I have the same problem with imagining some big daddy super-mind in the sky who counts or knows. — apokrisis
Do you want to argue for panpsychism? — apokrisis
So there is a science of meaning-making. Semiotics. And it begins right at the intersection of physics and symbols. It is embodied or rooted in an pragmatic interaction between "a mind" and "a world". — apokrisis
There's your problem in a nutshell - an inherited image which conditions your thinking (and not only yours). — Wayfarer
It's more that in the Western philosophical tradition, there is the seminal idea of 'nous', — Wayfarer
But I don't think you recognise anything that corresponds with that, whilst still seeking to retain some of its products. You will acknowledge that 'mind has been there all along' but if anyone suggests that this might amount to a notion of 'spirit' then you vociferously object (because of the 'subterranean mountain'). But quite what is the nature of 'nous' or 'mind' in that naturalistic sense, is obviously a very hard thing to conceive of. — Wayfarer
In the Aristotelian scheme, nous is the basic understanding or awareness which allows human beings to think rationally. For Aristotle, this was distinct from the processing of sensory perception, including the use of imagination and memory, which other animals can do. This therefore connects discussion of nous, to discussion of how the human mind sets definitions in a consistent and communicable way, and whether people must be born with some innate potential to understand the same universal categories the same logical ways.
Deriving from this it was also sometimes argued, especially in classical and medieval philosophy, that the individual nous must require help of a spiritual and divine type. By this type of account, it came to be argued that the human understanding (nous) somehow stems from this cosmic nous, which is however not just a recipient of order, but a creator of it.
In my philosophy, 'mind' is never an object of perception, but is nevertheless an ubiquitous reality. But it's not a 'that' to us, it is not something we can objectively know. — Wayfarer
But, I'm learning a lot of stuff thinking about it, which is after all why we post here. — Wayfarer
As it stands there is no substance to the points being made in favour of abiogenesis- as you saw I used the same points of molecular machines to argue against abiogenesis.. — MikeL
Firstly atoms forming biological machines is an absurd notion, — MikeL
Secondly, that the specificity of the machines found in the nucleus must be encoded in the DNA. — MikeL
Ultimately I guess its an engineering problem. Randomness cannot account for it in any sensible way. It may lay the materials all over the ground, but they will not assemble randomly into a racecar. And the degree of regulation inside the nucleus is staggering. — MikeL
You are missing that the conversation in biology has gone way beyond this stage now. The organism is neither a random assemblage nor a deterministic machine.It is already starts its story with the irreducible complexity of a semiotic relation. — apokrisis
What level are you talking about here? — MikeL
I just find it so hard to imagine reality in any but the most stereotyped and hackneyed old ways. — apokrisis
maybe nous could be understood as a claim about "soul stuff", or maybe it could be understood as a claim about reason - semiotics - as a metaphysically general reasoning process? — apokrisis
In that light, God-causes and soul-stuffs just strike me as mundane — apokrisis
the Cosmic mind is everywhere and nowhere, baby, It is immaterial, imperceptible and disembodied, knowable only via faith and deep meditation. That's your "philosophy" and it is impregnable to anything science might have to say. — apokrisis
You are laboring points that I don't disagree with. I want you to understand what the OP is saying. To do this you must abandon what Pierce or anybody else says about semiotics. Let me try and walk you through the concepts so we know where our opinions diverge. — MikeL
Do you agree that between the first two images and the third there has been information loss? — MikeL
The point is to recognise that a "realm of information" or semiotic interpretance becomes possible at the limit of physics. It is itself a natural or immanent fact. The world is on the whole entropic and dynamic - always in motion and running down an energy hill. But immanent in that is then inherently the "other" which is the possibility of a "non-physical" mark. — apokrisis
there is in some important sense an incommensurability between the physical and the semiotic. It is precisely this incommensurability which you then claim to have overcome by 'pansemiosis' - when this is actually the point at issue! — Wayfarer
touching on something critical Mikel did mention — apokrisis
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