected by the politically correct policing (thought police) that has become common here. Get this: Trump just won the presidency, the Republicans just won the House and Senate, and yet if many Americans were to show up to their jobs with Trump stickers on their car they would face severe retaliation from their employer and fellow employees, certainly being openly insulted and verbally attacked and ostracized, and in some cases including being fired.

The “silent majority” has been made to be silent. We live in 1984.

The same goes, obviously, for Islam. Muslims get upset whenever someone states that Islam is a violent religion – and the Muslim then immediately puts out a death sentence upon such an individual, proving that individual was correct. Why do you think anti-Islam politicians need such heavy security, and sometimes they still get killed anyway? Or they need to live in hiding for the rest of their lives, and yet we are forbidden from announcing this fact publicly, we must always say how tolerance and peaceful Islam is. lol.

I am claiming now that any belief or belief system that sanctions violence, force, intimidation or retaliation against someone else who disagrees with that belief system, to be total and complete shit. Liberalism is a form of fascism, I see this almost every day out in public, it literally controls people’s speech and actions. Islam is also a form of fascism, despite the fact that half of all Muslims can co-exist peacefully and moderate to some degree. The ideology itself is fascist, in a way that Christianity is not.

From now on I will oppose any belief, in religion or philosophy or politics, or otherwise, that sanctions the use of force/violence either directly or indirectly against anyone simply because the other person does not adhere to that belief. These sort of retaliatory belief-fascisms must be opposed. Fuck Islam and fuck the left. And fuck conservatism too if it becomes fascist in this same manner.

If they can’t win in the war of ideas and logic, then they don’t deserve to win – and they know this, which is why they get all emotionally bent out of shape and resort to violence when they can’t complete on the philosophical level.


“What are you?” asked Apollonius.

“We are gods,” said Icarus.

“Why are you gods?”

“We are gods because we are good men.”
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PostSubject: Re: Illogic of retaliatory beliefs Tue Mar 14, 2017 2:26 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
I’m glad that most time I get to totally agree with you. This is one of those times. For me, a threat of violence against me allows me to consider the one making the threat fair game for a killing. Self defense.

I do not accept the actions of the present liberals or the actions of the militant Islamist. Change by force is unacceptable. I will resist to the maximum of my abilities.

And I will speak out against it whenever I have the opportunity.

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PostSubject: Re: Illogic of retaliatory beliefs Tue Mar 14, 2017 4:25 am Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post Delete this post View IP address of poster
Yes. I also take extreme joy in seeing the demise and death of anyone who is motivated by such violent retaliatory beliefs. It is the natural reward for their stupidity.

I essentially Trump their beliefs with a greater deathforce, afforded by a greater lifeforce: if you wish death upon someone that hasnt warranted this by my code, I say you will perish like the soulless hound you are.