Belindi wrote: ↑June 21st, 2019, 7:22 am
GaryLouisSmith wrote:
it is between a mind (not a self) and everything it thinks about whether attentively or nonchalantly. It is the core of the act of awareness. There are many types of awareness: perception, imagining,
I have to go out soon and before I google that Nexus thing, I just want to say when you said "mind" that looks as if you presumed mind as an entity apart from brain. My contention is it's brain-mind that thinks attentively, nonchalantly , or indeed hallucinatedly, meditatively, or drowsily. The brain-mind thinks , okay?
Yes, I did/do indeed presume mind to be an entity apart from the brain. And I think I have always presumed that you don’t think that. I have presumed that you are either a Neutral Monist, which is the idea that mind-words and brain-words both point to a third thing what is neither mind nor brain, but is instead a neutral third. That third thing being the reality. Or you are saying that all mind-words are just abbreviated ways of pointing to the brain and its processes. In that case the brain in the reality, not the mind. That last is reductionistic materialism.
I think neither of those views about mind-brain unity will hold up under analytical scrutiny.
Here’s how I see things. My way is phenomenological, that is to say that I stay with the phenomena that are present to my viewing mind. I do not speculate about unseen causes, forces or urges. I look about and I see a world. And I am aware of my awareness of that world. One of the things I see in that world is my brain, and your brain and all those other brains, human or otherwise. Brains exist. I can see them and I can see their physiology. As for my awareness, it comes in many flavors: perceiving, imagining, remembering, doubting, wondering, questioning and on and on. That is all directly known. I am directly aware of all that, no speculating.
I also notice that we live in a subject-predicate world. That is to say that we see individuals having properties. In symbols, x is F. Moreover, I see that the x and the F are always tied together. That being tied together is pointed to by that little word “is”, x is F. That tie is given the Latin name of Nexus. The Nexus of Exemplification, in this case.
Now for mind. That x is F is a fact. A fact is composed of three things: x, F, is. A fact is a complex, while the things that make it up are three simple (not complex) things. Facts vs. things. A mind consists of ideas. For example I perceive that my coffee is cold. There you have a fact, a complex consisting of a bare x, which individuates, the two Forms of coffee and cold and Exemplification. (Of course there is much more to it, but I speak schematically.) Then when I phenomenologically examine my perceiving, I see that it consists of the property of being a perception and the idea that my coffee is cold. In symbols, the idea that x is F can be written [x is F]. Those brackets show that the idea is a simple thing. It is a property that is exemplified by the bare particular that is my mind. An idea is a simple universal Form that is of a complex fact. A one-many arrangement. I contend that ideas exist. They are universals that are exemplified by particulars. That preserves the subject-predicate form of the world.
Now obviously ideas are not just floating around unconnected to the world. Every idea is of a fact in the world. Whether of not every fact has an idea associated with it is another question that I will no go into here, but it is mighty interesting. Do you see that little world “of” in the sentence Every idea is of a fact. That word “of” names the Nexus. The Nexus of Intentionality. Without that the ideas that are our mind could never make contact with the world. We phenomenologically observe that the mind and the world are united. It is the Nexus that accomplishes that. That is my ontological analysis of mind. Actually it is not “my” analysis, but the analysis of the phenomenological realists that I read. What I do in my writing is expand on that analysis. I take it as far as it will go. To the limits of analysis. And then the deluge.
BTW, I contend that we are directly, phenomenologically, aware of the various Nexus. Other philosophers of my ilk say be aren't and we must only infer their existence. Such is philosophical argument. Ain't life grand!