Still, it seems hard to deny that the "raw materials" are there in nature prior to the emergence of life. A pressure gradient between two points in space is still a binary difference in magnitude even when its not being leveraged as such by some living system, isn't it (in the sense that the magnitude at point A is not the magnitude at point B)? — Aaron R
That's a delicate project, insofar as any such critique must itself take some logical form. While certainly not an impossible task, one must be careful not to cut off the branch upon which one sits (sorry for the overworn cliche). — Aaron R
A pressure gradient between two points in space is still a binary difference in magnitude even when its not being leveraged as such by some living system, isn't it (in the sense that the magnitude at point A is not the magnitude at point B)? — Aaron R
But to be honest my interest in this topic isn't proportional to the amount of time I'm spending typing about it, so I'm going to stop replying here — The Great Whatever
As I said above, the analog is not at all anything like a 'thing-in-itself'. It is eminently knowable in the most trivial of ways; it's just that unlike 'digital knowledge' which is denotative and representational, analog knowledge deals with relationships. — StreetlightX
Recall that to institute any digital logic, a continuum must distinguish a part of itself, from itself. — StreetlightX
This is why it is vital to define 'continuity' and 'discontinuity' in terms of negation: negation provides the unassailable index for what counts as continuous (analog) and what counts as discontinuous (digital): if a system includes negation, it is digital, if it does not, it is analog. — StreetlightX
Now, the interesting question that has been raised a few times - and that I've avoided talking about - has to do with the status of the boundary itself. Does it belong to the continuum itself, or does it belong to the instituted digital system? The answer can only be that the boundary belongs to neither. It cannot belong to the continuum, because if it did, the continuum would be already-digitized; on the other hand, it cannot belong to the digital system because it is the very condition by which the digital is instituted. Like Russell's barber who both shaves and does not shave himself, the boundary's status is constitutively undecidable. — StreetlightX
Accordingly, anything you might say about this analog existence, this continuum, is based only in this assumption. So in order to say anything true about the continuum, your assumption of a real existing continuum must be first validated, justified. Only by validating this assumption does the nature of the continuum become intelligible. To simply assume a continuum, and say that it is of an analog nature, and completely other than the digital, is just an assumption which is completely unjustified, until it is demonstrated why this is assumed to be the case. — Metaphysician Undercover
Recall that to institute any digital logic, a continuum must distinguish a part of itself, from itself. — StreetlightX
Now, the interesting question that has been raised a few times - and that I've avoided talking about - has to do with the status of the boundary itself. Does it belong to the continuum itself, or does it belong to the instituted digital system? The answer can only be that the boundary belongs to neither. It cannot belong to the continuum, because if it did, the continuum would be already-digitized; on the other hand, it cannot belong to the digital system because it is the very condition by which the digital is instituted. — StreetlightX
[Emphasis added]Digitization just is the introduction of precise boundaries. — John
Digitization just is the introduction of precise boundaries. — John
But quantum theory has re-introduced the basic metaphysical dichotomy - is existence continuous or discrete (or indeed, beyond that, indeterministic)? - at base. — apokrisis
Given this seems to be a debate about Analytic metaphysics vs PoMo metaphysics, as usual I would say only Pragmatic metaphysics has the proper resources to answer these kinds of questions properly. :) — apokrisis
Recall that to institute any digital logic, a continuum must distinguish a part of itself, from itself. In other words, the 'flatness' of the analog must become self-reflexive and thus stratified into 'levels': the object level of the continuum itself, and the meta-level at which the continuum can 'refer' to itself. — StreetlightX
"It is impossible to decide whether [the boundary] belongs to the set A or the set non-A. It belongs to neither, it is both neither and nowhere, and it corresponds to nothing in the real world whatsoever". — StreetlightX
The boundary is a line or plane for spacial boundaries. It's an idea. I pondered this a long time ago.. the origin of the concept of negation. Maybe it comes from craving and aversion. — Mongrel
It only comes to be called a continuum in crisp distinction to the digital or the discrete within the realm of symbolisation or signification. It is a logical step to insist the world must be divided into A and not-A in this fashion. — apokrisis
So the situation is the reverse of the one you paint. We don't need to begin in certainty — apokrisis
So this is the mistake, these two, discrete and continuous, are not properly opposed and therefore are not mutually exclusive, as you imply. We have discrete colours, red, yellow, green, blue, within a continuous spectrumWe can always divide uncertainty towards two dialectically self-grounding global possibilities. The thing-in-itself must be either (in the limit) discrete or continuous. — apokrisis
I don't think this works: a pressure gradient still has no negative values: there is more pressure here, and less pressure there, but at no point is there a relation of exclusion between the two 'ends' of the gradient; the magnitude at point A is not that of ¬B and vice versa. — Streetlight
So a digital computer leverages material differences in voltages as a foundation for binary computation (2V = "true", 5V = "false"). My point was simply (and hopefully uncontroversially) that nature provides the "raw materials" that make the imposition of binary distinctions possible in first place. If it didn't - if there were no materially exclusive differences already within nature to leverage - then the emergence of binary systems could never have occurred. — Aaron R
Nothing is 'equal to' or 'identical to itself', 'in-itself'. These notions are heuristics that are imposed upon nature for the sake of communicative ease. — StreetlightX
Isn't the difference between an analog and a digital system a digitalization anyway? Either/or you are analog or digital... — darthbarracuda
And in Kantian fashion, we never of course grasp the thing-in-itself. That remains formally vague. But the epistemic cut now renders the thing-in-itself as a digitised system of signs. We know it via the measurements that come to stand for it within a framework of theory. And in some sense this system of signs works and so endures. — apokrisis
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.