Do you maybe mean "The fragility of the concepts of time and the unconscious"?The fragility of time and the unconscious — Constance
I can't see where does the contradiction lie. Psychotherapy (and other techniques) is based on exactly that process: bringing things that lie in out "unconscious" to our consciousness. This helps us to understand problems that lie hidden inside us and affects us and out behavior negatively, But in general, this is a very natural process that occurs with us every day: I have a name in my mind that I cannot remember, however hard I try. Suddenly, it pops up in my head: "I remembered it!". I don't know how much percent, but the very larger part of our is hidden from us at any given moment. We can say that it lies in our "unconscious", but only for description purposes.ANY talk at all about the unconscious is self contradictory, for to speak of it is to bring it to consciousness, — Constance
Do you maybe mean "The fragility of the concepts of time and the unconscious"?
Because neither time nor unconscious does actually exist to be fragile or strong. — Alkis Piskas
About time: As you said, we use the terms "past", "present" and "future" conventionally. They are points of reference. We use them mainly for description purposes, and they are indeed very useful. But it is very easy to see that neither of them exists: past is long gone, it' not here, it's nowhere. Future has not come yet, so it's nowhere either. Present --which we usually call "Now"-- is the most controversial concept of the three. For one thing, it cannot be "grasped" because from the moment we refer to it, it has already passed by. But we can define it in a context, as a period of time, e.g. "At present" or "At the present time" or "Presently", refers to a period of time existing "as we talk". (Note: all the references to the word "exist" are figurative, since time does not actually exist.) — Alkis Piskas
About unconscious: It doesn't actually exist either. It's a term invented by Freud and it is rejected by a lot of psychologists today. If there were an unconscious mind, it would have to be inside mind, i.e. a mind inside a mind. We use the term conventionally, as we do with the terms mentioned above regarding time, to mean whatever is inside our mind that we are not aware of, i.e. it is "hidden". It is also very useful. We say, "I did that unconsciously", meaning without thinking or being aware of it. — Alkis Piskas
I can't see where does the contradiction lie. Psychotherapy (and other techniques) is based on exactly that process: bringing things that lie in out "unconscious" to our consciousness. This helps us to understand problems that lie hidden inside us and affects us and out behavior negatively, But in general, this is a very natural process that occurs with us every day: I have a name in my mind that I cannot remember, however hard I try. Suddenly, it pops up in my head: "I remembered it!". I don't know how much percent, but the very larger part of our is hidden from us at any given moment. We can say that it lies in our "unconscious", but only for description purposes. — Alkis Piskas
Right. This is about what I said. Time itself cannot be fragile; it's concept only can be. So, are you agreeing with that but just don't want to accept it directly? :smile:Time and the unconscious are always already conceptual, are they not? — Constance
You lost me. Too complicated for me to get involved in! The space in my mind will be distorted! And I'm afraid that my mind might even be exploded! :grin:As I make reference to, say, the future, I deploy, in the act of reference itself, the past which informs the reference regarding language and habits of experience ... — Constance
I don't know what that "something can be. But I thought later that "a mind inside a mind" might not be the case, but rather a different "mind", i.e two minds working parallely, which anyway, doesn't make sense either. So it's useless to speak about any of them. That's why I use to say "a part of my mind", refering to what is customarily called "unconscious". This at least makes more sense.Not so much a mind inside a mind, but "something" — Constance
Indeed, this guy was quite problematic! :grin: I can only find problems and emptyness in his "sayings", like the above position you mentioned, which for me means absolutely nothing. Giving a logical answer has nothing to do with defining logic! You give dozens of logical answers everyday about a dozen different subjects. Godssake, man. Enough! There. Because you have ignited a wick in me that started a fire! :grin:Wittgensteinian problem: try to say what logic is, and the very best you can do is give a logical answer! — Constance
No, I didn't say that. I didn't speak about any theory. I just mentioned that the word "unconcious" was invented by Freud.I thought you said Freudian theory, theory of the unconscious, was merely an invention. — Constance
Right. This is about what I said. Time itself cannot be fragile; it's concept only can be. So, are tou agreeing agree on that but just don't want to accept it directly? :smile: — Alkis Piskas
You lost me. Too complicated for me to get involved in! The space in my mind will be distorted! And I'm afraid that my mind might even be exploded! :grin:
Indeed, how can you perform all that thinking? What I can only get are complicated optical illusions, like this one: — Alkis Piskas
I don't know what that "something can be. But I thought later that "a mind inside a mind" might not be the case, but rather a different "mind", i.e two minds working parallely, which anyway, doesn't make sense either. So it's useless to speak about any of them. That's why I use to say "a part of my mind", refering to what is customarily called "unconscious". This at least makes more sense. — Alkis Piskas
Indeed, this guy was quite problematic! :grin: I can only find problems and emptyness in his "sayings", like the above position you mentioned, which for me means absolutely nothing. Giving a logical answer has nothing to do with defining logic! You give dozens of logical answers everyday about a dozen different subjects. Godssake, man. Enough! There. Because you have ignited a wick in me that started a fire! :grin: — Alkis Piskas
No, I didn't say that. I didn't speak about any theory. I just mentioned that the word "unconcious" was invented by Freud.
I stopped being interested in and talk about the "unconscious (mind)" since a long time ago. I'm only interested in and talk about the conscious mind and consciousness! :smile: — Alkis Piskas
I would rather say, "without a concept ot time, we cannot talk about 'time' at all; the word 'time' has no meaning". Without the concept of freedom, the word "freedom" means nothing.without the concept, time is no longer time at all. — Constance
The thought of myself is not myself. The thought of a tree is not a tree.The thought of time IS time — Constance
I described avove the relation of concepts to language, using the word "word" :smile:But it is not independent of language, because to behold it at all with your intelligence is to bring whatever something is, INTO language. — Constance
Don't talk to me about more reading, pleeeease! :grin:See Derrida's Khora, the Violence of Existence — Constance
Agree.I don't take issue with the assumption of an unconscious to the extent that it yields an understanding of the dynamics of a conscious set of affairs. — Constance
This is how I can see concepts are created: We first have an abstract idea, i.e. a concept, about something and then we give it a name. Ancient people, where watching a river flowing, seing the sun rising and setting every day --an illusion of course, since it's the earth that is rotating and orbiting-- etc., and these observations, penomena were giving them a sense, an idea of continuous change and movement, which is very similar to that of time, but they didn't have a name for them. At some point, they had to invent words for them for description and communication purposes. One of them was "time".
But these abstract ideas are not confined in the description of phenomena in the external world, which we perceive through our senses. They can refer to things that exist only in our mind. For example, how has the concept of freedom been created? From the idea of getting liberated from a state of being imprisoned into something or enslaved by someone. The sense of relief and the idea of being released, at some point gets "materialized" in the word "freedom" (or whatever came before it).
So there's no word "time", until we get the concept of time into a word. That is, until we give a name to the idea of constant change and movment. Yet, it still doen't exist in the way a river exists, but only as an idea in our mind. — Alkis Piskas
The thought of myself is not myself. The thought of a tree is not a tree. — Alkis Piskas
Don't talk to me about more reading, pleeeease! — Alkis Piskas
What kind is this?The trouble with this kind of thinking — Constance
I'm afraid you missed the point. Nothing was assumed. I talked about phenomena that "were giving them [people] a sense, an idea of continuous change and movement, which is very similar to that of time." The word "time" is used here as a reference to what we are using today to refer to such phenomena.assumes a time when there was no word/concept there for time — Constance
My whole point was that concepts exist as ideas in our mind before we give them names!
You totally missed it. And it took me some time to explain all that. Pity! — Alkis Piskas
But these abstract ideas are not confined in the description of phenomena in the external world, which we perceive through our senses. They can refer to things that exist only in our mind. For example, how has the concept of freedom been created? From the idea of getting liberated from a state of being imprisoned into something or enslaved by someone. The sense of relief and the idea of being released, at some point gets "materialized" in the word "freedom" (or whatever came before it). — Alkis Piskas
show me the past and will show you a present event affirming something called past. the future and the present suffer the same fate. — Constance
The unconscious: it takes but a moment to see that ANY talk at all about the unconscious is self contradictory, for to speak of it is to bring it to consciousness, thus, the moment it comes to our lips, rises up to thought and language, it is conscious — Constance
You missed it again. "At some point" is a descriptive expression, not an absolute or a name or a term, used for space and time. We are using it to refer to the past --sometimes to the future too. It's not a substitute for the word "time". It does not even represent time.The problem with this lies with "at some point." — Constance
Time, being a human construct, is a matter of sensitivity and perception.But "where" is time, so to speak? — Constance
Time is the inverse to frequency [ t=(1/f) ] and it only points in a positive direction — Rocco Rosano
Which is why it is helpful to think of time in terms of William James "specious present", that duration, perhaps 2 seconds or so, in which we combine the immediate future, the instant present and the already passing moment in time. Anything less than that is something which we aren't aware of consciously, at these levels we react unconsciously.
If you deny the future and past, you cannot make sense of the present, because it has already past. — Manuel
Not really. We see, roughly, when photons hit the eye and react to the photo-receptors we have. We aren't conscious of this process. We become conscious of it when we study mammalian vision, but, aside from the discussions, we don't see photons, nor do we see how the brain turns this into images.
And there is plenty of study in linguistics than show that we cannot introspect into our language faculty. What we get in consciousness are fragments, not the process by which we get these fragments.
Until we get rid of this idea of "access to consciousness", we will remain stuck in philosophy of mind, because, as a factual matter, the vast majority of the things we do don't enter experience. But this should be rather obvious, requiring little times reflection. — Manuel
Time, being a human construct, is a matter of sensitivity and perception.
Time is the inverse to frequency [ t=(1/f) ] and it only points in a positive direction. Because it is a construct, the only question becomes: Is it sound and valid? — Rocco Rosano
Sensations can only be felt in time. So wouldn't animals feel time as well? — Gregory
Nobody was more aware of time flowing then him among older philosophers — Gregory
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