Comments

  • Metaphysics - what is it?
    who makes the exact opposite claim: bodies are trapped by souls. The point? The physical is more sublime than the mental.Agent Smith

    You could read it that way.

    Another way is that the body of a human is trained to talk about itself like there's a ghost inside it that's responsible for what that body does. The way we like to do things lately is just use one ghost.
  • The Pure Witness / The Transcendental Ego
    None of us can even imagine a state where basic awareness is not, because we would still be aware of the imagining. Even in dreams we are aware.
    Imagination is a form of awareness (quiet assumption), so imagining the absence of awareness is a manifestation of awareness. Seems like an elaboration of hazy grammar, not an illumination of the interior. No mention of being out cold, not yet born, or dead.

    Moreover, these traditions maintain, there are not two different types of awareness, enlightened versus ignorant. There is only awareness. And this awareness, exactly and precisely as it is, without correction or modification at all, is itself Spirit, since there is nowhere Spirit is not. The instructions, then, are to recognize awareness, recognize the Witness, recognize the Self, and abide as that. Any attempt to get awareness is totally beside the point. 'But I still don't see Spirit!' 'You are aware of your not seeing Spirit, and that awareness is itself Spirit.'"
    https://www.integralworld.net/meditation.html

    Clearly the goal is a recognition of Spirit. At the same time, this would just be more awareness, which is never enlightened or ignorant but just itself. Trying to 'see' or 'get' this awareness/Spirit is 'totally beside the point.' But the point of the text is obviously to help one 'see' or 'get' it...in the right way (try to not try so hard). The recognition is mediated conceptually. Since Spirit was always already there, it was never really the target. The myth/story of Spirit grasping itself is self-fulfilling, self-describing. The consumer/participant enjoys an identification with completed or self-grasping Spirit. But isn't my interpretation a further elaboration or self-grasping of Spirit? The game can be continued, surely. Was bare/pure awareness ever interesting in itself? An object eternal only through its vacuity? Or was it always about possession and hierarchy?
  • Metaphors and validity
    I think the update is simulation theory.Tom Storm

    :up:

    Which I can't make sense of, so maybe I'm Cypher. It hurts to stub my toe, whether or not I call the pain 'real' or 'simulated.'
  • Popper's Swamp, Observation Statements, Facts/Interpretations
    Interesting discussion so far.
    Philosophy of science is as useful to scientists as ornithology is to birds.
    — Richard Feynman
    180 Proof

    Nice vid.

    Maybe scientists don't care, but I want insight on whether to trust or not trust the emission from this or that institution. Also don't like to just settle for the drift of concepts (such as scientists is whatever people called scientists are doing just now.) A cynic might say that we can't help being seduced by technology that gives us what we want. Perhaps that's mostly correct. A certain kind of pragmatist might take technology as the essence of science/knowledge. Its objectivity would just be the fact that it works independently of its users' trust in it, while god-talk and placebo pills would be something else.

    Anyway, I'd love to get your input on this thread...
  • Metaphors and validity
    This is a grand, self-endangering claim but maybe relevant.
    What, then, is truth? A mobile army of metaphors, metonyms, and anthropomorphisms—in short, a sum of human relations which have been enhanced, transposed, and embellished poetically and rhetorically, and which after long use seem firm, canonical, and obligatory to a people: truths are illusions about which one has forgotten that this is what they are; metaphors which are worn out and without sensuous power; coins which have lost their pictures and now matter only as metal, no longer as coins. — Nietzsche
  • Metaphors and validity
    An example of a successful metaphor rehash is the brain-in-a-vat gedanken experiment.Agent Smith
    :up:

    It's time we updated the metaphors we find so useful and adapt them to current times so that people can relate to them more easily.Agent Smith

    T. S. Eliot is pretty great on this. Reminds me of Hegel/Feuerbach too.

    Eliot challenges the common perception that a poet's greatness and individuality lie in their departure from their predecessors; he argues that "the most individual parts of his [the poet's] work may be those in which the dead poets, his ancestors, assert their immortality most vigorously." Eliot claims that this "historical sense" is not only a resemblance to traditional works but an awareness and understanding of their relation to his poetry.

    This fidelity to tradition, however, does not require the great poet to forfeit novelty in an act of surrender to repetition. Rather, Eliot has a much more dynamic and progressive conception of the poetic process: novelty is possible only through tapping into tradition. ...The act of artistic creation does not take place in a vacuum. The introduction of a new work alters the cohesion of this existing order, and causes a readjustment of the old to accommodate the new. The inclusion of the new work alters the way in which the past is seen... In Eliot’s own words, "What happens when a new work of art is created is something that happens simultaneously to all the works of art that preceded it." Eliot refers to this organic tradition, this developing canon, as the "mind of Europe." The private mind is subsumed by this more massive one.
    ...
    Since the poet engages in a "continual surrender of himself" to the vast order of tradition, artistic creation is a process of depersonalisation. The mature poet is viewed as a medium, through which tradition is channelled and elaborated. The poet is a depersonalised vessel, a mere medium.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tradition_and_the_Individual_Talent

    You can see above that the future haunts the past too.
  • Metaphors and validity
    there could be physics metaphorsAgent Smith

    @apokrisis and I were discussing the machine versus organism metaphor as applied to physics/nature.
  • Metaphors and validity
    Maybe metaphors occur as systemsAgent Smith
    :up:

    I like looking at it that way. The 'big' metaphors are the basic structures of an era or a personality.
  • Metaphors and validity
    they're also, in a certain sense, pitfalls for they, I surmise, constrain a person to a particular point of view, a one-dimensional way of looking at things that though helpful can result in tunnel vision.Agent Smith

    The past haunts a future that haunts the present. Inherited metaphors frame possible futures. We need the same dead metaphors that trap us. We are snakes climbing out of our skins, Neurathian rafts of metaphors clusters.
  • Metaphors and validity
    If analogy is such a prevalent thing in our cognition, then it would seem to be necessary (though perhaps not completely possible) to find some way of talking about this phenomenon without participating in it, in order to reach a true understanding of it and the world in general._db

    My current opinion is that we are mostly stuck using new metaphors to dislodge old ones. Consider Wittgenstein's fly in the bottle, or his insistence that we tend to be misled by pictures. Metaphors warning us of metaphors, but of course it's the hidden metaphor that traps us, hence the transparency of the bottle. Rorty discusses the mirror of nature as a candidate for an especially dominant 'picture' of this kind. I prefer the synonymous metaphor of lens. The point is mediation. Philosophy dreamed/dreams of mastering/articulating the structure of all possible experience by figuring out the nature of the mirror/lens. Then there's Plato's cave. Locke's tabula rasa. The list goes on. If metaphor/analogy is the essence of cognition, then any 'true' understanding would be only the latest dominant metaphor? Like the metaphor metaphor...
  • The Concept of Religion
    .
    That is, today's understanding of morality is superior to 500 years ago. We're not just flittering randomly over time regarding what is good and evil, but are getting closer to the truth.Hanover

    Must the notion of better be understood in terms of proximity to a postulated 'truth' which I interpret as a perfected morality? This would be something like an End of History, whether or not the limit/ideal were ever obtained.
  • The Concept of Religion
    So, assuming moral truths are relative to society, the times, the culture, one's idiosyncratic upbringing and experiences, tell me why the rapist ought be judged wrong despite his view it is right?Hanover

    He's outnumbered. 'We' don't tolerate such things, nor do 'we' feel the need to justify every justification. On Certainty seems relevant here: "Giving grounds [must] come to an end sometime. But the end is not an ungrounded presupposition: it is an ungrounded way of acting. " While we bother to justify some claims and actions, the bottom of the system is mud, 'blind' habit. Eventually there's that's just the way we do things. (Or, better maybe, the doing of them.) Dreyfus is also good on this:

    For both Heidegger and Wittgenstein, then, the source of the intelligibility of the world is the average public practices through which alone there can be any understanding at all. What is shared is not a conceptual scheme, i.e., not a belief system that can be made explicit and justified. Not that we share a belief system that is always implicit and arbitrary. That is just the Sartrean version of the same mistake. What we share is simply our average comportment. Once a practice has been explained by appealing to what one does, no more basic explanation is possible. As Wittgenstein puts it in On Certainty: "Giving grounds [must] come to an end sometime. But the end is not an ungrounded presupposition: it is an ungrounded way of acting.
    ...
    This view is entirely antithetical to the philosophical ideal of total clarity and ultimate intelligibility. Philosophers seek an ultimate ground. When they discover there is none, even modern philosophers like Sartre and Derrida seem to think that they have fallen into an abyss -- that the lack of an ultimate ground has catastrophic consequences for human activity.
    ...
    There is, however, something that average everyday intelligibility obscures, viz., that it is merely average everyday intelligibility. It takes for granted that the everyday for-the-sake-of-whichs and the equipment that serves them are based upon God's goodness, human nature, or at least solid good sense. This is what Heidegger called "the perhaps necessary appearance of foundation." One cannot help thinking that the right (healthy, civilized, rational, natural, etc.) way to sit, for example, is on chairs, at tables, etc., not on the floor. Our way seems to make intrinsic sense -- a sense not captured in saying, "This is what we in the West happen to do." What gets covered up in everyday understanding is not some deep intelligibility as the tradition has always held; it is that the ultimate "ground" of intelligibility is simply shared practices. There is no right interpretation. Average intelligibility is not inferior intelligibility; it simply obscures its own groundlessness. This is the last stage of the hermeneutics of suspicion. The only deep interpretation left is that there is no deep interpretation.
    https://dl1.cuni.cz/pluginfile.php/404866/mod_resource/content/0/Hubert_L._Dreyfus_Being-in-the-World_A_Commentary_on_Heideggers_Being_and_Time%2C_Division_I.__1995.pdf
  • Popper's Swamp, Observation Statements, Facts/Interpretations
    As I see it, both PoMo and AP are essentially reductionist and never escape that monism - whether they fetishise the monism of the one or the many.apokrisis

    I don't know if you include Hegel in PoMo, but Braver's charting of the journey of 'anti-realism' from Kant to Hegel to Heidegger to Derrida features holism prominently. I can't help but think you are politicizing PoMo, and no doubt some of these thinkers have been applied to politics. To me the big theme that starts with Kant is mediation in terms of an impersonal concept scheme. This 'lens' or 'mirror' metaphor evolves from thinker to thinker. For Kant it was fixed and ahistorical. For the rest, not. In Saussure, every language user has an (imperfect) copy of the language system in his brain. For Feuerbach, thinking is not a function of the individual. I think in terms of a distributed, self-updating operating system...
  • Popper's Swamp, Observation Statements, Facts/Interpretations
    I remember liking Gadamer.apokrisis

    I love his idea that our exploration/interpretation of the object is always also self-discovery. We 'are' our prejudices in a certain sense, and we are mostly invisible to ourselves. We are revealed in our revelation/interpretation of the other.
  • Popper's Swamp, Observation Statements, Facts/Interpretations
    Pragmatism. What use is knowledge that ain't useful.

    Even poetry is supposed to be useful according to its promoters.
    apokrisis

    I tend to agree, but the sign 'utility' only gets it meaning from other signs (or in the spaces between.) I read a few Dawkins books lately, so I'm tempted to read utility that way. But this points away from meaning altogether perhaps. I'm guess I'm OK with that, and with the coming heat death. Dark sense of humor, I guess.
  • Popper's Swamp, Observation Statements, Facts/Interpretations
    So maybe vocalisation is a privileging medium here after all. The paleo record seems to say so.apokrisis

    Good points, so maybe Saussure wasn't such a bastard after all. Probably the medium independence idea is aimed at possibility more than actuality, such as another lifeform with different sense organs evolved on a different planet.

    So I say that the holism of pragmatism is the best path to approach metaphysics. Natural philosophy, systems science, etc. That gives you training in the habits of thought which are actually required to grasp the whole that is meant to be at the end of the trail.apokrisis

    I did start with a big dose of pragmatism, which might be why I can appreciate thinkers on both sides. I'm not sure an end of the trail is possible. At the moment, I think that most systems have some blindspot or some thread that can be tugged until half of it unravels. I'm not committed to this view. I just tend to find that the elaboration and specification of a system reveals internal tensions. I do postulate an ineradicable ambiguity in all thinking.

    My trajectory would have been biology => ecology => artificial intelligence => human evolution => social pyschology => cognitive neuroscience => complexity theory => systems science => Peircean semiotics;apokrisis

    Quite a journey! For better or worse, I'm am or at least have been as much an artist/musician as a laborer in the realm of concept. I'm an ex-Romantic, you might say, so I am not put off by Nietzsche or Derrida or even DADA manifestoes. Clearly you are more the pure scientist type.
  • Popper's Swamp, Observation Statements, Facts/Interpretations
    And then you learn that the mark is in fact part of some larger mental structure - some community-level habit of interpretation. As more marks get made, you might start to think you could crack this cuneiform code.

    So at the level of some single mark, it could be "just physics" - a complete material accident in a world composed of material accidents over all possible spatiotemporal scales. Or it could be "all mind" in being a purposeful act of encoding information.

    A mark could be a switch. Or not a switch. And so it sits there right at the epistemic cut as an information bit that might also be understood as an entropic microstate.
    apokrisis

    :up:

    Underlined part reminds me of Gadamer.

    The fact that understanding operates by means of such anticipatory structures means that understanding always involves what Gadamer terms the ‘anticipation of completeness’—it always involves the revisable presupposition that what is to be understood constitutes something that is understandable, that is, something that is constituted as a coherent, and therefore meaningful, whole.
    ...
    The prejudicial character of understanding means that, whenever we understand, we are involved in a dialogue that encompasses both our own self-understanding and our understanding of the matter at issue. In the dialogue of understanding our prejudices come to the fore, both inasmuch as they play a crucial role in opening up what is to be understood, and inasmuch as they themselves become evident in that process. As our prejudices thereby become apparent to us, so they can also become the focus of questioning in their own turn.
    https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/gadamer/#PosPre
  • Popper's Swamp, Observation Statements, Facts/Interpretations
    the possibility of its being repeated another time-breaches, divides, expropriates the "ideal" plenitude or self-presence of intention,...of all adequation between meaning and saying. Iterability alters...leaves us no room but to mean (to say) something that is (already, always, also) other than what we mean (to say)Joshs

    In other words, we don't ground/fix the 'meaning' of our sign in some private intention or unboxed beetle. It's a 'token' which is implicitly iterable. But signs have their meaning only differentially (in relation to other signs), and the entire context/system drifts, so that the 'same' salute or secret handshake is not quite the same, anymore than the 'same' knight on a chessboard maintains some constant 'meaning' as the game advances.

    Derrida is a bit confusing here by suggesting a gap between what we meant to say and what we actually said. This 'what we meant to say' is a kind of fiction or concept under erasure, seems to me. It's part of the view/picture that's being challenged. But we have no choice but to work within the prejudices we are challenging, as we drift on Neurath's boat.

    Or that's my improvisation, which can never say an all that's always slipping away.
  • Popper's Swamp, Observation Statements, Facts/Interpretations

    I love the theme you are touching on, and Limited Inc is one of D's books I've studied and enjoyed, but...the exposition (yours and his in the post above) is indulgently gnarly.
  • Popper's Swamp, Observation Statements, Facts/Interpretations
    It is the principles of codes that is at stake, whether they be verbal, numerical, neural or genetic.apokrisis

    A Derridean point, by the way. Phonocentrism is 'bad' because it prioritizes speech as uniquely close to 'meaning stuff.' There is no privileged medium. The idea of a code is roughly that of the iterable token, something that can function in the absence of the 'intention' traditionally postulated to ground it.

    One metaphysics to rule them all.apokrisis

    That is the goal. Why? Is an appreciation for economy something basic? Informed or determined biologically? The single self ghost that haunts the body, the god ghost that haunts the sky, the unification of a body of knowledge, the necessity that a theory be consistent and comprehensive....
  • Popper's Swamp, Observation Statements, Facts/Interpretations
    Reality is dichotomies, or switches, or ampheks, or signs, or quantum operators acting on infinte Hilbert spaces, or symmetry breaking in general, all the way down to ground. Which is then defined by the Planck triad of constants - that stand in their own final set of reciprocal relations. That becomes the Big Bang cut-off that says you can't go any smaller or hotter as the fabric of reality now becomes just a vagueness - the dissolution that is Wheeler's quantum foam.apokrisis

    I'm not fully equipped to grasp this, but I appreciate the economy of principles involved. No small feat, grasping the life of the universe at all scales....My journey was (roughly) literature => philosophy => math, but I never abandoned any of stepping stones. My bias has been toward interpersonal sense-making (personality as a lens). I've loved programming since I was a kid, so it's natural for me to think of physical models as simulations (simplified worlds which we can watch evolve, with or without 'randomness.')
  • Popper's Swamp, Observation Statements, Facts/Interpretations
    The difference is that Peirce is thinking mathematically. Just check out the amphek as the epistemic cut switching device that makes possible the whole of Boolean algebra - a fact known to Peirce in 1880 and not rediscovered until Sheffer in 1913. And even Sheffer got no credit until Bertrand Russell stumbled across it in the 1920s and was compelled to incorporate it into the second edition of his Principia Mathematica.apokrisis

    Oh it's a nice piece of technology. I have an old switching theory textbook. It's beautiful stuff. And Peirce had the spirit of a scientist. That's clear from the subset of his stuff that's influenced me for years ( which is also there in James, however adulterated with other stuff.) For instance:

    The essence of belief is the establishment of a habit; and different beliefs are distinguished by the different modes of action to which they give rise. If beliefs do not differ in this respect, if they appease the same doubt by producing the same rule of action, then no mere differences in the manner of consciousness of them can make them different beliefs, any more than playing a tune in different keys is playing different tunes. Imaginary distinctions are often drawn between beliefs which differ only in their mode of expression; -- the wrangling which ensues is real enough, however.

    He doesn't want to babble about something unmeasurable. He moves toward what we can be objective about.
  • Popper's Swamp, Observation Statements, Facts/Interpretations
    So Peirce is mathematical rigor underneath all the neologisms. Derrida and PoMo in general are more like the blind people in a dark room giving the elephant a good touch up and feeling moved to poetic outbursts.apokrisis

    Ha. Well you know I think you are oversimplifying, but I recognize that you don't seem to need them. It's like starting from either the inside or the outside and ending up pretty much in the same place.
    If meaning evolves dialectically/historically, then obscurity is often just a function of how embedded or not one is within a subculture. According to Braver, one famous continental philosopher found a famous anglo philosopher incomprehensible (can't remember the details.)
  • Metaphors and validity
    There are some exciting theories on this theme. For instance:

    It is a system of metaphor that structures our everyday conceptual system, including most abstract concepts, and that lies behind much of everyday language. The discovery of this enormous metaphor system has destroyed the traditional literal-figurative distinction, since the term literal, as used in defining the traditional distinction, carries with it all those false assumptions. — Lakoff

    https://terpconnect.umd.edu/~israel/lakoff-ConTheorMetaphor.pdf

    I recommend Metaphors We Live By. Lakoff's work on math is also good, if you like math.

    Derrida's White Mythology is an excellent though more difficult text. Anatole France reduced metaphysics to anemic metaphors, but this requires employing metaphor (itself an anemic or dead metaphor) as a metaphysical crowbar, forgotten by the critique it enables.

    Another source:

    Analogies—which we make constantly, relentlessly and mostly unconsciously—are what allow categorization to happen, he said. "Our minds are constructed with an unlimited quality for 'chunking' primordial concepts, which then become larger concepts."

    Hofstadter used as an example the word "hub," as in "Denver is the hub for United Airlines," and displayed a hand-drawn chart mapping words representing some of the linked concepts that are "chunked" together to make up the commonly used term. His examples ranged from basics like "wheel" and "node" to higher-order concepts like "spoke" and "network." Higher-order concepts are glommed together from lower-order ones, he said.

    There's no fundamental difference in thinking with basic concepts and very large concepts because we don't "see" inside them, he said. "We build concepts by putting several concepts together and putting a membrane around them, and kind of miraculously these [interior] concepts disappear."
    ...
    Underground competition is going on in every word choice, in every situation and at all times, Hofstadter said. "We are trying to put labels on things by mapping situations that we have encountered before. That to me is nothing but analogy."
    https://news.stanford.edu/news/2006/february22/hofstadter-021506.html#:~:text=Analogy%20is%20the%20%22motor%20of,has%20written%20on%20topics%20including
  • The Pure Witness / The Transcendental Ego
    Concepts like the "Transcendental Ego" appear to be more of a product of a death denying ideology (orphaned by facts) than a legit philosophical topic that could allow us to arrive to wise statements about our ontology.Nickolasgaspar

    Now you are saying something, theorizing, and I think you are on to something. The 'pure witness' is a version of eternity. It is what is always there. It is like 'God' in that it makes experience possible. The mystical version offers spiritual comfort in the obvious way. 'You are really a deathless universal awareness.' The metaphysical version is part of a machinery that conquers time, allows us to discuss the form of all possible experience, provide the space where pure-exact language-independent and culture-independent meanings live, safe from the ravages of time and relativism. Kant and Husserl didn't want to only be talking only about nerdy European white dudes in this or that era. They needed the very essence of what it meant to be human and rational. And so it seems do you, with your implicitly universal notion of 'Philosophy.' As Marx might tell Stirner and that kid in the The Sixth Sense might tell Bruce Willis... the ego is a spook ! The ghostbuster is a ghost...
  • The Pure Witness / The Transcendental Ego
    How can you enrich this conversation without any data...just with faith based claims!?Nickolasgaspar

    Have you not realized that I'm analyzing and criticizing the concept ? The real work is done not by repeating well-known mantras that fit on bumper stickers but down in the weeds with the details. So far I'm just picking up a garden variety scientism in your posts. I say that as an old atheist who thinks that even the 'self' and 'consciousness' are inventions, pieces of technology, culture not nature.

    If you haven't looked into Popper, I encourage you to look into my other thread. Observation statements are philosophically nontrivial. Sellars also sees in his own way what Popper calls the swamp on which our knowledge is built.


    Antecedent to epistemology, Sellars’s treatment of semantics essentially constitutes a denial of what can be called a semantic given—the idea that some of our terms or concepts, independently of their occurrence in formal and material inferences, derive their meaning directly from confrontation with a particular (kind of) object or experience. Sellars is anti-foundationalist in his theories of concepts, knowledge, and truth.

    ...
    The observational/theoretical vocabulary distinction, thus conceived, was taken to have ontological implications. We are committed to the existence of the given, for that is what ties thought to reality. Theories, however, are merely tools to enable us to explain observation-level empirical generalizations. Presumably, some empirical generalizations may be first derived with the help of a theory, but they are subject to more direct investigation and corroboration, so the theory is not essential to it. Thus, there is no ontological commitment to any entities that theories postulate; they can be viewed as convenient fictions, devices of calculation.

    Sellars thinks that this instrumentalist picture gets almost everything wrong. In his view the observation vocabulary/theoretical vocabulary distinction is merely methodological and is, moreover, highly malleable; it therefore possesses no particular ontological force. There is no given, so it can play no semantic role. Meanings are functional roles in language usage, and nothing in principle prevents a term that might originally have arisen as part of a theory from acquiring a role in observation reports. The well-trained physicist “just sees” an alpha-particle track in a cloud chamber as directly and non-inferentially as the well-trained child just sees a dog. Furthermore, what is observable depends on the techniques and instruments employed, and these are often loaded with theoretical baggage. “Pure” observation uncontaminated by theory is outside our reach.
    https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/sellars/#ScieReal
  • The Pure Witness / The Transcendental Ego
    My intention was to point out that those ideas are not Philosophy.Nickolasgaspar

    I'm afraid that your eccentric use of 'philosophy' is anything but authoritative. You can do what so many have done before and try to impose a narrowing of the concept, but you don't get it for free. Capitalizing the word is rhetorically questionable (suggestive of mysticism, idolatry, etc.) It's just a word, a thing people do, not the name of the divine. Another poster likes to capitalize 'reason,' and sure enough personification followed, turns out she's a Lady.
  • Popper's Swamp, Observation Statements, Facts/Interpretations
    Why was the Catholic Church so historically powerful? Because is fostered precisely this image of the human condition.

    If you make everyone self-conscious of their need to constantly watch over their every impulse and weigh it against a culturally-defined norm, then you indeed own their "souls".

    Modern neo-liberalism just continues this epistemological tradition. If you can make every citizen guilty for their failures to be self-actualising entrepreneurs, then again you own their "souls" and they become the building blocks that creatively strive to make the social hierarchy that your "consciousness model" embodies.
    apokrisis

    I think this is what Foucault was getting at.

    The soul is the effect and instrument of a political anatomy; the soul is the prison of the body.

    Another similar idea is that the subject is an effect of language, a kind of ghost created by/as patterns in our sign-trading.

    Yeah sure. But this is the Kantian throat-clearing level of the discussion. It should be the bleeding obvious. How many times can one kill the corpse of Cartesian representationalism?

    But yes, I realise that is a rhetorical question. Every second post on this forum demonstrates that the grip of this zombie metaphysics is as strong as ever. And I've just said why. Humanity - as a social organism - depends on Cartesian representationalism as its standard operating system.
    apokrisis

    Yes. The ghost has been killed or at least dethroned (for what is the hard problem of consciousness all about?) but most can't/won't follow the critical conversation far enough to grasp this. A picture tends to hold us captive (Wittgenstein), also called 'interpretedness' (Heidegger) or 'prejudice' (Gadamer.) The 'soul' is a piece of technology, something 'contingent' (which is not to say unmotivated) but mistaken for necessary (as that which is initially given, as if an 'internal monologue' in French or Latin or English could make sense without a background of others in a shared world.)

    Language starts first out in the tribal space to co-ordinate tribal action. Then it became internalised as inner self-regulatory speech once the value of that trick became culturally apparent.

    It's Vygotskian psychology 101. But Vygotsky is another Peirce. Someone totally brilliant, yet caught out by being in the wrong place at the wrong time. They both wrote down all the answers, but their manuscripts remained lost to the world until little groups began to rediscover their existence in the 1980s and 1990s.
    apokrisis

    Wow. That's how I see it. Or that's how I understand things from the POV of the camera positioned above the tribe, watching them deal with their environment. A sign-system (including self-regulation) accumulates/grows/differentiates within their brains/interactions. Their environment is simultaneously differentiated with their economy and tools.

    Something you've probably already touched on and seems relevant is the difficult distinction between sign and non-sign. If a sign is not grounded in a 'mental content' (a signified), then it's just 'out there' in the environment. In other words, what separates a salute from wiping the sweat off of one's forehead? The answer is probably something like the 'play' or 'ambiguity' of the sign/non-sign or trace/non-trace distinction. This is why I say the Cartesian 'ghost' is dethroned perhaps rather than annihilated. Our mentalistic language, however misleading, almost needs to remain legible. This is determinate negation, writing under erasure, etc. Less pretentiously we might talk of switching between language games or perspectives.
  • Popper's Swamp, Observation Statements, Facts/Interpretations
    If vagueness is Firstness - the most absolute form of constraint in being an Apeiron, an absolute absence of constraint - then that already is also the nullity that guarantees the existence of its "other" in the form of the first primal actualisation of a constraint, and hence the full triadic irreducibility of the secondness of dyadic relations, and thirdness of enstructured habit.apokrisis

    Funny point, but this is as dense and elusive as anything Derrida wrote. I think you know what you are talking about, but I confess that I can't parse it...yet. Probably because I don't know Peirce's terminology more than anything.
  • Popper's Swamp, Observation Statements, Facts/Interpretations
    So in the "beginning" was the vague.apokrisis

    I think 'the vague' is excellent as the undifferentiated continuum. A first distinction would perhaps install/create/be the self-world dichotomy. This 'self' might be the individual organism opposed to non-body stuff. It might be the thought-stuff opposed to the 'material' or to 'sensation.' And so on. The idea is that the vague is the continuum on which or from which a discrete structure is imposed/composed.

    I don't know much about the physics of the beginning of the universe. I'm interested in thermodynamics and information. I did learn Newtonian physics pretty well once.
  • Popper's Swamp, Observation Statements, Facts/Interpretations
    I would add that this view of consciousness - a little soul inside the physical body that has freewill and is responsible for everything the body chooses to get up to - is socially constructed and has great pragmatic value for the social level of the human organism.apokrisis

    :up:

    I totally agree. So it's only about 'seeing around' this invention when appropriate, recognizing that it's not some absolute starting point for inquiry.
  • The Pure Witness / The Transcendental Ego
    The issue here is not Science vs Philosophy but Philosophy vs Pseudo Philosophy on really bad abstract reasoning. I am not here to argue in favor of knowledge but in favor of wisdom. Claims that do not provide any wisdom or expand our understanding aren't Philosophical By definition.
    Philosophy is the struggle to understand the world through wise claims founded on what we already know, not to make up answers on arbitrary presumptions that we can not evaluate.
    Nickolasgaspar

    I suggest you start your own thread on this issue (should have said this in my previous reply.)

    Or please try to address the topic of this thread.
  • The Pure Witness / The Transcendental Ego
    We can fill pages of discussion on that topic but nothing originates from real knowledge and none of what it will be said can ever leave the metaphysical realm. This is a text book example of pseudo philosophy.Nickolasgaspar

    FYI, You can highlight text and then push the quote button so that the quoted person is notified and the quote appears more readably in a bubble.

    We could probably also fill pages with 'meaningless' discussion about all the failed (self-destroying) attempts to sharply separate meaningful from meaningless statements. I suspect your own concept of the 'metaphysical realm' belongs in this same realm by your own standards, and that you've just not recognized that yet. In any case, I challenge you to articulate the distinction so that your articulation is not itself on the wrong side of the line. Note that Popper was shrewd enough to offer his demarcation as a convention...not as itself a piece of science. The quote below sketches where I think you are more or less coming from?

    The logical positivists' initial stance was that a statement is "cognitively meaningful" in terms of conveying truth value, information or factual content only if some finite procedure conclusively determines its truth. By this verifiability principle, only statements verifiable either by their analyticity or by empiricism were cognitively meaningful. Metaphysics, ontology, as well as much of ethics failed this criterion, and so were found cognitively meaningless.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logical_positivism#:~:text=Cognitive%20meaningfulness,-Verification&text=The%20logical%20positivists'%20initial%20stance,procedure%20conclusively%20determines%20its%20truth.
  • Popper's Swamp, Observation Statements, Facts/Interpretations
    Thus it is neurobiology that is indeed “the pure mental stuff” here - even if one wouldn’t want to use such a dualistic, Cartesian substance, term.apokrisis

    That's helpful. Curious what you'll make of my concerns.

    I'm a bit of a 'consciousness denier.' I don't mean that I don't have the usual 'sensations' and 'emotions.' But I suspect that the idea of an inaccessible interior is epistemologically useless. You've probably seen this, but for convenience and whoever else is reading, I'll quote the classic analogy. I doubt the following will be new to you, so perhaps I'm measuring whether/where exactly we might differ.

    If I say of myself that it is only from my own case that I know what the word "pain" means - must I not say the same of other people too? And how can I generalize the one case so irresponsibly?

    Now someone tells me that he knows what pain is only from his own case! --Suppose everyone had a box with something in it: we call it a "beetle". No one can look into anyone else's box, and everyone says he knows what a beetle is only by looking at his beetle. --Here it would be quite possible for everyone to have something different in his box. One might even imagine such a thing constantly changing. --But suppose the word "beetle" had a use in these people's language? --If so it would not be used as the name of a thing. The thing in the box has no place in the language-game at all; not even as a something: for the box might even be empty. --No, one can 'divide through' by the thing in the box; it cancels out, whatever it is.

    That is to say: if we construe the grammar of the expression of sensation on the model of 'object and designation' the object drops out of consideration as irrelevant.

    Perhaps you can see that Wittgenstein is 'deconstructing' the two-sided Saussurian sign in folksier language. With Witt, I like to take the POV of a biologist watching a group of animals trade material signals to organize their behavior. Such a biologist can interpret a certain cry of a vervet monkey as a warning about a nearby eagle (because/from 'flight' that follows the cry). One can try to imagine the what-it's-like-to-be-a-vervet-in-that-situation. But this what-it's-like is vague until cashed out or operationalized. If imagined as an inaccessible interior, we're stuck. So we let the sign collapse into the trace. The cry is a 'cheap' movement of the air that flicks a switch in the group's nervous system. Now we just try to view human language this way.

    So a constraints based approach says the syntax glues together a set of semantic switches. We have to think of the hairy caterpillar, and not the bald or scaly or feathered or clothed caterpillar.apokrisis

    This makes sense to me, but I'm tempted to cash out 'think of' in terms of tendencies to behave this way rather than that way, where this behavior is public (back to the Popper's fog.) I very much count speech acts as 'public,' and, along those lines, multiple choice surveys would be a cheap way to detect or articulate a postulated 'consciousness space' in which there are mental images. We could choose random variations of adjectives for this caterpillar and ask questions about it, etc.
  • Popper's Swamp, Observation Statements, Facts/Interpretations
    Stan Salthe wrote the best two books on all this from the hierarchy theory point of view - Evolving Hierarchical Systems and Development and Evolution - probably the two most important books I ever read.apokrisis

    Thanks for the reference. I'll check into these.
  • The Concept of Religion
    Well, I could never wrap my head around Wittgenstein's "meaning is use" statement.Agent Smith

    Don't want to detail the thread, but maybe consider the possibility that meaning isn't mental, that it's out there in the world with our bodies, between us instead of in us.

    But if we had to name anything which is the life of the sign, we have to say that it is its use.
    If the meaning of the sign (roughly, that which is of importance about the sign) is an image built up in our minds when we see or hear the sign, then first let us adopt the method we just described of replacing this mental image by some outward object seen, e.g. a painted or modelled image. Then why should the written sign plus this painted image be alive if the written sign alone was dead? -- In fact, as soon as you think of replacing the mental image by, say, a painted one, and as soon as the image thereby loses its occult character, it ceased to seem to impart any life to the sentence at all. (It was in fact just the occult character of the mental process which you needed for your purposes.)

    This is the picture picture, I suppose. Imagine that Beckett wrote a play where characters who live in a junkyard hold conversations by silently taking turns lifting up this or that piece of junk. If that's all they ever did, not much meaning perhaps, but start integrating such a 'language' into practical activities and I think even abstractions will develop. The alternator will represent representation or something.
  • Popper's Swamp, Observation Statements, Facts/Interpretations
    I’m not getting how it is a distinction that makes a difference.apokrisis

    It doesn't matter much. The big issue is whether one thinks the meaning of a sign is grounded in some kind of pure mental stuff or instead in the relationship this sign has with others signs and objects in the world.

    The context is always out there in brute physical fashion. So start by trying to predict and thus already ignore it. Let it then intrude on your world conception to the degree that it feels it must.apokrisis

    :up:
  • What is mysticism?
    Mathematicians in analysis or topology mostly know Brouwer for his famous Fixed Point theorem .jgill

    Ah yes! I'm guessing that's part of his work he didn't find metaphysically sound. I'm pretty much OK with mainstream math. The outsider versions are intriguing though.
  • The Concept of Religion
    Or was it that they thought they were picking up essences, misled by a picture - a theory of definition - that held them captive; while all along they were just getting on with making use of their words to get stuff done?Banno
    :up:
  • Popper's Swamp, Observation Statements, Facts/Interpretations
    And it is the judgement being exercised in what exact proteins get made that then adds all the meaning.apokrisis

    Yes. And 'the world' (an otherwise vague continuum) constrains our use of signs, I'd think. So frequently used signs will be short/cheap, etc.

    So the greater the scope for an endless recursion of sign, the more meaningful it is when we can say almost everything in a remarkably few words.

    At the wedding ceremony: "I will".
    apokrisis

    This also emphasizes the importance of context. The meaning of the sign is in its position relative to other signs (the minister, the bride, ...)

    A taxonomy is a hierarchy of switches. Ideally, the throwing of a switch at each level bisects the space of probability with 50/50 Bayesian exactness.

    So I have in my box here a ....? Well, you already know its got to be that small. So its it animal or mineral? Is it rocky or metallic? Is it shiny or dull? Is it more gold or silver? Is it globular or toroid? Aha, I can guess it is the wedding ring. "I will".
    apokrisis

    Yes, this makes sense to me. I studied a little of Shannon's work.

    Only a chain of switches can reduce its material cross section to the point where it "escapes" the 4D constraints of the real material world.apokrisis

    Over my head at the moment.

    Each switch can either expand or contract the space of possibility in logarithmic steps while keep the cost of any step strictly linear.

    So a linear code gives you hierarchical holism for next to no computational cost. I can't talk as gaily about the Big Bang as the fleck of dust I've just noted on my screen. In 20 questions I can cover almost any space of semantic possibilities that I might practically have an interest in.
    apokrisis

    OK, I think I get that. Nice point about the linear cost. I've studied a little complexity theory, but I haven't put it in such a context before. Thanks!