This is just circular reasoning. What I'm asking is to ground the dichotomy in ontology, rather than to base your ontology in dichotomy, simply because dichotomy is logical. Why would you think that existence has to adhere to logic? And if not, then why assume dichotomy as a fundamental ontological principle? — Metaphysician Undercover
Whether or not it "works", is relative. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't understand how you can claim a dichotomous holism. — Metaphysician Undercover
And I don't understand what you mean by "crisp existence". — Metaphysician Undercover
These two incommensurable kinds of reasoning cannot be grounded in ontology simply because one of them is firmly grounded in logic. — John
My point, though, was that being (identity) since it is grounded in the human eternalistic doing called 'logic' cannot be grounded in the human temporalistic doing called 'ontology', because in the latter there is no being that is not becoming, when we examine and think about 'what is'. — John
You may focus more on Geist or spirit - which I say is treating mindfulness as a substance rather than a process. I take the Peircean route that mind is the process of semiotic reasoning - it is an enactive relation with the world based on sign. — apokrisis
You have a hard life ahead if you can't tell the difference between a challenge to your arguments and an attack on your person. — apokrisis
As I tried to show above the dichotomy proceeds from our reasoning, which I think is fairly obvious. One side of it comes from logical reasoning and the other from ontological reasoning. These two incommensurable kinds of reasoning cannot be grounded in ontology simply because one of them is firmly grounded in logic. — John
You've forgotten one important step. Prior to reasoning, whether it be "logical reasoning" or "ontological reasoning" (whatever difference there's supposed to be here), we need to identify and describe the identified thing. The description of a thing is not derived from logical reasoning, logical reasoning follows the description as an attempt to understand the described thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
'Becoming' or 'flux' are words used to denote what is as it presents itself to us. What is presents itself as a vast field of more or less changing similarities and differences. Some things remain so similar through time that the differences may be indistinguishable to us; they are for us so much the same across time that they are logical identities. But we believe that they are not ontological identities, at least insofar as their physicality is concerned, because we know that they must be changing, however subtly, as time passes. So becoming is not a determinably identifiable 'thing', but a general attribute of phenomenal reality. — John
So I didn't say that the idea of becoming derives from logic. — John
It is the idea of identity which is derived form logic... — John
I'm a little lost here, but the claim that you can generate a polynomial function from its differential is wrong.
For example, f(x) = 3x + 1 and f(x) = 3x + 2 are different functions, but their derivative is the same: f(x) = 3. You cannot go 'backwards' from 3 to either of these lines, not even around a single point (they're parallel and share no points in common). The lines can be specified without reference to the differential, as I just did.
Also, the claim that the differential is not a number is confusing: if by 'differential' you mean the result of performing the differential operation on some function, then of course it's not a number, it's another function. The result of differentiating is of the same sort as the thing differentiated, it's just of a lower power.
If by differential you mean the infinitesimal, I don't know what people think about it generally, but certainly you don't need to treat it as a number. You seem to be saying you don't want to treat it as an ideal limit, either, but then, I'm not sure what you're proposing instead. — The Great Whatever
If something presents itself to us, as to "remain so similar through time that the differences may be indistinguishable to us", yet we "know" that it must be changing, then how is it that we know this, other than by the means of logic? — Metaphysician Undercover
This is not true. Logic proceeds from identity, so identity is necessarily prior to logic. It is quite clear that we must have a good grasp of identity before we can proceed with any logic, as logic operates on identified things, so the very opposite of what you say is the truth, logic is derived from identity. — Metaphysician Undercover
what I wanted to convey is that on Deleuze's reading, the difference between these two functions is not simply quantitative but rather qualitative. What does this mean? Negatively, that the differential cannot be a magnitude or a quantity — StreetlightX
Negatively, that the differential cannot be a magnitude or a quantity: at the point at which dy/dx = 0/0, — StreetlightX
Now, the point of this giant mathematical detour is that insofar as the differential is understood as this element of pure quality ('the cancellation of quantity in general'), it serves as the model for Deleuze's notion of pure relationality. — StreetlightX
Again in Bowden's words: "even though dx is totally undetermined with respect to x, as is dy to y [[dy/dx can only be determined in relation to each other, without each each value is nothing], since the relation subsists, they are in principle determinable with respect to each other" (my emphasis). — StreetlightX
this model itself has a distinctive trait that allows Deleuze to set himself against a position that his entire oeuvre pitches itself against: the idea that what exists prior to individuation is an indeterminate generality which is then progressively differentiated though limitation or negation (which itself calls for a correlative abandonment of any hylomorphic model of individuation). In other words, Apo's entire metaphysical picture. — StreetlightX
On the contrary, he will argue that this pre-individual, undifferentiated sphere of being is entirely determined - and determined precisely in the qualitative form as outlined above: this is it's 'distinctive trait' that I mentioned. — StreetlightX
It's ultimately over the question of the determination of the pre-individual that the debate between me and Apo turns. Apo is unable to recognize - perhaps because he's never encountered it before - the idea of a determinate but undifferentiated realm of the pre-individual. — StreetlightX
if you haven't noticed already not all of this post is for you TGW — StreetlightX
I wasn't just being snide when I said earlier that the whole edifice is self-referential - it really is — StreetlightX
We can bring out the importance of this seemingly trivial point however if we turn again to Deleuze's reading of the calculus. I said originally that "the differential must differ in kind from the numbers that make up the primitive curve" - this was ambiguous and you were right to call me out on this. It's indeed far more precise to say that the derivative of f(x) yields another function f'(x): what I wanted to convey is that on Deleuze's reading, the difference between these two functions is not simply quantitative but rather qualitative. What does this mean? Negatively, that the differential cannot be a magnitude or a quantity: at the point at which dy/dx = 0/0, the value of the derivative is itself neither zero nor an infinitesimal. As Sean Bowden puts it, "dx represents only the cancellation of quantity in general"; instead, Deleuze's argument is that while it cannot be determined in the form of quantity, it can (only) instead be determined in "qualitative form". — StreetlightX
And what does it mean that the differential can be determined only in qualitative form? Simply that, as we've said, the derivative is never simply a value that correlates to a single, particular point on a primitive function, but instead defines the qualitative character of the function around a particular point. In Simon Duffy's words, "the differential relation characterises or qualifies not only the distinctive points which it determines, but also the nature of the regular points in the immediate neighbourhood of these points" (Duffy, "The Mathematics of Deleuze's Differential Logic and Metaphysics"). This is the import of the Aden quote above. — StreetlightX
Why is this reciprocal determinability of the differential important to Deleuze? For two reasons: first, not only does it provide a model for pure relationality, but second and even more importantly, this model itself has a distinctive trait that allows Deleuze to set himself against a position that his entire oeuvre pitches itself against: the idea that what exists prior to individuation is an indeterminate generality which is then progressively differentiated though limitation or negation (which itself calls for a correlative abandonment of any hylomorphic model of individuation). — StreetlightX
But 0/0 is the limit. So the point never exists - except as an idea, a goal, a virtual object (in the way that singularities, event horizons, virtual particles, renormalised fields, etc, are all virtual objects in physics).
So all we can do is imagine the point as the virtual locus - a bare property-less location - to which we can then start artificially gluing dimensionality (the general or global quality that is constraint!) back on to.
And what does it mean that the differential can be determined only in qualitative form? Simply that, as we've said, the derivative is never simply a value that correlates to a single, particular point on a primitive function, but instead defines the qualitative character of the function around a particular point. In Simon Duffy's words, "the differential relation characterises or qualifies not only the distinctive points which it determines, but also the nature of the regular points in the immediate neighbourhood of these points" (Duffy, "The Mathematics of Deleuze's Differential Logic and Metaphysics"). This is the import of the Aden quote above. Now, the point of this giant mathematical detour is that insofar as the differential is understood as this element of pure quality ('the cancellation of quantity in general'), it serves as the model for Deleuze's notion of pure relationality. Again in Bowden's words: "even though dx is totally undetermined with respect to x, as is dy to y [[dy/dx can only be determined in relation to each other, without each each value is nothing], since the relation subsists, they are in principle determinable with respect to each other" (my emphasis). — StreetlightX
But the whole point is to reverse the order of priority in order to think the construction of the primitive out of the virtual, which, although not actual, is in every regard real: "The virtual is fully real in so far as it is virtual [it is] real without being actual, ideal without being abstract [...] The reality of the virtual consists of the differential elements and relations along with the singular points which correspond to them". — StreetlightX
Eh, your random opinion doesn't really matter tho. — StreetlightX
Philosophy should be primarily concerned with how to live, in my opinion. — John
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