Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑November 27th, 2023, 9:43 amI said linguistic register, not vocabulary. Anyone with a smallish vocabulary can be explicit and vice versa;it requires only that the speaker define his terms.Belindi wrote: ↑November 26th, 2023, 3:50 pm Are you preferring the common usage of 'emotions' as a synonym for 'feelings' perhaps because you choose to include everyone in the conversation? That's not really academic philosophy. I don't think we can do philosophy unless we spend a lot of our time using explicit language.The use of explicit language does not include jokes or poetry so it's also a good thing to intersperse the explicit stuff with the more sociable linguistic register .I'm not objecting to vocabulary, yours or anyone else's. I'm only making one point. Talking about spirituality, or emotion as it is experienced by humans in their real lives, the medical view is too distanced, I think. It may underlie what's going on, but it lies deeply buried, while experience is what we notice, and respond to.
True, the title of this conversation is not explicit and a lot of the conversation has been about what is meant by this or that. If I had thought that explicit language was not the proper register I'd not have joined.
And if we return to spirituality, I think it's fair and reasonable to observe that a medical or scientific perspective is of little use or value. Does spirituality even exist in a medical/scientific perspective? I suspect not.
Spinoza's ontology is a double aspect theory of existence. Mind and matter are merely two of an infinite number of “modes” (usually 1.mind and 2. matter) of a single existing substance, which he identified with God. Some medics know nothing about the double aspect theory of existence ,and some medics(I hope only a few!) are Cartesian theistic dualists. Some medics are idealists, and some are physicalists. I never intended to present my preference (for Spinoza's double aspect theory) as "the medical view", although it is peculiarly suitable for psychiatry.
I can't discuss spirituality because the meaning of the word 'spirituality ' relates to its use within a mutually accepted social context .I am happy
philosophers are mainly people who like to ask "what do you mean by xyz?"