Theoretically, could one exist in nothingness? Or does a conscious creature always need an environment?
Any book recommendations that deal with nothingness?
A universe from nothing
>>8668028
But nothingness and being are exactly the same thing
>>8668041
Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out Nihilists get out
>>8668028
You'd probs go insane. Probs.
>>8668041
nonsense. already different by its very own definition.
>>8668140
Being is internal to nothingness and vice versa
t Derrida
I aren't know what he means by this tho
>>8668154
>Being is internal to nothingness and vice versa
Anon, we've reached quite the delicate situation here. Namely that the way you interpret the concept of "existence" is completely unsalvageable.
I don't see how that's possible.
>>8668222
Just as a thought game, IRL it's of course not possible
Being and Nothingness is bready good tbqhfam.
>>8668028
Parmenides' 'On Nature'
if you were in nothingness how would you know you existed?
>nothing to see
>nothing to hear
>nothing to feel
>nothing to taste
>nothing to smell
>nothing for you to form concepts about
>nothing to identify your existence by
if you've never seen the color red you can't think about the color red. if you've never seen ANYTHING you couldn't think about anything. ergo consciousness requires external stimuli.
Most of the Buddhist canon desu