chewybrian wrote: ↑October 31st, 2023, 6:57 am
I am rejecting the idea that I could reach the ideal, just as any philosopher would. I am not rejecting the idea that we can approach the ideal. Approaching is the process. As the scientist approaches knowledge, the philosopher approaches wisdom. Gains are tentative and subject to review--forever!
I mean, when it's actualized it ceases to be an ideal...
Wisdom and virtue are a function of experiencing the one, it is not a process but a transformation.
One you're apparently unwilling to actually encounter.
chewybrian wrote: ↑October 31st, 2023, 6:57 am
I agree, but I don't think being that 'liberated' is the most productive path. I think some restraint is called for--at least for me it is. His example, like that of Jesus or Socrates, should give people pause and cause them to examine their own actions and motives. I don't there is any cause to discard our cups or to live in a pot, though.
You are suggesting that being productive is your ideal...
Lao Tzu says if you make yourself useful you will be used...
Why is that how you think all should live? We already have rampant global exploitation.
chewybrian wrote: ↑October 31st, 2023, 6:57 am
You've already claimed that I have no accord and no distinct life. On your terms, I will do only what the universe and the past dictates. So, I find it odd that you would get angry with people who disagree with you or try so hard to convince them to join you in your dead end beliefs. How can you be angry with folks for doing the only thing they could do, for believing the only thing they could believe?
I'm not angry but you always act on present beliefs so they should be as accurate as possible else you're going to do harm.
chewybrian wrote: ↑October 31st, 2023, 6:57 amI'll gladly accept the judgement of Epictetus as to what the outcome of my hard work in philosophy should be. This is fully rational when you consider that I have concluded that he is wiser than me. I can grow by emulating him because he is greater than me. You evidently can't go this way because you seem to have concluded that nobody is or ever was greater than you (see below).
You don't follow him though because you reject ataraxia...
chewybrian wrote: ↑October 31st, 2023, 6:57 am
I feel like I am talking to the ghost of Rush Limbaugh. There are few requirements for a philosopher. I won't try to list them all, but things like intellectual honesty and an attempt to be objective jump to mind. When you look at the world this way, you quickly see that no man can know a materially significant subset of the available knowledge. Nobody can be objective. We are al subject to cognitive bias and prejudice. The philosopher tries to overcome these obstacles, but he knows he can only make progress and get better, never claiming victory.
Thus, one glaring requirement for a philosopher is humility. Look back at the way that @LuckyR and @Pattern-chaser conducted themselves in their discussion with you about free will. Bertrand Russel said something like "the problem with the world is that fools are so damned sure of themselves while the wise have so many doubts." To be wise, you must be humble. If you say you are a sage, you are not wise.
For me humility is just arrogance on its head.
Those I value point at complete naturalness, not a modified artificialness.