But I am extremely wary of Craig Venter and his ilk. — Wayfarer
Whereas the kind of approach I'm pursuing, is not actually trying to create an alternative or competing model, but to cultivate a different cognitve mode, or way-of-being. — Wayfarer
Often what people want is not answers, but the illusion of solution to problems or fears... — TheWillowOfDarkness
It's a complexity which the lovers of structure cannot stand. — TheWillowOfDarkness
In this respect, I'd read "eternal return" quite literally here. Selection always returns. No matter what is (or is not) a difference is defined. Expression of form is necessary. I'd say it's almost a combination of the two you are asking about: that which selects (eternal return-- "nothing") and that selection is necessary. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Yep. Pomo in a nutshell. — apokrisis
What could be more chaotic than chaos? And yet what do we now know that has simpler generative rules?
So the wheel has turned again (while philosophy hasn't been watching) and the time reads "post-post-structuralism".
How is selection important if nothing selects? Why not just dismiss selection as an incoherent concept of transcendentalists? — Metaphysician Undercover
I think that there is a question concerning the relationship between these two. In the op it is said that metaphysics selects the field, and ontology operates within that field. But when you refer to Deleuze, the inverse is implied, that the ontological, eternal return necessitates selection. However, you also said "it's the eternal return that 'selects' what returns, and of course what returns is 'difference'". Now, there seems to be some ambiguity in your posts, could you clarify one thing for me? Do you think that the eternal return actually selects, or does the eternal return necessitate selection? — Metaphysician Undercover
First, I'm not even sure it makes much sense to talk about specific or generic difference for Aristotle---as mentioned, this seems to be a Porphyrian element extrinsic to the way Aristotle himself thought. — Nagase
Hierarchy theory, non-linear dynamics, statistical mechanics, etc, are all mathematical enterprises. But to use the elephant analogy, that's still talking at the level of trunks, tails and legs. It is not yet a maths of pan-semiosis, a maths that captures the essential generative seed in fully abstract or universalising fashion.
And maybe, like all theories of everything, we can never get there. It's a mirage, an impossible dream. I'm perfectly willing to listen to and respond to rational arguments in that direction. But then in my own lifetime all I've seen is a rollercoaster of scientific thought heading in this direction.
Your characterisation of my position is accurate enough here. But I don't see the problem.
Surely a model by definition is going to be an atemporal truth? The map is not the territory, and all that....
If the territory the map covers is everything, then the map has to include itself - the map become a part of the territory. That's what makes me a little wary of all theories of everything, this kind of recursive implosion. — csalisbury
how does the existence of God disqualify your system? — darthbarracuda
Do you accept the necessity of a first cause? — darthbarracuda
If gods exists nothing would change, or be any different. — Punshhh
Yet Aristotle posited the Prime Mover... — darthbarracuda
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