involved in too many conversations to pursue it far. — FrancisRay
A negation is always required for a thought or concept. — FrancisRay
But there would be a way out. — FrancisRay
for the sake of discussion, this question derived from them definitely works for me. — 180 Proof
The only concern on my part is that we try to avoid attributing self organization to the world, when it could be the case that we are the one's doing the organizing e.g. "starmaking", "ways of talking", etc. — Manuel
It's not so clear to me how to distinguish these two when speaking about the world. The phenomena that arise fleeting in my consciousness seem to be fragmented, incomplete, sometimes random and repetitive. But it could be that when we write or speak to others, we are organizing whatever goes on in the head, in a more structured manner.
I assume something like this happens to other people. — Manuel
This again assumes the there's nothing that transcends the logic associated with the mind, or Being. In other words, if we say the essence of consciousness is self-organization then we can easily refer to say Heisenberg uncertainty principle and see that it is something beyond pure reason. — 3017amen
(why do we have this need to wonder about things like causation, etc.), the Will, and other fixed,/innate/intrinsic abstract features of consciousness and self-awareness. — 3017amen
If negation is always required for thought, but there is a way out, such that negations are not always required, then some system must be possible that is not a (human) system of thought.
I’m beginning to find that out. Amazing to me, how many people don’t know what it is to think, or, knowing that, choose to re-name it and thereby justify their insistence that that’s not really what they’re actually doing. — Mww
Thus while the rejection of mind-body dualism opens the door to various other ideas, the rejection of all dualism leads ineluctably to mysticism and the single, unique metaphysical doctrine that is non-dualism. — FrancisRay
Consciousness can be anything we define it as, because we don’t understand it. — Xtrix
If a dualist believes in the necessary phenomenon of subjective and objective truth, does that in itself imply a dichotomous cognition?
That wouldn't meet the definition standards of incoherence. To ask why do things happen vis-a-vis consciousness one of many answers would be the Will. — 3017amen
No. You said logic isn’t abstract. Logic most certainly is abstract, as is mathematics.
Consciousness can be anything we define it as, because we don’t understand it.
— Xtrix
How do you reconcile the fact that a simple a priori syllogism is not abstract yet the nature of such is abstract (formal logic equals mathematics)? — 3017amen
No. I’m referring to what you and I do every day, almost every second of every day in fact. We talk to ourselves all day long. Introspect for a while and you’ll see what I mean.
— Xtrix
I'm not exactly following that can you provide an example? — 3017amen
Consciousness can be anything we define it as, because we don’t understand it.
— Xtrix
Actually consciousness is extremely difficult to define, because its manifestations are endlessly variable and open ended. — Pop
That consciousness is an evolving process of self organization seems difficult to dispute. — Pop
consciousness, which we don't understand, happens because of the "will," which we also don't understand. — Xtrix
They're both abstract. Whatever an "a prior syllogism" is, I don't know. But if it's a syllogism, it's abstract. — Xtrix
Either define your terms or stop wasting everyone's time. — Xtrix
recent years Heisenberg's uncertainty has been challenged by decoherence - this story is yet to pan out, imo.
By transcendent I assume you mean subconscious. Self organization is largely subconscious, but this doesn't mean its totally beyond understanding. — Pop
If a dualist believes in the necessary phenomenon of subjective and objective truth, does that in itself imply a dichotomous cognition?
In constructivist psychology, holding two contradictory concepts as being equally true is the model for mental illness. — Pop
No, we can define it any way we'd like precisely because we don't understand it. Something we don't understand isn't "hard to define" -- it's just nonsense. So the "its" in your sentence refers to nothing. — Xtrix
If we're talking in ordinary conversation, fine -- then everyone knows what consciousness is — Xtrix
You've been going on and on about "self-organization" for a while now, yet have no idea what it means. So now we have two terms we don't understand — Xtrix
You may want to take a refresher on the basics of logic. — 3017amen
As a living organism you need to self organize. You need to create a self, If you are to avoid fragmentation. — Pop
Internally you are self organized, down to the smallest particle , and externally you organize the whole in relation to the information effecting you, so you are self organizing. — Pop
Interesting. What is constructivist psychology? — 3017amen
1. The point I'm making is that if we consider consciousness a self-organized being, then it implies Kantian pure reason. Graph with all the change and in our discussion pure reason has its limitations viz. Heisenberg, Godel, etc..
2. And so if we were to use this logic, our own sense of logic, it would not be able to explain the nature in this case of [your] self-organization. For that reason it transcends our sense of logic. (The conscious and subconscious mind all working together of course is a whole nother discussion/distinction.) — 3017amen
In any event I was wondering if you we're going to try to link subjectivity and objectivity (in every sense) to some sort of dualism mind-body problem. You know, making a connection between the physical world which is inanimate, purposeless yet determined, whereas the mental world involves consciousness, self-awareness, planning, willing, desiring, etc. — 3017amen
Yes, but only when "metaphysical analysis" is inadequate (i.e. Woo-of-the-Gaps via the principle of explosion). From the incoherent to the unintelligible is the shortest "leap of faith" imaginable. — 180 Proof
If negation is always required for thought, but there is a way out, such that negations are not always required, then some system must be possible that is not a (human) system of thought.
I’m beginning to find that out. Amazing to me, how many people don’t know what it is to think, or, knowing that, choose to re-name it and thereby justify their insistence that that’s not really what they’re actually doing. — Mww
Consciousness is a convoluted thing indeed..... — Pop
.......This is why I prefer to call it self organization. — Pop
makes for some interesting psychology. — Pop
There are no excepions to the rule. negation are always required. — FrancisRay
The point is not that there is some way around this limit, but that we can know more than we can think. — FrancisRay
I think you should at least do some reading. — FrancisRay
And so if we were to use this logic, our own sense of logic, it would not be able to explain the nature in this case of [your] self-organization. For that reason it transcends our sense of logic. (The conscious and subconscious mind all working together of course is a whole nother discussion/distinction.) — 3017amen
The conscious and the subconscious are not necessarily in conflict. Recent research shows brain structure changes in response to new ideas. — Pop
Complexity theory would have it that self organization arises fundamentally from fluctuating patterns of energy. Is this all there is to it? Is it arbitrary? — Pop
Maybe they do, but what does organize mean in this situation? — Manuel
It doesn’t mean anything. It’s just a word used to explain another word, and this is supposed to be interesting. It’s really the incoherent ramblings of someone on the Internet. Even if it were true— who cares? Maybe everything is organization. Yes. Maybe everything is God, nature, energy, will, reason, objectivity, etc etc. Just add it to the list and then we can feel like we’ve accomplished something. — Xtrix
It doesn’t mean anything. It’s just a word used to explain another word, and this is supposed to be interesting. It’s really the incoherent ramblings of someone on the Internet. Even if it were true— who cares? Maybe everything is organization. Yes. Maybe everything is God, nature, energy, will, reason, objectivity, etc etc. Just add it to the list and then we can feel like we’ve accomplished something. — Xtrix
You're in a Metaphysic's thread, not a uninformed political one. — 3017amen
What you say makes some sense. But for me metaphysics is a matter of logic and reason and it makes no difference who's doing it or what we want from it. It's just cold, hard logic.The facts of metaphysiis are demonstrable. It makes no difference whether we're a physicist, a mystic or a plumber. — FrancisRay
which is devoid of meaning. — Xtrix
This response is as coherent as anything else you’ve said. — Xtrix
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.