Asking for the meaning of life is a category error. Meanings are properties of symbols - and life, as far as we know, is not a symbol. So asking for its meaning is like asking for the taste of starlight. To vainly chase the sun's flavor is to ignore the majesty of its radiance.
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Replying to @G_S_Bhogal
this is sophistry. querying the meaning of life is equivalent to querying the purpose of existence
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Replying to @CultofNewMedia
And exactly the same answer can be used for "purpose of existence". It too is a category error for precisely the same reason. See my other responses in this thread for further information.
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Replying to @G_S_Bhogal
more like the same misapplication of semiotics. the fact that language is inadequate to an existential question does not make the question unanswerable
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Replying to @CultofNewMedia
The question is not just unanswerable, but nonsensical. "Meaning of life" presumes life is a symbol. "Purpose of existence" presumes existence has a design. They're the wrong questions.
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Replying to @G_S_Bhogal
reducing an existential question to fit a simplistic semiotic premise is not profundity.
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Replying to @CultofNewMedia
Then please, show me true profundity. I'd love for you to correct my simplistic thinking with your highly advanced and deeply insightful analysis.
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Yes, I surrender. There are few arguments more profound than telling someone else you've won the argument.
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