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Analogies, metaphors, and allegories vs. stark reality

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Re: Analogies, metaphors, and allegories vs. stark reality

Unread postby Arthur75 » Fri 11 Feb 2011, 19:01:00

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Arthur75', '
')A fine line for sure (the wing of stupidity is never far)



It wasn't stupid, it just had nothing to do with reality. :)


Not it does, in very simple terms
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Re: Analogies, metaphors, and allegories vs. stark reality

Unread postby Ludi » Fri 11 Feb 2011, 19:07:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Arthur75', '
')Not it does, in very simple terms


"Not it does" doesn't make sense to me, sorry. :)
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Re: Analogies, metaphors, and allegories vs. stark reality

Unread postby Arthur75 » Fri 11 Feb 2011, 19:21:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Arthur75', '
')Not it does, in very simple terms


"Not it does" doesn't make sense to me, sorry. :)


Just think for instance of all the bar codes that you scan at the super market corresponding to some products, bar codes being distributed by GS1, and products having been thought about (without any mystery), or to the fact that saying something is saying something, but also acting on the words being said in a way, not much more ..
Not forgetting that nothing would work without these codes, making them clearly part of "stark reality"
Last edited by Arthur75 on Fri 11 Feb 2011, 19:26:30, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Analogies, metaphors, and allegories vs. stark reality

Unread postby Ludi » Fri 11 Feb 2011, 19:25:53

Maybe someone else can explain what Arthur is talking about, I have no clue. :)
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Re: Analogies, metaphors, and allegories vs. stark reality

Unread postby SeaGypsy » Fri 11 Feb 2011, 19:30:47

and every single bar code has a six at each end and another in the center. These are the only lines without the number written beneath, they extend below the others. Stupid thing about the devil-man who came up with this is that the number of the beast is 72 ( threescore six and six) but to this day billions of people think it's 666....

God Mos! What happened to your thread?
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Re: Analogies, metaphors, and allegories vs. stark reality

Unread postby Arthur75 » Fri 11 Feb 2011, 19:35:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', 'M')aybe someone else can explain what Arthur is talking about, I have no clue. :)


You are a nihilist then ! Or a woman maybe ? :lol:
(but I don't believe you at all ;-) )
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Re: Analogies, metaphors, and allegories vs. stark reality

Unread postby Ludi » Fri 11 Feb 2011, 20:26:33

Nope, really don't know what Arthur is talking about. Anybody? What does "not it does" mean, and what has that got to do with being a nihilist or a woman? Is Arthur drunk, or stoned?

:?:

I don't think Arthur understood what I meant about the phenomenon of experiencing everything as connected to something by symbols. I wasn't talking about bar codes, I was talking about a psychotic state of mind. :roll:
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Re: Analogies, metaphors, and allegories vs. stark reality

Unread postby Quinny » Sat 12 Feb 2011, 01:55:39

With you on this Ludi. Not a clue whats happening here. :lol:
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Re: Analogies, metaphors, and allegories vs. stark reality

Unread postby SeaGypsy » Sat 12 Feb 2011, 07:20:34

This is turning into a really atrocious threadjacking.
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Re: Analogies, metaphors, and allegories vs. stark reality

Unread postby davep » Sat 12 Feb 2011, 07:43:30

I'm guessing English isn't Arthur's first language.
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Re: Analogies, metaphors, and allegories vs. stark reality

Unread postby SeaGypsy » Sat 12 Feb 2011, 07:46:34

Nor yours Dave? You do ok in English,I never knew if you are expat in France or local.
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Re: Analogies, metaphors, and allegories vs. stark reality

Unread postby davep » Sat 12 Feb 2011, 07:47:35

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('SeaGypsy', 'N')or yours Dave? You do ok in English,I never knew if you are expat in France or local.


I'm English (from Liverpool) but have lived in France on and off for the last 20 years.
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Re: Analogies, metaphors, and allegories vs. stark reality

Unread postby SeaGypsy » Sat 12 Feb 2011, 07:59:12

French is the most beautifull language I think. Norwegian is very pretty also.
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Re: Analogies, metaphors, and allegories vs. stark reality

Unread postby nobodypanic » Sat 12 Feb 2011, 12:15:56

everything is metaphor.

there is no perfectly transparent window to Reality.

however you try describing reality, there will never be perfect correspondence. language colors and distorts.

the best we can hope for is that our description of reality has enough points of contact with Reality to 'work' in a practical way - to allow us to manipulate our environment to our benefit.
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Re: Analogies, metaphors, and allegories vs. stark reality

Unread postby SeaGypsy » Sat 12 Feb 2011, 12:22:55

Even us, we are all partly metaphor at least, it's the nature of the creative beast.
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Re: Analogies, metaphors, and allegories vs. stark reality

Unread postby Narz » Sun 13 Feb 2011, 01:06:32

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', 'T')his seems relevant :? :

More Gaming Can Save the World! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dE1DuBes ... mbedded#at

That's kind of a cool video. Reminds me of a friend of mine with a huge online-game project idea that rewards you in virtual worlds for your skills in the real one. I'm going to send him the video.

This thread is terrible though. :( Mods please split the God crap off to a different thread!

I agree with Mos, most of the time analogies just don't cut it, especially when trying to describe the unique problems (trails and opportunities) of the modern world.
“Seek simplicity but distrust it”
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Re: Analogies, metaphors, and allegories vs. stark reality

Unread postby Arthur75 » Sun 13 Feb 2011, 07:06:12

Sorry Ludi indeed was a bit drunk with above messages, but stand on the basis even if badly explained (basically that we are also sitting on a big book which is as much part of stark reality as anything else), and nothing to do with esoteric kind of stuff really, or more litterature oriented let's say.
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Re: Analogies, metaphors, and allegories vs. stark reality

Unread postby evilgenius » Thu 02 Feb 2017, 13:27:43

I've been thinking about this topic lately. Recently, I've had occasion to contemplate the importance of symbols to man, especially in juxtaposition to language. I've been wondering about the number of consciousnesses people possess. One such consciousness could be called the human spirit. It doesn't understand the world in terms of language, though it must understand language, but through analogy and metaphor. It seems more energy than exactness which might direct that energy toward a specific kind of work, though energy is described as the ability to perform work. More history than the moment of perception, though it does exist in that moment.

If you go from the principle that the truth we say we want language to convey cannot be conveyed conversationally within language without that language becoming impenetrable, not to mention the limitations of short term memory in such a process, then you can understand analogy and metaphor. There have been bigger brained branches of monkeys off of the evolutionary tree. Maybe they couldn't get abstraction, but had to be precise with language? If so, you can see how they could not adapt as fluidly as homo sapiens when it came to new environments or external threat. They couldn't use like or as to conjure up proximal enough comparisons so as to deal with change.

The reason why I have been thinking about this has to do with the topic of childhood trauma. For most people the basic foundation of our inner analogies, the starting points for further adding to them, occurs in childhood. When the things we put in there are skewed toward either coping too severely with something that shouldn't be part of any child's life or are too blatantly of a camp that rejects love and embraces hate, then all further basic life analogies suffer from that basis. Often times a person built upon that order finds themselves battling issues they cannot control or repeating behavior patterns they don't understand. To fix it they need to get at their underlying assumptions, the ones upon which their ancient analogies were founded. This can come about through the influence of words, but it will probably need symbols as well.

We also use symbols in connection with words, you see. They store meaning beyond that which simple dictionary definitions contain. By controlling how we educate ourselves in the definitions of new words and the symbols associated with them and our existing vocabulary we can gain power for use in addressing our ancient symbols and analogies, those we have to change in order to free ourselves unto health. This does relate to religion, insofar as it has been an attempt at this which tends to flatten out in power as its terminology becomes progressively swallowed up in an association with the status quo rather than liberation. There is huge power in words, yes, even in religion. The way we think in both stark and abstract terms can elevate that power or render it banal.
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Re: Analogies, metaphors, and allegories vs. stark reality

Unread postby Cog » Thu 02 Feb 2017, 15:55:55

People don't think the world works like it does, but it do.
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Re: Analogies, metaphors, and allegories vs. stark reality

Unread postby sparky » Fri 03 Feb 2017, 18:59:01

.
"... je résolus de laisser les mots de triste nature errer eux-mêmes sur ma bouche "

[.. I resolved to let the words of a sad nature wander by themselves from my mouth ]

Sound like blogging to me
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