Bodhidharma wrote: Here's my question to you, why are you so sarcastic and generally negative?
Bodhidharma wrote: I'm also an amateur psychologist ...
bonkey wrote: Shouldn't you have put the word "apparently" before "free-flowing and random" there?
Son Goku wrote: I love the free-flowing and random, thats why my favourite subjects are quantum field theory and chaos.
Idioteque wrote: Is not a lot of our questioning /logic flawed because we are limited to what knowledge we have?.
Hence our questioning is flawed... e.g. Statement: God created Man. Question: Yes, but what was there before God? Now surely such questions as the one above are based upon our knowledge of physics etc but ultimately is such a question not flawed?
Are we not limited in the same way that a goldfish would be to swimming around a bowl, unaware of the magnitude of life around it?
Bodhidharma wrote: To Sapien, why dont you actually come out with an opinion instead of sniping away in the background with your pseudo intellectual gibberish.
Bodhidharma wrote: The answers i look for are very hard to describe. I woudn't say the meaning of life, more like, why life? These answers are very much based on emotional intuitiveness. Something you feel more than you can quantify.
Son Goku wrote: it can't enhance anybody spiritually at all
Bodhidharma wrote: The answers i look for are very hard to describe. I woudn't say the meaning of life, more like, why life? These answers are very much based on emotional intuitiveness. Something you feel more than you can quantify. I do admit that Physics is probably the most dynamic and changable of all the disciplines, i still find it difficult to see how it can enhance our spiritual life. How it can bring us closer to the ultimate truth. I know i am being vague in regard to what questions i want answers for, but i am only a beginner after all. I do not profess great knowledge in the subject but i do feel some truth to the words of some of the great pholosophers. I am not a skeptic but i do feel there is great value in questioning the assumptions of the world.
But it does have me believe that you prefer the structured and linear to the free flowing and random.
Religion and science are examples of bad faith because we cannot know anything about the universe.
I am of the opinon that the answers you search for will not benefit the human condition. I cannot argue with you on science, i am not qualified. Science can do great things but it cannot ease the suffering of the soul. The constant questioning of our purpose will never end.
Son Goku wrote: How can I comment on that without referencing Science.
Again you have written about science and results and so on, that is not Philosophy!
i would say that sartre got it right in saying that science is an example of bad faith.
What is a number? Answer that. its nothing but an illusion created by us to fool us into believing we will be able to answer questions totally beyond our comprehension.
we are not capable of knowing anything about the universe because science was created by us. like it or not we know nothing. even the great minds are empty of real knowledge. science is based on maths, which we created.
I disagree with what you have said, the " what if real isnt real" debate has got merit, because my whole point is that science is based on observation, and observation is about perception. If we are not seeing or understanding things the right way then any results will be useless.
I think maybe your definition of Philosophy is somewhat different to mine. I see it as the search for greater understanding of the human condition and our place in the scheme of things, if indeed there is one. To put it simply i am more interested in the things that can make life better, understanding and experiences. Particle accelerators hold no interest for me.
Science and numbers are only useful if you accept the nature of reality that we perceive to be true, and this is open to debate.
Bodhidharma wrote: Apologies to Son Goku if he/she saw my response as aggresive, it wasn't intended as such.
Bodhidharma wrote: I am neither a mathamatician nor a philosopher, so pardon me for not knowing about maths theories. Son Goku, i dont have an idea what your talking about. Axiomatic Structure? Bewildering people with obscure, highly specialised references is one way to end a discussion, it does not make you right though.
My theory is simply this, the universe is much more simple and staightforward than you can imagine. so simple in fact that we will never find the answers. its like looking all over the house for keys when they are in your pocket. Answers are over rated, its the questions that intrigue me.
Bodhidharma wrote: Maths is the universal language eh?
Bodhidharma wrote: First off i dont think my computer running shows any great sign of intelligence. after all, what is it but a tool for communicating, Smoke signals did the same hundreds of years ago.
Secondly, giving me examples of equations is all well and good, but they are based on numbers. What is a number? Answer that. its nothing but an illusion created by us to fool us into believing we will be able to answer questions totally beyond our comprehension.Maths is the universal language eh? if we ever make contact be sure to ask them that equation of yours!
its nothing but an illusion created by us to fool us into believing we will be able to answer questions totally beyond our comprehension.
DadaKopf wrote: No, science has 'deepened' knowledge in some areas and rendered others invisible at best, deviant at worst. Some questions are permitted, some just aren't on the radar.
Bodhidharma wrote: I too have become very interested in philosophy in the past few months and if i was a pretentious intellectual( i'm not, i'm a pretentious wannabe), i would say that sartre got it right in saying that science is an example of bad faith. we are not capable of knowing anything about the universe because science was created by us. like it or not we know nothing. even the great minds are empty of real knowledge. science is based on maths, which we created. us humans are the most arrogant and presumptious speices in the universe ( or maybe not, i am being presumptious), but why do we think WE can solve anything? flesh and blood with a little bit of intelligence. we create maths to find answers to the world, but if we created them with this in mind surely the system is flawed. it begins with an answer and tries to fit the questions to it.
transperson wrote: what are the areas that have been left invisible and off the radar or even deviant?
Idioteque wrote: I'm sure there's some simple flaw in what I'm asking but then again that's why this board is here is it not! Excuse my naivety but I’m no philosopher...
science has 'deepened' knowledge in some areas and rendered others invisible at best, deviant at worst. Some questions are permitted, some just aren't on the radar