In other words, is there in fact some sort of metaphysical guarantee that the process of individuation would have necessarily given rise to this individual, and not another? — StreetlightX
This is the key point to understand. The nature of possibility, potential, is such that it will not necessitate any particular thing, the same potential has the capacity to bring about many different things. So the underlying actuality, which is responsible for the thing being what it is and not something else, which actualizes that particular potential, is understood to act as a cause in the same sense as final cause (telos), according to the concept of freedom of choice.Unfortunately, notes Simondon, the problem with taking the individual as a starting point is that it presupposes that this individual is a necessary outcome of the process of individuation which gave rise to it. In some sense, this is true. Given this or that individual thing, it's clear that it is necessary (on the account of it's being there) that the process that gave rise to it did so. But, the question is whether or not it could have given rise to something else instead. — StreetlightX
This thought, might be vey closely related to Deleuze's "repetition". If an act of individuation occurs at a moment in time, a similar but different act of individuation occurs at the next moment, the present being the only time capable of supporting the existence of individuals.To quote Simondon again, "The individual ... would then be grasped as a relative reality, a certain phase of being that supposes a preindividual reality, and that, even after individuation, does not exist on its own, because individuation does not exhaust with one stroke the potentials of preindividual reality." — StreetlightX
One consequence of this thought is that it also requires us to rethink the status of the law of the excluded middle, or indeed logic in it's classical form. For Simondon, unity and identity are the result of an operation which exceeds it insofar as Being, understood in it's full sense, comprises of not just the individual, but also the pre-individual. Simondon again: "The concrete being or the full being, which is to say, the preindividual being, is a being that is more than a unit. Unity (characteristic of the individuated being and of identity), which authorizes the use of the principle of the excluded middle, cannot be applied to the preindividual being... Unity and identity are applicable only to one of the being's stages, which comes after the process of individuation. — StreetlightX
It would be odd to insist that a person is alive and dead at the same time. — fdrake
This is the root of Simondon's (and Deleuze's) critique of Hegelian dialectics, which, according to both, begins from individuals and then tries to think their becoming through negation, rather than beginning with the process of ontogenesis, and inscribing negation 'positiviely' within that process. — StreetlightX
It is never a step or a stage, and individuation is not synthesis, a return to unity, but rather the being passing out of step with itself, through the potentialization of the incompatibilities of its preindividual center." — Simondon
Compare Deleuze: "Difference is not the negative; on the contrary, non-being is Difference.... — Deleuze
For Simondon - and this is his revolutionary contribution to philosophy - one ought to think of individuation not from the perspective of the individual, but from the perspective of the process which gave rise to it. — StreetlightX
Unity (characteristic of the individuated being and of identity), which authorizes the use of the principle of the excluded middle, cannot be applied to the preindividual being... — Simondon
[Aristotle] insisted that the law of non-contradiction ought to be upheld, and defined the category of potential, in which the law of excluded middle was to be excepted. Hegel offered another understanding of becoming, in which the law of non-contradiction becomes inapplicable. These are two distinct understandings of "becoming", which appear quite different. — Metaphysician Undercover
That was Peirce's switch on Hegel too. First the bare potential - the vagueness as that to which the PNC does not apply - and then its symmetry-breaking dichotomisation and eventual transformation into the stable regularity of a habit. — apokrisis
The pre-individual is the state of pure potentiality where the PNC does not apply - as Hegel and Peirce and Anaximander all agree. Before a symmetry is broken, the two poles of contrary or dialectical being that the breaking will reveal, are not in existence, just in a state of potentiality. So the PNC does not (yet) apply. — apokrisis
And here is where the LEM comes into play in more Aristotelean fashion.
The specific example Aristotle used was the problem of the future contingent - who would win the battle tomorrow. — apokrisis
This Aristotelean way of thinking led him to put being before becoming (and MU to put material cause before final cause). — apokrisis
To say that the PNC does not apply to bare potential, is the Hegelian conception, not the Aristotelian conception. — Metaphysician Undercover
Under the Aristotelian conception, becoming is the middle, between being and not being. — Metaphysician Undercover
"Bare potential", such as prime matter is ruled out, as impossible, by the cosmological argument. — Metaphysician Undercover
If the pre-individual is a state of pure potentiality, then there is no reason for the thing which comes into being, to be the thing which it is. The principle of sufficient reason would not apply, there could be no actuality to cause that thing to be any particular thing, it would come into existence as any random thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
If we could imagine a point, prior to the passing of any time, at which point no time has passed to create any sort of actual existence (no constraints), this would be pure potentiality; the possibility for absolutely anything. But assuming this point is unjustified and unwarranted. — Metaphysician Undercover
Can you provide citations that make that clear? I think the point was to avoid the idea that something could come from nothing in fact. — apokrisis
Is this really Aristotle now - who offered a variety of analyses - or more the latter scholastic overlay? — apokrisis
So the principle of sufficient reason (with its focus on particular causes determining every particular effect) goes out of the window. — apokrisis
This is how I remember the demonstration. When an object comes into being, there is a change from the not being of that particular object to the being of that particular object. ....We never get to the point of actually describing change, or becoming, by following this manner of logic. Instead, we must simply assume a change, or becoming, which takes the middle position between the not-being and being of an object. — Metaphysician Undercover
Throwing the PSR out the window is not something to be taken lightly. This allows for randomness. Once you allow randomness into your schema, you can't get it out. Then you are left without the means to account for any consistency or coherency in the world. There cannot be a reason for consistency. In other words, any form of apparent consistency in the world would actually be the result of some random, chance occurrence. And this is absurd to think that consistency could emerge from randomness, without any reason. — Metaphysician Undercover
This sounds like his discussion of Zeno's paradoxes. But I would say that more generally Aristotle takes the position that nothing comes from nothing. Being begins in potential and actuality is about the move or change from there towards contrary or dichotomous limits. So non-being becomes then a privation or lack of some predicate - a positive kind of absence or negativity! If a horse can be white, it also can be not-white. That is a potential change that can take place, being a complementary and LEM-like crisp possibility. — apokrisis
So in its way, Aristotle's take is the kind of Anaximander/Peirce tale of organic development in which we start with a naked potential or vagueness and then this becomes crisply something by separating towards its own logically dichotomous limits. Change inheres in potentiality in metastable fashion because potentiality is already poised, suspended, between two alternative states of development. The question then is what tips the balance so things move in one direction or the other? — apokrisis
However where Aristotle goes wrong is that he takes reality's basic condition as stasis rather than flux. — apokrisis
This is exactly the position which he worked to refute with the cosmological argument. As I've explained, according to Aristotle the naked potential is impossible, that is why he assumed eternal circular motion. The eternal circular motion is an eternal actuality which he assumed because he concluded that naked potential is impossible. — Metaphysician Undercover
The problem is the same, or very similar whether you take reality's basic condition as stasis, or flux. The problem is the problem of change. Whether it is a static thing which changes, or a motion which changes, the issue is the same. As a static thing, the issue is the intermediate between being and not-being of the thing. As a motion, the issue is acceleration, the intermediate between moving in one direction, then moving in another direction. Just like there must be a cause which acts in the interim between being and not-being of the thing, there must be a cause which acts in the interim between moving in one way, and moving in another way. — Metaphysician Undercover
If at one moment, the object has X value of momentum, and at the next it has Y value. We need to assume that a change has occurred between X and Y. We could assume an intermediate, Z, but then we head to infinite regress. — Metaphysician Undercover
What you say that this is a sort of poetic act? That beings are disclosed by/as new concepts of things-background pairs? — Hoo
What do you mean by "seamlessly variant"? Perhaps that's an oxymoron? Anyway, the way that we understand such a reality, is descriptions which apply at the moment. Unless you allow that there is some reality to such states, then you are assuming that our entire understanding of reality is baseless, and wrong. Further, you are claiming that reality is fundamentally unintelligible. This is contrary to the philosophical mindset, which is a desire to know. If we assume that reality is unintelligible, as you do, we kill the desire to know.Here again you seem to be demanding that a process that may be seamlessly variant, both temporally and spatially, must consist in series of static moments, and an aggregation of discrete parts. — John
Yes, I agree, that was Aristotle's solution to the issue raised by the refutation of Pythagorean idealism, i.e., the cosmological argument. Aristotle assumed an eternal prime mover, as an eternal efficient cause. The Neo-Platonists however resolved the issue by assuming a final cause as first cause. History shows that the Aristotelian solution was dismissed, while the Neo-Platonist solution was upheld.As I understand it, Aristotle's argument was that change could not have a beginning in an efficient cause. So the alternative had to be that there was no beginning to change and the cause of change was instead the eternal finality of a prime mover that thus acted constantly to "stir things up" from the outer edge of cosmic existence. — apokrisis
I agree, the Aristotelian solution doesn't really work. The Neo-Platonist solution does work, while respecting the principles of the cosmological argument. Your solution is to throw away the cosmological argument.So I think you are mixing up two things. Aristotle did talk about change in general terms of the symmetry breaking of a potential, and so that is a view that fits well with the world as we know it today. And then he also had this other first cause issue with cosmic existence itself - and came up with an answer there that doesn't really work. — apokrisis
So being-disclosure enlarges the system. This reminds me of the "commonsense" background presupposed by abstract thought. Or unconscious inferences...
[World disclosure] refers to how things become intelligible and meaningfully relevant to human beings, by virtue of being part of an ontological world – i.e., a pre-interpreted and holistically structured background of meaning. This understanding is said to be first disclosed to human beings through their practical day-to-day encounters with others, with things in the world, and through language. ..
"[T]he world is not a possible object of knowledge – because it is not an object at all, not an entity or set of entities. It is that within which entities appear, a field or horizon [that sets] the conditions for any intra-worldly relation, and so is not analysable in terms of any such relation. " (Mulhall)
The implication is that we are always already "thrown" into these conditions, that is, thrown into a prior understanding of the things which we encounter on a daily basis – an understanding that is already somewhat meaningful and coherent. However, our understanding cannot be made fully conscious or knowable at one time, since this background understanding isn't itself an object:
"All testing, all confirmation and disconfirmation of a hypothesis takes place already within a system. And this system is not a more or less arbitrary and doubtful point of departure for all our arguments: no, it belongs to the essence of what we call an argument... as the element in which arguments have their life." (Wittgenstein)
— Wiki
I agree, the Aristotelian solution doesn't really work. The Neo-Platonist solution does work, while respecting the principles of the cosmological argument. Your solution is to throw away the cosmological argument. — Metaphysician Undercover
In that view, finality acts as a final cause in being the global limit that thus emerges to mark an end on change. Or at least an equilbrium state in which change no longer makes a difference.
So we are on opposite sides of this argument still. — apokrisis
Look, you place "final cause", as the end of change. — Metaphysician Undercover
But placing "bare potential" as first, only stymies any such progression, because one then proceeds to build an ontology on this unreasonable premise. . — Metaphysician Undercover
At the cosmological level, time itself is emergent and so talk of before and after doesn't work out for me — apokrisis
Why not? It appears to me, like many things which "science" presents as truth, change to be not true, after fifteen or twenty years. This is what drives philosophers to seek stability in knowledge.You can't argue with science after all. — apokrisis
To emerge requires time, so things only emerge if there already is time. This means that it is contradictory to say that time emerges, because there must be time prior to anything, including time, emerging. — Metaphysician Undercover
It appears to me, like many things which "science" presents as truth, change to be not true, after fifteen or twenty years. — Metaphysician Undercover
In my view, time is change. So time as we know it is part of change as we know it. — apokrisis
What important cosmological discoveries did you have in mind here? — apokrisis
So how would change emerge then? — Metaphysician Undercover
If time and change emerge, as you say, then prior to change, there would be no change. — Metaphysician Undercover
Perhaps there was absolutely nothing before time and change, — Metaphysician Undercover
But if it is eternal, it must be an eternal changelessness, so how could change emerge from eternal changelessness? — Metaphysician Undercover
Hey, you made the blanket statement, "you can't argue with science after all". I wasn't referring to cosmological designations, — Metaphysician Undercover
It works for me as the most reasonable cosmology. You can't argue with science after all. — apokrisis
I was referring to more simple, basic things like 40 or 50 years ago when science determined that butter is bad for you, and margarine was supposed to be the saviour. Now it seems like science says the opposite. — Metaphysician Undercover
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