T
Tao_Equus
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I know Wil, if you keep drifting much further to the right might have to start call you nasty namesLiberal is another word I have issues with...http://www.natural-law.org/news/news_flash/2000_04_22.html

I know Wil, if you keep drifting much further to the right might have to start call you nasty namesLiberal is another word I have issues with...http://www.natural-law.org/news/news_flash/2000_04_22.html
Haha, NA, this is very funny ! Isn't that really the point of existentialism anyway ? It pushes complexity to the limit, so we get confused trying to understand what we are trying to understand.
This reminds me of some of the old Woody Allen movies, in them I think he was parodying the existentialist writers. Especially in "Love and Death" that was a really funny one. The final scene has him trying to outmanuever the Angel of Death !!
Hume is a man I am now going to embark on knowing a lot about.
I am wholly unfamiliar with David Hume. So, went to see if there was something comparing his thought to Buddhism and found this:
Netscape Search
It's a long philosophical essay examining their confluence and reminds me of why I typically came close to falling asleep in undergraduate philosophy classes.Must warn you all-it contains allusions to materialism.
earl
Good, I much prefer to work with what has some material substance. My take is that there is a universe full of the material, better to know that before trying to know the immaterial.Must warn you all-it contains allusions to materialism.earl
By all means Snoopy-only read that sucker if you want somnolenceearl
... here's a short one-just a few paragraphs which gives a concise Buddhist view of brain science and consciousness.
well, I think we'd agree that everything that exists has a material effect. Beyond that, eh. As I've said before, in science it is often more the case of interpretation of data than data-gathering, (though if you're talking about "hard" science as being the gold standard of proof, then there is much in the human expereince that cannot not be "tested" nor probably will be in the future). But as to interpetation of data, this is why I've said elsewhere that science alone will not definitively establish the "truth" about consciousness and what transpires within in as anyone who chooses to establish what ultimately exists or doesn't exist based on data alone then has to fall back on underlying explanatory systems, be they religious or secular. earlIf something is not material how do you quantify it? My guess is that there is nothing that does not have material presence. And so everything is best approached through looking at its material characteristics. If I am wrong then I would first like it clearly stated what is there that is not material.
(though if you're talking about "hard" science as being the gold standard of proof, then there is much in the human expereince that cannot not be "tested" nor probably will be in the future).
Because, whatever data science collects now or in the future still will filter through the belief systems of humans.You have a very pessimistic view of human potential.
Here we are, as a species, barely out of our infancy, and you've already decided what humans are capable of knowing?
I have no idea what the future holds. How can you be so certain?
Because, whatever data science collects now or in future still will filter through the belief systems of humans.![]()
Oh, I believe physical science will discover many fascinating things about "physical" reality.Oh... I get it. That must be why we still believe the Sun revolves around the Earth.
Take NDE's for example. All who have had them do not require science to confirm they had them, though how such is interpretted will no doubt vary from person to person. earl