Well, if as the OP says, 'to have a metaphysics' is to have a way to 'select' among the kinds of things that 'exist'; and if you say that the 'kinds of things that exist' are limited to 'the kinds of things that the natural sciences are able to discover' - then is that an open or a closed model? — Wayfarer
The process claims only to minimise our uncertainty.
If you believe in some different epistemology derived from an alternative axiomatic basis (one less idealist perhaps) then go for it. Justify away. (Revelation, Platonism???) — Apokrisis
Parmenides describes the journey of the poet, escorted by maidens ("the daughters of the Sun made haste to escort me, having left the halls of Night for the light"), from the ordinary daytime world to a strange destination, outside our human paths. Carried in a whirling chariot, and attended by the daughters of Helios the Sun, the man reaches a temple sacred to an unnamed goddess (variously identified by the commentators as Nature, Wisdom, Necessity or Themis), by whom the rest of the poem is spoken. The goddess resides in a well-known mythological space: where Night and Day have their meeting place. Its essential character is that here all opposites are undivided, or one.
'selection' is anything but voluntary in Delezue, and selection is always the result of an 'encounter' with or 'interference of' a 'question-problem complex' which forces one to creatively engage and fabulate responses as a result (the quoted phrases are Deleuze's)
I don't understand the significance of your mechanic/organic distinction here. — csalisbury
Are you just dumbing it down for those of us who can't do math? and, if so, why are you doing that? It's a little patronizing. — csalisbury
But he wouldn't pretend that a crisp distinction between x and y is 'mathematical' because he respects his interlocutors well enough not to pretend that stark differentiation *is* math. I assume, based on your assurance, that you have similar mathematical facility (right?) so i wonder what accounts for the difference in approach? — csalisbury
Get ready for the dance of the seven veils;)*stutters into the mike, adjusts collar* could you, um, comment on that?
It never tells us anything about the intrinsic nature of matter, in so far as its 'intrinsic nature' is more than its structure. — Wayfarer
Whereas, I think naturalist methodology assumes the reality of the objects of experience, — Wayfarer
Its essential character is that here all opposites are undivided, or one.
So is there a ghost in the machine after all?So the mechanical is reality modelled in terms of just material and efficient cause. In other words, formal and final cause have to be supplied by an external creator, a transcendent mind. Then the organic is immanent by contrast as all four causes, including formal and final, arise internally through self-organising development.
This is why univocity becomes so important: univocity 'ontologizes' selection, it gives it the status of being itself. Thus re: the 'hinge' of selection in my post above, Deleuze's own 'hinge' will be the eternal return: it's the eternal return that 'selects' what returns, and of course what returns is 'difference'. — StreetlightX
As far as selection is concerned, it takes place at the level of the first and second syntheses of time (contraction of habit and synthesis of memory), while the third synthesis (eternal return) ensures that a selection must be made at every point. It's basically the imperative of an inescapable 'NEXT' which forces the affirmation of selection at every 'point' in time. — StreetlightX
I agree that it's almost certainly a Porphyrian Aristotle in the background here, but in truth, I don't think I did justice to Deleuze's reading in the OP. In reality, the engagement with Aristotle in D&R takes place almost exclusively with respect to Aristotle's impositions upon difference. If anything, what is 'selected' for is not where individuals fall under in terms of genera and species (as I put it in the OP), but the kind of difference which is given legitimacy in Aristotle. Aristotle 'selects for' specific difference, while ruling out, as ontologically illegitimate as it were, generic difference - hence the turn to equivocal/analogical Being. — StreetlightX
As I said to Moliere earlier in the thread, the associations of language here might lead us astray, because despite it's 'voluntarist' tenor, 'selection' is anything but voluntary in Delezue, and selection is always the result of an 'encounter' with or 'interference of' a 'question-problem complex' which forces one to creatively engage and fabulate responses as a result (the quoted phrases are Deleuze's). The kind of 'phenomenology' - if we may call it that - of Lewis being 'gripped' by the necessity of imposing the sorts of divisions he does is very much in keeping with the Deleuzian conception of philosophy as involving a 'pedagogy of the concept', where creation - or in this case selection - is very much a matter of imposition, of 'subjective dissolution', if we may put it that way. — StreetlightX
Yeah, same, it confused me at first and now it just bugs me. It's pretty clear that, for Nietzsche, the eternal return is a thought experiment which serves as an ethical heuristic. It's not an ontological thesis at all. Maybe you could make the claim that Nietzsche's work as a whole supports this ontological idea that Deleuze has dubbed 'eternal return' (I have no idea, I haven't read much Nietzsche since high school) but either way, it's still a bad term to employ.Also, I simply don't like Deleuze's use of the phrase itself. I get what he's trying to do with it - it's basically an incredibly clever rejoinder to Plato - but it's unnecessarily confusing and leads to objections exactly like the one you've formulated.
But the simple systems science answer - which bases itself directly on Aristotelean naturalism - looks at it in terms of the four causes.
So the mechanical is reality modelled in terms of just material and efficient cause. In other words, formal and final cause have to be supplied by an external creator, a transcendent mind. Then the organic is immanent by contrast as all four causes, including formal and final, arise internally through self-organising development.
I'm not talking about maths as maths. I'm talking about the particular maths I would employ - such as symmetry breaking, statistical mechanics, hierarchy theory, quantum mechanics, non-linear dynamics.
So there are certain mathematical/logical structures that I would appeal to here, not maths in some general sense as a practice.
And remember my response to the OP was that SX ought to use crisp formal mathematical concepts in place of his vague terminology. I said he should think in terms of reciprocal relations - as in dichotomies - rather than his "selection". Or hierarchical relations rather than his "hinges".
So if you want examples of what a more mathematically rigorous approach looks like, that was already it.
I didn't understand your suggestion that my asking after the ontological status of your model meant that I was thinking in mechanistic terms. I still don't. — csalisbury
And I'm still curious what your theory of truth is. Or if you even care about that kind of thing? and, if not, why not? — csalisbury
The biggest problem I have with this explanation is that it's not really true - you constantly use 'crisp' and 'rigorous' and 'mathematical' to refer to non-mathematical neat dichotomies, as with that true detective analysis way back when. — csalisbury
odd. 'dialectic' is certainly not a 'crisp formal mathematical concept.' — csalisbury
There's this thing you have with 'crisp' - which is very interesting. I mean it's interesting that the word you use most, and seem to find immense satisfaction in, is not itself any more 'crisp, formal, mathematical' than 'selection' or 'hinge.'
Do you find that interesting? What do you think about it? It seems interesting right! — csalisbury
I still don't understand where i levied an 18th century romantic stance othering you as 'mechanistic.' — csalisbury
I probably can, but I really don't want to. — StreetlightX
I think it is the case that Apokrisis' philosophy is essentially drawn from and based around the life sciences — Wayfarer
What secular reason is missing is self-awareness. It is “unenlightened about itself” in the sense that it has within itself no mechanism for questioning the products and conclusions of its formal, procedural entailments and experiments.
Your model appears to paint the world as an unfurling dialectical play of flux and stasis which relation is intimately tied to potential/constraint (is that right?) But the model, however, can be reached once and forever. A model is something constructed, but once constructed it appears to be provide atemporal truths. — csalisbury
The other thing is you seem to get something out of reasserting its principles - in distilled terms -over and over again, in all sorts of diverse threads. — csalisbury
What makes philosophy enjoyable and worthwhile, for me, is the uncertainty and periodic aha moments - but so having found the right answers, why still do it? — csalisbury
As though - this is the insinuation - your model feeds on its difference from false models. and has to keep feeding. — csalisbury
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