Should we care about "reality" beyond reality?
What is reality? Everything that exists, that has a being. Everything that can be grasped by reason and somehow perceived.
How should we call that which is beyond described reality? Should we call it? Should we care about it? If it's beyond our reason, beyond the world we know and world we live in, why should we care about it?
Right. But than again, if that, I will call it reality beyond, is the ground of all existence, if it is our own ground and we are somehow touched by it, touched essentially, than it should be of our primal concern.
What I'm talking about is our unconsciousness as a part of our psyche, a part from witch our consciousness (and reason) emerged. If we could equate our unconsciousness with reality beyond, should we then care about it?
What are your thoughts on all this? On unconsciousness and reality beyond? On their relatedness with us, as human beings, and existence in general?
How should we call that which is beyond described reality? Should we call it? Should we care about it? If it's beyond our reason, beyond the world we know and world we live in, why should we care about it?
Right. But than again, if that, I will call it reality beyond, is the ground of all existence, if it is our own ground and we are somehow touched by it, touched essentially, than it should be of our primal concern.
What I'm talking about is our unconsciousness as a part of our psyche, a part from witch our consciousness (and reason) emerged. If we could equate our unconsciousness with reality beyond, should we then care about it?
What are your thoughts on all this? On unconsciousness and reality beyond? On their relatedness with us, as human beings, and existence in general?
Comments (35)
The encompassing of reason that necessarily cannot itself be encompassed by reasoning.
Undescribed reality.
It always already calls us (into question). How we respond either dignifies or destroys us.
Constraints also enable, horizons orient. Besides, reality hurts - often fatally - the careless.
The alternative - not to care, care-less-ness - is maladaptive and, as I point out above, often hazardous.
From a recent thread What is "Real"? https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/449183 here's my previous post on this topic ... Tell me what you think about (my three rabbit-holes down to not-quite-Wonderland) what I think.
What is reality? Reality is the totality of everything that surrounds me, everything that has the capacity to be sensed or to be thought about by me, everything that I can change by my thoughts or actions.
Depressing!
Any way you can make it less morose? :chin: Is there a silver lining in the sense there's more to reality than needing to be in touch with it just to avoid injury and fatality? I'd like you to take a moment and look at the brighter side of reality, if there's one. What do you see?
I think that depends on whether (y/our) expectations are realistic or not (e.g. idealistic).
'Reality' isn't anthropic or even biophilic.
(Local) Reality's regularities are computable and, therefore, explicable (if only approximately, non-exhaustively). Science - though inherently incomplete, probabilistic & fallibilist - is, besides music, the only magic that works.
As an aside, I've liked the statement that science seeks to describe outer reality while the arts seek to describe our inner reality.
Regards, stay safe 'n well.
I guess you are saying that part of our mind that is unconscious somehow extends to that which we cannot perceive in our every day life. That what we can perceive is the visible universe, that what we cannot perceive is something beyond, like something that's outside the universe.
I guess maybe you can say what we cannot perceive are some kind of minds or mind or an eternal mind that may reside outside of the universe.
Spiritual things could reside outside of the universe.
Somehow our unconscious mind extends to these non-perceivable things? Does our unconscious mind "touch" these things somehow or is it "connected" to these things some how?
Maybe. I don't know. Maybe the unconscious mind is more of a wanderer then the conscious mind. And it's always unconsciously wondering about these things.
Should we concern ourselves with these things?
I think that whether you think we should or we shouldn't, your mind will naturally concern itself with these things (both conscious and unconscious mind). Maybe not now, but at some point it will. And then it will grow tired of it, because maybe it cannot find a meaningful solution or maybe it did find a meaningful solution, and is now ready to move on to other things. Like paying your bills or something. And then the cycle will continue again. Your mind (conscious or unconscious) will again concern itself with other-worldly things and then again the time will come when it's time to mow the grass. Etc ...
Edit: to add to this. Maybe eventually, if you continue to think about reality beyond reality, you can achieve a certain frame of mind. So maybe there is a reason to do it. Or maybe not. Idk.
It seems to me here that this concept of yours is practically the metaphysical world o ideas, something incomprehensible that we - humans - try to understand and project in the world. If something like this exists, the fact that we are stuck with "Being" makes it impossible for us to conceive and experience the "Non Being". Its almost "the One" of Plotinus:
"Once you have uttered 'The Good' - the concept - add no further thought: by any addition, and in proportion to that addition, you introduce a deficiency."
Well, that was light work. I thought I was going to have to give my whole day to this thread on "deepity."
Thanks! My issue is with the general tendency among people to define/describe reality negatively in the sense that it's always in the form of a warning, "be real unless
Quoting 180 Proof
But it isn't completely anthrophobic or biophobic either, right?
I suppose I'm asking, "why the constant [s]realistic[/s] pessimistic attitude toward reality?"
Sure. As per the mediocrity principle.
The Second Law of Thermodynamics: global disorder (i.e. complexity, proximity-to-maximum-equilibrium) never decreases.
You took the words right out of my mouth. Entropy is a pain. There being innumerable ways for thing to go wrong and usually only a handful of ways for things to go right, to be realistic = to be pessimistic. :sad:
Do you think there's a strategy that could make optimism a viable option? Imagine if I don't care what happens; anything would be acceptable to me and I'll never face disappointment in my life, granting me and others who adopt a similar attitude full rights to be optimistic. :grin:
I reject "optimism". Courage is my preferred adaptive stance (rehearsed-reinforced daily via sisyphusian reflective, cognitive, ethical & existential acts of defiance). Epicurus-Epictetus, Spinoza, Zapffe-Camus, Albert Murray et al are some (varied) exemplars.
:up: I feel like I committed a fallacy when I said I could become an optimist by not caring what happens.
Can you spot it?
Are optimism and pessimism subjective enough to allow that much freedom? Can I switch from one to the other merely by changing my preferences?
The philosopher has to be capable of comprehending conditions that are largely hostile to his being. Where courage is lacking there the mind constructs fantasies, delusions of reality to make it more palatable. Where are the philosophers of courage? We don't need more abstractors, we need more courageous and tough-minded thinkers!
Agreed. I dropped some names previously, and there are quite a few more - e.g. Galileo, Rosset, Nietzsche, Cioran, Lucretius, Diogenes of Sinope, Sextus Empiricus, d'Holbach, Darwin, Paine, Feuerbach, Peirce, Kropotkin, Gramsci, Wittgenstein, Arendt, West, et al - who teach by their varied examples courageous philosophies moreso than "philosophies of courage".
Absolutely, all of them philosophers. :up: :smile:
You hit the nail on the head with courage.
You really hit the bulls eye when you brought up entropy and the mediocrity principle - they makes pessimism the most reasonable attitude to adopt to life. It's as if to be realist one has to be a pessimist. I also give a thumbs-up to your idea of constant courage and existential defiance in the face of such mediocre odds we have.
One thing though. There's the small matter of, well, the devil. Not that I believe in him but as the archetypical anarchist, el diablo wishes, hopes, for chaos to prevail i.e. maximum entropy figures at the top of the devil's wishlist. I daresay there are quite a number of people with diabolical inclinations out there who would like nothing better than to see our most elaborate plans fail pathetically. The devil, such people, form a category of their own, a category that desires higher entropic states and as odd as it sounds, to them success is failure.
Doesn't this mean that the devil and those who wish chaos in the world are favored by chance? After all, entropy is always going to be on their side and since increased entropy is what the devil and such folks desire, they have much to look forward to. Mathematically, the probability of disappointment for the devil and anarchists is going to be so negligible that they might as well engage in celebratory revelry 24/7. In other words, the devil and people whom I've labeled anarchists are fully justified to be optimists.
However, there seems to be a sense in which this is wrong. Optimism and pessimism aren't attitudes per se, attitudes that can be picked up or thrown away simply on the basis of what one thinks of as desirable or not. Au contraire, optimism is the belief that things in general will tend toward the good and pessimism, being the opposite, is the belief that outcomes, on balance, will usually be bad. Good and bad are ideas that are fixed and unalterable - no change in attitude is ever going to affect their meaning in ways that good could be bad and vice versa. In other words, optimism and pessimism are about the fixed, non-negotiable, nature of the outcomes themselves, specifically whether they're good or bad and I use "good" and "bad" in a moral sense, inclusive of all subsequent meanings associated with the good and the bad.
In summary, yes, the devil and his anarchist band of followers will find it nigh impossible to remember a day when they were disappointed but the "positive" attitude of always having their expectations pan out that develops out of this track record isn't optimism.
What say you?
People having bothered with stuff like this have probably contributed to the enlightenment, the scientific process and stuff and thereby granted me a life already far longer than that for humans through history so I say - shoot!
Quoting Eremit
How does one reason to the ground of all existence, when such ground is excluded from that which is within the “grasp” of reason?
It appears to be nothing more than “...a lame appeal to a logical condition, which is no doubt a necessary condition of the existence of the conception, but is far from being sufficient for the real objective possibility (of it)...”, insofar as reality, as stated, in conjunction with the validity of the complementary nature of human reason itself, permits the notion of “beyond reality”, even at the expense of knowing anything about it, which of course, leaves the second assertion without proper warrant.
[quote=George Orwell]The only ism that has justified itself is pessimism.[/quote]
e.g. this old 'anti-optimist' rant :point: https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/346349
and an excerpt from another old post:
"'What's my philosophy?' Don't be a fool (or an asshole) - minimize frustrations by Reflectively aligning expectations with The Real - is the whole of philosophy; the rest, like the Rabbi says, is commentary." ~180 Proof
Quoting TheMadFool
As I've pointed out elsewhere, I interpret these "attitudes" as risks for which we can prepare ourselves rather than outcomes independent of any actions we take; thus:
We are - will be - safe. (optimist)
We are not - will not be - safe. (pessimist)
We are safe - until we are not. ([s]realist[/s] absurdist)
are how I read these stances.
I disagree. The pessimist, not quite a paranoid (usually), is egocentric in so far as he thinks reality is somehow biased against him; that is, he expects nature isn't 'mediocre' and that she never throws fair dice as far as (his) life is concerned. The most reasonable attitude, as you say, is that reality is indifferent to all attitudes, reasonable or not, which are merely self-serving habits-of-mind that either work (minimizing frustrations) to varying degrees or not at all.
This is futility and has nothing to do with entropy, etc.
No. Those "who wish chaos" where "plans fail pathetically" due to "higher entropic states" are also subject to the universe's free fall (so to speak) or "strange attraction" ever inexorably, towards "maximum entropy". It doesn't matter what they, "the devil" or anybody "desires", only what we/they do in spite of constant resistance from and indifference of the real.
I don't think so. You've described them, Fool, as more akin to fatalists (re: futilitarians) than optimists (re: placebo/fetish-dependent deniers). Besides, chaos ain't chaos unless it cannibalizes itself first and last.
:death: :flower:
Something of a latter-day "anarchist" (Kropotkin, Chomsky, Schweickart), I've often styled myself a cheerful pessimist since my expectations are almost always worse than whatever actually happens. (Epictetus). This stance, however, is not optimism. A happy warrior is not an optimist (Marcus Aurelius). However, I prefer absurdist, with all its connotations, which, for this topic, is less confusing and more apt (Epicurus, Zapffe, Rosset).
Marcus Aurelius speaks clearer to me: "The impediment to action advances action. What stands in the way becomes the way." :wink:
Quoting Saphsin
[I]There is no future but the present[/i].
Songs end yet are still sweetly sung. Hunger always returns yet we often relish a meal as if - even if - it's our last. Children play in bombed-out rubble and ruins with abandon. Angry partners still make (their most) passionate love. And so on ... "Hope", my friend, is empty bullshit, futile & undignifying.
This is why courage matters most - the reason to fight here and now is because there is no alternative except 'humiliation here and now', succumbing in denial (Becker) to the exigencies of the moment, to cowardly retreat or surrender unscathed; the "fighting" - struggle - is (usually) all there is; remember Sisyphus ----
[quote=Albert Camus]Real generosity towards the future lies in giving all to the present.[/quote]
A less haughty, more homespun, corollary:
[quote=Mark Twain]It's not the size of the dog in the fight, it's the size of the fight in the dog.[/quote]
As I've pointed out previously, my focus, or stance, is absurdist and not (merely) "pessimist". Memento mori :death: (solitaire) lucidly drives memento vivere :flower: (solidaire) - courage: sapere aude: amor fati: jouissance (Spinoza, Rosset).
Nothing is "beyond Reason" --- if it is allowed to roam freely, and restrained only by the long leash of Experience. Human Reason is like a dog's Nose : it's always sniffing around for things unseen. Sometimes it bumps into a Porcupine, but more often it leads to tasty "Pork". Both have real consequences.
Should we care about anything that is beyond our horizon? Common people are content with their own local reality. But Philosophers & Scientists & Pioneers have always been motivated to go beyond mundane reality to explore the exotic terra incognita over the horizon., where be dragons & mysteries & secrets (potential knowledge). But the question remains : "why should we care" about such "impractical" & "dangerous" things & ideas? Why go to Mars?
In Physics, we call such things "keys to progress". In Metaphysics, we call them "keys to enlightenment". In my own physics/meta-physics thesis, based on the ubiquitous role of Information in the real world and in the imaginary realms, I call "that which is beyond described reality" Ideality. Hard Realists, who disparage ghostly Idealism, may be afraid of the dragons of Myth & Mysticism. But, some of us are driven to explore the unknown in order to make known that which is not, but might be. Such an optimistic & progressive attitude may not appeal to conservatives of both Religion and Science. Some of the dangers of "the beyond reality" may be real, but some turn-out to be imaginary. So, if we proceed with appropriate caution into the Dark, we might stub our toes, but we might also reveal that which was formerly hidden. :cool:
Ideality :
[i]In Plato’s theory of Forms, he argues that non-physical forms (or ideas) represent the most accurate or perfect reality. Those Forms are not physical things, but merely definitions or recipes of possible things. What we call Reality consists of a few actualized potentials drawn from a realm of infinite possibilities.
1. Materialists deny the existence of such immaterial ideals, but recent developments in Quantum Theory have forced them to accept the concept of “virtual” particles in a mathematical “field”, that are not real, but only potential, until their unreal state is collapsed into reality by a measurement or observation. To measure is to extract meaning into a mind. [Measure, from L. Mensura, to know; from mens-, mind]
2. Some modern idealists find the QT scenario to be intriguingly similar to Plato’s notion that ideal Forms can be realized, i.e. meaning extracted, by knowing minds. For the purposes of this blog, “Ideality” refers to an infinite pool of potential (equivalent to a quantum field), of which physical Reality is a small part. Are Dark Matter & Dark Energy real, or ideal?[/i]
http://blog-glossary.enformationism.info/page11.html
If it is there for a mind to see, then chances are it is part of reality in some way. Whether existence or subsistence.
This question seems kind of dumb to me, but then maybe I'm just not getting it and I'm the one who is dumb in this instance.
Hi Hermit
I'm not sure what you mean by equating "unconscious with reality". Freud's term "unconscious" is today more appropriately called "sub-conscious". For each person, there is only one holistic consciousness, but only a tiny fraction is the "awareness" that most of us equate with consciousness (see image below). By far the majority of brain functions are subliminal : below the threshold of awareness. But Jung broadened the concept of Consciousness, and reified it into a mystical Collective Un-consciousness. And others have gone so far as to imagine Consciousness as a latent energy or "The Force" that is out there in the ether, for us to tap into. But that's true only as an as-if fictional metaphor. Although, my own notion of EnFormAction could be mistaken for the fictional Star Wars Force.
If Consciousness (imagined as mind-stuff) is the substance of Reality, then your equation would be correct. I don't take that analogy literally though, but I do think that human consciousness (the function of the brain's information processing) is an evolutionary emergence from the workings of abstract Information (the power to enform). In this application, Information is more like Energy than Awareness. And it's a substance only in the sense of Spinoza's Universal Substance, which he equated with God. In that case, God creates Reality from immaterial mind-stuff. Which is not necessarily aware of anything, but has the creative potential to actualize real things from ideal concepts (Plato's Forms).
I don't expect this BS to make sense to you, because it is based on the unconventional worldview of Enformationism. So, I'm just using this opportunity to apply that theory to your question.
Quoting Eremit
As an extension of my Enformationism thesis, I envision the creation of our Reality metaphorically in Plato's terms : eternal unformed Chaos (infinite Potential) was enformed by Logos into a temporal Cosmos (finite Actuality). The "mind" that converts potential into actual is the hypothetical Mind of G*D. :nerd:
Chaos : Unformed Randomess
In ancient Greek creation myths Chaos was the void state preceding the creation of the universe or cosmos. It literally means "emptiness", but can also refer to a random undefined unformed state that was changed into the orderly law-defined enformed Cosmos. In modern Cosmology, Chaos can represent the eternal/infinite state from which the Big Bang created space/time. In that sense of infinite Potential, it is an attribute of G*D, whose power of EnFormAction converts possibilities (Platonic Forms) into actualities (physical things).
http://blog-glossary.enformationism.info/page12.html
Cosmos : Order, harmony, beauty, well-formed
Universe means "all existing matter and space considered as a whole; the cosmos." The words can be used as synonym of each other, or you can use cosmos when you are referring to the well-ordered aspect of the universe.
https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/20734/whats-the-difference-between-the-universe-and-the-cosmos
"A principle of courage ..."
Quoting 180 Proof