I generally agree with your analysis, but the issue that I have is with the idea that mind is the output or consequence of fundamentally physical processes — Wayfarer
The mainstream neo-darwinian view is that life began in the apocryphal 'warm pond' by some as-yet undetermined process involving some combination of heat, pressure, and complex chemistry — Wayfarer
However, this still does seem a generally physicalist account, in that it seems to assume that the biochemical gives rise to, or is prior to, the symbolic - that the ability to speak and abstract is itself the product of biochemistry. So I don't see how here the distinction between information and matter is really maintained - the former is simply an outcome of the latter. — Wayfarer
What, here, do I have to justify? I think you want to expand this list into areas where, if you make a claim, it's you who have to justify it. — tim wood
However the reason why the symbol part of the equation - the stuff like the genetic memory that can encode constraints - can actually work is that it acts to regulate the unstable. If the physics has rigid stability, how could information push it in any direction? But if the physics is balanced on an instability, a point of bifurcation, then it is like a switch that can be tipped by the barest nudge.
So that is how semiotic control can arise. That is how symbols can control states of matter. The matter has to be in a state that is inherently unstable and hence able to be nudged in a direction that is some higher level informational choice.
That is the trick of life. It is the combination of information and matter, a system able to be directed with a purpose because the matter is poised to be tipped and has the least amount of telos concerning its actual state as is possible.
Stable matter knows what it wants to be. It is deterministic. But instability is freedom just begging to be harnessed. It solves the mystery of how symbols could affect the actions of anything.
And how life goes is how mind goes. The same applies when it comes to closing the explanatory gap between matter and symbol there. — apokrisis
Right, that's why homeostasis, and its assumed goal of "stability" is an inappropriate description of living systems. — Metaphysician Undercover
Why do you find it so difficult to agree with me, even when you are saying the same thing anyway? — Metaphysician Undercover
Theories of homeostasis dictate that living systems have the goal of setting up stable equilibriums, that's how the living system is described, as a stable equilibrium. But what you have just said is completely opposed to this idea, the living systems are setting up unstable material conditions, not stable conditions. — Metaphysician Undercover
An organism must be able to both persist and to adapt. In the long run, it must be stably centred or balanced - hence homeostasis. In the short run, it must be able to adjust that general balance in locally useful ways. — apokrisis
What don't you get about the difference between the general and the particular? — apokrisis
The child first learns to stay upright on a bike. Then it learns to lean into corners. — apokrisis
An organism has autonomy because it can make an active distinction between its long-term central balance and its moment-to-moment fine adjustments. — apokrisis
It is not my problem if your understand of biological terminology insists on a more inflexible reading - one that is either/or rather than and/both. — apokrisis
There is no "long run" for an organism. — Metaphysician Undercover
To stay upright on a bike requires forward motion, pedaling, and this is a form of instability, not stability. — Metaphysician Undercover
There is no such thing as an organism's "long term central balance", that's a fiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you want to do your biology in this contradictory way, then I think that is your problem. — Metaphysician Undercover
What a horrendous self-contradiction. You claim that to be moving forward steadily is unstable? Next thing you will be claiming Newton was wrong about inertia! — apokrisis
In respect of life, I don't know. It's a personal problem of mine that I sometimes miss the obvious, so maybe there is some obvious reason that life in itself differs from form to form.1. The tree is alive.
— tim wood
Do you think that plant life is representative of all forms of life, or that there might be attributes and characteristics that animals and humans have that trees don't. — Wayfarer
In the list you’ve provided, the need for justification would apply to (4). — javra
4. It can be convenient and useful to refer to trees as acting in accord with purpose, or motive, or telos, but these accounts are simply abstract fictions, there being nothing in the tree where purpose or motive or telos occurs. Unless these are just abstract and general terms for reacting to stimuli, or acting per DNA. — tim wood
One should keep in mind that awareness of other and its processes is not located within something physical, like in a pineal gland when it comes to vertebrates. Awareness is a gestalt form that is—I’ll say “fully correlated” to keep the causal process as ambiguous as possible—fully correlated with its substrata of physical information. This applies to living humans—at least when not addressing eliminativism. On what rational grounds would it not also apply to living dogs, insects, nematodes, sponges, fungi, plants, and prokaryotes? — javra
Or else it deflates the rather inflated notion of telos that folk have in the first place. — apokrisis
As to being representative, I suppose that a life form is representative of all forms only in so far as they share similar characteristics, and in terms of those characteristics, but not beyond.
These are obvious answers, though. What are you aiming at? — tim wood
deflates the rather inflated notion of telos that folk have in the first place — apokrisis
a full four-causes physicalism. — apokrisis
Is the motion constant and long-run in terms of its direction or not? — apokrisis
What you're calling me to justify, near as I can tell, is the proposition that attributing motive, purpose, telos, to trees is at best a convenient fiction, unless it is just general and abstract terminology used to describe either reacting to stimuli or acting per DNA. The only grounds for objection are that you maintain that the tree has, possesses, exhibits motive, purpose, telos, and these not to be confused with mere response to stimuli or its DNA. — tim wood
What, actually, has happened? The surface of the tree reacted to a high temperature. — tim wood
This is susceptible of description in teleological terms, and it would be a very convenient way to describe it. But where is the mediation? What mediated What/where is the awareness? Where is any evidence that the tree did anything other than immediately react to stimuli? — tim wood
Can you justify attributing awareness, mediateness, to living things that don't have the capacity? — tim wood
Or if all you mean is that the so-called behaviour serves a purpose, then it's teleological, then have at it. But I think Apokrisis correctly assesses this usage:
Or else it deflates the rather inflated notion of telos that folk have in the first place. — apokrisis — tim wood
It starts with the pedaling, and may stop with the brakes at any moment, and the direction changes with the steering. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, with the qualification that maybe if we looked very closely at this, it might not be so simple. For now, agreed.1) We have stimuli (which stimulate actions) on the one hand and something which is responding to it (via actions and reactions) on the other. The two—the stimulus and that which responds to it—cannot logically be identical.
Do we agree? — javra
Not exactly. I do not think of the DNA itself reacting. I only mention DNA because of the things trees do, some seem to be reactions to stimuli, some not. For the tree's doings not reactions to stimuli, I imagine the impetus comes from the DNA. After some more thought, maybe the instructions encoded in DNA are provisional, "If condition x applies, then do y." If that's the case, then it's all reaction to stimuli, and the qualification becomes that the reaction occurs within parameters set by the DNA. I accept your addition of the other functioning parts. I have a problem with "self-regulating" because it implies a self. Will you accept "internally regulated"?2) You presume that what is responding are specific parts of the tree’s DNA (which cause immediate actions on their own, to use your terminology) rather than the tree as the total metabolizing process of a multicellular organisms—a total self-regulating process that results from the set of its individual molecular subcomponents (including nucleic acids) found within its many individual cells.
Is this correct? — javra
I think the only argument - disagreement - I have lies in what I take to be a reification of motive, purpose, telos, and now gestalt. As explanatory concepts - as ideas - they're all wonderful. But in my view they are not things. They can't be dissected with a scalpel or stored in a jar.If you find errors to this argument I’ve provided, either due to a disparity with the data obtained from the empirical sciences of biology or due to erroneous metaphysical logic, — javra
As I said much earlier in the thread, in regard to "reason", we need to distinguish between an agent acting for a reason (purpose), having the reason or purpose for action within itself, and the reason (purpose) which we project onto a thing from outside, saying that the thing did this for this reason, or that it is good for this purpose, to us. — Metaphysician Undercover
I have a problem with "self-regulating" because it implies a self. Will you accept "internally regulated"? — tim wood
In any case I still hold to the mediate/immediate distinction. — tim wood
I'll also say that intra-tree communication occurs only via channels within the tree, presumably by a cell-to-cell transmission of an electro-chemical signal. — tim wood
I think the only argument - disagreement - I have lies in what I take to be a reification of motive, purpose, telos, and now gestalt. — tim wood
A collection of physical, biological, psychological or symbolic elements that creates a whole, unified concept or pattern which is other than the sum of its parts, due to the relationships between the parts (of a character, personality, entity, or being)
But in my view they are not things. They can't be dissected with a scalpel or stored in a jar. — tim wood
I think of this set of distinctions in terms of causes, but that involves agency. Mainly, I agree. And further, I read that modern science has no use for causes, although it may still use the word for convenience. An analysis of cause, taken down to the root of it, shows an animistic bias that science has learned is illusory. It seems that between time t-1 of Cause c-1 and event E at time e-1, there is always an intermediate t-2, t-3 of intermediate causes c-2, c-3, until you arrive at simultaneity of C an E. There is no discrete agency of cause. (I'll review the argument and correct it if I've neglected a detail.) — tim wood
think the only argument - disagreement - I have lies in what I take to be a reification of motive, purpose, telos, and now gestalt. As explanatory concepts - as ideas - they're all wonderful. But in my view they are not things. They can't be dissected with a scalpel or stored in a jar. — tim wood
Plants grow around ponds. If you want to say that the plants want water, nothing wrong with that as poetical description. The trouble comes if you say that the plants actually want water. It's one thing to say they "act" like they "want' water. It's another to say they actually want water. That's the distinction I make, that I think you - and a lot of people - do not make. I assume you can make it when it's laid out like this, and I repent in sackcloth and ashes that I did not make this clearer, earlier. — tim wood
However, despite the fact that inanimate things do not display their own internal reasons, we can infer that living beings other than human beings have their own internal reasons for behaving as they do.
Clearly other mammals which have brains and think have their own reasons for their actions as well. Don't you think that trees and other plants have their own reasons for their actions as well? — Metaphysician Undercover
...think the only argument - disagreement - I have lies in what I take to be a reification of motive, purpose, telos, and now gestalt. As explanatory concepts - as ideas - they're all wonderful. But in my view they are not things. They can't be dissected with a scalpel or stored in a jar. — tim wood
If my current interpretation is accurate, I as of yet do not understand what alternative causal process your belief system ascribes to “mediated” actions and reaction. — javra
"...which is other than the sum of its parts." Do you see it?From Wiktionary: gestalt:
A collection of physical, biological, psychological or symbolic elements that creates a whole, unified concept or pattern which is other than the sum of its parts, due to the relationships between the parts (of a character, personality, entity, or being)
Where on earth do you find even a smidgen of reification in what I’ve said — javra
In a tree, cells. I say that because I believe that's what a tree is, a collection of plant cells. And that communication must be cell-to-cell - as you point out, there is no central nervous system.Since the issue of final causes, i.e. teleology, won’t go anywhere prior to resolving the basic issue of what is doing the responding to stimuli, — javra
I burned my hand this morning under some hot water. My hand moved involuntarily. Later, when my toast was done, I had a choice between raspberry and blueberry jam; I chose both. The hand movement I call immediate, unmediated. The behaviour of choosing which jam, mediated.
Perhaps another way. The immediate action just happens, it couldn't be any other way. The mediate action represents a decision, and the action could have been this or that. — tim wood
Life is a gestalt process. Any portion of the physical substrata which serves as a constituent of the gestalt process of life will be dead or dying when isolated from its interactions with all other material subcomponents from which life emerges as a gestalt process. — javra
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