
Dom wrote:I wonder. Hmmmm... 'cogito ergo sum' but does that mean that when I'm not thinking, ie. when I'm asleep, I don't exist? I wonder. Any thoughts
Deses wrote:
More realistically, "I think occasionally, therefore I exist"
Dom wrote:Deses wrote:
More realistically, "I think occasionally, therefore I exist"
But how do you know that this is reality and that when you are asleep you aren't in the true reality and that this isn't just a dream?
psilord wrote:The lack of destiny or higher order control is the true expression of free will.

Paul wrote:Odd. Why should someone who takes pleasure in the meaninglessness of his existence be saddened by his irrelevance?
Paul wrote:I'm guessing that you struggle to understand Aeschylus and Sophocles...
Dom wrote:But how do you know that this is reality and that when you are asleep you aren't in the true reality and that this isn't just a dream?


Deses wrote:The carthesian cogito ergo sum principle was primarily meant as a first building block of a rationalist philosophy. In that particular setting it works ok.

ThomasGR wrote:You simple know that. Like people know they are dreaming when they are dreaming that they are awake, although in really they are dreaming. They just know that. No mystery at all.
Dom wrote:I wonder. Hmmmm... 'cogito ergo sum' but does that mean that when I'm not thinking, ie. when I'm asleep, I don't exist? I wonder. Any thoughts
jamesbath wrote:Sine cogitatio sentio, sic supra mentem sum.
//Without thought I perceive things so I exist beyond thought.//
jaihare wrote:I think you have to use the ablative after sine, which is (if I'm not wrong) cōgitātiōne with this word.
Eadmund wrote:Even if what you perceive to be reality is a dream, then you must still exist in order to be fooled by your dreams.
Eadmund wrote:If anything happens to you, you exist.
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