Well put for simplicity's sake... — creativesoul
You wrote:
I don't want to argue with this except to say that I understand the word 'fact' to be equivocal. It is variously used to mean both 'true proposition' and 'actual state of affairs'. I think the first usage is the more common and consistent one, so I stick to that and avoid using 'fact' to mean state of affairs or actuality.
You wrote:
To elaborate a bit, what I wanted to express in saying that truth speaks actuality is to say that to speak the truth is to speak actuality, along much the same lines as Aristotle's formulation:
"To say of what is that it is not, or of what is not that it is, is false, while to say of what is that it is, and of what is not that it is not, is true”.
To say that truth reveals actuality is to say that actuality 'comes to fruition' in our true speaking of it. I admit that there is something of poetry in all this, but I think philosophy is more of an art than a science, so that is not inappropriate, as I see it.
You wrote...
I think of the actual as the twin categories of things which act, which "have an effect", and which are acted upon, which are affected. Of course, the two are not mutually exclusive. The real I think of as both the actual, and the conditions that are necessary, whatever they might be, for the actual to be.
It seems to me that that is unnecessarily confusing.
Can you tell me what is in it that confuses you?
I asked the following:
Would I be correct in surmising that your use of the terms "real", "actual", and "actuality" indicate awareness of our own fallibility? I mean, do they include the unknown realm?
I maybe inadequately understand your questions here. I'm not sure if it is relevant to the intention of them, but I will say this: I believe we know the real, the actual, actuality, intimately. Here I mean knowing in the 'Biblical' sense, knowing by intimate relation. For various reasons, though, what we say does not always reflect the real, the actual; and once we begin to argue (with ourselves or others) about it; then we begin the descent into confusion.
You wrote:
I tend to distinguish between the real and the actual; I think of the latter as meaning something like 'the totality of what we humans experience' and of the former as 'containing, but not limited to, the actual'. The actual is what we humans experience because that is what acts upon us, and what we act upon, as actual beings ourselves; it is the world of interaction. It is real, but we also must think that what lies beyond our sphere of interaction is real, and that it includes the conditions that give rise to our sphere of interaction.
Of course objections may always be made on terminological grounds; that is due to the imprecision of language.
I am not sure if that is a compliment – put down – or both?
Do you think my explanation of the origin of meaning – cognition – language is cogent?
Could you add some subtlety to my scenario?
Do you have an alternate theory of how meaning arrived – cognition and language?
Perhaps cognition should come before meaning – we must have had cognitive power first before we could derive associative meaning.
How did we acquire cognition? I would like to hear what you think.
You're neglecting to draw and maintain the crucial distinction between thinking and thinking about stuff. I suspect that you've also neglected to consider the difference between pre-linguistic thought and linguistic. I would even go as far as to guess that you also neglect to consider the difference between thought/belief and thinking about thought/belief.
You neglected to address the long answer, which argued for the short. Gratuitous assertions aren't acceptable. — creativesoul
The above is steeped in language use that leaves me guessing. What is the word "that" referring to in the following?
"The actual is what we humans experience because that is what acts upon us, and what we act upon, as actual beings ourselves."
Of course objections may always be made on terminological grounds; that is due to the imprecision of language.
Language is certainly sometimes imprecise and can have many different results, that being but one. — creativesoul
I am not sure if that is a compliment – put down – or both?
Neither. — creativesoul
Do you think my explanation of the origin of meaning – cognition – language is cogent?
Yup. — creativesoul
Could you add some subtlety to my scenario?
Yup. — creativesoul
Do you have an alternate theory of how meaning arrived – cognition and language?
Nope. — creativesoul
Perhaps cognition should come before meaning – we must have had cognitive power first before we could derive associative meaning.
Perhaps they arise simultaneously. — creativesoul
I do not think that that question leads to greater understanding. Better to focus attention upon what cognition requires. What is the bare minimum criterion? What must be the case in order for cognition to happen? Does that include things that require other things? What is included within the set of necessary existential preconditions? — creativesoul
You may be right that cognition and meaning are simultaneous. However, if we go back way before the first Homo sapiens – back to the beginning – and ask the same questions about cognition and meaning. The first primate-like mammals, or proto-primates, evolved in the early Paleocene Epoch (65.5-55.8 million years ago) at the beginning of the Cenozoic Era. Did they have cognition of their senses? Yes, but I am not so sure they had meaning. If we look at simple cell organisms today - we can see they will respond to stimuli – they have a rudimentary cognition, but I don’t think they have meaning. So, I think cognition comes first – then meaning somewhere down the line.
I think John explained the difference between real and actual very well. For example - the universe is real, but my perception of it may be a little different from what it actually is. In my example that would be the universe. I get his meaning quite clearly.
I don’t think I can take this comment at face value because it leaves me guessing at what you mean. Your previous comment – “well put” – leads me to understand complimentary approval. I am still not sure what you meant by – “for simplicity's sake...” Did you mean a simplistic explanation - or something else – I honestly don’t know? If simplistic, I would infer – put down. If in fact you do mean “neither” - now – please explain what that means. Then correlate what you mean by neither with your original comment...
If thoughts weren't about things then the thoughts would be the things themselves, similar to how words must be about things or else the words are the things themselves.
Yes, thoughts are things too, which is why we can turn our thoughts on themselves - of thinking about thinking.Thoughts are things. Some thought is about stuff. Others are more simple in constitution and facilitate the very ability for our thinking about stuff. — creativesoul
It seems that your notion of cognition is not equivalent to my notion of thought/belief. On my view, not all stimulus/response situations involve thought/belief. Detection alone is insufficient for drawing mental correlations between 'objects' of physiological sensory perception and/or one's own state of mind. All such mental correlations constitute thought/belief formation. Simple cell organisms have no state of mind, for they do not have the complexity that seems obviously necessary for it. — creativesoul
That doesn't follow from what was written. — creativesoul
It's not that difficult to understand. When one says "Well put, for simplicity's sake" it need be neither a compliment nor a put down. You see, both of those require a focus upon the author, whereas "Well put, for simplicity's sake" focused upon the content of the expression. — creativesoul
Creatures without written language are always in the moment, and never thinking about being so. Such creatures are more than capable of attributing meaning to 'objects' of sensory perception by virtue of drawing mental correlations between them and/or themselves(their own state of mind). — creativesoul
Yes, thoughts are things too, which is why we can turn our thoughts on themselves...
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