Then why is it possible to not strive for life? Why is it possible to meditate, enjoy aesthetics, commit suicide, etc? Surely these would also be objectifications of the Will? — darthbarracuda
No offense but this is kind of a cop-out. If it's outside the laws, how can it act on them? — darthbarracuda
Why would the Will (to live) create something that would eventually lead to a rejection of the will to live? Why would it hasten its own demise? — darthbarracuda
How does the Will live on itself without eventually running out of anything to feed on? Like an ouroboros, it cannot constantly eat itself. — darthbarracuda
Unless of course the Will is outside of the laws of thermodynamics and energy conservation, in which case it just becomes a mystical metaphor with little actual explanatory power except for illuminating the human condition. — darthbarracuda
If life did not exist, would there be any Will to self-cannibalize? Are we talking entropy here? — darthbarracuda
Yeah, I know it works this way for Schop, I was speculatin' for myself there. — csalisbury
I don't quite understand though why the Will would create something that can seemingly oppose it because it suffers due to the Will. Is it just by accident that the Will creates beings that can suffer? Why does there seem to be exceptions to the Will? Not everything in the world is chaotic, random, or striving. I'm not sure why or how the Will would create a world that is not in its own nature. — darthbarracuda
There's something irreducible here. I wonder if it's a 'will'/idea split all the way down. A kind of panpsychism that (like those escher hands someone posted above) always relies on something outside of consciousness, which in turn relies on it. I really don't know though — csalisbury
Why must this non-space/time/causality be limited or manifested in this way, and not another? — schopenhauer1
Work me through " I think other people see basketballs and hoops when I play basketball with them" -> "I want people to be reducible to me." — csalisbury
If you wanted to talk to someone about coercion and inter-affectivity they could, at any time, simply deny the existence of others. — csalisbury
Love-proxies for the infant and basketball-robots - there doesn't have to be anyone but you tgw. — csalisbury
Philosophy, in the socratic tradition, requires shared experience which renders possible the discussion and critique of various particular beliefs. You can't have a socratic dialogue if you don't have multiple people who understand the same language. There's no 'Republic' if Socrates and whats-is-name don't have that mutual understanding of being-wealthy which sparks the whole thing. — csalisbury
Well. I can argue I'm the only conscious being in the world and there's no such thing as inter-affectivity and coercion and the blind fountain or any of that. How can you argue against that? — csalisbury
But what do you think, in your heart of hearts. When you were playing basketball with the other ppl, did they see a hoop, a basketball. What do you believe? — csalisbury
That people can describe, in literature or reporting, similar experiences seems to me a good indicator we share similar experiences. — csalisbury
I'm going to ask you again, point blank, do you think the other players saw hoops and basketballs? If you don't want to answer that, that's fine. But if you're not willing to share your actual beliefs, I don't think I can honestly engage you in this conversation. — csalisbury
Definitely not. And? — csalisbury
I'm going to ask you point blank: Those childhood memories of playing basketball - Do you think the other players saw a hoop, saw a basketball? Or was it just you? — csalisbury
I think you're getting lost through fidelity to your theory. People play basketball together. They all see a hoop. They all see a basketball. Do you sincerely doubt this? (And please please please that these hoops and basketballs could be unsubstantial projections is implicit here) — csalisbury
For a basketball game to take place each participant has to illusion (makeshift verb) in a similar way. — csalisbury
That's fine. In that case we externalize many things in very similar ways. — csalisbury
I don't see how anyone could ever coerce anyone else? — csalisbury
If a basketball game can take place, one's metaphysical model has to be able to explain how that's possible, even if it's rare. — csalisbury
I still don't understand the video game example. It seems like a weird choice, given what I know of your view. In a video game, there's a graphical interface which is identical for all players. Various players provide input through their controller or keyboard, and this input can have no have effect on the inputs of other unless these inputs are mediated by that shared interface. This is the model you want to use? — csalisbury
One player has to project another player passing the ball. — csalisbury
Or he can, through 'coercion'. But how can he 'coerce' his teammate unless his teammate projects him coercing (e.g., in this case, sees him pass the basketball? — csalisbury
No angle with this question, just sincerely curious. Do you think connection and sympathy exist at all? — csalisbury
Do you think people can play a basketball game without awareness of each other? — csalisbury
How do people affect each other if the 'blobs' don't intersect? I honestly don't understand how you reconcile nothin-but-pathe with this interaction. It seems unintelligible to me. — csalisbury
For the players to play, they have to be in sync. — csalisbury
People's projections all seem incredibly tied to each other's in this case. For the players to play, they have to be in sync. For the audience to watch and understand, they all have to project something similar (they can talk to each other about this or that play) and be constrained by the actions and projections of those playing. — csalisbury
Am I exquisitely attuned to the depths of any of those besides some friends and family? Not really. I think there's a substantial difference between that and practical solipsism. This is a move you make a lot. Either people are super-empaths deeply emotionally attuned to the plumbless depths of everyone or they're practical solipsists. Psychoanalysts call this way of thinking "splitting." — csalisbury
I don't understand the point you're trying yo make about RTS AIs being hard to distinguish from human players. I'm asking you to explain, using your blob-model, how a basketball game works, which you still haven't done. — csalisbury
Actually, yes. There's a famous study by Rene Spitz, following infants raised in orphanages, who had their basic needs met, but who had minimal human contact. Nearly all of them were severely developmentally disabled. — csalisbury
By practical solipsists, then, you mean people who neither think about the vast complexity and deep humanity nor form deep connections with the people they interact with in passing? — csalisbury
It seems to me that organisms who have no idea they're interacting with other organism is a poor metaphor for what goes on in a basketball game. — csalisbury
Probably not. Babies (even newborns, even hours-old newborns) seem to need (expressive) faces. I think that suggests the baby needs something they experience as an emotional source, a bestower, not just a touch or soundwaves. I think you can have a sense of a source without quite having a theory of mind. — csalisbury
In a similar vein, the 'test' of a turning test is precisely whether it gives you the sense of someone 'there.' — csalisbury
Right, but my sense is that this model begins to disintegrate as soon as you try to try to apply it to intersubjective situations, especially cooperative ones. So, for instance, could you give a sketch of how to extend your model to account for a professional basketball game (two teams playing and an audience)? — csalisbury
Does the above make sense? — Michael
I don't think we're born alone. Or at least - we're born always looking toward someone else. Usually Mom takes the role. It's true that there may be no one to fill the role. But then the baby dies. Being able to be alone comes much later, if we survive infancy. And even then the way we're alone always involves someone else. — csalisbury
Anyway this is what I was getting at with the 'transitional object.' The model as presented in your picture is utterly solipsistic. But the actual human infant depends on the pre-existing projections of someone else in order to project. And so forth all the way down. — csalisbury
But I sometimes feel like you take the more severe approach of suggesting not only that you don't know, but that we can't, in principle know - and that it any case it doesn't matter. — csalisbury
I suppose that's fair. I thought it would be better to try to work things out according to the immanent logic of your account, because you tend to be immediately dismissive of anything else. — csalisbury
It was intelligible before the picture. What I'm objecting to is what appears to me a reluctance to apply your model to concrete examples in good faith by arbitrarily precluding certain language and metaphors that you yourself have recourse to. — csalisbury
What's the blind fountain? — csalisbury
"One ought not X and there is no rule against X" appears to be a contradiction — Michael
The problem for me is that the model is very bad at explaining the constraints -especially intersubjective constraints - on how the pathe can form, of itself, worlds and processes. — csalisbury
My approach has beena faux-naif attempt to ask questions that draw out these limitations. And the response is generally a host of qualifications that actually contradict this model. But when I try to highlight that this is happening you assume I must not understand your basic framework and reiterate it using exactly the same language your qualifications would forbid. — csalisbury
To take just one example: you stated admantly that pathe do *not* generate objects. & now, in your language, both identity and the world 'grow out' out of the pathe. — csalisbury
If one wants to stick with the term 'projection', it seems that projection is always social (or at least intimate) and that each individual's 'projections' are a share in a collective projection. — csalisbury
I think it's just as easy to be scared of the outer. — csalisbury
(1)Believing too firmly in the absoluteness of things can both keep at bay the outer and others. Whether one cites the One, God or Nature, the idea persists that there is some higher power which keeps everything in its place. This externalization of meaning and creative power makes actual intimacy difficult.
(2) But intelligent people start to see the cracks. (Or rather intelligent, disappointed people do.) But how does this play out? There's the old-testament prophetic route, where one gets obsessed with the eventual destruction of the cities, like a man who knows the bridge is compromised and awaits the train that will bring it down, like the trumpet that will bring down Jericho. In social-intimate terms, this is definitely alienating. But there's also the possibility of salvaging a crackless inside by riding the via negativa to another place. The cracks are thereby prevented from letting the outside in because. The 'world' turns out not to live up to the ideal we thought it did, so one discards it, instead of discarding the ideal.
(3) Accept that things are fragile and that we create them together. Interesting avenues of exploration: Attachment theory, the psycho-genesis of cities and villages, the mutation of myths and religions (which Sloterdjik rightly calls technologies of immunity) etc. — csalisbury
As to the squirrel. Well, maybe it doesn't project an acorn per se. That's probably true. Regardless, our projected/illusory world is shared. The man can pick up and move the acorn and it'll fuck up the squirrel's shit. Interaction with - and through - each others 'projections' is possible. — csalisbury
The accumulated 'projections' exceed the particular desires of individuals to such an extent - well, it's almost like an ant colony. Any particular ant is mindlessly following pheremone trails. Viewed in the light of the whole, though, it's helping to build a nest, although no individual ant has any idea of the process its taking part in. There's a kind of objectivity build out of the blindness of individual subjectivities pursuing their own ends. — csalisbury
I still don't get what you mean by projection. If it isn't a 'generative' power, why call it 'projection' at all? To project is to be the cause of what's projected. What qualities of projections, literal or psychological, do you see in the process you're trying to describe? You talked about objects (object-ing) being like psychological projection, resulting from our trying to externalize our inner agony. Except now you're saying that no individual can actually do that? Do the subjects merely watch an Other's projections, projections of the kingdom of god, projections which so entrance, that the subjects can't help but subconsciously affirm the show? But then why did you being up individual psychological projection before? I'm not being cute, I really don't understand how 'projection' is being put to work here. — csalisbury
Q: Why do infants, empirically, need a static object to project onto? — csalisbury
Q: Why does the infant need the static result of prior projections to project onto? — csalisbury
Even if there's nothing 'there,' there is absolutely a process of 'there-ing' and 'object-ing.' (& you got Husserl and intentionality even with ideas ). But a need for substantiality isn't where I was going. — csalisbury
What is the relation between the acorn-projection of the squirrel and the acorn-projection of the man? — csalisbury
Why do kids need transitional objects given by parents? why don't they just project their frustrations as objects on their own? — csalisbury
But I still don't really understand how you conceptualize 'the light behind.' — csalisbury
But when pressed on how that works, you're quick to clarify that it's not as though there's some subject who creates a world if out there, which it 'bears'. " it doesn't act as a transcendental condition." Except that's exactly how you describe it. The sleight-of-hand is to say that there are 'illusions' not 'objects.' But then the subject becomes precisely a transcendental bearer of a world of 'illusions.' — csalisbury
This is still confusing to me. Classical psychological projection makes already-existing others bearers of the feelings we can't deal with harboring ourselves. — csalisbury
A stuffed animal - any 'transitional object - exists prior to a child's projections. The very syntax of 'we project our desires onto something else' suggests a subject and an object upon which the subject can unburden its agonies. "there is no animal or creature 'there.'" Except, of course, that there is. The stuffed animal doesn't, in itself, contain those things we project upon it. But, for some reason, having a static object really helps us organize us those confused feelings. — csalisbury
This seems diametrically opposed to the idea of world and self as co-constituting, which you've nominally espoused. — csalisbury