Posted on 05/23/2003 3:59:51 PM PDT by unspun
| The Absurdity of 'Thinking in Language' | |||||
| This paper has been read to the University of Southern California philosophy group and the Boston 1972 meeting of the American Philosophical Association, as well as to the Houston meeting of the Southwestern Philosophical Society. Appeared in The Southwestern Journal of Philosophy, IV(1973), pp. 125-132. Numbers in "<>" refer to this journal. | |||||
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Precepts, I assume you mean....
No, I meant "percepts." noun: the representation of what is perceived
Generally consciousness is considered to have three levels, in the simplest creatures, sentience, the more complex, perception, and the highest (only humans) conception. Instances of consciousness at each level would be sensations, percepts, and concepts. This is very general, just so you know what I mean by percepts.
I don't suppose you could recast this explanation with a little more concreteness--I believe it's making me a little dizzy trying to follow along in the playbook.
Well, you did assume I was mistaken by the very first term I used and replaced it with your own. It might make a little more sense now that I have cleared that up, I hope.
The concepts are not easy, I know, and readily admit I have difficulty making them clear when both space and time are limited.
Hank
I also hope for the day when materialism is finally buried. The way things are going in scientific research into the inception of all that there is - it seems to me that either materialism will be assigned to the dustbin of intellectual trials - or those who willfully reject God (or a greater power) will be forced to present the anthropic principle as the edge of the map of all that there is, beyond which nothing else exists (like in the ancient days, beyond here, there be dragons )
Still digesting some of the more arcane references so I shall avoid stepping on my tongue or other sensitive areas. But I will say that this has been a serious blow to my solopsistic view of the universe. I thought when I logged off all you bums winked out of existence! Hey, wait a minute...maybe you did...hah! Had me going for a minute there. You imaginary people are gonna have to get up pretty early in the morning to fool ol' BtD...
I appreciate your analysis and summary at 376; indeed, it is directly on point with the subject of the article. I also believe it is a wonderful thing that the discussion has broken off into several different directions. Evidently people have a lot of related concerns and this has been an exceptionally gifted group to consider all of them.
With regard to the question of ego - we just spent several hundred posts on a previous thread on a related issue, namely willfulness and the Word. My opinion on that thread applies on this thread (and everywhere in life.)
In sum, whereas there are different ways to approach being, thinking, doing and saying (including posting on Free Republic) - I have chosen to surrender to Christ. So, if anyone wishes to object to my posts for any reason other than a flaw on my part, I rejoice because it means the effort did not go unnoticed and/or there is a blessing to be had for the fussiness!
It is all a big mosaic to me, unspun. Some things are most clearly visible when set in contrast!
Possibly, with some caveats. If I were to make the distinction, I would say that "knowing" refers to a pattern in a single context, and that "understanding" refers to a pattern in all possible contexts. The primary caveat is that a finite system can only possibly "understand" vastly more finite systems than itself, a mathematical consequence. When people say they "understand" something, it usually means they "know it in the finite number of experiential contexts they have", which really isn't the same thing. I think there is substantial evidence that most people believe they "understand" things when they really only "know" things in a very limited experiential context.
It follows then that we are stuck with a Heinlein-ian "Fair Witness" as a local ideal. We know what we know AND we recognize that this knowledge only exists within a finite context and therefore we cannot assert true understanding. We can understand finite systems, but to extend ones understanding of a finite system to the universal case is an error in reasoning (a common one it seems).
To put it another way, more people really should understand Bayes theorem and why it applies to them. All the above is really just a restatement of a corollary of reasoning in finite systems: "correct" and "rational" are not required to be the same thing and frequently are not. Many, many regular arguments could be stopped if people understood the difference and why it is important.
"If we reflect upon our languages, we find that at best they must be considered only as maps." -- Alfred Korzybski
What I said was if I draw conclusions about that which I perceive, it is my reasoning that is wrong, not the perception.
Logic is used to develop new knowledge from data perceived about the observable universe, not to determine the data itself.
If I beleive the light is green (when it is red), because I am color blind, it is not the grey color I see
Perhaps I see where you are going: the logic telling you it should be green is in error. But this isn't what I'm getting at - You saw grey, your perception was in error, any reasoning following this false premise is on shakey ground - certainly not moving toward a valid proof.
Logic, on the level we're discussing, starts with an observation, or a premise, axiom, "self-evident" truth statement. It does not "prove" these. (In the case of science, observation is not derived using logic, but by using our sense organs and instruments that extend the senses - direct perception, not "drawing conclusions" - that comes later).
If the premise is wrong - whether it be a scientific measurement or a major premise - even correct logic can likely result in a false conclusion.
Again the point is that logic alone is insufficient to determine "all that can be known of reality." The BEGINNING point for use of logic/reason is after a great deal of important knowledge is determined (or assumed to be true) - it is done so, not in error, or on a whim or for lack of desire, but because logic/reason cannot be used for that purpose.
Without true sense data, empirical sense data, logic is blind.Really. How do you know that? I mean, without logic?
Non sequitor unless you think I'm stating that logic cannot be used as a tool for knowing - which I have said many times that I'm not. [Am I to suppose you would then agree with the statement since I developed it logically?]
If, as you believe, all we can know about the ultimate human objective can, and must, only be known using logic/reason, I think it would be useful to the discussion to examine that, in your own knowledge, and see if it is true.I'll be glad to discuss it. I already know it is true. Then, it follows, that you only know it using logic/reason.
I appreciate the opportunity to continue the dialogue I attempted before:
You know, using logic alone, that: The ultimate human objective is to live in whatever way their nature requires them to live successfully and to enjoy their lives.
First, we'd need at least one clarification of terms. By "ultimate" do you mean highest/most developed/most significant (a qualitative value definition), or do you mean the "last" or final objective?
Next, of course, I'll ask for a proper logical proof of your statement's truth - in order that it may be "known by the use of logic."
Thanks very much for your reply.
The word reality has been heavily in play throughout this thread. From my perspective - theology, philosophy, politics and science all seek to discover what is commonly understood to be reality.
Nevertheless, each discipline is likely to come up with a different meaning for what is real and within disciplines, the meanings may vary. IOW, I see this as a potential definition stumblingblock both for the discussion and for those following it.
Perhaps it would be useful to define reality for the purposes of this thread? I would like to offer this draft definition:
Sorry. I've been involved in the absurdity of darwinian thought threads. There I find language often divorced from thinking.
Between Two Worlds (1944) begins with people on a ship who haven't yet figured out that they are dead. Kinda like materialism?
Sounds good, but would would you call it after discovery, observation or measurement?
What would I be concsiuos of and how would I be conscious? Conscious does not belong to some other realm of existence. There is only one existence. But concsiousness is a "quality" of that existence that does not itself have any material qualities, but, it only exists in entities (which are material) which have another "quality" which is iteself non-material called life (that which differentiates organisms from all other kinds of entities), but neither life or consciousness can exist independently of the material entities of which they are qualities.
Do you draw a distinction between your consciousness and your incorporial spirit?
What is an "incorporeal spirit? If you equate spirit with consiousness, yes. If you equate spirit with some independent "ghost-like" invisible being who lives inside my body, I do not have one of those.
Hank
You saw grey, your perception was in error ...
How can it be in error? For the kind of physiological "eyes" the color blind person has, grey is the correct information. When you see "red," for example, your actual perception might be the same as my "blue," but both of us would agree when pointing to something of that color that it is red. It is not the subjective experience that is "right" or "wrong." It can be neither, because it is whatever it is. Perceptions make no judgement or interpretation, they just are. Right and wrong, true and false pertain only to judgements or statements.
I think I know where our problem is. It is obvious reason cannot reason about nothing. But existence and consciousness are axiomatic to me. Existence is that which I am directly conscious of, however I am conscious of it, and all my reasoning is about that. Of course we must be conscious of something before we can reason about it.
Now, blind people, deaf people, and people with many other kinds of perceptual handicaps are able to learn everything about the material world that those without the handicaps are able to learn. If differences in perception were erroneous information about the world, only those with perfect perception would be able to learn science, for example, or history or anything else.
A few year ago some scientiest asked some students to wear special glasses as part of an experiment. These glasses cause everything to appear upside down. Within a couple of days, the students wearing the glasses no longer saw things upside down.
In this case we know the sensory information reaching the brain was "incorrect," as you would put it. It did not matter. Even at the pre-cognitive level of consciousness, the data was "corrected."
You quoted me: The ultimate human objective is to live in whatever way their nature requires them to live successfully and to enjoy their lives.
Then said: By "ultimate" do you mean highest/most developed/most significant (a qualitative value definition), or do you mean the "last" or final objective?
Both, I suppose. Any system of values is hierarchical in nature. Values define what things one should seek to achieve, gain, and keep, and what things one should shun, avoid, and eliminate, but such a system requires a primary or highest value, an "ideal" if you like, that all other values are directed toward.
It is this highest value or ideal that I meant by ultimate human objective. But, if one is successful, of course, at the conclusion of one's life, they will have achieved that ideal. So, it is both.
Next, of course, I'll ask for a proper logical proof of your statement's truth.
You could ask it, but I do not think you undestand what is being said. It is not the kind of thing one proves. If I tell my child, learning the times tables will make all of mathematics easier, once you have learned them, it is not something I would or ought to attempt to prove, and he either will or won't learn the truth of it to his benefit or detriment.
Values pertain to only one classs of existents, living organisms. Things can only be good or bad in relationship to some objective or purpose, and only living things have a purpose. The ultimate purpose or objective of any organism is its own existence. All of its behavior is directed toward that end.
Only one class or organims requires a system of values. Human beings. The nature of all other organims provides an automatic pattern of behavior appropriate to the requirements of their nature that guarantees, within the environment and conditions required, the survival of the organism. This automatic pattern of behavior is called instinct.
Human beings do not have an automatic pattern of behavior that guarantees they will bahave in a way appropriate to the requirements of their nature. They must learn what the requirements of their nature are, and what kind of behavior, action, and choices are appropriate to that nature.
We mean by "enjoying one's life" that state in which a human being is doing what is appropriate to the requirements of their nature and they know it.
Since any more would require a complete exposition of my theory of ethics, I stop here.
Hank
This definition makes reality dependent on our beliefs. It is subjective in nature. It is the very thing Betty Boop was objecting to in post #456, I quote: "...reality is not at all dependent on my (or your) conceptualization of it in language. It is even independent of my perception of it. It doesn't need me to be what it is..." with which I totally agree. No one needs to believe anything about it for it to be what it is.
Here is the definition from "An Introduction to Autonomy": By reality we mean all that is the way it is.
Reality is what is so, whether anybody knows what is so or not. Reality includes everything that is and excludes everything that is not. It includes everything, not as a random collection of unrelated things but every entity, every event and every relationship between them. It includes fictional things as fictions, hallucinations as hallucinations, historical things as historical things, and material things as material things. Reality does not include fictions (such as Santa Claus) as material or historical facts. It does include the fact that Santa Claus is a common fiction used for the enjoyment of Children at the Christmas season.
Hank
reality - the sum of all things, conditions and abstractions which the person believes to exist objectively before discovery, observation or measurement___________________________________
re·al·i·ty
( P ) Pronunciation Key (r
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n. pl. re·al·i·tiesSource: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
- The quality or state of being actual or true.
- One, such as a person, an entity, or an event, that is actual: the weight of history and political realities (Benno C. Schmidt, Jr.).
- The totality of all things possessing actuality, existence, or essence.
- That which exists objectively and in fact: Your observations do not seem to be about reality
And I'm glad to see that even a "Revised" dictionary agrees with reality:
reality
\Re*al"i*ty\, n.; pl. Realities. [Cf. F. r['e]alit['e], LL. realitas. See 3d Real. and cf. 2d Realty.]
1. The state or quality of being real; actual being or existence of anything, in distinction from mere appearance; fact.
A man fancies that he understands a critic, when in reality he does not comprehend his meaning. --Addison.
2. That which is real; an actual existence; that which is not imagination, fiction, or pretense; that which has objective existence, and is not merely an idea.
And to realities yield all her shows. --Milton.
My neck may be an idea to you, but it is reality to me. --Beattie.
3. [See 1st Realty, 2.] Loyalty; devotion. [Obs.]
To express our reality to the emperor. --Fuller.
4. (Law) See 2d Realty, 2.
Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, © 1996, 1998 MICRA, Inc.
I know that people talk about "your realit" vs. "my reality," but I sincerely hope that they say this tongue in cheek, if they do, as opposed to forked tongued. Thank you for your motive of being kind, but the truth is much kinder.
If I turn to a metaphysical naturalist, reality is all that exists in nature.
If I turn to an autonomist or objectivist, evidently reality is all that rationally exists in a mortal sense.
If I turn to a mystic, reality may include thought as substantive force and hence, a part of reality.
If I turn to Plato, reality may include redness, chairness but if I turn to another mathematician/philosopher, these things are not reality but language.
If I turn to some physicists, reality may the illusion of quantum mechanics.
If I turn to myself a Christian reality is Gods will and unknowable in its fullness.
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