Every skull wears an acquired face and calls it "self". I suspect that language – word-fetishizing – is why "the myth of self endures". — 180 Proof
"It persists", it seems to me, because "self" might be a kind of cognitive (memory) bias related to emotion-enabled scenario-planning and judgmemt (Damasio).Granted that it's an invention, does it persist because it accomplishes something ? — plaque flag
:fire: :100:Brains model worlds. In order to construct an “objective” view - an Umwelt - the organism must successfully “other” itself as the “subjective” part of that viewing.
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A classic example from ecological perception is landing a plane on a runway. The pilot fixes on a landing spot and just maintains a steady optic flow. So a sense of self emerges from the process of becoming the still centre of a world in smooth predictable motion. You and your target are one. Two halves of the psychological equation. The wider world is likewise reduced to a continuous flow. The brain is modelling reality in a cleanly divided fashion which is not a model of the world, but a model of us in the world as the world’s still and purposeful centre, with the world then passing by in a smooth and predictable manner. — apokrisis
So the 'biosemiotic story' goes ...Memes on top of genes that were built to host them ? — plaque flag
So the 'biosemiotic story' goes ... — 180 Proof
I'm not persuaded that 'memetics' explains much. — 180 Proof
Sure.Yet language is our killer app. — plaque flag
You seem to saying language is necessary for somethings existence. — Andrew4Handel
I thought you were saying we bring something into existence (or you might say reify it) with language.Before long we think that nothing is more real than this convention — plaque flag
I agree. I think I was not right to call it a metaphor. I like the idea that language discloses or unveils phenomena. Adorno did that. — plaque flag
I suspect that language – word-fetishizing – is why "the myth of self endures". — 180 Proof
I thought you were saying we bring something into existence (or you might say reify it) with language. — Andrew4Handel
I suppose my theory of language is that is must start by referring to things before we can abstract to concepts. — Andrew4Handel
I also think it starts pretty simple, maybe with worldly objects, but then we can make lots of metaphors which drift into literal concepts as we use them enough. — plaque flag
The word "self" (like "god") exists and we use – "talk about" – it meaningfully and incessantly (re: Meinong's Jungle, Witty's language games, etc).I am not sure what your theory of language is but I don't think we can talk about things that don't exist. — Andrew4Handel
The Self is just a ghost in the hive mind of society until it appears out of the fog of history in a cloak of righteousness, defying a world that's become evil. — frank
A most eloquent quote Frank and a great summary of Sophocles - Antigone. — invicta
Indeed the two deceased brothers Polynices and Eteocles could almost be twins and if the concept of self was to be divided they are a division of self.
Both dead of course and so Antigone doing rightly wants to bury both not just Eteocles as the king ordered. — invicta
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