The Beast wrote: ↑June 25th, 2023, 10:26 amI'm really relying on the difference between ontology and epistemology, there is a state of affairs we call the universe, and a separate issue of what we can know of that state of affairs. If our human experiential knowing kit is limited and flawed, and we can only check it with similarly flawed humans, we only eliminate anamolous humans. That's the 'third person falsifiability' science offers, when it comes things which are observable/measurable, and conscious experience itself is outside even such testing. And if human reason, like human observation, is as I describe, its primary job is to keep our model coherent and useful. The rules of logic, reason and causation help keep the model coherent and useful. That might be because they are close to the ontological reality, or they might just be latching onto patterns.Gertie wrote: ↑June 24th, 2023, 4:16 pmI find it useful to the understanding to use a function and not a proposition. Your musings of “flawed and incomplete observations” might give track to the idea of the function of existence.The Beast wrote: ↑June 23rd, 2023, 9:28 amBeast, if you want a response from me I'm afraid you'll have to re-phrase this more simply, I'm struggling to parse what you're saying.The crisis of thought (or lack of it) presents itself as doctrines. The reason for this is a crisis of the understanding or worse. How do we relate “an effect without a cause” with the decision of conscious discrimination. As for the “principle” of enantiodromia we must have a positive POV when dealing with the inconsistencies of human nature and congruent with the apocatastasis. Logically, negative or positive transformations have different outcomes.
I'm saying that our human notions of reason, logic and causality are ultimately rooted in the way we humans consciously experience being in the world and interacting with it.
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Our observations are flawed and incomplete, part of the useful model of the world we create in our minds in order to successfully navigate the world, and the 'rules of thought' arise from this useful way of experientially modelling the actual world into something coherent and thus useful for us. (And our language, including the thinky voice in our heads we reason with, naturally reflects our observations of what the world is made of and how it works. Words label the stuff, and the syntax of grammar reflects how we experience that stuff interacts - Subject --> Verb --> Object.).
So human Logic, Reason and Causation which are rooted in making sense of our observations, seem to be part of our constructed human experiential representation of reality, which work well enough for us to successfully navigate the world. (Hoffman call this Darwinian Fictions, and Seth talks of conscious experience as being in the biz of making useful predictions. I think there's something to that, and Logic, Reason and Causation can be contextualised that way too, rather thanindependently existing outside of that for us to discover).
However, there is no agreement to when existence is positive or negative whether is 60% or 40% since there is bias towards the senses and logical systems work for logical minds. Children are removed from the equation, then critical states of consciousness are removed, then dishonest members and lastly operators with restricted operational methods leave humanity in the conundrum of meaning. As with restricted operational methods I am making clear that this refers to Kant and others with the critique of reason and the restriction of metaphysical as QM wasn’t an identity. Do you consider consciousness (force) as existing and if so, is it local or Universal or both.
Conscious experience certainly exists, the only thing I know for certain is that mine does. I wouldn't call it a ''force'', unless you're talking about us being agents willing our behaviour. In that instance, we run into the mind-body relationship, and nobody can answer that. Mental causation feels real, it seems to perform a function (tho the is a physicalist case for epiphenomalism), and if I ignore it and wait for my dinner to just turn up I'm going to starve. So it plays a real role in the model. (Re Kant, he fails to acknowledge that other minds are part of the phenomenal experiential package our experience is, I see it as part of his pick n mix approach to rebuilding an ontology from Cartesian scepticism)
From what we can tell being an experiencing subject is local. We each have a specific and private first person pov, which manifests as being physically and discretely embodied in a physical world we interact with, located in time and space, with a unified field of consciousness. But again, that's the model. To claim experience is universal would be claiming knowledge which isn't accessible imo, but it might be true.
In some language theories this identity is one of rhetorical predicates that are not binary at all. Any binary or not?What do you mean here by identity?