It" either reads the signs, or creates them (thinking of the creative power of Hoffman's conscious agents); a conscious agent, or agents, which transcend(s) substantial existence. From a psychological standpoint, that makes sense because that's what human beings do: create things (albeit, in a temporal manner). — Galuchat
Whereas, ascribing semiotic attributes to anything other than a psychophysical organism is a category error. — Galuchat
I remember trying to explain to my psychologist that choice was an illusion when I was ~15 years old. I didn't know of the term "mechanism" then, but it was blatantly obvious to me that there was actually no such thing as free will. The problem is, I also remember not doing a damn thing with my life then,
...
. I notice that I tend to procrastinate allot anytime I think about mechanism, regardless of my efforts not to. — XanderTheGrey
I said they were external, not internal. That would be the difference. The water of the river knows which way to go because a channel carved over time points the way downhill. — apokrisis
There are no hidden mysteries here. — apokrisis
The conception of life at stake in each seem entirely unrelated to each other. — StreetlightX
Even though, yeah, I get it, you have a kind of visceral reaction to the idea of anything to do with 'naturalism'. But it is warranted here, conceptually? And if so, why? — StreetlightX
Pan-semiosis is then a further speculative metaphysical project where dissipative structure is also understood as a generalised sign relation. It connects to the mainstream of current physics now that it has turned productively from talking about reality in terms of particles to bits of information. — apokrisis
By the same token, mind enters the picture right from the start. As soon as there is the vaguest speck of semiotic mechanism in play. — apokrisis
I only have the advantage that my paradigm is thoroughly supported by scientific investigation. — apokrisis
Yes, the striking thing that comes through from Hoffman is that the basis of life is way more mechanical than we knew. It is all a bunch of little switches and rotors and pumps and chains and conveyor belts. So out of utter instability, a little bit of genetic information can conjure a fantastic apparatus. We used to think metabolism was a chemical soup. The cell was a bag of reactants. Now we can see it is a factory with structure.
So the explanation of life back a decade or two was focused on genetic information and metabolic reactions. At school, we all had to learn a bunch of chemical equations like the Krebs cycle. Now there is this third intervening level of mechanical organisation.
That is a huge realisation in terms of the metaphysics of life. No one was predicting that ATP production would actually involve a proper little rotating spindle device. That is just so outlandish. — apokrisis
Hoffman's book also makes it clear how just the tiniest, simplest scrap of mechanical structure can have outsized impact at the nanoscale. And that is key to the abiogenesis issue. It is much less of a step from nonliving to living than we imagined. — apokrisis
Nick Lane's book then comes from the other side and talks about how - with alkaline sea vents - the nonliving world closes the gap to make it a much tinier leap than we ever previously imagined. In terms of a chemical soup (with no biological machinery), there can be a dissipative energetic process in full swing. — apokrisis
Now we can see that if the nonliving metabolic cycle already exists, all the first life had to do was take away the possibility of that metabolic cycle collapsing. — apokrisis
We know substance dualism can't work in any sensible causal fashion. — apokrisis
The reason why Peircean semiotics impresses me as the most developed model of systems causality is because it turns things around.
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This is the pansemiotic hypothesis that Peirce dubbed objective idealism. — apokrisis
Google 'pansemiosis bootstrapping' and see what comes up ;-) — Wayfarer
No. It arises from constraints on a vague material potential (that thus become the concrete degrees of freedom of the system because there are those limits that produce some distinct variety of substantial being). — apokrisis
The semiotic information acts causally as the constraints on substantial being. In Hylomorphic terms, it represents the top-down formal and final causes. — apokrisis
So in terms of the four causes, it is formal/final cause constraining vague potential to produce definite material/efficient causes. The causal loop is then closed as these material/efficient causes must be of the right character to re-construct and perpetuate the global state of constraint. — apokrisis
Apokrisis is providing the pivot we need to understand the transition from non-life to life. Semiotics allows us to jump track from chemistry to biology by considering function over form. — MikeL
The semiotic information acts causally as the constraints on substantial being. In Hylomorphic terms, it represents the top-down formal and final causes. — apokrisis
Then the physical degrees of freedom are the bottom-up material and efficient causes.
Substantial being emerges as the third thing of their interaction. As hylomorphism argued long ago. — apokrisis
So while I appreciate your attempt at parody, it failed by not understanding what it hoped to mock. — apokrisis
OK. How does energy come to rest to yield "solid matter"? What is your theory which isn't another "just so" story? — apokrisis
I can't believe you guys take the passivity of matter so much for granted. . — apokrisis
Biology says the answer is just add semiotics to dissipative structure. — apokrisis
Exactly, and Watts wants to claim that in the mystical union that the mystic achieves with God, he has such knowledge. That is how he justifies the attempt to use mystical religion to complete the understanding from God to the universe. — Agustino
Now I don't think Watts' solution works. He removes the difference between creature and Creator and re-inserts it, through the back door as it were, when it comes to morality. — Agustino
What is crucial is that for something to be 'evidence' it must be intimately correlated with the facts that it is evidence for. — Fafner
If your grounds for claiming that you know something don't justify you to say that you know, then I think it comes down to the same thing as saying that you don't have any good reasons at all to say that you know (and hence you ought not to have any confidence in your knowledge whatsoever). — Fafner
The structure of the skeptical argument is such that all of your claims to knowledge are completely worthless unless you've ruled out all possibilities of error. — Fafner
Obviously the skeptics' argument is based on the idea that you can't say that you know something unless you are not absolutely sure that you are not mistaken - and of course this is the assumption that I'm rejecting. — Fafner
Then Watts goes on to critique part of Aquinas in light of mystical religion. Watts begins by saying that Aquinas reasons perfectly from the universe to God, but cannot reason back from God to the universe. Namely, it is not shown how the First Cause produces the universe. — Agustino
Well, no. We don't know that there is an immaterial aspect of life. You believe that but I don't. — T Clark
I do listen to you, I just don't agree with you. — T Clark
I don't understand the distinction you're trying to make - "non-living matter became animate" vs. "the coming into existence of living matter." — T Clark
Why do you need to attribute negative motivation to my disagreement with you? — T Clark
Sure, but we are talking about an historic event, a fact - the time the first non-living matter became animate. It happened sometime about 3.5 billion years ago. The matter changed in ways that were physical and chemical to become biological. Matter, energy, cells, organisms - these are material things I deal with everyday. Why do I need to consider non-material factors? I'm willing to if you give me a reason. — T Clark
It depends on what one means here by "evidence". On my understanding, having evidence for p is being in a state of such kind that you cannot be in this very same state when p is false. — Fafner
The skeptic says that our confidence in all of our claims to knowledge ought to be 0, since there are some crazy possibilities of error that we cannot rule out. But does it follow? I think not. — Fafner
Now, suppose that you form a belief that there's a tree in front of you on the basis of your experience. Is your belief entirely without grounds as the skeptic claims? — Fafner
I don't think so, because the experience that you are having does rule out objectively, some possibilities of error - e.g., that you are looking at a traffic light or a painting of a tree etc.- since it is impossible for a person with a normal eyesight and proper lighting conditions to take a painting or a traffic light for a real tree. — Fafner
So in pother words, what I'm trying to argue is that we have good grounds to trust our judgments (and take them to be knowledge) even in the face of their fallibility, since it is simply not the case that they are completely groundless. Why should we assess our judgments relative to the imaginary stories that the skeptic tells us? If we just stop being obsessive about absolute certainty, and adopt some more modest standards for knowledge claims (which is not the same as not having standards at all), then there will remain no longer any good reason to worry about what the skeptic is saying, and thus no reason to not to be confident in most of our claims to know. — Fafner
See the conclusion of the skeptical argument in my first post. — Fafner
I meant to exclude such cases, of course there are many ceteris paribus conditions that we must take into account. I meant that when you perceive a tree (you are not dreaming, your eyesight is normal etc.) then your perceptual state is correlated with the fact that there's a tree in front of you, and this is an objective matter. This is what should be properly regarded as your evidence. — Fafner
No, it doesn't refer to my judgment. You know that p, if you judge that p on a basis of evidence which entails that p (and p is true). Such judgments are fallible as you say, but it doesn't show that they are not knowledge when they do succeeded. — Fafner
In the first case you are basing your belief on a capacity that within certain parameters (that is, in the right sort of environment) is an extremely reliable tree-detector (meaning it can detect real trees as opposed to fake trees, but not real trees as opposed to extremely vivid hallucinations). — Fafner
How do you know it's not? — T Clark
not — Wayfarer
Why complicate a simple understanding with unnecessary decoration? — T Clark
You didn't answer my question. Are you denying that life is a physical, chemical, and biological process? — T Clark
I didn't actually deny what you said that I denied (that knowing p means ruling out p's falsehood) - and I agree with you on this. I only disputed the claim that knowing must also entail being able to detect (from the subjects point of view) all cases of p's falsehood, and I think this is something else. — Fafner
What must rule out the possibility of falsehood is your objective evidence. So for example, if you are in a waking state perceiving a tree in full daylight, you cannot possibly be in this very same state and still be wrong about the tree. — Fafner
So my point is this - when you know that p, then your evidence must objectively entail the truth of p - — Fafner
Again, you are just assuming here that knowing that p requires the ability to detect every conceivable possibility of p being false, while I saying that such an assumption is unwarranted. Again, there's no much that I can add to what I already said on this point. — Fafner
ONE THING IS CERTAIN - If life stopped evolving it would perish: It must mutate lest the crest it is on sink into the abyss. Is this Creative Evolution? — MikeL
No, I think you've missed the trick there Metaphysician. If we extrapolate the inteference from the paper, there are not billions and billions of different lifeforms on earth, there is only one organism covering the adaptive landscape like a mat. It slides through the valleys and around the edges all at once. And when it goes into the valley it is wiped out and when it goes around the valley it survives. — MikeL
The philosophical danger lies in the denial of novelty: the genotype network must not be thought of in terms of a set of pre-existing possibilities that is here and there instantiated depending on environmental contingencies (Bergson's critique of possibility, if you're familiar with it, would be applicable).
...Paths that were once available now become closed off: phylogeny now becomes path-dependant, closing off certain evolutionary possibilities.
However because the landscape is multidimensional, paths closed off by speciation in one dimension may open up paths along other dimensions. What is at stake here is the creation of new possibilities. In other words, the adaptive landscape is not just a series of possibilities but a series of changing possibilities, which are themselves dependent upon the actual paths of speciation. — StreetlightX
It's what the word means in the context of the survival of the fittest though. — BlueBanana
A teaser, from the above article, on how to skip the valley (add dimensions!): — StreetlightX
Well, insofar as the phrase "survival of the fittest" has any use, it's just this: you don't get to reproduce if you don't survive. — Srap Tasmaner
But in all these cases, my own feeling is that honesty/dishonesty is not even applicable. Cats, stick insects, the schoolboys, my mother, seem to be 'doing what come naturally'; there is deception perhaps, but no intention to deceive. — unenlightened
Where I find a more agonising grey area, is the notion of self-deception. I can wonder, for example if McDoodle's father might have been deceiving himself that he was 'doing the right thing' and 'helping his son to grow up' and so on, when in fact he was recoiling from the expression by his son of his own feelings of hurt. — unenlightened
Anyway, honesty - vitally important but I don't really know what it is. Perhaps we have to say that it is your best effort to respond fully in the moment, in the condition that you're in, as far as you know. And then your second-guesses afterwards are perhaps self insights, or perhaps deceptive self-flagellation, and it will take your best third guess to decide which. — unenlightened
What I was hoping to illustrate with my anecdote was that intersubjective communication is - in the beginning at least - nonverbal. And I wanted to ask you because you asked,Where does honesty lie in this approach? — Metaphysician Undercover, whether the notion of honesty could apply to my mother's nonverbal communication, and if so, whether it was honest or dishonest? — unenlightened
Part of the dialogical approach is that ideas rarely happen in an 'inner world' but rather in the inter-world. — mcdoodle
I need to read some more, so this is a directed random fragment of fragments. Let me just remark that there seems to be a foundational, unreflective immediacy of intersubjectivity that is prior to language that can be exemplified by mother and child relations that are non-verbal in the first instance. And this bodily immediacy persists in dialogue generally as 'body language', and is only eliminated as a major factor in virtual worlds such as this. — unenlightened
My traumatic initiation into the solitary cerebral self. — unenlightened
You do realise that this is one of those 'first principles' which have to be seen, and cannot be deduced, right? If someone lacks the noetic insight into their own desire, then they cannot be 'reasoned to' it. It's disagreement over basic premises. Both Plato and Aristotle struggled with this problem of how to arrive at correct/true first premises. — Agustino
The more interesting thing to look at, is why does one end up believing such a true falsehood? — Agustino
do tend to see desire as something produced in us - or aroused in us - by the object desired. But this is to give power at a distance as it were to the object desired. It is to accept some sort of teleology, where the object desired can orient my being towards it. Not many people today would be willing to accept that. — Agustino
Here you illustrate that you're using a different conception of desire. — Agustino
The inner void is constitutive of desire - it is desire. Desire just is the inner void trying to affirm itself - make itself actual - and failing to do so. Desire in this conception is not conceived with reference to any external or internal OBJECT. Rather it is conceived only with reference to itself. That is why, according to Spinoza for example, or Nietzsche, will-to-power or the conatus is the essence of man. This vain striving to no end - striving for its own sake. — Agustino
Indeed, the journey of the subject is fueled by this inner void that compels the subject to bring itself into being as it were. To make itself real. To transform itself - the void - into something substantial. Desire is pointed inward - desire itself is circular. Pure non-being becomes the active force. The end of desire or the will isn't the object anymore - but rather desire itself - its own self-affirmation. Obtaining the object desired is not the essential aspect anymore - rather it is the affirmation of the desire itself - which is exactly why desire is always frustrated in obtaining its object because self-affirmation knows no end. — Agustino
The relation of parent to infant necessarily begins as a person-object relation, in which the parent is the author and authority, and the infant is a dependent object. The task is to conjure from this relation a new relation between individuals, by invoking the interiority of the infant, just as God created man in His own image. — unenlightened
The rejection of the parent as authority is a necessary part of the process of individualisation, just as the Fall is a necessary part of the creation of humanity. — unenlightened
