The eyes of reason
In the SD
Hello Rabbi,
I have a question about our ideal vision. How exactly does it work?
For example, if we take the problem of causality when we see object 1 hitting object 2 and then see object 2 move.
- According to what you said, you claim that we see an idea that tells us that when object1 is temporarily preceded by object2 and then object2 moves. So that means that object2 causes object1? Did I understand correctly? It's like a kind of operating instructions?
- Is this idea a general idea and do we apply it to every case in the world, or is there a parallel idea for every possibility in the world, and that's how we know to make the connection?
- The idea, according to the Rabbi, is in a self-contained place, or does every body in the world go with its idea? And in fact, there is a parallel dimension to the world (this is actually the second question).
- How do we know how to find the most suitable idea from all the ideas? It's as if we are unaware of this whole search process. Doesn't that sound strange to a rabbi?
I would be happy to answer Rabbi Yaan!
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0 Answers
- It is not true that temporal coherence means causality. Causality is something beyond temporal coherence. Nor do we deduce it from temporal coherence but rather "see" (with the mind's eye) the causality itself.
- I didn't understand the question.
- The ideas are not in place. And neither is my soul in place. But even according to Plato, who says that ideas are in some sense, there is one idea of each kind and not every object has an idea.
- I didn't understand.
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