The cat doesn’t need to distinguish purpose or meaning in order for her interactions to be purposeful or meaningful. — Possibility
The relation between the cat and the aquarium may not have a particular meaning for the cat -she recognises its significance, and manifests that significance through her actions.But the relation is NOT meaningless, regardless of what the cat does or doesn’t notice or consider.
The life sustaining role is not recognized by her for she does not have the language in order to be able to draw such complex correlations. The relation is meaningful to us, and significant to her by virtue of being life sustaining. She has no clue. — creativesoul
Not all things significant to her are also meaningful to her. Unless something becomes part of a correlation drawn by a candidate under consideration, it is not meaningful to them. That same something may be significant to her without her ever becoming aware of the significance that it has. — creativesoul
Significance is not equivalent to meaning. — creativesoul
Fair enough - not consciously recognised as significant, but nevertheless manifest in her attention and effort towards the aquarium. That’s how you recognise the significance of the relation - because her attention and effort (her integration and manifestation of significance) is not just meaningful but significant TO you. It is not, however significant TO me, although I recognise its potential significance, and that is meaningful to me. — Possibility
The cat is neither you nor I. — creativesoul
That’s how you recognise the significance of the relation... — Possibility
My point is that possible meaning is attributed where we recognise variable significance, and potential significance is attributed where we recognise variable attention and effort. — Possibility
This looks like of those times where the narrative gets meta and the authors lose sight of the ground.
The very notion of possible meaning is existentially dependent upon language use. Where there has never been language use, there could have never been anyone hedging their bets upon another's meaning. Possible meaning is only attributed within a language game. Cookie does not play such games. — creativesoul
When she’s thirsty, her limited capacity for thought gravitates towards this potentiality. If you empty the tank, she would still consider it, but it may eventually drop in this significance in favour of other water sources with more recently perceived potential to satisfy an allocation of attention and effort toward the relation. — Possibility
I have an overall relational structure in mind that is six-dimensional, with possibility or meaning as six-dimensional structure, value, potential or significance as five-dimensional and physical interaction, events or life as four-dimensional structures of relation. Each dimensional level allows a corresponding level of integrated awareness. — Possibility
When she's thirsty she goes to the place where she drinks. She knows how to get there. If she found it empty, she'd go elsewhere. — creativesoul
The aquarium was not meaningful to the cat until the cat drew correlations between the water in the aquarium and the satisfaction of her own thirst that drinking water can provide. Now, the cat goes to the aquarium whenever she wants a drink of water. — creativesoul
I'm suddenly reminded of being charged with using an unnecessarily complicated framework. — creativesoul
I’m not saying that Cookie attributes possible meaning, but that possible meaning is attributable (by us)... — Possibility
There is a distinction between meaningful and meaningful TO someone. — Possibility
If we attribute possible meaning to my cat...
Can we be wrong? How could we possibly know that we are? What standard of comparison could we use as a means to know what sort of stuff is meaningful to her, could become meaningful to her, and what sort of stuff cannot possibly be, or cannot ever become meaningful to her? — creativesoul
There is a distinction between meaningful and meaningful TO someone.
— Possibility
I missed this. I completely disagree.
If we replace "someone" with "a creature capable of attributing meaning" there is no distinction between being meaningful and being meaningful to a creature capable of attributing meaning. — creativesoul
Your notion of significance blurs the distinction between causality and meaning. Causality is always significant, but not always meaningful. That's part of my rejection of significance being equated to meaning. They are not equivalent. — creativesoul
I’m not suggesting we attribute possible meaning to your cat. — Possibility
I’m saying that our awareness of the aquarium’s significance to your cat has meaning for us. — Possibility
Causality refers to a temporal relation... — Possibility
You’re talking about meaningful as a way of being or becoming in relation to a creature. — Possibility
There is a distinction between meaningful and meaningful TO someone.
— Possibility
I missed this. I completely disagree.
If we replace "someone" with "a creature capable of attributing meaning" there is no distinction between being meaningful and being meaningful to a creature capable of attributing meaning.
— creativesoul
Okay, now I think we might be getting somewhere. You’re talking about meaningful as a way of being or becoming in relation to a creature. This seems to be a temporal relation for you, as if at some point the relation, once meaningful, can cease to be so. Would that be accurate? — Possibility
After rereading this thread, I want to once again commend you on continuing to maintain a respectful 'tone' despite what clearly looks to me - now at least - like my own unwarranted bristling/taking unwarranted offense at different times throughout. — creativesoul
Yes! Without doubt, meaningfulness has temporal duration/relation. Things that were once meaningful can cease to be so. — creativesoul
Ha ha, evidence that meaning has a temporal duration. The thread has different meaning now than it did back then. — Metaphysician Undercover
Aren't there things with a constant meaningful duration? — javi2541997
That would be eternal truth, if there is such a thing. Some would attribute this to God, others to mathematics, and some perhaps to physics — Metaphysician Undercover
What if we could consider 'cogito ergo sum' as an eternal truth?
Alas, being aware that we exist or being aware of our consciousness could be an eternal truth.
I can't imagine a decrease in the level of meaningfulness in Cartesianism. — javi2541997
Wouldn't this mean that your existence is eternal? — Metaphysician Undercover
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