Not far into Time Consciousness but it feels like retention is less a razor's edge than a sense that one's current experience is a continuation of an earlier experience, part of the same movement (though not in a narrative way - in fact narrating the movement from what's been retained to where you are now would probably be a surefire sign that those moments are no longer retained.) — csalisbury
Can't you type shorter replies so that a bunch of stuff doesn't get lost? — Terrapin Station
What would you be positng aside from matter physically situated in the world... — Terrapin Station
I wasn't forwarding anything like a logical argument. I was simply stating a view. — Terrapin Station
The relation, since it supervenes on the physical things in question, is physical. — Terrapin Station
The simplest way to put supervenience is that it's the properties of a collection of things interacting as a system. It's an identity relation rather than a "follows/following" relation. — Terrapin Station
The relation, since it supervenes on the physical things in question, is physical. — Terrapin Station
The property in question obtains via how A and B are related to each other. That's what relations are. — Terrapin Station
That doesn't mean that the relational property is something nonphysical that's separate from A and B. — Terrapin Station
It's supervenes on A and B; how they move/change with respect to each other. — Terrapin Station
Obviously it does depend on the human mind, because as relationships, is simply how we describe the world, and descriptions are produced by the human mind. That one thing is moving in relation to another is simply how we describe things. Show me the physical object which is called "one thing moving in relation to another" if you really think that movement is a physical object.That doesn't depend on a human mind. Things really move/change with respect to each other. — Terrapin Station
If you had charitably interpreted what I was saying, you would have acknowledged that my point was not to say or even imply that "the sun moves through the sky while the earth remains still", but instead that "whatever the sun does (or does not do), it does so with observable consistency, which can be the basis for an inductive argument which can be strengthened through additional repetition". — VagabondSpectre
Everytime you say "truth", somehow I think you're always referring to "ultimate and objective truth". Well what is that? Does it even exist? Can we ever refer to something as "true" and not be inherently stating a falsehood? I've been very clear from the beginning, in every single one of my posts, that "objective certainty" is not achievable. I've not been concerning myself with it or been discussing it at all since my first post or only to clarify that science and what we call "objective scientific fact" is not founded on deductive certainty, it is founded in inductive likelihood from consistency in observations and reliable predictions. It's a whole different kind of truth than the truth you continuously charge me with not recognizing that science does not produce. — VagabondSpectre
The superficial induction based truths, if strong enough from the get go, tend to remain true, while the deeper truths, which are also founded in induction, provide additional explanatory and predictive power which the more superficial truths lack. — VagabondSpectre
The fact that the earth spins does not falsify the actual meaning of the statement "the sun rises..." — VagabondSpectre
You're basically using plato's allegory of the cave to try and convince me that my statements are "false" when all I'm trying to do is point out that the more consistently the shadows on the wall behave, the more reliably we are able to predict their future behavior. I'm pointing at consistency in the behavior of the shadows and you are saying broadly "you can never be certain of shadows", but I never said that we could be certain, I said that the more consistently these shadows behave the more confident we can be in predicting the future behavior of said shadows. — VagabondSpectre
Change and/or motion. Or in other words, it's processes, or changing relations of matter. — Terrapin Station
Whatever that would be. — Terrapin Station
It's a problem if the dualism is positing non-physical existents. Why? Because there are no non-physical existents. — Terrapin Station
I didn't mean "absolute energy", what I meant is the absolute which is called "energy". According to the principles of special relativity, energy is conceived as a limit to physical existence. Apokrisis had defined absolutes as "limits", which are by definition uneal. But by the way that Apokrisis refers to entropy, and entropification, it is clear that this absolute, energy, is believed to have real existence.Did he explicitly say that? It seems like he'd say there is no such thing as "absolute energy," and I'd agree with him. — Terrapin Station
I think the case is more plausible for retention. — The Great Whatever
It's actually a famous line. You know that, don't you? — apokrisis
We know that our vacuum is both quantum and three dimensional. — apokrisis
In my book, absolutes represent limits and so are by definition unreal in being where reality ceases to be the case. And that's why reality always needs two complementary limits to give it somewhere to actually be - the somewhere that is within complementary bounds. — apokrisis
You are employing a dualistic ontology and you don't see that as a problem. — apokrisis
It is always going to be the case that we model the world to the best of our abilities. I haven't claimed absolute knowledge in some thing-in-itself fashion. — apokrisis
That's why I don't defend a notion of the "good". This thread shows that folk can't in fact define it except in terms of other more measurable things. — apokrisis
And the reason why entropy (or information) has come to the fore is that it is our most universal way of measuring anything. — apokrisis
However it is why scientists in the end are right to get exasperated and tell you to shut up and calculate. — apokrisis
The quantum vacuum is hardly nothing. It might be cold, flat and extremely featureless, but it is still a sizzle of quantum fluctuations spread out in a three dimensional vastness of cosmic proportions. — apokrisis
What is the difference between 'real' and 'absolute' here? If you're thirsty, a drink of water is a good, and examples of such utilitarian goods can be multiplied indefinitely. The issue with ethical theory is that it wants to find something that is good, independently of any particular need or want, good in its own right. 'Absolute' in that sense, is what is required. — Wayfarer
That is the subject of the whole field of ethical philosophy. — Wayfarer
I wouldn't get too hung up on what entropy "actually is". Like the notions of force or energy before it, the more we can construct a useful system of measuring reality, the further away from any concrete notion of reality we are going to get. In modelling, our analytic signs of reality replace the reality we thought we believed in - our synthetic intuitions due to psychological "direct experience". — apokrisis
My argument is that all regularity is the product of constraints. So for entropification to "keep happening" there has to be a global prevailing state of constraint. — apokrisis
But when humans reach a certain developmental level, they're able to perceive kinds of goods which their forbears could not. — Wayfarer
This enables them to discover some idea of real or ultimate purpose, which has formed the basis of the various cultures. — Wayfarer
Doesn't it follow that 'what is good', is whatever works, whatever is instrumentally effective? There's no real good in the redemptive sense. So the good basically it is still the same kind of 'good' that animals seek. Although animals aren't burdened with the knowledge of their own identity, so it's a bit easier for them. — Wayfarer
So what's the thing with the intention? What's the thing with motivation? God? Mother Nature? Unless you're arguing for some Higher Power or, again, panpsychism, it doesn't make sense to suggest that there's intention or motivation or purpose in these non-human (or other intelligent being) events. — Michael
I think you're reading too much into it. When I say that nature doesn't have intentions I'm not saying that human intention is non-natural. I'm just saying, for example, that evolution (or entropy) isn't an intentional activity that the world-at-large engages in. It's just something that happens given the laws of physics. — Michael
I think "purpose" is the wrong word to use here. It suggests intention, which nature doesn't have (unless you count us wanting things as nature having intentions, or unless you're arguing for panpsychism). — Michael
"Without reducing the abyss that can in fact separate retention from re-presentation .... we must be able to say a priori that their common root, the possibility of re-petition in its most general form .... is a possibility that not only must inhabit the pure actuality of the now, but also must constitute it by means of the very movement of the différance that the possibility inserts into the pure actuality of the now." — StreetlightX
MU, I wouldn't associate the sign with protention as you have. The possibility of repetition generally, or expectation generally, is something far and above protention, which is something a little closer to home: the kind of primary expectation that comes in sort of 'seeing the future' when you watch movement, with things that are about to happen seemingly 'getting ready to happen' right before your eyes. — The Great Whatever
I think it is the difference, or relation between this non-presence, and the present itself which is supposed to be responsible for the flow of time.All I have, at this point, is something like: retention/protention introduce a non-present into the present the way an indicative sign does,,, — csalisbury
There is no prior field of constraint which enables the world to be and mean as it does.
Instead, there is no enabling constraint ("the compass just points"), with the world expressing the infinite of meanings on its own. The world is always free and creating, an emergent expression, rather than something following the order of a predetermining ideal. The rejection of the prior field is the insight of immanence. — TheWillowOfDarkness
But, in so doing, Kant discovers the modern way of saving transcendence: this is no longer the transcendence of a Something, or of a One higher than everything (contemplation), but that of a Subject to which the field of immanence is only attributed by belonging to a self that necessarily represents such a subject to itself (reflection). — StreetlightX
Yet one more step: when immanence becomes immanent "to" a transcendental subjectivity, it is at the heart of its own field that the hallmark or figure of a transcendence must appear as action now referring to another self, to an-other consciousness (communication). — StreetlightX
Why not hold, as Husserl says he does, that the past itself belongs through retention to originary perception, and so undermine Derrida's entire claim to presentation being dependent on re-presentation? If the past is 'present' in this way, then the fact that retention and the primal impression are co-constututive simply does not get Derrida what he wants. — The Great Whatever
The "sun" "appears" in the "sky" every "day". There's nothing untrue about this. The sun is visible each day from the surface of the planet earth. No amount of trying to enforce semantic technicalities to say this is "unobjective" will change this observable truth.
An observation does not have to amount to a complete description of something, it can be specific, incomplete, or even based on an abstraction. "The sun rises every day" is a very simple observation and the strong inductive argument which arises from it is extremely specific: the sun is visible with predictable regularity. Again this does not say anything about what the sun "is" beyond that whatever it is, "it's visibility from the surface of the earth follows a cyclical pattern". — VagabondSpectre
You're still using semantics to try and make your point while ignoring the one you are trying to criticize. — VagabondSpectre
Repeatable observations of reliable phenomenon assist in producing models which allow us to reliably predict various aspects of said phenomenon. It's not objective truth; it's reliable and useful truth; that's science. — VagabondSpectre
I have noticed the way 'immanent' is used - as a kind of bulwark against the dreaded 'transcendent', the 'beyond'. — Wayfarer
All of the 'traditions of transcendence' say that truth comes from within. — Wayfarer
The first man to make an appointment invented timekeeping. — Barry Etheridge
The pattern is that the sun is visible in the sky every day; that's the pattern, not the numbers or symbols we use to represent them. — VagabondSpectre
The sun appearing in the sky every day IS the pattern. The pattern is there whether I check a box, scribble a one to record it, or not. — VagabondSpectre
On an individual level, scientists seek to find "descriptions" (sometimes to describe, sometimes to explain, sometimes to predict) of things which "agree" with observation and experimentation. — VagabondSpectre
I never said what the phenomenon was, you did. All I said was there is a dark spot on the horizon, and with my recorded observations of it's "relative position" over time I have identified a pattern which allows me to predict where this dark spot will appear tomorrow. I don't claim to have knowledge about what the dark spot is; that's your own presumption, I've never said it was a rock. All I claim is to have reliable predictive power over where this dark spot is going to be on the horizon tomorrow. — VagabondSpectre
But by "laws of physics suddenly changed" I meant things like: "What if gravity suddenly reversed the direction of it's force?", "What if the speed of light suddenly slowed?", "What if the nuclear bonds holding atoms together suddenly became stronger or weaker?", "What if empty space suddenly became electrically conductive"?. These are the kinds of things which we hope will never change, because if they did then some or all of what we pragmatically rely on as scientific or even just general fact could suddenly change, and continue changing, forever, rendering some or all of our current models useless and evidently "not objective". — VagabondSpectre
The pattern is inherent in the numbers though; in the data; in the observations. — VagabondSpectre
In the most basic argument saying "the sun will rise tomorrow", the observational data is a series of 1's or checked boxes representing each previous consecutive day recording the fact that the sun rose on that day. — VagabondSpectre
We can never be absolutely certain that all the laws of physics wont all suddenly change one day, making science useless, but until then the overwhelming consistency of the empirical phenomenon that scientific theories are developed from represents an extremely strong inductive argument which is why science itself is strong. — VagabondSpectre
Taking the universal assumption that everyone must experience such an inner voice cannot be made. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I think I agree, all I am saying is that sometimes the way you are wording it makes it seem as if there's first an imagination of a word, and then a representation of that imagination. What I'm saying is that's one level removed, and the text treats the imagination as the representation to begin with (of the actual use of the speech in communication). — The Great Whatever
I think it is the difference between a real communicative linguistic act and an imagination of this (which is the representation). Not a a representation of the imagination, which goes one level too far. — The Great Whatever
