"Make sense out of nothing"? What does that mean? Can you give a real-world example being that you're a realist?Dontaskme wrote: ↑Wed Apr 12, 2023 6:08 pmYou are entitled to your opinions, and so good for you..but I think I’ll stick to my own world, the one that I perceive, a world in which I was born to be an existentialist, a pessimist, and an absurdist all rolled into one. I prefer realism.Trajk Logik wrote: ↑Wed Apr 12, 2023 1:20 pmDo your posts make sense? Do any of our posts make sense? Are we suppose to find meaning in your posts? If the answer is "no", then what is the point of typing non-sensical scribbles on the screen expecting others to read them and make sense of them? If the answer is "yes", well then you've just defeated your argument.Dontaskme wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 10:51 am Nothing makes sense.
The person who accepts the absurdity of life surrenders to reality and can find lasting peace. They face the harsh truth upfront freeing themselves of the anxiety of searching for meaning.
The absurdist is fully lucid and may move freely through their inner world. No illusions need be sustained. Their mind is free.
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This is no different than saying, "We can't know anything.", yet the one making the statement seems to know that we can't know anyything. Statements like these defeat themselves. They are a philosopher's language games - sometimes referred to as "deepities". They aren't trying to say anything important or profound, they are merely playing games with words.
The world does make sense, just not the sense that many would like to be the case. Words do make sense when used correctly. Just because we can organize a string of scribbles that follows the rules of some language does not mean that we've actually said anything. The rule that is often forgotten, or abandoned, in philosophical discussions is that the scribbles need to refer to some real state-of-affairs in the world for them to truly make sense and be meaningful. Where the world does not make sense does not give you free reign to just make stuff up and I'm not willing to fill gaps in knowledge with delusions. It's okay to say that I just don't know the answer right now, but I eventually will, and that makes sense of how we are born mostly ignorant yet we can learn with the powers of observation and logic.
In my humble opinion, not everyone is born to make sense out of nothing. And I love that I’m free to feel and think this way.
What does "stick to your own world" mean? Don't we all live in the same world - one world? Are you confusing the map (mind) with the territory (world)? - but then you talk about a world you perceive and were born into specifically to hold certain ideas? That is why you were born? Odd. This doesn't sound like anything a realist would say. I would know. I'm a realist - but an indirect one, not a naïve one.
If you were to stick to your world, then why are you posting about your world to others? Are you open-minded in that you are willing to open up "your" world to criticism? Does "your" world evolve with new experiences with others and their ideas? If so, then doesn't it make sense to say that you might be confusing the word, "world" with "beliefs" and that we all live in the same world - one world - and share our beliefs and evolve in our beliefs by interacting with the world which includes other people and their beliefs?
These are not rhetorical questions. I'm genuinely trying to understand what you are saying.
We all live in the same world. There is no "my" world. It is our world. Understanding that is what helps to understand that what we do can impact others. We all start with the same facts - that we are born into this world and will eventually die. What we do in-between should be up to each individual - as long as it doesn't involve infringing on the rights of others to do the same.
I believe that everything has the potential to make sense given enough time an effort to figure it out and having the right tools to test our theories. We have come so far as a species, but still have a long way to go (hopefully).
