It has actual existence as what it is, say an apple, but is potential with respect to our perception (sensibility) and comprehension (intelligibility).Intelligibility has existence independent of the perception and comprehension of agent intellect? — ucarr
Yes, the event is intrinsically comprehensible, but the extrinsic conditions required to actualize that potential are missing.Asking this another way, when a tree falls in the forest sans observer, is this event nonetheless an intelligible phenomenon? — ucarr
What propagates is a physical action that can inform sense organs (the Scholastics called this the sensible species). This is because the object is acting on its environment, say by scattering light, emitting sound or pushing back when touched. Without this sort of action, there would be no sensation. After that, it is up to the subject to attend to the sensation or not. Attending is the act of the agent intellect, and deciding to attend is an act of will.Asking it obversely, does intelligibility propagate only in direct connection to the comprehension of the agent intellect (of the sentient being)? — ucarr
The simple answer would have been: "As long as the intelligible object does. Not as a stand-alone entity." We now aware that objects are surrounded by a radiance of action (or sensible species) that may persist long after the core object has ceased to be. For example, a star may be long gone before we perceive and comprehend it.Does intelligibility persist in the absence of sentience? — ucarr
Well, order is intelligible.Consider: Intelligibility ≡ Order
The above statement is true? — ucarr
I think "non-teleological evolution" is an oxymoron. Natural selection is selection by the laws of nature, which act to determinate ends.Obversely, does non-teleological evolution preclude all linkage between intelligibility and order? — ucarr
To judge that a system has order, it has to be capable of eliciting the concept <order>, which means that order is, by definition, intelligible. How can something unintelligible elicit any concept?Can there be unintelligible order? — ucarr
That has long been my position for many theoretical and empirical reasons. See my "Mind or Randomness in Evolution" Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies 22 (1-2):32-66 (2010) (https://www.academia.edu/27797943/Mind_or_Randomness_in_Evolution).If not, must we conclude there can be no non-teleological evolution? — ucarr
I would start with sensibility, but I agree that we come to know our self, not a priori, but by reflecting on what we do -- both physically and intentionally.If so, must we conclude mind takes the sensory input of the proto-order of the objective world and converts it into the following block chain: intelligibility_perception_memory-processing-comprehension_self — ucarr
Yes. The historical question was whether it was a human or a divine power. I think that idenitifying it with awareness allows us to settle the question in favor of a human power. If it were a divine power, we would be aware of everything.Using the above statements, can I deduce agent intellect is ontologically present and active within the mind of humans? — ucarr
The agent intellect is an essential part of a theory that stands between them.Moreover, can I conclude agent intellect lies somewhere between hard dualism at one end and hard reduction at the other end? — ucarr
It seems to me, the reason we can sometimes perceive order is because the laws of nature result in patterns and order. Conceivably, there are laws of nature that we we may never become aware of, and thus a sort of "order" we can never perceive. More importantly, I think "order" is too fuzzy (and subjective) to treat as an intrinsic property of a state of affairs, whereas the perception of order is explainable with laws of nature- which do seem to reflect something intrinsic.To judge that a system has order, it has to be capable of eliciting the concept <order>, which means that order is, by definition, intelligible. How can something unintelligible elicit any concept? — Dfpolis
I agree with you for the most part. Order is a result of the laws of nature, which are not the same as our descriptions of them, because they act to determine the outcome of physical (vs. intentional) processes. I also said, "order is one of those things which we may know when we see it, but does not have an agreed upon definition." So, whether it is an intrinsic property cannot be determined until a definition is agreed upon.It seems to me, the reason we can sometimes perceive order is because the laws of nature result in patterns and order. Conceivably, there are laws of nature that we we may never become aware of, and thus a sort of "order" we can never perceive. More importantly, I think "order" is too fuzzy (and subjective) to treat as an intrinsic property of a state of affairs, whereas the perception of order is explainable with laws of nature- which do seem to reflect something intrinsic. — Relativist
It seems superfluous to try and construe order as an intrinsic property, because laws of nature fully account for the perceived order.whether it[order] is an intrinsic property cannot be determined until a definition is agreed upon. — Dfpolis
An effect (order) is distinct from its cause (the operation of the laws). Looked at differently, order is evidence for a source of order.It seems superfluous to try and construe order as an intrinsic property, because laws of nature fully account for the perceived order. — Relativist
We perceive order, and infer laws of nature that account for it. So I agree our perception of order is a critical step in our understanding of nature, but the law exists with or without our perception and inferences.An effect (order) is distinct from its cause (the operation of the laws). Looked at differently, order is evidence for a source of order. — Dfpolis
Of course.the law exists with or without our perception and inferences. — Relativist
No, I have not read it. You might take a look at this review: https://www.academia.edu/31170852/Mind_and_Cosmos_Why_the_Materialist_Neo_Darwinian_Conception_of_Nature_Is_Almost_Certainly_False_by_Thomas_Nagelhave you read Thomas Nagel's "Mind and Cosmos"? — Relativist
Assuming that order and intelligibility are coextensive, they still differ in definition. "Order" names an intrinsic property, while "intelligibility" points to a possible relation -- the possibility of being an object in the subject-object relation of knowledge. — Dfpolis
I suspect so, but we need a good definition of order to do the analysis.n other words, do we have distinct properties that are inseparable? — ucarr
Again, I think this is putting the cart before the horse. We need to go through the Socratic exercise of finding a good definition. I think we can agree that where order occurs, it is actual, not potential.Please assess the following conjecture: An apple is an ordered state of being of an existing thing. By definition, its order is active, not potential*. — ucarr
About the seed: I wonder if it does not already have all the order that the mature tree will have, but packed tighter. — Dfpolis
With active order absent, we have a chaotic jumble of disconnected attributes. — ucarr
About the seed: I wonder if it does not already have all the order that the mature tree will have, but packed tighter. — Dfpolis
That was the reason for my hesitation.I do not think that this could be the case, because the growing seed is subjected to external forces, these are accidents, and the way that the growing form responds produces a unique order. — Metaphysician Undercover
That was Lamarck's theory. It is not the current view.This is why evolution is possible, and consequently a reality. — Metaphysician Undercover
As I argued in my article, there is no reason to think that physics has no intentional effects. So, how could physcal interactions produce free will?This provides for the reality of a being with free will, the form in the mind must be created from within, rather than determined by the external accidents. — Metaphysician Undercover
In statistical mechanics, entropy measures how many microscopic states could underlie a macroscopic state. It is only defined for closed systems. For example, in a box filled with a gas, many microscopic states could underlie a uniform temperature. Vastly fewer microscopic states have high temperature at one end and low temperature at the other. We can conclude that random motion is far more likely to produce one of the many uniform temperature macroscopic states than one of the few large temperature difference macroscopic states. Still, there is a theorem that says, if you wait long enough, the system will get as close as you like to any distribution you choose. Sadly, the wait times are large compared to the age of the universe.What degree of variation or change in an ordered sequence crosses the threshold dividing integral change from entropic breakdown? Entropy, a thermodynamic measurement essential to systems theory feels to me like a suitable context in which to pursue a contemporary and useful definition of order. — ucarr
With active order absent, we have a chaotic jumble of disconnected attributes. — ucarr
The problem with this is that we could not even call this "attributes", because "attribute" refers to an apprehended order. — Metaphysician Undercover
It seems to me that the idea of order is related to unity and intelligibility, rather than microscopic realizations, which were never thought of by classic authors. We see things as ordered, for example, when they are directed to a single end -- e.g., the parts of an organism being ordered to sustaining its life or propagating its species. — Dfpolis
As Aristotle defined it, the agent intellect has one function: to make intelligibility actually known. I am identifying this with the act of awareness, by which neurally encoded contents are recognized.Does agent-intellect have three essential functions? Are they: entanglement, causation, over-arching cognition? — ucarr
As I argued in my article, there is no reason to think that physics has no intentional effects. — Dfpolis
The missing essential is the interface, viz., the entanglement of data-neutral-wrt-order of the phenomenal universe and operational intentionality of agent-intellect. — ucarr
So, how could physcal interactions produce free will? — Dfpolis
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