- Die 13 1/2 Leben des Käpt'n Blaubär

I read, or more like listened to, this as an audiobook in German, and the audiobook version adds so much. I think this is maybe the first time where I would say not only is the audiobook version probably superior (I did not read the physical book), but I would actually recommend it over the book itself. The narrator gives every character a different voice, the music is well done, and the overall audio design in general is great.
But about the book itself: it’s a silly fantasy book that doesn’t take itself too seriously. It works a lot with language, so I would recommend reading it in German, I don’t know how well it would translate. The author loves using long lists of made-up things, which are very fun to listen to/read through. It just has a lot of creativity and silliness to it. Fun read.
- Philosophical Ramblings #13: What is existence?
What is existence? The meaning of words arises through their usage. We use words and learn what they mean not through strict dictionary definitions, but more through associations, so that each word carries a network of related meanings and experiences. From this, meaning emerges. But this meaning is varied; there is no single strict definition of existence. Rather, we often use different senses of the word in different contexts.
When I say that the table exists in front of me, I associate existence with something I can touch, clearly see, and physically interact with. When I say that love exists, I mean something different: not a physical object, but a lived reality expressed through feeling, action, relation, and interpretation. When I say that a unicorn exists, I mean that there are stories, symbols, and cultural imaginaries in which unicorns appear.
So when we speak about free will or other abstract concepts and ask whether they exist, the question is often too simplistic. Free will clearly does not exist in the same way a table does, but perhaps more akin to the way love exists. By the very fact that we are speaking about a concept, it already has a certain kind of existence.
Words do not have meaning because they correspond to a single hidden essence, but because of how they are used within forms of life and human practices. The word “existence” is not a rigid logical operator with one universal meaning underlying all cases. Rather, it gathers together a family of related uses.
So when we say:
- “The table exists,”
- “Love exists,”
- “Unicorns exist,”
- “Free will exists,”
the word “exists” is not functioning identically in each sentence.
The table exists as a publicly encounterable object: durable, spatial, touchable, measurable.
Love exists more as a lived structure of behavior, emotion, relation, interpretation, and intentionality. It is not a thing among things, yet it is not therefore unreal.
A unicorn exists mythically or narratively: as an element within stories, imagination, symbolic systems, artworks, and cultural memory.
And free will may exist as a phenomenological, ethical, social, or interpretive reality, even if it does not exist as some metaphysical “uncaused cause” hidden inside the brain.
Once something enters discourse, imagination, or practice, it already possesses some mode of being. Not necessarily physical being, but presence within human existence.
The mistake many debates make is assuming that “exists” must mean one single thing everywhere. Then people ask:
- “Does love really exist?”
- “Does morality really exist?”
- “Does free will really exist?”
But often the hidden assumption is:
“Do these exist in the same way tables or atoms do?”
And once phrased that way, the answer may simply be: no, but why should that be the only legitimate mode of existence?
Human reality is layered. Some things exist physically, some socially, some symbolically, some phenomenologically, some mathematically, and some fictionally. Money, nations, laws, marriages, depression, melodies, and fictional characters all “exist,” though not in the same way rocks exist.
By the very fact that we are talking about a concept, it already has a certain kind of existence to us. That does not automatically grant it physical or metaphysical independence, but it prevents the simplistic dismissal:
“It doesn’t exist, therefore it is nothing.”
A hallucination does not exist as an external object, but the hallucination itself undeniably exists as an experience. A fictional character does not exist biologically, but they exist culturally and imaginatively.
So perhaps the deeper philosophical question is not:
“Does X exist?”
but rather:
“In what way does X exist?”
“Within what mode of being?”
“Within what human practice or disclosure does it appear?”
That reframing avoids forcing all reality into the model of physical objects alone.
- Meister Eckhart Vom Seelengrund Eine Auswahl aus den deutschen Predigten
Meister Eckhart was a Christian German mystic from the 14th century. This book contains selected sermons by him. One major theme in almost all of these sermons is that God is beyond all predicates. Whenever you describe God: for example, by saying He is all-powerful or all-good—you do Him a disservice, because you limit Him. In fact, God is beyond all descriptions. - The Frog and the Water (2025)

Watched this movie as a sneak preview. It was alright, had some cool shots and some nice pictures. There were some scenes where I chuckled; the character was alright, the story was meh, not really my cup of tea. 6/10
- God as beingless being
A cardinal asked St. Bernard, ‘Why should I love God and in what manner?’ St. Bernard replied, ‘I will tell you. God is the reason why we should love Him. The mode is without mode.’ For God is nothing: not in the sense of having no being. He is neither this nor that that one can speak of: He is being above all being. He is beingless being. Therefore the mode of loving Him must be modeless. He is beyond all speech. That we may come to this perfect love, may God help us. Amen
~ Meister Eckhart, Sermon Q 82