@Everyone: Regarding various posts "pointing out" that knowledge is not the same as belief.
I KNOW it is not the same as belief. I specifically stated that knowledge is TRUE belief. I also stated that this definition was from Plato's
Theaetetus, where he actually gave a slightly longer definition: "justified true belief." In that post I also mentioned that I left out the "justified" part in order to keep things simpler...however, I will go with the full definition, explaining exactly why Plato formulated it as such - and why it is a correct formulation.
Let's say Harry, and Tom are playing a strange game of "coin toss." One of them takes a coin and tosses it into a bucket on the other side of the room. From where they are standing, they cannot see the coin in the bottom of the bucket.
Harry says, "I have a REALLY strong feeling. I BELIEVE that the coin is showing heads." Then Tom says, "Well, I also have a REALLY strong feeling. I BELIEVE that the coin is showing tails."
Neither has a KNOWLEDGE of the state of the coin (heads or tails showing) but one of them is correct...it is EITHER heads or tails. So while one of them believes something true, there is actually one more step required to turn that true belief into actual knowledge...and that is justification.
They then decide to look into the bucket...and they see that the coin is showing heads. NOW Harry's belief is both true and justified...and he KNOWS that the coin is showing heads. Any claim he would have made to having "knowledge" of the actual state of the coin (other than that there was a 50% chance of it either being heads or tails) would have been incorrect until he had a "justified true belief."
@universecannon:
Quote:...There is no mention of belief in any of those definitions...Wink
See the explanation above. (Also, in the same post I gave Plato's definition right above the dictionary.com definition.)
Quote:And, regardless, people always experience and interpret the meaning of words in their own way, in their own minds...despite the myriad of dictionary definitions. There's no shame in admitting that though.
Yes...and not only to I admit that this is what people do, I make sure to point it out when they do, and also to point out that words DO have meanings, and that in the interest of both clear communication AND clear thinking, one should always strive to use the actual meaning of words and the concepts they represent. In fact, in a previous post I wrote:
Quote:I think it is very important to use language precisely. Words represent concepts, and concepts are the building-blocks of thought. Clear, precise thinking (and communication) isn't really possible in the absence of clear, precise concepts and the words which represent them.
So, while people are "free" to use words in any way they want, so to speak, if one is trying to debate a point, or even simply discuss something with another person, this is essentially impossible if there are not agreed-upon meanings applied to all the words used. And rather than painstakingly define each word individually, making up language as we go along every time one speaks with another person, it's really convenient to be able to simply say (or infer) that one is speaking (in this case) English, and therefore assume that all the words will have the definitions that are used in English.
@benzyme:
Quote:you can be as precise as you want, in any language including math, and there will still be phenomena you cannot precisely "define" without some incongruencies in syllogisms and mathematical proofs.
In a previous post I have already acknowledged that there may well be limits to the knowledge one can derive about reality, but this only means that one should seek to know where these limits lie and all that one can within these limits:
Quote:Now, let's imagine something different...let's call it a "Reality Fundamentalist." This person believes that "reality exists" and that reality is EVERYTHING or ALL that exists. Furthermore, this person believes that the only way to know and understand reality is to study reality itself. (Well...that's actually a pretty good way of looking at science: it attempts to know and understand reality by studying reality itself.) It also turns out that the "Reality Fundamentalist" will eventually learn to co-opt the techniques of the "Mathematical Fundamentalist" into his or her "Reality Fundamentalism" because, as it turns out, reality operates in many ways which can be desribed mathematically. (Perhaps, upon realizing this, the "Reality Fundamentalist" draws the metaphysical conclusion that "Reality must be consistent with its own existence, or it could not exist," and understands that this is the reason that reality can often be described in mathematical ways.)
Now, there may well be limits to the knowledge which one can derive about reality...but the "Reality Fundamentalist" will not simply acknowledge that such limits may well exist, and then decide to cease all further investigation or exploration of the nature of reality. Instead, the "Reality Fundamentalist" will seek to know what these limits are, and will further seek to know and study all that can be known within these limits.
@jamie:
Quote:
Zon, you have misrepresented the meaning of the term mystical.
I actually think I have represented the term QUITE accurately...and I have also discussed AND justified my use of the term in a previous post:
Quote:A reading of the Wikipedia article on Mysticism (
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mysticism ) provides a long list of all sorts of ideas and practices which have been identified as "mystical." If there is anything at all that these practices have in common it seems to be a general disregard or rejection of reason and critical thinking and a general acceptance of some "higher (often spiritual) reality."
A bit further down in the same post I also said:
Quote:Mysticism is a mode of thinking or relating to the world from which honest critical reason is absent. Science on the other hand, is a mode of thinking or relating to the world which embraces honest critical reason.
I stand by my definition, also given in the same post: “Mysticism” refers to any sort of ineffective, non-reality-based methodology or approach to the acquisition of knowledge and understanding.
Quote: It does not innately refer to anything supernatural or outside of the mind.
Beliefs in the supernatural would certainly be considered a "mysticism." And I never said that mysticism was something "outside the mind;" in fact mysticisms are false constructs existing exclusively within the mind, rather than as a part of external reality.
Quote: I could not have made the arguments you are making in a classroom when I was at college studying religious anthropology. I would have been shot down pretty quick with that limited definition.
This may not be the "politically correct" way of phrasing it, but my purpose here is not "political correctness," but greater mutual understanding. I also understand that in the context of a course in religious anthropology such a definition would have "shot you down rather quickly." There may be a few reasons for that. Primary among these is that the vast majority of people are mystical in general, and thus don't like to have their mysticism exposed for what it really is...and I would suspect that this would almost be a certainty for someone whose life path lead them to teaching a course in religious anthropology. (As a side-note: I have had a couple of courses where I quickly detected the mysticism of the professor...and easily "aced" those courses by carefully using language designed to appeal to the professor's mysticisms, while also maintaining my personal integrity by never actually giving personal credence to the mysticisms.)
Also, there is the "political correctness" issue, which I touched upon above. In anthropological courses in general an acceptance of the idea of "cultural relativism" is essentially
de rigueur; in other words, there is an emphasis on simply observing and recording cultural differences and not "judging" these differences as "right or wrong" in terms of one's own culture.
This, however, is not a class in religious anthropology.
Quote:" "Mysticism" is derived from the Greek μυω, meaning "I conceal",[web 1] and its derivative μυστικός, mystikos, meaning 'an initiate'."
You also lack adequate understanding of the role of the mystery and what the term likely meant to the Greeks.
The objective of philosophy, in Greece, as it came to them from the Egyptians and out of Vedic philosophy..was liberation. Without liberation, it was not even philosophy. It was a mystery because most men and women had not been schooled in philosophical thought until they had gone through the mysteries.
The mystics were initiates of the mysteries. I don't know how familiar you are with old world mystery traditions or the mythologies embedded within them...but there is no real evidence to suggest the context for such a belief system as you have put forward.
I am actually not as unfamiliar with Greek mysticism as you might think, although I am sure that my understanding and interpretation of such mysticism is markedly different from yours. I will say that much of Egyptian and Vedic philosophy would certainly fit into exactly my definition of "mysticism," as would much of Greek philosophy as well...how much evidence do you need?
Quote:Science, and rationalism, are themselves the children of the mystery initiates. Neither of them would have arisen at the time they did without the mysteries.
I essentially agree. People started with all sorts of approaches, many of which were essentially mystical...and then some of them started actually having real success in understanding the world when they began to use methods that eventually came to be identified as "scientific." Once they realized they power of this scientific approach in comparison with the essentially impotent approach of mysticism, mysticism was abondonded in favor of science.
Also, regarding the word "rationalism," this is a term that has been defined in all sorts of ways. (Philosophers are sort of notorious for giving words definitions which don't mean what may be expected, and often for different philosophers to give contradicting meanings to the same term.) Rationalism has even been defined as an approach to knowing reality using only the mind, without reference to empirical observation. (Certainly NOT something I subscribe to.) From your use of the term it seems that you mean something like "logical thinking or reasoning." (Something I DO subscribe to.) I think a much better general term for the scientific approach, as introduced in Scionics, is "empiricorationalism." This is the skeptical application and integration of both empiricism and rationality.
Quote:Comparative mythology is the only way to really grasp today the allegorical nature of the mythologies that surrounded the mysteries...and if you really study them, it becomes rather clear that these were stories meant to be transcended by the initiates. They were allegory. The contained wisdom. That's all. Wisdom that required a level of stages to fully grasp so that one can move beyond the avatars and see a larger picture.
It is well understood that many Greek philosophers who came out of the mysteries never regarded the gods as literalized anthropomorphic beings. I don't believe that people were that stupid.
The mysteries, and the mystics who were innitiates(known as telestai), were simply initiated into a level of knowledge that was hidden from non-initiates, although the mysteries were open to anyone of any social standing as long as they were not murderers and were able to speak Greek(for obvious reasons). Those people became the mystics.
I never said that all Greeks believed in the gods, or that all Greeks were mystical...but many did and were.
And what was the "wisdom" or the "level of knowledge that was hidden from non-initiates" but an even deeper or more subtle or "secret" (but just as non-reality-based) form of mysticism? (I will say however, that there is speculation that the Pythagoreans actually had two paths: Both started essentially the same, with a mixture of mathematics, mysticism, and other teachings. Those who displayed an affinity for mysticism, or otherwise did not "measure up," were taken down the false, "mystical" path, all the while thinking they were recieving "the inner secrets." Those who rejected mystical thinking, and also "measured up" in other ways, were shown the true, reality-based path...again, this is just speculation, but interesting.)
Quote:You are using a grossly misappropriated version of the term.
See pretty much all of the above.
LIVE AND LET LIVE!
"Thou Art Zon."