Why is it that so many people follow a religion they don't even understand, even when it states that for that lack of understanding they will spend eternity in hell. Are they unable to bring theirself to think of anything outside their attachments and desires for 10 fucking minutes to find out how retarded their beliefs are?
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Deleted User 3420
24492 Posts
Why is it that so many people follow a religion they don't even understand, even when it states that for that lack of understanding they will spend eternity in hell. Are they unable to bring theirself to think of anything outside their attachments and desires for 10 fucking minutes to find out how retarded their beliefs are? | ||
BanZu
United States3329 Posts
On August 29 2008 05:13 Kletus wrote: And I'm quite sure that you'd move your leg but a fraction to the left, you would find that it would cease to be peed upon. Now if you two are done bickering I would like open an invitation for all to an afternoon of tea and crumpets and perhaps followed by a friendly game of croquet. | ||
iNcontroL
USA29055 Posts
On August 29 2008 05:36 Makhno wrote: I disagree. I don't see art as something that trancsends time and place to the level that it becomes close to supernatural, as I interpret your understanding of it (though I may have misunderstood your view of art itself). I see art as something thought- and feeling provoking, a thing that almost forces a reaction from the viewer. It can sometimes be so moving for the individual that they value it above basically everything else. But I still think it's something physical, made by man for man, which provokes a physical response which can be understood by humans. As for value, my argument is that you can establish some sort of physical value, the appreciation of mankind and the general value given by man, both now and then. This however is only material. But the sort of inner value, the higher sense of value, I don't think exists, not for art and not for anything. Art's value isn't physical though. Nobody (that actually tries and understand appreciate art, basically I am discluding thoughs that buy art for purely superficial purposes and would buy a lump of poop if someone told them it was amazing) buys art for the space it fills but rather what it represents and evokes. That worth, that value is not physical and cannot be grasped as its experience is unique and independent to each person. This of course is getting into the debate as to whether or not you believe people can experience an emotion exactly the same way. I argue they cannot. In fact each time someone feels sadness or happiness that feeling is unique to previous or future feelings as well. That is how I reason that art's "value" and worth transcends time.. the fact that emotions do the same and art is an emotional provateur means they are one in the same, relatively speaking. Your point on inner value is interesting. While I agree, quantifying it is impossible I think to argue it doesn't exist is a folly. People (as I have said) have died for art, sacrificed much more than material worth to obtain certain pieces of art. To say they did it in every case without inner value is incorrect I would argue. | ||
Kletus
Canada580 Posts
On August 29 2008 07:03 BanZu wrote: Now if you two are done bickering I would like open an invitation for all to an afternoon of tea and crumpets and perhaps followed by a friendly game of croquet. | ||
Deleted User 3420
24492 Posts
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Falcynn
United States3597 Posts
On August 29 2008 07:01 Falcynn wrote: Yes yes yes yes yes, BUT my leg was here first. Damn it, I thought we were going to finish this first T.T | ||
Chef
10810 Posts
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iNcontroL
USA29055 Posts
On August 29 2008 07:36 travis wrote: nothing transcends time We don't know that. Additionally, my argument is from a human beings perspective. The only perspective we know. Therefore time as is spoken from our perspective, can be transcended. Since no person is "immortal" (whatever that means) time is finite in regard to us. As is such, art transcends our version of time. The time of which we speak of. | ||
Kletus
Canada580 Posts
On August 29 2008 07:45 Falcynn wrote: Damn it, I thought we were going to finish this first T.T Well I'm sorry, I had to!!! ;_; My favourites are the leg peeing, sniper business, JFK assassination and "Do you know it's illegal to say" | ||
Deleted User 3420
24492 Posts
In what way can something transcend time? | ||
iNcontroL
USA29055 Posts
On August 29 2008 07:58 travis wrote: Isn't everything we talk about from a human being's perspective? In what way can something transcend time? Yeah for the most part. Like I said earlier, "we don't know that." If I were to answer your question I'd be leading on that I'm not human. Not saying I am but I don't want to say otherwise | ||
Deleted User 3420
24492 Posts
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iNcontroL
USA29055 Posts
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Makhno
Sweden585 Posts
On August 29 2008 07:17 {88}iNcontroL wrote: Art's value isn't physical though. Nobody (that actually tries and understand appreciate art, basically I am discluding thoughs that buy art for purely superficial purposes and would buy a lump of poop if someone told them it was amazing) buys art for the space it fills but rather what it represents and evokes. That worth, that value is not physical and cannot be grasped as its experience is unique and independent to each person. This of course is getting into the debate as to whether or not you believe people can experience an emotion exactly the same way. I argue they cannot. In fact each time someone feels sadness or happiness that feeling is unique to previous or future feelings as well. That is how I reason that art's "value" and worth transcends time.. the fact that emotions do the same and art is an emotional provateur means they are one in the same, relatively speaking. Your point on inner value is interesting. While I agree, quantifying it is impossible I think to argue it doesn't exist is a folly. People (as I have said) have died for art, sacrificed much more than material worth to obtain certain pieces of art. To say they did it in every case without inner value is incorrect I would argue. I could argue further about my idea of the physical, general, value of art but I get the feeling it would'nt go much farther than where we find ourselves here. As for the discussion of the inner value, it is very much a different topic, philosophical and all-encompassing. Thank you for this intriguing discussion, now I shall rest and return tomorrow, with vigor, to engage in some other ...engaging argument. | ||
iNcontroL
USA29055 Posts
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zulu_nation8
China26351 Posts
On August 29 2008 05:21 {88}iNcontroL wrote: We agree on "young contemporary" art except that you misunderstood me: All art is potentially "young" in my opinion. Mere human beings do no determine whether or not art is great or amazing. Art transcends time and place so that their value can articifically be labeled by people of that current time.. but its actual value and worth is undetermined. People have died for art, wars have been fought and societies burried.. how do you place a value on that art? You cannot. That is my argument. Incontrol you completely disregarded what I said. I agree people misinterpret art. However it's pointless to not interpret just because the values we interpret art by change. It's like saying we should not have a government because ours will be obselete and replaced by a better one eventually. Human beings need to live; just like art, especially after modernity, needs self-reflection to survive and progress. | ||
zulu_nation8
China26351 Posts
On August 29 2008 06:56 travis wrote: why do all neuroscientists conveniently ignore the fact that there is no logical reason as to why anyone should experience anything. actually, pretty much all empiricists (like everyone in the west and most in the east) have this same flaw. even new-age philosophers(and most from the past) seem to have this flaw, those who claim they are pursuing truth. and when you bring it up they ignore that you even made a point, they say that science will explain it, in the future. that they are getting closer to explaining how experience happens via matter. meanwhile they ignore the question of why it would ever happen in the first place. why is this? Because doing philosophy, or anything from experience traps you into a hole that no one can get out of. So after Heidegger came in and said we should start from our everyday actions instead of the mind itself, philosophy got a lot easier and everyone is happy. If you start from the mind and your own private experiences you can never look me in the face with logical reasoning and tell me you are directly interacting with the world and that you are not a trascendental subject yourself. | ||
zulu_nation8
China26351 Posts
On August 29 2008 07:01 travis wrote: Why is it that so very few people are interested in knowing what they are. Shouldn't this be the most important question you can answer before you die? Why is it that so many people follow a religion they don't even understand, even when it states that for that lack of understanding they will spend eternity in hell. Are they unable to bring theirself to think of anything outside their attachments and desires for 10 fucking minutes to find out how retarded their beliefs are? Eh Why are you so certain about your own subjective views. | ||
zulu_nation8
China26351 Posts
On August 29 2008 07:17 {88}iNcontroL wrote: Art's value isn't physical though. Nobody (that actually tries and understand appreciate art, basically I am discluding thoughs that buy art for purely superficial purposes and would buy a lump of poop if someone told them it was amazing) buys art for the space it fills but rather what it represents and evokes. That worth, that value is not physical and cannot be grasped as its experience is unique and independent to each person. This of course is getting into the debate as to whether or not you believe people can experience an emotion exactly the same way. I argue they cannot. In fact each time someone feels sadness or happiness that feeling is unique to previous or future feelings as well. That is how I reason that art's "value" and worth transcends time.. the fact that emotions do the same and art is an emotional provateur means they are one in the same, relatively speaking. Your point on inner value is interesting. While I agree, quantifying it is impossible I think to argue it doesn't exist is a folly. People (as I have said) have died for art, sacrificed much more than material worth to obtain certain pieces of art. To say they did it in every case without inner value is incorrect I would argue. In reality only like, 0.0000000000001% of all art has enough genius in it that people will call it timeless or whatever. So you really can't use those specific works to represent all art. Also not all art aim to evoke an emotional response, and that certainly should not be the primary reason in determining a certain piece's genius. There's lots of other "physical" stuff like composition, color, technical precision that determines art's value. | ||
Deleted User 3420
24492 Posts
On August 29 2008 11:37 zulu_nation8 wrote: Because doing philosophy, or anything from experience traps you into a hole that no one can get out of. So after Heidegger came in and said we should start from our everyday actions instead of the mind itself, philosophy got a lot easier and everyone is happy. exactly If you start from the mind and your own private experiences you can never look me in the face with logical reasoning that's not true, you just can't communicate the concepts to people much different than yourself and tell me you are directly interacting with the world and that you are not a transcendental subject yourself. doesn't this help prove my point? | ||
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