What fundamental notions Bran?bran wrote:...
I'm not quite so sure that aphilosophy is or ever will become a "belief system". For one thing, doing so would destroy it; it would come into conflict with its fundamental notions. ...
How? And what is Zen's approach to 'philosophy' given its an Eastern philosophy? Is this what you mean?...
It's rather Zen in its approach to philosophy and the activities of mind. ...
Your friend is pretty much barking.I have a friend, Theoretika the Unicorn, who serves as an advisor on matters of philosophy and religion. She has long ago told me that the animal community rather pities mankind because of its infection with codified language and thought. ...
Its an assumption that has been made in philosophy, but how does she explain thoughts? What does she think a thought is?It is a prison of the mind, she says. What is essential is best communicated by the eyes, the face, the movement and actions of the body. I write these words, these scratches in the dirt, and my mind functions by use of these words, but I think I get the drift of her message. ...
Its not what is "essential", its that these things are also part of communication and 'language' can be mistaken as only what is "essential" or "there" in communication, is my opinion.
Or that they made the best explanation of how things worked at the time.... Animals are here and now people, but humans live so much more in the past and future. And we are less accepting of our own existences than animals are; we insist upon meaning and understanding our place in the whole of things--which of course is why we make gods to begin with.
Animals have no "here and now" in the sense that we have.
Not if she thinks animals 'pity' us and have a 'community' she's not.I'm a right stout Taoist and distant patron of Buddhist philosophy, but I'm not ready for either atheism or aphilosophy. I do believe (note that term) that the gods we know are all man-made, but only because the divine is quite too inhumanly vast and transcendent for us to comprehend, or if we could comprehend, to feel any affection for. We are like blind men describing the elephant. One man speaks for science, another for religion, and yet another for the poet and artist. We feel of it and identify it in our own various terminologies; then we argue over words. Theoretika is right, you know.