I know that what I call experience, wordless awareness, is different from knowing or understanding using language. It feels different in a profound way. It uses different parts of me. I — T Clark
You're changing the meaning of the word "talking." Talking uses words. This from the web:
Talk - speak in order to give information or express ideas or feelings; converse or communicate by spoken words. — T Clark
The other is understood entirely by a body of knowledge possessed by a self, so no separation is possible. No mind independent other can exist, so a self cannot be separated from other.
This conception of self has a central density of information then extends outward, similar to a hurricane, to wherever and whatever it has information of.
How would you conceive a self, and thus a boundary of "subject"? — Pop
The answer to the second question then becomes....to know a thing it is necessary to conceive it, and to conceive a thing it is necessary to represent it, but the mere representation of a thing makes the naming of it only possible and not necessary. — Mww
By the same token, taking into consideration the second question really meant to ask.....how can I know you know something that can’t be put into words (or some kind of expression)....then it is the case I cannot. — Mww
Is it anything like this? — Joshs
Thus intellectual meanings are in their very nature aspects of subjective feelings. Any moment's subjective feeling implicitly contains many possible meanings which could be differentiated and symbolized. — Joshs
I can also think ‘pre-verbally’, using the felt as a of a situation. But to me words are merely more richly articulated versions of a felt sense. — Joshs
The felt sense is a vague , impressionistic sketch of what the word crystalizes. — Joshs
I don't understand the distinction you are making between the representation and the naming. — T Clark
No. That's not what I "really meant to ask." — T Clark
what did you have in mind when you wrote "some kind of expression." — T Clark
Stop thinking of it in dualistic terms and think of it monistically, or else you're left with explaining how physical things interact with ideas.I know that Scientific realism is the common sensical position, and I have a lot of time for it.
I guess I'm considering a view of idealism and realism at the same time. For example, I say that physical nature exists independantly of human cognition, which is a realist statement, but then I realise that such a statement, that nature exists independantly of human cognition, is borne of human cognition, and wouldn't be possible without it. Then I get stuck in a double bind. — Aidan buk
The subject-object boundary is none other than the finite, discreet nature of time. Time is nothing outside of the experience of time , and the experience of time is that of my immediate past ( and by implication all of my prior history linked to it ) being changed by implying into a new event which occurs into that implying. The now is always a differential. It is what occurs to me by changing me. — Joshs
The distinction resides in the point-of-use of a speculative human cognitive system on the one hand, and the talking about the conditions under which that point-of-use system operates, on the other. — Mww
Intentional communication. — Mww
:clap: :lol: :100:Again, the best analogue is Antigonish...
"Yesterday, upon the stair,
I met a man who wasn't there
He wasn't there again today
I wish, I wish he'd go away..."
"Being in itself" is the philosopher's "little man who wasn't there".
Kant invented this nonsense. Husserl and friends elevated it to an academic career. — Banno
The felt sense is a vague , impressionistic sketch of what the word crystalizes.
— Joshs
The crystallization you refer to is achieved by throwing away much of the information included in the original experience. — T Clark
I left something important out. I know that what I call experience, wordless awareness, is different from knowing or understanding using language. It feels different in a profound way. It uses different parts of me. If you don't feel that same difference, then there's probably not much further we can go with this discussion. — T Clark
The epistemic cut approach works better as it doesn’t try to reduce the world to the model anymore than it reduces the model to the world. — apokrisis
Instead, there is an interaction between a self and the world, an organism and an environment, where each has a specific reciprocal effect. The order in one is increased to the degree the order in the other is dissipated. — apokrisis
Then I could carefully protect my favourite coffee cup - treating it as an extension of my self - or carelessly dispose of a beer bottle by smashing it against the nearest wall because I generally regard it and my environment as non-self - a realm of waste, an entropic heat sink. — apokrisis
It's like the boundary between a mountain and a valley. We think of a mountain as an independent thing, not noticing how the concept is bound to it's negation. If there were no valleys, there would be no mountains and vice versa. We're bound to divide things up like that for the sake of explanations and narratives. — frank
I think it is the consciousness and thought which is able to tell the subject and object, the internal and external, known, unknown, the objects and limitation of reason, and the objects of intuition and faith. — Corvus
I don't understand the distinction you are making between the representation and the naming. How is it represented if not in words? — T Clark
Mostly I like your thinking, but I sense you share with Pattee, a dualistic bias. — Pop
Would Pattee say a Ribosome makes an epistemic cut in regard to an RNA? — Pop
Nevertheless, it is the case that no symbol vehicle
or symbolic operation can evade physical laws. This means that in spite of the apparent
autonomy of biological information, physical laws impose several conditions on the material
embodiment of the different forms of information. — Pattee
The dissipation bottleneck will effect everything, without exception. I wonder what obscure insights you might have, apart from the obvious? — Pop
I think future generations are going to be paying for this sort of thinking. They will look back and blame this sort of thinking for the trashing of the earth. This sort of thinking arises from dualism, of course I am as guilty as anybody else, but I would dearly like to promote a different way of thinking. One where mother earth is respected, as a consequence of the way people think about themselves as being at one with the earth and each other ( monism ). — Pop
The human system is all about the entropy and does near zero recycling. Why would we expect it to last much longer in any form? Why would it deserve to with such a disregard of basic design principles?
Will big tech save us? I give you as prime examples the marvels of unrepairable Apple phones, the entropic idiocy of bitcoins, and the big oil sponsored ruse of “green hydrogen. :grin: — apokrisis
I say that a ‘feeling’ is a particular change being made in the way we relate to a situation, just as a word is. — Joshs
What give a feeling the richness a word doesn’t have? Is it some intrinsic , immediate mystery? — Joshs
Is it some intrinsic , immediate mystery? — Joshs
In short, naming something is a very brief and concise way of expressing something which is much richer in experience than a single word could convey. It's the difference between all the ways you could think about trees and how you interact with them as opposed to merely naming them. — Manuel
In Yogic logic, one of the practices is to turn thought off completely. Such a mental state is surprisingly innately pleasant, for me at least. Walking along a beach, or through a forest, just absorbing it thoughtlessly and nonjudgmentally has this affect of connecting me with the surroundings that is lost once thought returns. — Pop
This is exactly the issue I’ve been working on. The cut seems pretty sharp when you are talking about the coded information vs the material product, but in fact we do then have the further issue of precisely how the two sides interact. — apokrisis
The human system is all about the entropy and does near zero recycling. Why would we expect it to last much longer in any form? Why would it deserve to with such a disregard of basic design principles?
Will big tech save us? I give you as prime examples the marvels of unrepairable Apple phones, the entropic idiocy of bitcoins, and the big oil sponsored ruse of “green hydrogen. :grin: — apokrisis
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