- July 14th, 2012, 5:15 am
#92667
'Nothing' has been intriguing for me for quite a while. Usually my approach to such problems centers on the way language has interfered with intimacy with a concept's meaning. (This is especially true with ethics.) I think it is important to realize the problem that arises when we discuss any 'real' thing. Instanty we are thrown off by the question of whether we can ever get to the thing and escape the language dynamics that constitute meaning. But let's say, notwithstanding the strong claims that language pretty much owns meaning and try as you may you can never step out of the conditions of meaning making to affirm something independently, that when I stand in the middle of an experience of, say, being assaulted with a baseball bat, I have an ability to acknowledge the existential end of that the event that is clear and unquestioned. The first thing I notice is that I am facing something that is not language. The world, as Sartre once said, is not language. So when we think about it, face it bodily , we have to understand that what may have a logical abstract property, in this case the empty set or the numerical designation '0', for examples, should not be conflated with the existential counterpart. I know that 5-5=0; but this '0' is an abstraction and has no more actual existence than any other nominal designation. But here is the point: In the abstract world there are lots and lots of meaningless 'nothings' ; they are all just logical functions. Put it in Kant's language: concepts without intuitions are empty. However, do we want to make this hold for another vastly different kind of nothingness: existential nothngness?! Clearly they are not the same. In a very real sense, existential nothingness IS, where abstract nothingness is not. Of course, this glosses over debate on realism vs. nominalism. (Plato thought, of course, that concepts are more real than the bodily real things we encounter. Let's forget him for now.) Thus, I am in awe of nothingness in the in-your-face apriori form of intuition sense. But I wil take this a step beyond Kant; for what is intuited as space is a quesioned implicitly begged: where is that space? No: for me the buck stops at the immediacy of extending my arm through this mysterious medium. Where that is I haven't a clue. But I know it is not nothing in the abstract sense.