Thiese attempts to meld a certain interpretaion of Buddhist thinking with complexity and dynamical systems approaches, without putting into question objectively casual pre-suppositions of physics. — Joshs
You say time is change, but this notion presupposes, like the physical view of time, that change is what happens to things, that events occur IN time ,as if time is an independent axis placed upon events or objects that subsist in themselves first and then interact. — Joshs
We don’t need extrinsic sources of motivation to push or pull us, or determine direction, because we are always already in motion. — Joshs
Radical time is a past which is changed by the present it functions in , and this present anticipates beyond itself. This complex structure defines a single moment, not three separate time positions. — Joshs
The radically temporal approaches of Derrida, Heidegger, Gendlin and Kelly reject this adaptionist view of the relation between feeling and intention-cognition. They begin from a different motivational principle than that of causal interaction between little bodies(neurons, particles, etc). They dont begin from the notion of 'body' or 'object' at all,, but from something more primitive and fundamental than a body or object. — Joshs
Some psychologists have suggested that PCT is not a psychological theory but a metatheory because it is a theory about theories. — wiki
Some psychologists have suggested that PCT is not a psychological theory but a metatheory because it is a theory about theories. — wiki
Radical time is a past which is changed by the present it functions in , and this present anticipates beyond itself. This complex structure defines a single moment, not three separate time positions. — Joshs
I was disappointed in that whilst emotion and feeling is mentioned often, the connection was not made that feelings are either painful or pleasurable, and that the intentional aspect of being is always one of either avoiding pain or seeking pleasure, or thereabouts. We are a pain avoiding, pleasure seeking creature, and in my understanding this is the carrot and stick that provides impetus to behavior. — Pop
So each new event is both familiar to us in some
respect, else it would be invisible to us, and different from our previous experience. But some
events we make sense of better than others. That is to say, we can align some new events in a rich manner along multiple dimensions of similarity with respect to our construct system. Other events lie mostly outside the range of convenience of our system. That is, our system is impermeable to these events. This is where affect comes in. Affect is simply the organizational state of the system with the respect to its effectiveness at assimilating a new event. Put differently, affect is how much sense new event makes to me. If my construct system is struggling to assimilate an event, to make sense of it in terms of likeness to what I already understand, if I only experience the event in terms of incoherences, then my experiencing will be one of chaos and confusion. This is what anxiety is for Kelly. If I anticipate that an event may lie outside the range of convenience of my system , this is threat. So basically all affective terms for Kelly describe my relative success or failure to make sense of my world. It is important to understand that feeling is not a RESPONSE. to such success or failure, not a mechanism that detects such organizational changes after the fact and then relays them to one’s consciousness in the guise of kinesthetic or proprioceptive receptors. Feeling simply IS the organizational dynamics as they are directly experienced. — Joshs
This still sounds like feeling is a mechanism
separate from thinking-cognition, as if we can manipulate it independently of cognition, or even remove it. — Joshs
, I follow George Kelly. He said we are always in motion, from moment to moment, meaning change in experience, not physical movement. Each new moment of time is a new, never before occurring event. We don’t directly perceive events, we construe them. That is, we assimilate each new event to a pre-existing internal scheme
of understanding. At the same time, that pre-existing internal scheme must slightly alter itself to accommodate itself to the novelty of each new event. So each construal is equal parts assimilation and accommodation. — Joshs
It is important to understand that feeling is not a RESPONSE. to such success or failure, not a mechanism that detects such organizational changes after the fact and then relays them to one’s consciousness in the guise of kinesthetic or proprioceptive receptors. Feeling simply IS the organizational dynamics as they are directly experienced. — Joshs
I hope you can see how this notion of feeling differs from a reinforcement mechanism that signals pleasure and pain. In such a model, pleasure and pain are no more than a dumb bodily system of feedback sensors. — Joshs
Don Bannister’s discovery of Kelly’s work and his importation of it into Britain was a game changer for a whole
generation of psychologists who felt utterly stifled by the stranglehold positivism had on the British psychological scene in the 1950’s. — Joshs
1: Senses input information
2: Information is integrated to reason
3: Reason is experienced
4: Experience is translated to emotion
5: Emotion is translated to a feeling
6: A feeling is located as a point on a pain / pleasure spectrum
7:The point on the pain pleasure spectrum causes affect — Pop
Do we perceive raw data and synthesize reason out of it or do we perceive events already pre-interpreted by us? In other words, do we hear a series of acoustic pitches or do we hear the train whistle and only later, as a derived d artificial act, dissect it into objective data pieces? — Joshs
You said we are anticipating beings. Do we reach out to the things we perceive with expectations and anticipations? Do those expectations co-create the perceived object or can we separate ‘raw’ perceptual data from our expectations and anticipations? — Joshs
If I am in a room and the lights are suddenly turned off , is the violation of my expectation for continued illumination the result of a translation of reason into emotion, or is my surprise a direct perception, prior to any translation? — Joshs
If your ability to experience affect were eliminated, describe to me what it would be like to function as a reasoning person. Give me an example of how you would interact with others at a party. Would you be like Mr Spock? — Joshs
The important thing to understand is that the whole
construct system functions integrally as a unified whole in the construing of events. This is important in understanding how Kelly treats affect. For Kelly the aim of construing is to anticipate what lies ahead. The construct system is wholly oriented around anticipation. It is not designed this way by some arbitrary inner mechanism or evolutionary adaptation. Anticipation is an a priori feature of subject -object interaction in time. — Joshs
Attunement - Heidegger - it is an emotional attunement in my understanding - it occurs for all life. Every moment of consciousness has its corresponding feeling, this is what primarily tunes us to the world, not the cognitive constructs. — Pop
Initially we we must integrate novel information into our personally constructed reality, then subsequently we recognize it in terms of our integration of it. — Pop
So you describe a system of construing which acts in a way such that future events have causal power over what is presently occurring, through the means of anticipation. — Metaphysician Undercover
Not only that, future events have causal
power over my past, because my past as it participates in forming my present is reshaped by my anticipations. — Joshs
Except that for Heidegger the cognitive and attunement are not separate constructs or processes. They are co-implied aspects of a single event, the event of transition that is how I am thrown into a world
moment to moment. — Joshs
I’m with Heidegger on this: — Joshs
background feelings are ever-present, although ordinarily tacit. They serve to structure the everyday ways in which we encounter the world, the basic ways in which we find ourselves in the world:Ratcliffe 2002, p.298) — Joshs
“Things are experienced as significant to us, as mattering to us, in various different ways, something that involves a sense of the possibilities they offer.” (Ratcliffe, 2020) — Joshs
These globally structured patterns of existential feeling amount to “ ‘ways of finding oneself in the world'. As such, they are what we might call ‘pre-intentional', meaning that they determine the kinds of intentional states we are capable of adopting, amounting to a ‘shape' that all experience takes on.” (Ratcliffe 2015 — Joshs
I think you need to initially cognize what you are interacting with, and what else is there other then personal constructs to do it with? Initially you have to construe it as a sound. No? — Pop
I cannot get past the idea that ultimately everything only matters in terms of the pleasure or pain it provides us. — Pop
In other words, our mind primes perception to see what we believe we should see and then provides that information alongside what we are
actually seeing. Optical illusions where we see a complete figure where there was only a partial
pattern are examples of this, and so is what happened s when we read. We will swear that a complete word was present when in fact only some of the letters were actually there.This is because we anticipate the next letter in a word, the next word in a sentence, etc. — Joshs
One can read Racliffe’a model of existential feeling as oriented along a binary of meaningfulness vs lack of meaning. Situations and people can appear more or less enticing , exciting, appealing, salient. You could
say that he keeps your notion of pleasure but re-interprets pain as meaninglessness. Depression isn’t a. experience of painful sensation, it’s an inability to care about the world or find meaning in it.
Like you, Ratcliffe explains the perceived
salience of events by virtue of an interaction between intentional meanings and bodily felt sensations which reinforce and orient cognition.
Kelly, like Ratcliffe, sees the affective binary in terms
of construed meaningfulness-coherence vs emptiness-chaos-confusion, but he sees this as inherent in intentional organization rather than as depending on the feedback from the body. — Joshs
I cannot get past the idea that ultimately everything only matters in terms of the pleasure or pain it provides us. — Pop
Everyday time is a past present and future as separate units, based on the idea of an endless sequence of identical nows. Radical time is a past which is changed by the present it functions in , and this present anticipates beyond itself. This complex structure defines a single moment, not three separate time positions. — Joshs
This really doesn't make much sense I'm afraid. — Xtrix
In this kind of self-showing a being “looks like . . .” Such self-showing we call seeming. And so in Greek the expression ϕαινο µενον, phenomenon, also has the meaning: what looks like, what seems to be, “seeming”; ϕαινο µενον αγαθον means a good that looks like, but is not “in reality” what it gives itself out to be. For any further understanding of the concept of phenomenon everything depends on seeing how what is named in these two meanings of ϕαινο µενον (“phenomenon” as what shows itself and “phenomenon” as seeming) coalesces in its structure. Only inasmuch as something strives to show itself, i.e. to be a phenomenon, can it show itself as something that it is not —can it “only look like . . .” Already in the one meaning of ϕαινο µενον (“seeming”) there lies the primordial meaning (phenomenon: the manifest) as founding the other. We assign the term “phenomenon” to the positive and primordial meaning of ϕαινο µενον, and distinguish this from seeming as its privative modification. What both terms express has from the start nothing whatsoever to do with what is called “appearance,” let alone “mere appearance.” — Heidegger, Being and Time
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.