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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I tend the think that reality doesn't have true or false or right or wrong. Those are human judgements.
Reason is not anything but reason. It's a wonderful privilege, but not to be exaggerated.
We use reason to determine what is right and wrong. Maybe it needs to be exaggerated a little more.
sentience -> sensation -> amoeba
perception -> percepts -> marmosets
conception -> concepts -> republicans
It is a good outline of how different levels of awareness are generally understood to be distributed. It would certainly not do as an outline of epistemology, however, and I must make a couple of observations:
What an amoeba's awareness is, of course, is purely conjectural, but that fact it responds as a living organism, and not just an inanimate entity, indicates some kind of "awareness."
There is no consciousness of "sensations" themselves. It is not philosophy, but science that supposes the nervous system provides "sensory data" to the brain, but there is no direct consciousness of such data. There is only perceptual consciousness, that is, we are only conscious of "percepts," such as patches of color, the perception of pain, sounds, etc. (The so called, "five senses," are actually a misnomer. We should probably call them the five essential percepts, or something like that.)
Finally, "conception," is not another level of consciousness, as though there were a hierarchy of consciousness. There is only perception. The distinction between that kind of consciousness we call perceptual (marmosets) and the conceptual (humans) is that human conscious, except for the immediate involuntary consciousness by which we perceive existence, is voluntary. That is what is meant by volition. The perceptual consciousness of all other creatures is completely involuntary.
May I assume that these are inclusive downward? ie, that republicans have sensations?
No. As I explained, there is only perceptual consciousness.
May I assume that organic beings all operate on sensation/precepts/concepts in order to make decisions that might aid in the fight to survive,
No. Only human beings make choices. As I explained to D-fendr, "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." The percepts of all other creatures simply provides the information necessary for their instinctive programs to be carried out.
...by making choices that might as easily be arrived at using the precepts of formal logic?
Again, no. Except within very narrow parameters, if you change an animals environment, it cannot make ajdustment to its behavior that will allow it to survive. It will perish.
It is the conceptual level of consciousness, that is, the reational/volitional mind, that enables human beings to not only change their behavior, but even to change their environment, to achieve whatever is required for them to enjoy their lives.
Just to try to be clear about this last question...may I, or may I not assume, that reactions to sensations are capable of providing survival behavior outside the reach of such formal precept-rich environments as grammar, symbolism, or logic?
I believe I have answered this.
Your questions are concept rich and I hope the paucity of detail in my answers is not failing to answer them completely.
Hank
I am. I think. As a result of my thinking, I either act or attempt to communicate my thought by use of a learned language. Sometimes that communication happens instantaneously (influenced by instinct or a learned/conditioned feeling). At other times it happens after more in depth language thinking.
A question that I have deals with multi-linguistic people. Being familiar (although not completely fluent) with another language I have at times thought of something and applied a foreign word to that thought. Do people that think in different languages think more than single language folks? Kind of a je ne sais quoi? If you know what I mean. Thanks for the thread. It really makes me THINK. ;-)
The only thing that matters or has any importance whatsoever is what we can know.
What you cannot know, cannot matter.
(This can be very easily proved to anyone who needs to have it proved.)
Hank
While checking your dictionary for conceptual meanings. look at the following concepts ... this way.
Reality is that which exists.
Reason is the standard (man's tool) for knowing reality.
Truth is the recognition of reality.
Knowledge is a treasure chest collection of "truth" held within an individual's mind.
And then ...
Make Reality the foundation for your metaphysics.
Make Reason the driving force for your epistemology.
Seek Truth, and accumulate truths as knowledge.
Trust first in ethics ... your own mind.
HK: Here is the misconception about what a concept is, no doubt the lingering influence of Plato. Concepts are not mirrors at all, pure or impure. They are not "miniature" pictures, or symbolic representations of anything. I repeat, they are only identifications of real things. (By the way, those real things are not only physical or material entities, they are also events, relationships, and qualities, and aspects of consciousness, and elements of language, such as verbs and prepositions. Certainly you wouldn't use the analogy of a mirror for the concept of a gerund.
Now I haven't read just a whole lot of various people's philosophies, but from what I'm able to pick up on, there is a difference between an absolute (or "universal," may be easier on the ears of some) and... well someting that ain't. In each case, it continutes to ring true that we can know many things about many things, but not everything about anything. Therefore, human concepts (including all the relationships of a particular) are skewed at best. Human concepts, i.e., {whatever a human knows about a particular including all its relationships} are also distorted and compared to a holistic identity, impure when regarded as if they are holistically known.
bb: If we regard reality as the test of the true, then one of the pair is "true" (i.e., the "referrent in the world") and the other, an approximation of truth (i.e., the "concept").
HK: That is certainly untrue. Since a concept only identifies a "referrent" in the real world, if there is such a referrant, it is absolutely true, else it is merely a fiction. (Be careful here. Most concepts are not particular concepts, that is, most do not have a single referrant. Most concepts are for classes or categories of referrants.)
If we have the above green ;-` (and blue) sense of "under standing" the truth, as opposed to asserting we may know all of it about any particular and it's full set of relationships with all else, then we see that we maintain concepts of the truth but not perfect concepts, even if that which we regard is perfect in any way it may be regarded as perfect. In other words, the Reality is greater than regard. We learn from what is actual, but we cannot teach it anything any more than we can know it in all ways in all its relationships.
bb: To then use the approximation to test the true seems like getting the problem backward.
HK: I have no idea what you would use then. If you want to use reality as the test of truth (which we must) we must have some way of identifying things in reality, and concepts are the only way we have of doing that.
These green things being the actuality of it for us, we have the blue truth of it (even in faulty vessels). We must identify things as best we can, subjective to the truth, therefore understanding what we may, in our knowledge. We do this as best we can by "tuning our pianos to the first piano," instead of tuning it to our own sense of what we hear from all pianos (the "first piano" being Reality) to borrow from the aforementioned Tozer quote. Or in other words, we march to the beat of the drum major (Reality, however we perceive it with all that we are) instead of only what we each of us reason out as our best beat, however near or distant the drummer.
Or in other words, while we may perceive in concepts for what they are in our ability to hold and apply them, we neither know all of what either reality or concepts are for, nor mainain anything but a finite view of them (not seeing them from all angles at once). Because of this, when we refer, we always best refer to the Real as directly as possible, as we conceptualize (and as we do whatever else we do). In so doing, we are not really testing Reality, we are testing ourselves by it (through the use of all our faculties, certainly including those which operate our conceptual aspects. That is under-standing. Said elsewhere, "The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom."
Our conceptual selves are not magic. Our conceptual selves are not authoritative. Our conceptual selves draw from what is real and do not give to it. Our conceptual selves are only "sane" when they are subordinated to Reality. It is Reality that is very literaly our master. (And the greatest Reality being the intentional source of reality and its true regarder, this Reality is our Master.) Cenceptualization is not our Master and it should not be our singular presssssiousssss.
(Our intentionality, or volition, is what does something about it all, including the internal processes that are of concept, but not only this lesser extractive regard of great reality a very fine kind of regard, which we use in managing our own lives, but one of numerous ways we regard reality.)
Maybe enough of this for me for now.
Ever hear of people gathered around a casket and one says, "Poor man... he never knew what hit him."
But thank God for his grace, you can know what matters and even what matters most, even if you choose to ignore.
And knowing, as bb has well pointed out, is about a relationship that runs deeper and is more essential (as Dallas Willard poined out) than strict rational conceptualization.
This is apparently true. You didn't even read what I wrote, evidently. I cannot believe your reading comprehension would be so poor that you would completely misunderstand what I wrote.
If you had read it, you would know everything you said had absolutely nothing to do with concepts as I defined them.
Oh well. It really doesn't matter, not to me, but it is going to matter to you.
Hank
Yes, but induction is problematic in the real world because a great many real world problems do not trivially reduce to an algebraic function or similar that people will readily accept as axiomatic. It works in mathematics because there is generally universal acceptance of the axioms and their derivatives. In the real world the selection of the axioms themselves are major points of contention.
This is the reason most useful reasoning mechanisms in the real world don't really require the implicit assertion of additional axioms and definitions beyond the underlying mathematics e.g. first order logic and Bayes theorem. It is hard do induction when the assertion being proved is not grounded in rock-solid axioms.
(Our intentionality, or volition, is what does something about it all, including the internal processes that are of concept, but not only this lesser extractive regard of great reality. Intentional reason with concepts is a very fine kind of regard, which we use in managing our own lives, but one of numerous ways we regard reality.)
Rather, it was expressly not about the concepts as you defined.
No. As I explained, there is only perceptual consciousness.
Humans do not have sensations? Is there a technical material correspondence for this claim? Does the fact that amoeba's lack nervous systems cause this rift? That's what I believe you've just suggested.
Again, no. Except within very narrow parameters, if you change an animals environment, it cannot make ajdustment to its behavior that will allow it to survive. It will perish.
Don't birds change their environments rather radically when survival becomes chancy in one location?
All ducks migrate for the winter by "instinct", yet some ducks hang around my pond all year round. Are you sure you have not merely detected a scalar difference in complexity of neuron entanglement, rather then some fundamental difference in constructive reasoning?
I believe I have answered this.
If I have understood you, you have answered this in the negative, which seems a rather ambitious claim to me. You really aver that humans have no useful perceptions/conceptions/preceptions which fall outside the useful perview of logic, grammar, or other discreteizing mechanism humans use to abstractly classify and manipulate what they see around them? Or have I overstated your case?
It's not hard to do--it's all to easy to do. It's just really, really hard on us, from time to time, when we entirely trust the results.
tpaine: The view that symbols exist apart from individual consciousness is revisionistic nonsense, according to experts.
For instance, in my view, much of mathematics and geometry is discovered not invented because the symbol is objectively "real."
The Mandelbrot Set was discovered not invented; ditto for Schwarzschild geometry, Euclidean geometry and General and Special Relativity - and pi for that matter.
This was the famous argument of Kurt Gödel and Albert Einstein and continues to this day between Roger Penrose and Stephen Hawking. To say the issue has been settled would be over-reaching in my view.
In quantum field theory, what else is there but symbolization?
Focusing on reality works, nothing else makes sense.
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