What a fine pawnArising_uk wrote: ↑Mon Aug 26, 2019 11:44 amPass what?Atla wrote: Very good, you pass with distinction
Göbekli Tepe
Re: Göbekli Tepe
Re: Göbekli Tepe
You didn't copy and you didn't understand (and you're not understanding this sentence either).Age wrote: ↑Mon Aug 26, 2019 7:41 amSo, I copy the words that you write, and then you say that is not even close to understanding what you write. Okay, Misunderstood.Atla wrote: ↑Mon Aug 26, 2019 6:20 amNot even close to understanding what I write.Age wrote: ↑Mon Aug 26, 2019 6:19 am
YES, I understand this COMPLETELY, and that is why I do not like to assume any thing and I NEVER believe any thing.
Now, you claim that this is "utterly wrong", therefore you MUST HAVE some sort of evidence and/or proof for this.
Will you provide that proof and evidence? Or, just once again, is the truthfulness and righteousness of what you say based again sorry on your already held beliefs and assumptions ONLY?
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Re: Göbekli Tepe
Atla wrote: What a fine pawn
Re: Göbekli Tepe
Yess use the power of projection
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Re: Göbekli Tepe
Atla wrote: Yess use the power of projection
Tell it to the Chinese.I'd say that this was the "first age" of humanity.
Later, humanity was thrown back again in the great civilizational collapse of 1200-1150 BC, the Bronze Age civilizations were actually surprisingly advanced, and some of them probably ocean-faring, most of that was forgotten or intentionally erased from history. ...
Given that there were ocean-faring peoples 50,000 years ago could you answer Age's aptly pointed-out questions, "What do you mean by "First Age" of humanity and how are you defining 'humanity' here?"
We do but we won't learn it from interweeble guesswork.So I'd say we are in the "third age" of humanity now. Even if some of the above is inaccurate or wrong, we have still much to learn about our past. ...
Take a look at the megaliths we build nowadays and have a rough guess as to why they built them.What went on in the minds of the first humans, 12000 years ago? This was probably long before any kind of dualistic thinking was invented, but even taking that into account, it still all seems so alien. ...
"dualistic thinking" - loon.
Try over 100 years and note that what they built later was pretty much what they built earlier from an Engineering perspective..the Indus Valley civ, personally I think that the Egyptians made contact with them around 2650 BC when they sent out expeditions; they are that extremely advanced civ that taught Egyptians so much, and this also explains how they could have gone from build crappy little pyramids to building the Great pyramids in just few decades.
Do you, that would be interesting. Could you post up the evidence that leads you to believe this?- the Phoenician-Minoan trading empire, which was mostly destroyed overnight by a volcanic eruption; this topic is HUGE, I think there's overwhelming evidence that these guys routinely traveled the planet around 1700-2000 BC and probably even before that, and mined copper in North America which then they transported to Europe; their magnificence even eclypsed Egypt ...
If this Empire was so big why do you think one volcano would have erased it?
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Re: Göbekli Tepe
Or just an example of how Engineering develops.Eodnhoj7 wrote:...
Technology is a projection of how one reasons about how reality works...the pyramids all over the world give evidence to some philosophical/religious movement of some form...
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Re: Göbekli Tepe
You apparently in the service of your monomania but off you go then, do something useful in your life and become a teacher and show the rest of us how it should be done.vegetariantaxidermy wrote: Yes. It's a crime that what should be a noble profession has been hijacked by self-serving, unimaginative, intellectually stunted wankers who see children as nothing more than political tools.
Re: Göbekli Tepe
Still of a projection of how we reason, the modern world is a reflection of how we view reality and ourselves. The same applies for this prior people. It would not be a stretch for them to observe that our process of reasoning exists through platonic forms as well as the repetition of events in nature sharing these base platonic generalities.Arising_uk wrote: ↑Mon Aug 26, 2019 6:53 pmOr just an example of how Engineering develops.Eodnhoj7 wrote:...
Technology is a projection of how one reasons about how reality works...the pyramids all over the world give evidence to some philosophical/religious movement of some form...
To observe reality as constructed purely through forms would necessitate a technology that is premised on forms.
Our current technology, as strictly a means of processing one phenomenon into another, is grounded in an inherent voidness. We take one phenomena, pull it apart, and change it into another resulting in an inherent change then wonder why all the confusion.
We see this with industries of various sorts:
Social media, as a zietgeist black box where the users' (plural) awareness and focus is the input and the output is some variation of that said awareness and focus in a fragmented state.
Standard refineries as the pulling up of resources and processing them into something else.
Industry where what is refined is then processed into something else such as a tool, or tech part, etc.
With industries processing into industries at a meta level (industry for making fire hoses requires an industry for certain rubber seals, which requires the rubber industry, which requires....)
Social engineering of schools where the natural awareness of the student is the input and the output is some variant of the students natural state.
Etc.
Engineering is thus a process of transmutation where we create various input/output devices that effectively cause a change in reality. This change, causes and inherent fragmentation that reverberates at the individual level of the pscyhe and the group level.
Last edited by Eodnhoj7 on Mon Aug 26, 2019 7:46 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Göbekli Tepe
I stumbled upon this comic today. Engineer vs Philosopher. Seems appropriate.
http://www.smbc-comics.com/index.php?db ... 1879#comic
Re: Göbekli Tepe
Last edited by Skepdick on Mon Aug 26, 2019 7:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Göbekli Tepe
In other words you don't know. Thank you for your contribution we expected no less.Arising_uk wrote: ↑Mon Aug 26, 2019 6:52 pm Take a look at the megaliths we build nowadays and have a rough guess as to why they built them.
I see you couldn't hold it in any longer and now bullshit is exploding all over the place.
This is huge. What on Earth are you talking about?Tell it to the Chinese.
Given that there were ocean-faring peoples 50,000 years ago
Last edited by Atla on Mon Aug 26, 2019 8:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Göbekli Tepe
It is not a compliment, what I am stating is the black box creates chaos by fragmenting one axiom (one point of awareness as all axioms are assumed) into many.Skepdick wrote: ↑Mon Aug 26, 2019 7:53 pmInput/output
Process
What is all this scientific/engineering speak on a Philosophy forum!?!?
This black box, as a form (as it is a form), is replicated in not just the abstractions of programming but empirical reality as well: industrial buildings, financial buildings, TV, social media devices, etc all share the basic box form which upon first glance appears meaningless but observes the same basic input output form.
I could use the words convergence and divergence or in and out as well. Tech speak for tech people.
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Re: Göbekli Tepe
For sure but it's also a reflection on what materials and techniques were available at the time.Eodnhoj7 wrote: Still of a projection of how we reason, the modern world is a reflection of how we view reality and ourselves. The same applies for this prior people. ...
A pretty big stretch really as it's a retrospective view based upon your current thought about a thought from another era.It would not be a stretch for them to observe that our process of reasoning exists through platonic forms as well as the repetition of events in nature sharing these base platonic generalities. ...
More importantly it would requires 'forma' to exist.To observe reality as constructed purely through forms would necessitate a technology that is premised on forms. ...
An inherent what?Our current technology, as strictly a means of processing one phenomenon into another, is grounded in an inherent voidness. ...
What confusion?We take one phenomena, pull it apart, and change it into another resulting in an inherent change then wonder why all the confusion. ...
Or just lots of different opinions and viewpoints.We see this with industries of various sorts:
Social media, as a zietgeist black box where the users' (plural) awareness and focus is the input and the output is some variation of that said awareness and focus in a fragmented state. ...
Where's the confusion in this?Standard refineries as the pulling up of resources and processing them into something else.
Industry where what is refined is then processed into something else such as a tool, or tech part, etc. ...
And the confusion here is?With industries processing into industries at a meta level (industry for making fire hoses requires an industry for certain rubber seals, which requires the rubber industry, which requires....) ...
I'd have thought schools were a kind of social engineering?Social engineering of schools where the natural awareness of the student is the input and the output is some variant of the students natural state. ...
Why is it fragmented, why is it not constructive?Etc.
Engineering is thus a process of transmutation where we create various input/output devices that effectively cause a change in reality. This change, causes and inherent fragmentation that reverberates at the individual level of the pscyhe and the group level.
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Re: Göbekli Tepe
Who's this 'we'?Atla wrote:In other words you don't know. Thank you for your contribution we expected no less. ...
But my point exactly, how do you know all the waffle you've spouted about the intentions and motives of the Tepe builders.(Oh! I see now, you're just repeating the opinions in that link of yours and passing it off as 'your' hunches.
I see you couldn't hold it in any longer and now bullshit is exploding all over the place.I could of course link a ton of evidence to most of what I said ...
Presumably you can link us to the evidence of the remains of the infrastructure, i.e. refineries, harbours, tools, etc needed to mine and ship hundreds of thousands of tons of copper ore around the planet? I really would be interested.(and no, that eruption didn't erase the Phoenician-Minoans, only greatly weakened them, that's why I wrote "mostly destroyed", it's a long story which you apparently know nothing about, just as you know nothing about the hundreds of thousands of tons of missing copper from America etc.), but you aren't worth my time, ...
Have I got you wrong? You said 'civilizational collapse' around 1200-1150 BCE but the Chinese seem to have been fine and dandy.but come on, what's this:
Tell it to the Chinese.
So I can add selective reading to the typical confirmation bias of the interweeble loon then can I?This is huge. What on Earth are you talking about?![]()
How do you think the Australian aboriginals got there? No don't tell me, they flew on sky-boats powered by mystical electro-magnetic totems.
By-the-by, do you now agree that the pyramids have a nice and clear progression of building development?
Re: Göbekli Tepe
Arising_uk wrote: ↑Mon Aug 26, 2019 10:22 pmFor sure but it's also a reflection on what materials and techniques were available at the time.Eodnhoj7 wrote: Still of a projection of how we reason, the modern world is a reflection of how we view reality and ourselves. The same applies for this prior people. ...
and what was available was a self reflective priest class.A pretty big stretch really as it's a retrospective view based upon your current thought about a thought from another era.It would not be a stretch for them to observe that our process of reasoning exists through platonic forms as well as the repetition of events in nature sharing these base platonic generalities. ...
not really the blank slate of Socrates alludes to a ground base for platonic forms.it would not be a stretch to observe the "eye of osiris" as an allegorical view of this nature of reality.
More importantly it would requires 'forma' to exist.To observe reality as constructed purely through forms would necessitate a technology that is premised on forms. ...
And empirical phenomena are not formed by curvature or frequencies as curvature?
An inherent what?Our current technology, as strictly a means of processing one phenomenon into another, is grounded in an inherent voidness. ...
Inverting the phenomena into another, one form into another requires the negation of that form through a formless state. Much like a rock is reduced to a formless state to pull out gold, the same thing applies.
Rather than voiding the self, through self reflection, we void the reality around us causing an instability as it becomes a projection of the axioms we embody (metaphorically speaking "gods" as localizations of reality). One God, one axiom, thus becomes polarized against another and the resulting chaos occurs. We can see this with the rise in tribalism and paganism in the west.
What confusion?We take one phenomena, pull it apart, and change it into another resulting in an inherent change then wonder why all the confusion. ...
the same confusion and chaos the media projects. It is a loop. We put chaotic images in, and chaotic images come out and replicate.
Or just lots of different opinions and viewpoints.We see this with industries of various sorts:
Social media, as a zietgeist black box where the users' (plural) awareness and focus is the input and the output is some variation of that said awareness and focus in a fragmented state. ...
Artificially produced and maintained.
Where's the confusion in this?Standard refineries as the pulling up of resources and processing them into something else.
Industry where what is refined is then processed into something else such as a tool, or tech part, etc. ...
Complexity leads to confusion. Tell me how a fire hose is made vs how a lump of clay is turned into a vase by hand. More steps, more complexity, each step recursively results in further steps, etc.
And the confusion here is?With industries processing into industries at a meta level (industry for making fire hoses requires an industry for certain rubber seals, which requires the rubber industry, which requires....) ...
complexity.
I'd have thought schools were a kind of social engineering?Social engineering of schools where the natural awareness of the student is the input and the output is some variant of the students natural state. ...
I just said schools are social engineering.Why is it fragmented, why is it not constructive?Etc.
Engineering is thus a process of transmutation where we create various input/output devices that effectively cause a change in reality. This change, causes and inherent fragmentation that reverberates at the individual level of the pscyhe and the group level.
Constructive is a neutral term. One can construct glass beads by smashing a pot.