Yes, we are 'beings-in-media-res'. I prefer Jasper's notion of 'Existenz' as conditioned, or grounded, by what he calls the encompassing¹ or even better, more concrete, Spinoza's/Deleuze's 'radical immanence' (i.e. eternal and infinite substance²).I wonder if we forget our place if we don't sometimes remind ourselves of the middle. — Fire Ologist
The metaphysical point is this: motion is. Also, identity evades.
The epistemological point is this: we will never be finished coming to know, even one thing. — Fire Ologist
I actually prove we can know at least one thing — Philosophim
I prefer Jasper's notion of 'Existenz' as conditioned, — 180 Proof
All, for human beings, is in the middle. — Fire Ologist
I wonder if we forget our place if we don't sometimes remind ourselves of the middle.
— Fire Ologist
Yes, we are 'beings-in-media-res'. I prefer Jasper's notion of 'Existenz' as conditioned, or grounded, by what he calls the encompassing¹ or even better, more concrete, Spinoza's/Deleuze's 'radical immanence' (i.e. eternal and infinite substance² — 180 Proof
The rhizome is reducible neither to the One nor the multiple. It is not the One that becomes Two or even directly three, four, five, etc. It is not a multiple derived from the One, or to which One is added (n + 1). It is composed not of units but of dimensions, or rather directions in motion. It has neither beginning nor end, but always a middle (milieu) from which it grows and which it overspills.
at home, here in the present, here in the middle, somewhere above the ground, like a frisbee — Fire Ologist
Here's what I read. Am I overreaching? — ENOAH
The middle is not a place on the course (of becoming), but the gap, actually inaccessible to us, but it's where being resides, in the present. — ENOAH
identity is merely — unenlightened
To me that leans too far. You can so lean, as the lines are extremely blurry. But I can’t unsee the lines. I still see enough to call being in the middle something happening. — Fire Ologist
And without identifying anything, nothing happens — Fire Ologist
Being in the middle, draws out simply becoming. — Fire Ologist
If “I am” links this becoming to the “I” and this is illusory, I say that I’ve tempered the illusion of identity by saying nothing of “I” and positing only “being in the middle is”. I’ve replaced the “I” with anything being in the middle, so nothing in particular, or everything — Fire Ologist
you say “inaccessible”, I would say this implies one here “accessing” (or failing to access), another one there. — Fire Ologist
For me, being/becoming: never the twain shall meet. (Except by illusion in becoming). — ENOAH
And, therefore, are we not truly in the unbridgeable "gap" between being and becoming, when we are truly in that nanosecond worth of being in the middle? — ENOAH
To hold something still in a nanosecond, there “is holding”, so there is still becoming in that nanosecond. We have to chop and measure a nanosecond, so instead, I see chopping and measuring. — Fire Ologist
In the middle is the “ing” personified as an object and therefore distorted into a “what”, a single what it is. — Fire Ologist
I think we're in agreement, and I am stubbornly clinging--like George Costanza clinging to nothing--to my insistence on the "never the twain shall meet." — ENOAH
Yes, because we cannot but becoming, while the x-ing for be-ing is in the is-ing [of it (without subject/object)], for so called "us" in human existence, with the unavoidable subject/object, it can only be attuned to, as the "ing" and not as the subject, in the middle of becoming. — ENOAH
Motion is. Motion cannot be tracked as moving, unless something endures long enough to be moved. So the thing is as well. But before we jump to ask “what is this thing” we can remember, if the thing “is”, it is also consumed by motion again — Fire Ologist
the most recent courtesy.)The becoming of the movement is a quantitative change, and the persistent being of the frisbee is a qualitative enduring as the same thing. — Joshs
All, for human beings, is in the middle. — Fire Ologist
And as these fleeting attempted selves are becoming, we move other things, making changes back at the world of moving things (like me writing this and sending it aloft, redefining me as a mover of ideas like you who receives them). — Fire Ologist
,There is no “this” meaning “this only”. There is always “this and that”, never this only. Every “this” brings with it it’s distinction from “that”, it’s position on the horizon, as it hangs there, flying, being, becoming. — Fire Ologist
So while I hope I have finally understood your intent, I cannot help but feel gratified either way. I look forward to reading more. — ENOAH
in this context, becoming to being and so on — ENOAH
Are you getting this from Heidegger? One question :
If we use the motion of an object as a metaphor for becoming, then do we also keep the fact that the nature of the object doesn’t change through the course of its movement? — Joshs
The point as applied to logic is this: we only find logic in between the concepts and premises we posit, in the relation that is joining premise to conclusion.
[71a] All teaching and all intellectual learning result from previous cognition... This is also true of both deductive and inductive arguments, since they both succeed in teaching because they rely on previous cognition: deductive arguments begin with premisses we are assumed to understand, and inductive arguments prove the universal by relying on the fact that the particular is already clear.
The epistemological point is this: we will never be finished coming to know, even one thing.
if we had to "unpack" all our propositional knowledge about complex things every time we used them in thought we'd never get any thinking done. — Count Timothy von Icarus
2+3 = 5 is taken as simple identity, instead of something that becomes. — Count Timothy von Icarus
thought is essentially processual. Eternal relations, taken as what is most real by positivists, are an abstraction from such processes. — Count Timothy von Icarus
So we end up in a weird place where trying to know what must be most unified through these discursive means. We try to get to reality rather than appearance, the in-itself rather than the relative, while still firmly stuck in the mode of knowing that is discursive and relativising. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Heidegger’s famous line that the nothing nothings means that truth happens in the nothing, which is another name for transcendence. Happening, the in-between, event, occurring, transit, difference, becoming are prior to identity. — Joshs
I've written about before in the context of R. Scott Bakker's "Blind Brain Theory" (https://medium.com/@tkbrown413/blind-brain-theory-and-the-role-of-the-unconscious-b61850a3d27f) — Count Timothy von Icarus
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