You forget that I am arguing the pragmatist view and so Occam's razor applies. You can pretend to worry about invisible powers that rule existence in ways that make no difference all you like. You are welcome to your scepticism and all its inconsistencies. But as I say, if whatever secret machinery you posit makes no difference, then who could care?
Yeah, but as soon as your private experience is framed by yourself as an argument, it is social, even if never in fact articulated publicly. — apokrisis
You seem to imagine that naive experiencing of experiences is possible. But to talk about the self that stands apart from his/her experiences is already to invoke a pragmatist's sign relation. — apokrisis
What this boils down to is we don't know if we are actually doing metaphysics, or just playing at it. — Punshhh
How is the actual experience experienced by the experiencer "framed"? — schopenhauer1
The clue is in the fact you have to mention the experiencer. — apokrisis
That we have a private experience that cannot be mapped? — schopenhauer
I find this question to be a little be strange. Is not the point of the map that it is secondary, only a representation of a territory which is some other state? If so, doesn't that make all experiences maps? — TheWillowOfDarkness
Yes I see that but, we are blind to what we are in some sense. — Punshhh
I am concerned with other or unconventional ways of knowing and other means of seeing and witnessing and the development of wisdom — Punshhh
and explains the degree to which it could then matter
This is your perception perhaps.Fine. But you are not showing that they have a demonstrable advantage - except as a way to block open minded, publicly conducted, ontological inquiry.
You haven't yet addressed the key point of my argument though, and that is the nature of selection itself. Deleuze characterizes selection as non-voluntary, necessary, whereas I consider selection as a free act of will. As an act of free will, we have to allow for will-power, which is to resist the temptation to choose, and to resist the habituated choice. As I described, the act of will-power is resistance to change and difference, therefore a selection of the status quo, lack of change, the same — Metaphysician Undercover
OK, selection is the subject of the inquiry.The subject of the inquiry is not "nothing." It is selection. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Now you ask what thing acts to make a selection.In both questions, the subject (God, selection) is treated as real and I am asking what thing acted to make it so. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Your answer, "nothing".For either question, "nothing" is a truthful answer because there is no thing which causes either. — TheWillowOfDarkness
For selection to be an action of something is a contradiction. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Selection must occur regardless of states of the world, else the different meanings expressed in the world would not be defined. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I didn't address this because I have nothing to say about 'free-will' that isn't disparaging. Nobody has any idea what a 'will' is, let alone a 'free' one. If 'free-will' is your (completely arbitrary) criteria for a metaphysics, then I've nothing to say to you. — StreetlightX
My point: if nothing acts to make a selection, then there is no selection, just like if our subject is "going to the store" and nothing acts to go to the store, there is no going to the store. — Metaphysician Undercover
I know that's your point. Mine is that that doesn't make sense. Selection, as spoken about in this thread, cannot be an action. It's incoherent. Without a defined difference, there is no-one to act and no actions to take. The point here is the definition of "selection" you are using cannot apply. — TheWillowOfDarkness
OK fine, you want to talk about selection which is not selection at all, it is something different from selection. So what is it that we are talking about?Your usage of "selection" just doesn't get the topic of discussion and so fails to speak about it. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Since it is only the map which tells, the fact it's not the territory has no impact on its ability to say something. Anyone may know anything about another experience. They'll just never "be" that experience. — TheWillowOfDarkness
OK fine, you want to talk about selection which is not selection at all, it is something different from selection. So what is it that we are talking about? — Metaphysician Undercover
That's what it means to know something: to have a model which is not exhaustive of the world. My point this is no limit on what may be known.
If I know what you are thinking of feeling at sometime, the point is I have a map of a tiny part of you and the world. The failure of the map to be exhaustive doesn't prevent it from telling me your upset. I can know that perfectly well. — TheWillowOfDarkness
So we have things without identity, which we cannot say that they are not the same as anything else, because this identifies them according to sameness. — Metaphysician Undercover
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