• tim wood
    9.3k
    'What exactly caused the explosion' was four-fold:Wayfarer

    Aristotle's four causes, sure. But observe that none of them come close to what caused the dynamite to explode. And this is only a flaw from our viewpoint, we who have asked in a modern sense, "what caused it to explode?" Physics from different eras doesn't always mix - not because the older is wrong, although it may well be by more modern criteria, but because basic understandings change.

    And the reason is that goal-directed activity is clearly intrinsic to any kind of living organisms.Wayfarer
    That's your template, your explanation. What does the plant know of any of that? The plant (arguably) doesn't know anything; it just does. And what it does occurs at the place and moment of the doing. We can describe it, and depending on the presuppositions of our science, our explanations will differ. That is, our descriptions are true and accurate by our criteria - which has zero to do with the plant.

    Someone earlier referred to paths of least resistance. That's the best way I can think of to think about life in itself. Somehow - no doubt in its DNA - it follows a path of what is, for it, a kind of least resistance, or greater reward. No telos at all. Looking at Aristotle is worthwhile. Arguing Aristotle is just so much of how many angels fit on the point of a pin.
  • tim wood
    9.3k
    Also, why can it not be both, "tree" and "firewood"? I see no reason for the claim that it cannot be both.Metaphysician Undercover

    For the claim, sure. But is that claims in your backyard, or trees? Do you burn claims in your fireplace, or firewood? The OP is about how it is ante claims, before thinking. We can approximate that by trying to follow the lead of real being. Imagine you have one beloved tree in your backyard and I come to chop it down. What of your claims then? It cannot be both firewood and tree. Don't you see that?
  • tim wood
    9.3k
    In rough parallel, all plants generally speaking hold (non-self-) awareness of gravity and sunlight, as well as of the threshold between self and non-self. They all respond to obstacle standing in the way as parts of the non-self. And they all are driven by an un-thought of telos to reach that which they are unthinkingly striving for. I personally believe the same awareness of givens and striving toward something that is to be obtained is applicable to all life.javra

    As you noted in your post, you said a lot! I should like you as a thought experiment to strip away from the understanding you have presented - I suppose it's fair to call it your understanding - everything anthropomorphic, scientific, reasonable. And I think that both a fair and necessary request. The first quote, above in the OP, is a turning to that time when there was no thinking, no ideas, no explanations, no theories, and ultimately no confusion, about anything. It appears there was only just the continualness of being. And it is just that, that I must regard with wonder, until I can find a better way.

    I argue that telos is a human template, an overlay of plausible explanation under a set of presuppositions. - All good and orderly in its place, but not the goal here!
  • javra
    2.6k
    I argue that telos is a human template, an overlay of plausible explanation under a set of presuppositions. - All good and orderly in its place, but not the goal here!tim wood

    If I’ve understood you properly given the context of your previous posts, you argue that there is no goal-striving to anything in nature, including to trees’ behaviors. Or are you saying that goals are not the goal of this thread as was outlined in the OP? In which case, I thought it obvious that I was obliging your questions to me with my answers. (to be clear, this in my longwinded last post to you)

    If the former, however, OK—but on what rational grounds does this argument stand?
  • Metaphysician Undercover
    13.2k
    Someone earlier referred to paths of least resistance. That's the best way I can think of to think about life in itself. Somehow - no doubt in its DNA - it follows a path of what is, for it, a kind of least resistance, or greater reward. No telos at all. Looking at Aristotle is worthwhile. Arguing Aristotle is just so much of how many angels fit on the point of a pin.tim wood

    To say that it follows the path of least resistance already presupposes telos, because it is going somewhere, and to be going somewhere presupposes telos. It's like trial and error, this presupposes telos, because the agent practising trial and error must necessarily distinguish between error and success. Likewise, the thing following the path of least resistance must distinguish between resistance and non-resistance, in relation to where it's going (success). Otherwise it would just be swept along by natural forces. But this is not the case, it is an agent going somewhere, distinguishing success from failure, as the path of least resistance, in relation to this, going somewhere.

    For the claim, sure. But is that claims in your backyard, or trees? Do you burn claims in your fireplace, or firewood? The OP is about how it is ante claims, before thinking. We can approximate that by trying to follow the lead of real being. Imagine you have one beloved tree in your backyard and I come to chop it down. What of your claims then? It cannot be both firewood and tree. Don't you see that?tim wood

    No, I will not allow you to invert our positions here. The claim was yours not mine. I call it "tree", you call it "firewood". You are the one claiming that it cannot be both. Even if you cut the tree down, I would still call it "tree" and you would call it "firewood". You haven't provided an argument for your claim that we cannot both know the same thing under different terms.

    See, you need to give me reason for me to adjust to your claim. Trying to force me, by cutting down the tree does not give me reason. The application of force only makes me more steadfast in my resistance to your claim.
  • tim wood
    9.3k
    If I’ve understood you properly given the context of your previous posts, you argue that there is no goal-striving to anything in nature, including to trees’ behaviors.javra

    Goal-striving for people, not for trees. That is, I think goal-striving is an appropriate term for beings that strive toward goals. It isn't clear to me that life-in-itself does that. Beings capable of thought do that (I'd argue), but not beings not capable of thought.

    I'd like to add to our thinking about the tree. I realized that whenever I think about a tree, I always have some image in mind: I "see" it. For me the tree is mainly a visual experience, and I "understand" the tree mainly based on that. Of course I don't see the part of the tree underground, but I know something about that, and so can complete, somewhat, my mental picture. This of course frames the tree in terms of space, distance, structure, and implicitly time. Not only does the tree endure through time, but on the assumption the tree communicates with itself, that communication takes time.

    Here's the thing: the tree has no eyes. It has no mind. It cannot have any kind of conception of itself - I don't even know if "itself" is right. It has no space or time. It reacts to things according to its DNA and it also does things. I imagine that its reactions are a complete description of its experiences - experiences that are neither more nor less than signals in transit through the body of the tree. The tree has no capacity for reflection or evaluation. In short, we could say that there is life, but no being; reaction but no feeling/emotion or judgment. This along the lines of being what the tree is. I have experienced a thought of terror in looking at a tree, it's top clawing at the air, its imagined roots clawing through the earth. It follows that almost everything that is said, can be said, about the tree is not so much about the tree as it is in itself, but about the tree in our own experience, perception, appreciation, judgment.

    It implies that our judgments about life cannot be based on life itself until and unless there is a far better understanding of life (than I know of). I would very much like to think that life itself is special in some way. At the moment, however, I think it's all moral/ethical argument - which is to say, an application of human values, which are manifestly human and have nothing to do with life. This is strange territory!
  • tim wood
    9.3k
    To say that it follows the path of least resistance already presupposes telos, because it is going somewhere, and to be going somewhere presupposes telos.Metaphysician Undercover
    Agreed! But that is just the failure of language to accommodate the tree's living. It - the tree - doesn't follow; it doesn't go. It just is, from moment to moment. We, being observant, might say that it changes from one particular moment to another. But the tree? Nope. It just is. Or, neologisms for fun and profit, the tree just ises, or beings, a state of ising, or beinging.

    No, I will not allow you to invert our positions here.Metaphysician Undercover
    Let's go back.
    It makes a difference. If we decide what things are, then we can reasonably differ. If on the other hand we know what something is, then we cannot reasonably differ.
    — tim wood

    There is no fundamental difference between deciding what things are, and knowing what things are, because all we can do is decide what something is, and having made that decision constitutes knowing what that things is.
    Metaphysician Undercover

    When you say there is no fundamental difference, you have left out a whole raft of qualifications. I don't know what they are, but what you wrote is categorical: no fundamental difference.

    I point out to you that there is a difference, I think a fundamental difference, between a living, growing, possibly beautiful and inspirational, tree and the pile of firewood it could be. It cannot be both. You appear to deny that. Please make clear how I could come and take ax to your tree and reduce it to firewood, and it is still your growing, living tree. If you're playing word games, I'm not interested.
  • apokrisis
    7.3k
    Someone earlier referred to paths of least resistance.tim wood

    Yeah. So how does every particle, every event, know how to follow the path of least action? How do you accommodate this “weirdness” that infects even classical physics in your metaphysical picture?

    But that is just the failure of language to accommodate the tree's living. It - the tree - doesn't follow; it doesn't go. It just is, from moment to moment.tim wood

    Science can talk of grades of telos - physical tendencies or propensities, biological function, psychological purpose. So finality or anticipation can be treated as something that comes in obvious grades of complexity.

    Then you just need a general story on how complexity arises. That is where pan-semiotics slots in. There is information bound up in a system’s history of constraints that gives it the tendencies it will express in the future.

    This only gets truly weird on the micro scale of quantum events where now - as in quantum eraser experiments - choices experimenters might make in the future can act as constraints on an event’s past. Time itself gets caught up in the least action principle.

    But the point is that finality is profoundly part of physics. And it’s exact understanding still an open question.

    It is not something to be dismissed. It is a forefront issue.
  • javra
    2.6k


    Due to time, I’ll be forthright in my views and not beat around the bush. My bad in advance if I’m currently too cranky.

    There can be anthropomorphism at play in any of our judgments concerning awareness and will. Our judgments of these can just as readily be clouded, if not utterly flawed, by an ego-driven anthropocentrism which states that “if it is not that precise form which only humans can experience, then it cannot exist in any other form in any non-human lifeform”. This mindset can often be found in ethology (the empirical, scientific study of animal behavior): animals cannot hold emotions such as anger or fear because emotions as we know them are only found in us human, therefore no animal can hold emotions of any form, period! (who gives a sheit about their limbic system being pretty much the same as our own, especially when regarding primates). Same can be said with arguments for awareness, will, and reasoning: if it is not that specific form which only humans can do, then it cannot in any way exist in any other form anywhere else. The reasoning as to why this is never given, only the assertion.

    the tree has no eyes.tim wood

    An empirically demonstrable conclusion we all know of, but I don’t understand its significance when addressing a tree’s awareness in sensing, and consequent propensity toward, gravity and sunlight. Since it’s the capacity to sense—regardless of what and of means—which defines a sentient being as such, are you arguing that trees cannot sense either gravity or sunlight?

    It has no mind.tim wood

    This is contingent upon how mind is defined; Varela et al. (who uphold the concept of autopoiesis) would disagree. But granting that here a mind is implicitly defined as that which necessarily correlates to a central nervous system, no, trees cannot have a mind thus defined because they are not planarians, arthropods, or chordates (with vertebrates as a subset of the latter).

    It has no space or time.tim wood

    This is an unsupported assertion. I’ve often heard it said even of mammals. As though dogs have no memory of where they’ve been and who they’ve interacted with in the past and no anticipation of what is to come in the future. But they don’t think of beginnings and ends to the universe like we do, so our anthropocentrism then quickly concludes that they only live in a non-temporal present. (this is contrary to evidence, if it needs to be said) Of course trees have no theory of time and space. But to say that their behaviors are not governed by before and afters (time) or by distances and proximities (space) is … at best utterly unsubstantiated.

    In terse overview of what I’m here upholding, trees are not humans, nor are they vertebrates—and so do not have attributes only applicable to humans and vertebrates. This, however, does not argue against trees holding awareness conjoined goal-strivings—to be clear, of a non-human, non-vertebrate kind.

    Addressed differently, what set of processes differentiates trees from rocks if not awareness conjoined with goal-striving being found in the former but not the latter? And if trees are to be indistinguishable from rocks in being solely governed by entropy, then on what grounds does one argue that trees are lifeforms rather than inanimate matter?
  • Wayfarer
    22.5k
    Somehow - no doubt in its DNA - it follows a path of what is, for it, a kind of least resistance, or greater rewardtim wood

    So, basically, your view is that ‘stuff just happens’. So really there’s nothing to be gained by discussion.
  • Janus
    16.3k
    'Reason and revelation' are defined and understood as different domains in philosophy of religion.Wayfarer

    Do you believe reason and revelation are independent domains just on the basis of religious authority? Or do you have your own reasons? I would prefer to see an argument from you.

    The whole point about 'revealed truth' is that we learn something from it, which you can't learn by any other means including reasoning.Wayfarer

    I think it depends on what you mean when you say that things are learned by means other than reason. In one sense it is true that nothing is learned by pure reason, because there is no pure reason. Things are learned by experience, but experience in itself yields nothing without the concepts that are derived from reason, or to put it more accurately, there is no experience without concepts derived from reason, and I would argue that this includes religious experience or revelation.

    Can you think of any example of knowledge derived from religious experience or revelation which is truly beyond reason? Surely as soon as anything is articulated it becomes reasonable if it is to be at all intelligible, no? (Pure nonsense may evokes some feelings, but as soon as you want to talk about those feelings I would say that you have entered the domain of reason).

    That's a deep question, obviously. You could answer with Wittgenstein: 'that of which we cannot speak'. But the problem with that answer is that it indeed does leave a great deal to conjecture;Wayfarer

    Nothing I have read of Wittgenstein (and I have read quite a bit over the years) indicates to me that he thought that ethics, aesthetics and religion are beyond reason, but merely that they cannot be precisely articulated in propositional or empirical terms. Literary works, for example, are not "beyond reason" even though they are not characteristically concerned with presenting deductive or inductive arguments to support standpoints.

    Thinking in Sellarsian terms you have the "scientific Image" of the world and human life (the space of causes) and the "manifest image" of the world and human life (the space of reasons). Sellars wants to give priority to the former, but really the former is derivative of the latter, which is a point that I believe Wittgenstein would have endorsed and disagreed with Sellars about.

    The space of reason is the whole of life, and this agrees with Hegel's "the Rational is the Real" and also with Peirce's understanding of reality as semiosis, as well as Kant's "Thoughts without content are empty, intuitions without concepts are blind?".
  • Janus
    16.3k
    I don't think so, they could just look at the things which we call "trees" as firewood. That's what we're talking about, calling the same thing by different words. I called it "tree", tim called it "firewood".

    You are making them into two distinct things, but that's not what we were talking about. We were talking about knowing what a thing is. One person knows the thing as "firewood", another knows it as "tree", the same thing.
    Metaphysician Undercover

    The problem with your argument is that a living tree is not merely firewood and in fact is not even suitable in its present green condition to serve as firewood. It is therefore highly implausible that anyone would have seen a tree to be nothing more than firewood. And even if someone did they would be seeing a tree, from a narrow perspective of utility, as firewood, not seeing it first as firewood and then broadening their perspective to see it as a tree.

    So, contrary to your last statement knowing something as firewood and knowing it as a tree is not the "same thing" at all, but these knowings constitute two very different perspectives on one thing;and the 'one thing' is the tree, not the firewood.
  • Wayfarer
    22.5k
    Do you believe reason and revelation are independent domains just on the basis of religious authority?Janus

    No, it’s a matter of definition.

    Can you think of any example of knowledge derived from religious experience or revelation which is truly beyond reason?Janus

    I gave one already, from Buddhism. Another would surely be the myth of the Burning Bush and the dispensation of the Ten Commandments.

    Nothing I have read of Wittgenstein (and I have read quite a bit over the years) indicates to me that he thought that ethics, aesthetics and religion are beyond reasonJanus

    What I meant was that you might argue that what is 'beyond reason', is that of which W. said 'that of which we cannot speak'.

    But he does seem to contemplate the transcendent in his writings. I was thinking of this:

    If there is a value which is of value, it must lie outside all happening and being-so. For all happening and being-so is accidental.

    and also:

    It is clear that ethics cannot be expressed.
    Ethics is transcendental.

    (Ethics and æsthetics are one.)

    and

    6.432
    How the world is, is completely indifferent for what is higher. God does not reveal himself in the world.


    The space of reason is the whole of lifeJanus

    Again - I think that is vain. Reason has limits and scope. To say that is not to deprecate reason; I think the traditional understanding is that reason points to something beyond itself, which is what I'm referring to as beyond reason or trans-rational.

    I've been perusing Jacques Maritain on this very question via an online text called The Range of Reason and also The Cultural Impact of Empiricism which I am finding generally congenial to my outlook.
  • Janus
    16.3k
    I gave one already, from Buddhism. Another would surely be the myth of the Burning Bush and the dispensation of the Ten Commandments.Wayfarer

    Explain exactly how you think they are beyond reason.

    As to Wittgenstein's,"The sense of the world must lie outside the world. In the world everything is as it is and happens as it does happen. In it there is no value -- and if there were, it would be of no value.

    If there is a value which is of value, it must lie outside all happening and being-so. For all happening and being-so is accidental.

    What makes it non-accidental cannot lie in the world, for otherwise this would again be accidental.

    It must lie outside the world."


    it needs to be put in context. For the Wittgenstein of the Tractatus the "world is the totality of facts, not of things". The totality of facts is the shared public world, the world that can be represented propositionally. Obviously, though, this by no means constitutes the limits of reason, it is more of an empirical horizon. I am sure that Wittgenstein would never agree that ethics, aesthetics, or religion cannot be reasoned about. Indeed what content is there in those domains that is non-conceptual? How could there be non-conceptual (non-reasoned) content at all?

    Reason has limits and scope.Wayfarer

    What, then, are it limits and scope, and what exactly lies beyond it? The point, for me, is that experience is always already mediated by reason, and thus it is always already meaningful.This is not to say that experience is literally a process of reasoning, but that everything that can have any meaning beyond mere sensation or feeling has its roots, its genesis, in reason. Of course there 'is' 'something' 'raw' 'prior' to reason, but 'it' cannot be anything without reason; that is the point I am trying to make.

    (Wittgenstein is speaking differently about something else when he says that in the world there cannot be any value; he is referring to a world considered merely as a sum of empirical propositions; the prosaic world of everything that is merely "the case').
  • tim wood
    9.3k
    Yeah. So how does every particle, every event, know how to follow the path of least action? How do you accommodate this “weirdness” that infects even classical physics in your metaphysical picture?apokrisis
    Does anyone know? Soap bubbles and least surface - how does that work? Do you think the water and soap have some kind of telos? Or is it just some kind of mechanics that is obvious when well-explained.

    Science can talk of grades of telos - physical tendencies or propensities, biological function, psychological purpose. So finality or anticipation can be treated as something that comes in obvious grades of complexity.apokrisis
    It does; it should. No disagreement here. In passing, your definition of telos as encompassing what you have listed seems to broaden and stretch telos beyond the limits of any original significance. If telos is that broad, then it means merely that there's a cause - and that's already presupposed!

    But what is the cause? What causes are for trees cannot be the same as causes for people. i argue that the first step is to identify the effects, then identify the causes of the effects.

    But the point is that finality is profoundly part of physics.apokrisis
    That is, part of the description. The finality being described is (presumably) a fact of some kind. The fact has no need of the science of physics or its descriptions to become or be that fact. The quote from the OP is, "Life will not answer to reason. And meaning is too young a thing to have much power over it." I am simply trying understand what "life" in this sentence means.
  • Janus
    16.3k
    "Life will not answer to reason. And meaning is too young a thing to have much power over it." I am simply trying understand what "life" in this sentence means.tim wood

    'Life' here must 'mean' something imagined to be absolutely unfathomable, indeterminate. In fact life does "answer to reason" insofar as it is intelligible at all. We might imagine there to be something unintelligible 'lying beneath' the intelligibility of life, but what could that 'something we know not what' ever really be for us beyond whatever we can think or imagine about 'it'?
  • Janus
    16.3k
    I've been perusing Jacques Maritain on this very question via an online text called The Range of Reason and also The Cultural Impact of Empiricism.Wayfarer

    I read a little bit of Maritain years ago, and I thought his grasp of modern philosophy was superficial at best.
  • apokrisis
    7.3k
    Or is it just some kind of mechanics that is obvious when well-explained.tim wood

    Well that is the big question. Can you succeed where others have failed?

    We can of course find approximative and perturbative mathematical techniques that do work well enough to solve problems as if they were simply a matter of determinist mechanics. But that then is to ignore the metaphysical mystery of how nature arrives at its rather more exact solutions.

    In passing, your definition of telos as encompassing what you have listed seems to broaden and stretch telos beyond the limits of any original significance. If telos is that broad, then it means merely that there's a cause - and that's already presupposed!tim wood

    Or else it deflates the rather inflated notion of telos that folk have in the first place. I prefer to look at it that way.

    It avoids being a mind~world dualist, while accepting that mechanistic physics is only talking about half the cause in its stress on the material, rather than the formal, causes of physical being.
  • tim wood
    9.3k
    There can be anthropomorphism at play in any of our judgments concerning awareness and will. Our judgments of these can just as readily be clouded, if not utterly flawed, by an ego-driven anthropocentrism which states that “if it is not that precise form which only humans can experience, then it cannot exist in any other form in any non-human lifeform”.javra
    There can indeed, in our judgments. Let's try this. Suppose there were something like anthropomorphism, call it arborism or dentroism, that would be attributing to people the qualities and abilities of trees, in the language and tropes appropriate to trees. Perhaps not possible to give form to in imagination but not thereby impossible. The point is that such an arborism would presuppose just those qualities and abilities that it might attribute. And the things, the qualities and abilities that arborism could attribute would be just exactly what trees are and do. Just as anthropomorphism attributes to (in this case) trees what people are and do in people-centric language. The question then becomes, is there any way to hear - discern in some way - what arborism might be saying, expressing it in tree terms?

    It has no mind.
    — tim wood
    This is contingent upon how mind is defined; Varela et al. (who uphold the concept of autopoiesis) would disagree.
    javra

    From your reference: "The term was introduced in 1972 by Chilean biologists Humberto Maturana and Francisco Varela to define the self-maintaining chemistry of living cells." What has this to do with mind?

    In terse overview of what I’m here upholding, trees are not humans, nor are they vertebrates—and so do not have attributes only applicable to humans and vertebrates. This, however, does not argue against trees holding awareness conjoined goal-strivings—to be clear, of a non-human, non-vertebrate kind.javra
    "Awareness, "goal-striving." It seems to me that awareness requires something able to be aware - in a tree what would that be? Goal-striving seems to require a capacity for anticipation. How, in a tree? My view is that the tree has a repertoire of chemical reactions to stimuli, and chemical messages it can send. To be sure, we can describe it in human;like terms, but while possibly poetic, it seems ultimately destructive of what might pass for knowledge of the tree.
  • tim wood
    9.3k
    So, basically, your view is that ‘stuff just happens’. So really there’s nothing to be gained by discussion.Wayfarer
    Not if the limit of your appreciation is "stuff just happens." In trying to approach some insight into what the life of a tree is, I am trying to jump out of my own systems, not least because, even if that is not possible, I can try to glimpse my subject as free from corrupting understandings as I can.
  • Cavacava
    2.4k
    "Life will not answer to reason. And meaning is too young a thing to have much power over it." I am simply trying understand what "life" in this sentence means.

    Life will not answer to reason (logic) because reason and hence science can't encompass the fullness our experience of life and I don't think this has sunk into our psyche's, we simply have not understood the implication. I don't think life can explain itself because life is based on luck, on an accident, which as such does not submit to an answer.
  • tim wood
    9.3k
    In fact life does "answer to reason" insofar as it is intelligible at all.Janus
    Life answers to reason only on the questions reasons asks, and only in the terms that reason asks in. This is just "putting nature to the question." Don't you think there might be more? Poetry finds it, sometimes; but poetry isn't from the tree, more it's about the aesthetic human reaction to the tree.
  • tim wood
    9.3k
    Or else it deflates the rather inflated notion of telos that folk have in the first place. I prefer to look at it that way.
    It avoids being a mind~world dualist, while accepting that mechanistic physics is only talking about half the cause in its stress on the material, rather than the formal, causes of physical being.
    apokrisis
    That's a good way to look at it, imo. Now on to "formal" causes. I'm thinking that DNA is the current flavour of formal causes. Do you have a different candidate?

    But that then is to ignore the metaphysical mystery of how nature arrives at its rather more exact solutions.apokrisis
    I lean toward regarding the "mystery" as an artifact of a certain kind of thinking. Think a different way and - no mystery! The trouble with metaphysical mysteries is that they have no bound. Can you solve for me the metaphysical mystery of how my glass of water got on my desk? Not how, but the metaphysical mystery of how. See how quickly it becomes nonsense? The question becomes, is it ever not nonsense?
  • apokrisis
    7.3k
    I'm thinking that DNA is the current flavour of formal causes. Do you have a different candidate?tim wood

    Yes, DNA is the canonical example of formal cause or top-down constraint here. So my position - the semiotic one - is about generalising that.

    Thus I recognise a major discontinuity in nature, as well as an underlying continuity, when it comes to telos.

    Life and mind are different in that they have the memory mechanisms to encode the information that constrains their material dynamics. Organisms are different in that they have autonomy and what we would mean by true purpose. Physical systems only have tendencies or propensities as they reflect the information that is encoded externally in their environments.

    So I am not arguing anything mystical.

    My response to the OP quotes was that they looked to get things the wrong way round. The material world is already reasonable or intelligible because its dynamism is formed or shaped by constraints. Life and mind are just the same story, with the twist that organisms can remember habits of constraint and so start to act from their own stored context of goals, purposes and reasons.

    I lean toward regarding the "mystery" as an artifact of a certain kind of thinking.tim wood

    But the “how” of the least action principle is an important question to tackle if you are interested in developing new physics.

    Unlike a particular or accidental mystery - like perhaps the glass of water on your desk - it is a general or universal level mystery. If you want an emergent or thermal model of time, for instance, then the metaphysical issues raised by the principle of least action are at the centre of that.
  • Metaphysician Undercover
    13.2k
    Here's the thing: the tree has no eyes. It has no mind. It cannot have any kind of conception of itself - I don't even know if "itself" is right. It has no space or time. It reacts to things according to its DNA and it also does things. I imagine that its reactions are a complete description of its experiences - experiences that are neither more nor less than signals in transit through the body of the tree.tim wood

    What the tree is doing is not properly described by "reaction". The tree is growing, and growing is not reacting. One is goal oriented activity, the other is not.

    Agreed! But that is just the failure of language to accommodate the tree's living. It - the tree - doesn't follow; it doesn't go. It just is, from moment to moment.tim wood

    Nor is it correct to say that the tree "just is", because it is always active, growing, producing leaves, photosynthesizing, loosing leaves, producing flowers, producing seeds, etc..

    I point out to you that there is a difference, I think a fundamental difference, between a living, growing, possibly beautiful and inspirational, tree and the pile of firewood it could be. It cannot be both. You appear to deny that. Please make clear how I could come and take ax to your tree and reduce it to firewood, and it is still your growing, living tree. If you're playing word games, I'm not interested.tim wood

    All right, now you given me the reason which I asked for. Now I can agree with you that there is a difference between knowing the thing as "tree", and knowing it as "firewood". You've disclosed that "tree" refers to a living growing thing, whereas "firewood" refers to an inanimate thing to be burned. Now you've given me an acceptable principle of differentiation, one is alive, the other is not. I would say that your argument is that to know the tree as a living thing is to have a better knowledge of it than to know it as an inanimate thing, and I agree. Do you agree with me, that we ought to have a certain respect for living things which we do not owe to inanimate things, we being within the class of living things ourslves?

    Goal-striving seems to require a capacity for anticipation. How, in a tree?tim wood

    Do you not see anticipation in photosynthesis, seed production, and growing in general? How can anyone deny that these are goal oriented, purposeful?

    The problem with your argument is that a living tree is not merely firewood and in fact is not even suitable in its present green condition to serve as firewood. It is therefore highly implausible that anyone would have seen a tree to be nothing more than firewood.Janus

    OK, if your point is like tim's, that the "tree" is alive, and the "firewood" is not, then I agree with you. As I said, to make this differentiation requires a further reason, and you have given it by distinguishing the one as being alive, and the other as not. Now the question is how does this differentiation qualify as knowledge? On what principle does the distinction between a living thing and an inanimate thing, i.e. being able to say that the tree is alive and the firewood is not alive, qualify as knowing something? Unless this distinction can be justified, then it is just another case of an arbitrary determination to say that one is alive and the other is not.

    Another would surely be the myth of the Burning Bush and the dispensation of the Ten Commandments.Wayfarer

    Hmm, the Burning Bush might qualify to deny the distinction between a living tree and firewood.
  • javra
    2.6k


    Yes, well, you haven’t addressed a single one of my three questions to you.

    The question then becomes, is there any way to hear - discern in some way - what arborism might be saying, expressing it in tree terms?tim wood

    What it is definitely saying is that trees have a metaphorical ‘point of view’ which is a literal awareness of other, and that there therefore is something it is like to be a tree. But your hypothesis is maybe putting the cart before the horse. We’re yet working on establishing that trees can sense things.

    From your reference: "The term was introduced in 1972 by Chilean biologists Humberto Maturana and Francisco Varela to define the self-maintaining chemistry of living cells." What has this to do with mind?tim wood

    The connection can be found here and here within the article I’ve linked to. One doesn’t need to read Thompson’s book to get its basic meaning—it's entitled Mind in Life: Biology, Phenomenology, and the Sciences of Mind. Although it’s a very interesting book to read, if one holds an interest for the topic(s).

    I’ll do my best to address the rest after you answer these three questions I previously asked which address the very issues you’ve specified:

    Since it’s the capacity to sense—regardless of what and of means—which defines a sentient being as such, are you arguing that trees cannot sense either gravity or sunlight?

    […]

    Addressed differently, what set of processes differentiates trees from rocks if not awareness conjoined with goal-striving being found in the former but not the latter? And if trees are to be indistinguishable from rocks in being solely governed by entropy, then on what grounds does one argue that trees are lifeforms rather than inanimate matter?
    — javra

    Notice I’m not speculating on what it’s like to be a tree (e.g., we obviously hold no conceptualization of what it could be to flourish only when other creatures eat our body parts so as to spread our zygotes about in order that they might grow—animals eat fruit to spread the tree’s seeds about when addressing the function/purpose of fruit). Rather, I’m attempting to rationally argue that trees are sentient beings by virtue of being living things. Or at least attempting to figure out how it could rationally be supported that trees are not sentient.
  • Janus
    16.3k


    For me poetry is a kind of reason, so we may be operating with different conceptions. I would say that poetry is as much from the trees as it is from the human. The reasons of things are intrinsic to the things; I don't think of them as arbitrary human fabrications.
  • Wayfarer
    22.5k
    I read a little bit of Maritain years ago, and I thought his grasp of modern philosophy was superficial at best.Janus

    It’s more that he thinks that what passes for philosophy in modern culture is superficial.

    Here is a simple hierarchy of the different levels of cause according to E F Schumacher:

    Cause - Minerals
    Stimulus- Plants
    Motive - Animals
    Will - Humans

    One is goal oriented activity, the other is notMetaphysician Undercover

    All living systems display homeostasis, which non-living systems do not.
  • Wayfarer
    22.5k
    life is based on luck, on an accidentCavacava

    Noted
  • Metaphysician Undercover
    13.2k
    All living systems display homeostasis, which non-living systems do not.Wayfarer

    I hear you, but that really doesn't say very much. And, it is a bit of a deceptive principle, perhaps an oversimplification, because we need to inquiry as to what is the purpose, or the reason for this homeostasis. Then we see that living things grow, multiply, and carry out activities in the world, so the concept of "homeostasis" does not properly represent what the living system is doing. Despite the fact that we say "all living systems display homeostasis", it is not a fact that the concept of "homeostasis" displays what the living system is doing.
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