Philosophy Forum  
Register Blogs Videos FAQ Members List Calendar Mark Forums Read

Go Back   Philosophy Forum > Philosophy Forums > Branches of Philosophy > Epistemology

Important Notice

Epistemology The Philosophy of Knowledge. Is knowledge really important and in what ways is knowledge acquired? Rationalism or Empiricism?

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools
  #71 (permalink)  
Old 12-17-2007, 10:03 AM
Full Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: here
Posts: 615
Thanks: 28
Thanked 98 Times in 84 Posts
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts
TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0
Rep Power: 3
nameless will become famous soon enoughnameless will become famous soon enough
Re: Do humans actually have free will?

Quote:
Originally Posted by GridLok View Post
What do say 'memories' are?
Ahhh, thats the question of the evening!

'Memory' (a definitional work in progress);

1) Memory = (what we accept as) Existence

'It' (self, dreams, thoughts, concepts, the 'world'...) exists, for us, because we have/are a memory of 'it', at the moment.

A 'memory' of a thing often appears to be that thing; it is not the thing. Memory has built-in ego. That mnemonic ego, sense of 'self' as individual = unique perspective. A 'unique self' (memory thereof) is a unique perspective of that memory. 'Self' is what memory presents as perspective of memory.

1) Each 'moment' = one uniquely perceived (mnemonically) universe. Like one cell from a film, motionless and unrelated to the other cells but by 'coincidental' arrangement and a sequentially perceived mnemonic.

1) A 'memory' must be contextual/definitional/dualistic to Be.
Existence = Context/definition

1) One memory (with perspectives) = one moment (Planck)

There are 10-^43/second meaning that if a Planck moment were the tiniest nano-increment 'larger', there would be 100 billion trillion trillion trillion Planck moments in one second.

1) As it is, a Planck moment is of such construction that there are no temporal qualities inherent in a 'slice of time that 'small'; all synchronous moments are completely 'timeless'. Odd how the illusion of such a thing as 'time' can occur in a moment that is timeless. Timeless and motionless.

1) All momentary memories are quantumly discrete and synchronous.

Physics shakily admits that there has been found no electrons jumping between energy levels. Nothing 'moving'. An electron was said to 'jump' from one energy level to another, but now that there are tools capable of observing, there cannot be found any electrons between energy levels. What this implies to me is that one 'moment' there is an electron in it on a particular energy level; in another moment, there is no electron on that level, but Now there is an electron on the next level in another moment. New moment, new memory, nothing 'happening' but momentary memory as perspective, as context, as all of our perceived 'existence', all at Once, for the non-duration, timelessly.
We are new 'creations'(memories/universes) each and every moment. Not linearly but synchronously 'Banging' into existence, and Banging out again at the same timeless /moment'. That is all of ever creation. Pooft! Sure appears differently though.. what a 'trip'. Fun, full, wildly and broadly elevated, but a 'mnemonic dream' nontheless.
Not 'Real'.

1) The 'ground' of memory seems to be (One) Mind, which I equate with the 'quantum probability wave field'.

Some quantum physicists call (the One) 'Consciousness' the "Ground of all Being". ( see; Copenhagen Interpretation) As undisturbed chaos, the 'wave field' (Mind) is absolutely undifferentiated potential. It is all the possibilities of existence/memory, yet nothing in particular. No memory. When Consciousness turns 'in' upon mind, each of the 'potential universes', each 'wave' (quanton) 'collapses' into it's 'potential' universes/'realities' (memories) of each of those (infinite?) particular 'realities' complete with many, many perspectives (us/ego built in).
And we imagine 'life'.
And people have been asking if there is 'life' after death (a nonsensical question on the face)! The question would have been better asking if there is 'life' before death.
One can/must get used to not accepting the 'display of memory' (perceptions/concepts) as 'Truth', in a 'quest' for 'Truth/Reality'.

This is a rough definition of 'memory', as I 'see' it.
At the 'moment', this definition is a work in progress. There is another moment, somewhere, where this definition is completed and, perhaps, more meaningful.
Peace
Reply With Quote
  #72 (permalink)  
Old 12-17-2007, 10:24 AM
Full Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: here
Posts: 615
Thanks: 28
Thanked 98 Times in 84 Posts
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts
TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0
Rep Power: 3
nameless will become famous soon enoughnameless will become famous soon enough
Re: Do humans actually have free will?

Quote:
Originally Posted by boagie View Post
Nameless,:)

:) Excellent point, it never the less seems an unresistable force to secular thought to try to reach the faithful through reason, something they long ago abandoned to their faith.
It is no different then the 'believers' attempting to propagate their 'beliefs'. It is all 'pride'. Those who 'believe' in logic are no different than those who 'believe' in spirit guides. The 'logician, if not a 'believer', if trying to 'convince' a believer of the (assumed) error of his ways is acting vainly egoically. It is prideful ego that assumes 'superiority' when faced with a differing perspective. 'Belief' and 'pride' are intimately connected, hence the apparent hypocrisy of those who 'believe' that 'pride' is a 'sin'. 'Belief' judges different as 'wrong/evil/bad'. Evangelizing in the name of 'Logic' or 'Jesus' is non-different, from this perspective.
That 'unresistable force' to which you refer, is 'prideful ego'.


Quote:
In the presence of knowledge there would be no need of faith.
Knowledge = Memory
Some, by 'faith/belief' accept their 'memory/knowledge' as 'Truth/Reality', whatever the subject.
All knowledge is memory, the 'believer's' and the non-believer's. None 'correcter/righter/more 'Truthful'/valuable... than another.
Which of the blind men surrounding the elephant is 'right'? Which is 'wrong'? Only the One Consciousness that is the Observer of all memory (the 'Experiencer' as compared to 'we experiences') 'perspectives' gets the complete picture.

Quote:
Memories: stored experiences?:confused:
Nothing to be 'stored'.
Flash Boom there is a memory/moment of a whole personal history, created on the spot, Now, as one moment/memory. You 'imagine' your life history to be a 'fact' from the appearances of memory (sort of).
Reply With Quote
  #73 (permalink)  
Old 12-17-2007, 10:32 AM
Full Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: here
Posts: 615
Thanks: 28
Thanked 98 Times in 84 Posts
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts
TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0
Rep Power: 3
nameless will become famous soon enoughnameless will become famous soon enough
Re: Do humans actually have free will?

Quote:
Originally Posted by boagie View Post
... to try to reach the faithful through reason, something they long ago abandoned to their faith.
'Knowledge' is only one 'path' to 'Truth/Reality'.
'Faith/belief' is another. Both are fruitful to a point, but both must be abandoned, in the end (as all 'paths'), to proceed toward the 'goal'.
Reply With Quote
  #74 (permalink)  
Old 12-17-2007, 10:45 AM
boagie's Avatar
Full Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Ontario Canada
Posts: 2,353
Thanks: 638
Thanked 334 Times in 290 Posts
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts
TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0
Rep Power: 8
boagie is a jewel in the roughboagie is a jewel in the roughboagie is a jewel in the roughboagie is a jewel in the rough
Re: Do humans actually have free will?

Quote:
Originally Posted by nameless View Post
It is no different then the 'believers' attempting to propagate their 'beliefs'. It is all 'pride'. Those who 'believe' in logic are no different than those who 'believe' in spirit guides. The 'logician, if not a 'believer', if trying to 'convince' a believer of the (assumed) error of his ways is acting vainly egoically. It is prideful ego that assumes 'superiority' when faced with a differing perspective. 'Belief' and 'pride' are intimately connected, hence the apparent hypocrisy of those who 'believe' that 'pride' is a 'sin'. 'Belief' judges different as 'wrong/evil/bad'. Evangelizing in the name of 'Logic' or 'Jesus' is non-different, from this perspective.
That 'unresistable force' to which you refer, is 'prideful ego'.



Knowledge = Memory
Some, by 'faith/belief' accept their 'memory/knowledge' as 'Truth/Reality', whatever the subject.
All knowledge is memory, the 'believer's' and the non-believer's. None 'correcter/righter/more 'Truthful'/valuable... than another.
Which of the blind men surrounding the elephant is 'right'? Which is 'wrong'? Only the One Consciousness that is the Observer of all memory (the 'Experiencer' as compared to 'we experiences') 'perspectives' gets the complete picture.


Nothing to be 'stored'.
Flash Boom there is a memory/moment of a whole personal history, created on the spot, Now, as one moment/memory. You 'imagine' your life history to be a 'fact' from the appearances of memory (sort of).
Nameless,

That is a most impressive soft shoe dance, but what is the knowledge you claim to be innate to religion? All meaning derived from the physical world is through the understanding of our relation to object for naïve realism at anyrate. If you wish to consider ultimate reality and its nature and origin then you are dealing with that ultimate mystery which is the unknown. Again what knowledge is innate to religion whether of naive realism or ultimate reality, an example would be most helpful.

Last edited by boagie; 12-17-2007 at 11:07 AM.
Reply With Quote
  #75 (permalink)  
Old 12-17-2007, 10:49 AM
Full Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Earth
Posts: 1,207
Thanks: 2
Thanked 106 Times in 98 Posts
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts
TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0
Rep Power: 4
Fido will become famous soon enoughFido will become famous soon enough
Re: Do humans actually have free will?

Quote:
Originally Posted by boagie View Post
Fido,

Religion requires no knowledge, please give an example of this said knowledge innate to religion. As I stated earlier in the presence of knowledge faith is unnecessary. Lord help my disbelief!
Sir. I did not say religion requires knowledge, but that knowledge requires faith. No one alive has tested all the concepts we must take for granted to add to knowledge. We take what the last generation tested on faith. The same is true of religion. They take someones testimony. What they do not realize is that they get only the testimony of those who prayed, and were saved, and they miss the testimony of all who prayed and were washed away. You should not confuse the fact that you can conceptualize all you know with really knowing what you are given in the way of concepts. Certainly, many concepts have fallen by the wayside that were once accepted as truth. It will happen today, tomorrow, and forever, if there is such a thing.
Reply With Quote
  #76 (permalink)  
Old 12-17-2007, 11:05 AM
Full Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Earth
Posts: 1,207
Thanks: 2
Thanked 106 Times in 98 Posts
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts
TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0
Rep Power: 4
Fido will become famous soon enoughFido will become famous soon enough
Re: Do humans actually have free will?

Quote:
Originally Posted by boagie View Post
Nameless,

That is a most impressive soft shoe dance, but what is the knowledge you claim to be innate to religion? All meaning derived from the physical world is through the understanding of our relation to object for naïve realism at anyrate. If you wish to consider ultimate reality and its nature and origin then you are dealing with that ultimate mystery which is the unknown. Again what knowledge is innate to religion whether of naive realism or ultimate reality, and example would be most helpful.
What you should try to realize is that the makings of religion were once the cutting edge theory of reality. Considering that each step leads to another, it is difficult to imagine how we might have gotten here if that step had not occured. There are a lot of ideas common to theology and philosophy even if the later has dismissed the ideas of the former. We still think of good, of virtue, of justice, and morality apart from religion. And for its part, religion and magic have the sense of force at a distance, tools, the power of words and words of power. Neither magic nor religion serve to answer the practical needs people have to understand nature. The reason it has survived is that it, better than the organizations of government based upon archaic understandings of human relationships, do not answer our needs for justice or community or contemplation. Religion used to explain reality, but in many respects it is the reality each thinking person must deal with. It is pervasive, and more so as the failures of government drive people back into older forms of relationship. You cannot become its master out of antipathy. You have to grasp what it is, not as telling a truth, but as answering a need.
Reply With Quote
  #77 (permalink)  
Old 12-17-2007, 11:45 AM
boagie's Avatar
Full Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Ontario Canada
Posts: 2,353
Thanks: 638
Thanked 334 Times in 290 Posts
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts
TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0
Rep Power: 8
boagie is a jewel in the roughboagie is a jewel in the roughboagie is a jewel in the roughboagie is a jewel in the rough
Re: Do humans actually have free will?

Fido,

"I did not say religion requires knowledge." This was the bone of contention, my apologies if I attributed to you a statement which is not yours. I am very familar with the nature of world mythologies and in how these things serve in informing of a particular culture. When one has a religion/mythology that was relevant two thousand years ago to a particular people, particular culture, and by its nature/ its own defination, it cannot change and adapt to the changeing world, it is apparent that it has no knowledge that is not present to the secular worlds understanding. Faith and knowledge seem to be logically linked, where you have faith is in the absence of knowledge.
Reply With Quote
  #78 (permalink)  
Old 12-17-2007, 12:56 PM
Full Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Earth
Posts: 1,207
Thanks: 2
Thanked 106 Times in 98 Posts
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts
TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0
Rep Power: 4
Fido will become famous soon enoughFido will become famous soon enough
Re: Do humans actually have free will?

Quote:
Originally Posted by boagie View Post
Fido,

"I did not say religion requires knowledge." This was the bone of contention, my apologies if I attributed to you a statement which is not yours. I am very familar with the nature of world mythologies and in how these things serve in informing of a particular culture. When one has a religion/mythology that was relevant two thousand years ago to a particular people, particular culture, and by its nature/ its own defination, it cannot change and adapt to the changeing world, it is apparent that it has no knowledge that is not present to the secular worlds understanding. Faith and knowledge seem to be logically linked, where you have faith is in the absence of knowledge.
Yes, where faith leaves off knowledge begins, and endferend. I think the adaption of religion is marvelous. Where is the religion of today that beats the bushes for a race of devils? Everyone is parried down to one logical God, and faith answers all the wants that knowledge does not. Ratio and religio are like owls and bats feeding off the same black night.
Reply With Quote
  #79 (permalink)  
Old 12-17-2007, 05:41 PM
boagie's Avatar
Full Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Ontario Canada
Posts: 2,353
Thanks: 638
Thanked 334 Times in 290 Posts
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts
TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0
Rep Power: 8
boagie is a jewel in the roughboagie is a jewel in the roughboagie is a jewel in the roughboagie is a jewel in the rough
Re: Do humans actually have free will?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Fido View Post
Yes, where faith leaves off knowledge begins, and endferend. I think the adaption of religion is marvelous. Where is the religion of today that beats the bushes for a race of devils? Everyone is parried down to one logical God, and faith answers all the wants that knowledge does not. Ratio and religio are like owls and bats feeding off the same black night.
Fido,

"Where faith leaves off knowledge begins?" Faith simply desires if you like, that it imagineings will one day manifest themselves as reality. Faith you might say is a process of desire, and nothing more. I believe the latin religio is translated to mean, a linking back, back to its origin, With Christianity this would be its genesis in the form of the garden of eden and the talking snake. I do like your analogy of a great darkness which is the shared experience of two different organisms, only one is claiming to know the darkness for what it really is------that would be the faithful.

Sorry if my stance seems harsh, perhaps in the future there will be a mythology created which does not totally breach with what we know of reality. Actually reality is very mystical, as intangible as it is it would lend itself to the knowledge of the day.

Last edited by boagie; 12-17-2007 at 06:28 PM.
Reply With Quote
  #80 (permalink)  
Old 12-18-2007, 02:57 AM
Full Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: here
Posts: 615
Thanks: 28
Thanked 98 Times in 84 Posts
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts
TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0
Rep Power: 3
nameless will become famous soon enoughnameless will become famous soon enough
Re: Do humans actually have free will?

Quote:
Originally Posted by boagie View Post
Nameless,:)

That is a most impressive soft shoe dance,
Is this what is known as a 'left handed compliment'?
A 'dismissal' of 'meat' in favor of a sweet tasting desert?
*__-

Quote:
but what is the knowledge you claim to be innate to religion?
'Knowledge' of a 'religion' = 'memory' of that 'religion' =that 'religion' has its existence in and as 'memory'.
There is no 'knowledge/memory' innate in anything but Mind. Religion exists as a memory for some people, a real and integral part of their 'mnemonic nature'. Their Jesus' and gods are as 'real' for them, in their 'world' as 'breakfast' (if you are fortunate enough to have the memory thereof) might be in yours. There is no 'difference', both, ALL existence, is memory.
Bye the bye, I'd love to see where I 'claim' that 'knowledge/memory' is innate to anything but, perhaps, Mind. There is nothing 'out there' (never been any valid evidence of such, anyway, nor is there likely to be any...).

Quote:
If you wish to consider ultimate reality and its nature and origin
Metaphysics and mysticism along with quantum physics, now, takes us down this path.

Quote:
then you are dealing with that ultimate mystery which is the unknown.
Making fire was an 'ultimate mystery' once... It was unknown, a 'mystery', not understood, by the people. Perhaps they made it a 'god' when it (wondrously) appeared..
Anything that is newly 'perceived' and examined is the 'unknown', for the moment. With examination, experiment, whatever, it gradually becomes more and more 'known'.
There is nothing in existence that cannot be 'known' as 'knowing/memory' IS existence.

Quote:
Again what knowledge is innate to religion whether of naive realism or ultimate reality, an example would be most helpful.
Naive realism is simply trusting that your senses, perceptions, provide an accurate reflection, in the form of concepts, of an (apparently) 'external/objective' existence. As that has been thoroughly refuted by science, logic and rationality suggest we ignore that perspective for the moment.
All 'knowledge' is 'memory', and all 'memory' is existence, personalized (completely subjective) by ego/perspective.
I hope that this helps your confusion in this matter. You have somehow misquoted me.
(Bye the bye, misquoting (misdirection) and then arguing the misquote is one symptomatic defensive survival tactic of a 'belief virus' that feels threatened. I'm going to have to keep my eyes open for the potential appearance of further symptoms. @__@
Perhaps this misquote was merely an oversight, somehow? Most likely, but 'beliefs' are widespread! We'll see... *__- )
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks

Tags
choice, determinism, free will

Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Why do humans like music? BMW Music 33 11-20-2008 03:30 PM
Argument from free will mashiaj Philosophy of Religion 24 08-19-2008 11:47 AM
Free Will Mr. Fight the Power Metaphysics 31 02-10-2008 11:56 PM
Why Humans Reject God tMeeker Philosophy of Religion 38 08-16-2007 01:58 PM
I Come To Set Free cut2thepoint New Member Introductions 2 11-14-2006 01:11 PM



vBulletin Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.2.0
Copyright 2006-2008 PhilosophyForum.com