Belindi wrote: ↑March 17th, 2020, 5:27 am
There is a third option. The absolute may or may not exist and in any case cannot affect us here in our relative space time. However consideration of what we would like to be absolute values , and even praying for those to be manifested on Earth, is a main human trait which became more powerful after the scientific enlightenment when light was being shone on human nature. Ontology is part of the human search for reality or truth. The human search for truth is faith- based, and faith is indispensible to maintenance of life.
You seem to be saying there that it is a "main human trait" to search for something that "may or may not exist and in any case cannot affect us . . ."
Is that not a fool's errand?
When you say, "Ontology is part of the search for reality or truth," is the "reality" and "truth" sought some sort of transcendental truth or reality, i.e., "Truth" and "Reality" capitalized? Something "truer" or "more real" than the truth of verifiable propositions, or the reality of common experience?
I think that is what most ontological theories strive for, and why I said they are nonsense. If the faith you mention is faith that some such transcendental truth or reality must exist, or that there is some transcendental "meaning of life," then that faith is idle; it leads either to delusions or frustrations, and is hardly necessary for maintenance of life --- indeed, it is more likely to be inimical to it.