this post was submitted on 29 Jun 2023
1 points (100.0% liked)
weirdway
70 readers
1 users here now
weird (adj.)
c. 1400,
• "having power to control fate", from wierd (n.), from Old English wyrd "fate, chance, fortune; destiny; the Fates," literally "that which comes,"
• from Proto-Germanic wurthiz (cognates: Old Saxon wurd, Old High German wurt "fate," Old Norse urðr "fate, one of the three Norns"),
• from PIE wert- "to turn, to wind," (cognates: German werden, Old English weorðan "to become"),
• from root wer- (3) "to turn, bend" (see versus).
• For sense development from "turning" to "becoming," compare phrase turn into "become."
OVERVIEW
This is a community dedicated to discussing subjective idealism and its implications. For a more detailed explanation, please take a look at our vision statement.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Exactly. You have to take responsibility instead of delegating it to an element of your own experience. The brain is an element of your experience.
Yup. The metaphor of "a brain as an agent" is something deeply conditioned into many of us. It can be conditioned to the point where even in your dreams it's possible that you also use that physicalistic metaphor.
Originally commented by u/mindseal on 2017-08-07 08:41:07 (dl9b3fp)