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An esoteric metaphysical view

_db May 11, 2018 at 20:24 12775 views 39 comments
The mind-body problem is probably the single most devastating criticism to be made of physicalism, materialism and/or naturalism. How consciousness, the mode of intentional, qualitative appearances, is derived from a mundane, mechanistic matter continues to be a complete mystery. This is not a god-of-the-gaps argument: the existence of consciousness (an indubitable fact, contra eliminative materialism), which is the mode in which metaphysical speculation occurs, directly contradicts the thesis that only matter exists. It makes no sense to deny the existence of the very thing that makes this denial even possible, i.e. it is a performative contradiction. The only way out of this is to see mind as ontologically primary and matter as derivative (idealism), or re-configure our understanding of what "matter" is (so that we get something like neutral monism, or Aristotelian hylomorphism, etc).

The postulate of the mind as something other than matter, which is organized only by efficient and material causation, brings with it the possibility of religion. That materialism coincides with atheism is no coincidence. In my opinion, the death of religion leads to the estrangement of consciousness from the rest of the world; religion is a plea for a home. Religious experience is the feeling of "belonging" to the Real. Now the question is: how does consciousness "fit" into the rest of reality? If it fits, then there must be a function, which implies teleology, which typically implies some form of divinity. If it doesn't fit, then the only way of describing the world so far as I can tell would be to call it weird. Very weird; disjointed, broken, falling apart, irrational. What we call "science" is I think perhaps only the tip of the iceberg. Map vs territory; I think the excessive confidence we put in science is a leftover from the faith we had in God.

At dusk, we may experience what Levinas calls the il y a - the "there is" without anything being. We are bewildered that a world exists that transcends our experience, with unfathomable depths where no understanding can penetrate. The il y a refutes idealism. This is the border between the light and the dark, the cliff separating sanity from panic. There is "something" churning behind the appearances, insidiously striving, creating in order to destroy. Existence is a painful process of decay that begins at the very genesis of being. What exists must always die, which is why it may be called the "second nothing-ness", i.e. the return-back-to-nothing. We all were nothing before, and we will all return to being nothing shortly - existence is but a sojourn from non-existence.

At least that's my esoteric metaphysical outlook.

Comments (39)

schopenhauer1 May 11, 2018 at 21:33 #177536
Quoting darthbarracuda
The mind-body problem is probably the single most devastating criticism to be made of physicalism, materialism and/or naturalism. How consciousness, the mode of intentional, qualitative appearances, is derived from a mundane, mechanistic matter continues to be a complete mystery. This is not a god-of-the-gaps argument: the existence of consciousness (an indubitable fact, contra eliminative materialism), which is the mode in which metaphysical speculation occurs, directly contradicts the thesis that only matter exists. It makes no sense to deny the existence of the very thing that makes this denial even possible, i.e. it is a performative contradiction. The only way out of this is to see mind as ontologically primary and matter as derivative (idealism), or re-configure our understanding of what "matter" is (so that we get something like neutral monism, or Aristotelian hylomorphism, etc).


Yes, people trip over the hard questions of consciousness. They assume the very thing they are explaining and often confuse the easy questions for the hard one. That's great that it is X, Y, Z phenomena that correlates with mental events. How is it the same thing though? If that becomes a category error, then we are already doing too much furniture rearranging for this to be straghtforward science.

Quoting darthbarracuda
The postulate of the mind as something other than matter, which is organized only by efficient and material causation, brings with it the possibility of religion. That materialism coincides with atheism is no coincidence. In my opinion, the death of religion leads to the estrangement of consciousness from the rest of the world; religion is a plea for a home. Religious experience is the feeling of "belonging" to the Real. Now the question is: how does consciousness "fit" into the rest of reality? If it fits, then there must be a function, which implies teleology, which typically implies some form of divinity. If it doesn't fit, then the only way of describing the world so far as I can tell would be to call it weird. Very weird; disjointed, broken, falling apart, irrational. What we call "science" is I think perhaps only the tip of the iceberg. Map vs territory; I think the excessive confidence we put in science is a leftover from the faith we had in God.


I think the unreasonableness effectiveness of math and the study of its patterns in nature since Galileo has made science compelling, so I can see why there is so much confidence. Also, technology seems to indicate validation of some sort of its rightness.
_db May 11, 2018 at 21:47 #177543
Quoting schopenhauer1
I think the unreasonableness of math and the study of its patterns in nature since Galileo has made science compelling, so I can see why there is so much confidence. Also, technology seems to indicate validation of some sort of its rightness.


Mathematics has fascinated people for longer than Galileo's rhetorical success. Pythagoreans worshiped mathematics. Mathematics was the model Platonic form and somehow was integral to the entire cosmological scene.

Yes, we have global communication networks and vaccines, transistors and atomic bombs. Good job everyone, rah rah rah, we're the best, I guess.
schopenhauer1 May 11, 2018 at 21:51 #177544
Quoting darthbarracuda
Mathematics has fascinated people for longer than Galileo's rhetorical success. Pythagoreans worshiped mathematics. Mathematics was the model Platonic form and somehow was integral to the entire cosmological scene.


True, but I mentioned Galileo in conjunction with science because it seemed with him to have been the start of connecting math with the natural world (rather than engineering or pure math), in ways that worked out extraordinarily for physics and other sciences later on. Actually one can argue maybe it was Copernicus.

Quoting darthbarracuda
Yes, we have global communication networks and vaccines, transistors and atomic bombs. Good job everyone, rah rah rah, we're the best, I guess.


Yes, but these are the things that make people not look too far outside science for their metaphysics, so what do we do about this? What is the response?
Thorongil May 11, 2018 at 21:52 #177545
Quoting darthbarracuda
The il y a refutes idealism.


Even granting this (which I do not; I would have to know more about what is meant by and how Levinas argues for this notion), it would only refute a certain type of idealism. For example, it seems to me that theism is by definition a form of idealism. Even if one posits a world existing independently of the mind (realism), still this world does not exist, on theism, independently of all minds. It still very much depends on one mind, namely God's, for its existence.

Quoting darthbarracuda
i.e. the return-back-to-nothing. We all were nothing before, and we will all return to being nothing shortly - existence is but a sojourn from non-existence.


I don't think we can make either claim here. If the nothingness spoken of is absolute, then we run into the argument of Parmenides on the impossibility of such a sojourn (which is another defeater of materialism, by the way). If it is relative, then the goal should be to determine if there are modes of contact between this mysterious reality beyond the world and the world rather than throw up one's hands at the suffering and absurdity on this side of the dichotomy.
_db May 11, 2018 at 22:04 #177548
Quoting Thorongil
Even granting this (which I do not; I would have to know more about what is meant by and how Levinas argues for this notion), it would only refute a certain type of idealism.


I grant this. Levinas attempts to refute egological or solipsistic idealism, the metaphysics of the totality where everything that exists must be discernible by the understanding. That there is Other that resists this assimilation into the totality is what Levinas is focused on.

Quoting Thorongil
I don't think we can make either claim here. If the nothingness spoken of is absolute, then we run into the argument of Parmenides on the impossibility of such a sojourn (which is another defeater of materialism, by the way). If it is relative, then the goal should be to determine if there are modes of contact between this mysterious reality beyond the world and the world rather than throw up one's hands at the suffering and absurdity on this side of the dichotomy.


Can you elaborate? I don't see anything wrong with talking about non-existence. The fact is that some things exist and some things do not, but we can still talk about either.
Janus May 11, 2018 at 22:05 #177549
Reply to darthbarracuda

If we think matter is mechanical rather than organic (or semiotic, which is arguably the same thing) then of course the hard problem arises. The hard problem is utterly insoluble because it is based on the presupposition that matter is mechanical. The hard problem can only be dis-solved by considering matter to be fundamentally semiotic.

The alternative is a monistic theism such as Spinoza's, where the problem also dissipates.
_db May 11, 2018 at 22:08 #177550
Reply to Janus Yes, this is why I said that the hard problem cannot be "resolved" given the current vogue metaphysics; it must be dissolved as a non-question through the re-interpretation of what "matter" is (by either merging mind and matter or reducing matter to mind).
apokrisis May 11, 2018 at 22:12 #177551
Quoting darthbarracuda
. The only way out of this is to see mind as ontologically primary and matter as derivative (idealism), or re-configure our understanding of what "matter" is (so that we get something like neutral monism, or Aristotelian hylomorphism, etc).


There is yet another way. And that is to talk about complexity. Mind arises due to the complexity of a sign relation that organises matter into a form. Consciousness is then just what it is like to be doing that at a massively complex level of development and evolution - one in which a self is modelled in contrast to a world to result in an embedded sense of autonomy or agency.

That semiotic view would also reconfigure our understanding of matter.

Our ordinary physics is constructed as a story of observables. The observer is not part of the model. Leaving out the observer is how we get really simple models of material reality.

So a semiotic view of matter would have to put the observer back into the system being modelled. Even at its simplest possible level, existence would have the logically irreducible complexity of a sign relation.

People think this a really esoteric metaphysics for some reason. :)
apokrisis May 11, 2018 at 22:15 #177552
Reply to Janus Beat me to it this time!
Thorongil May 11, 2018 at 22:15 #177553
Quoting darthbarracuda
I don't see anything wrong with talking about non-existence.


Ask yourself what it is you're "talking about."

Quoting darthbarracuda
The fact is that some things exist and some things do not, but we can still talk about either.


We can speak about things that have existed but no longer do, but we can't speak of that which never was, nor is, nor ever will be.
_db May 11, 2018 at 22:19 #177556
Quoting Thorongil
Ask yourself what it is you're "talking about."


Possibility.

Quoting Thorongil
We can speak about things that have existed but no longer do, but we can't speak of that which never was, nor is, nor ever will be.


I think we can. That which does not exist and never has is possibility. That which existed but no longer does is a failed possibility.
Janus May 11, 2018 at 22:20 #177557
Thorongil May 11, 2018 at 22:23 #177558
Quoting Janus
The hard problem is utterly insoluble because it is based on the presupposition that matter is mechanical. The hard problem can only be dis-solved by considering matter to be fundamentally semiotic.


Quoting apokrisis
That semiotic view would also reconfigure our understanding of matter.


This further highlights the problem with materialism. To believe that "only matter exists" begs the question. A materialist in the 17th century and a materialist in the 19th century both believed this, but the matter they believed in was not the same.
schopenhauer1 May 11, 2018 at 22:24 #177559
Reply to darthbarracuda

I also thought this quote was good about science and math:

Physics is mathematical not because we know so much about the physical world, but because we know so little; it is only its mathematical properties that we can discover- Bertrand Russell
_db May 11, 2018 at 22:24 #177560
Quoting apokrisis
People think this a really esoteric metaphysics for some reason. :)


Probably because, as Heidegger says, all metaphysical questions put the questioner themselves into question. That the world exists "over there" and we exists "over here" is the duality from which the mind-body problem arises. So yes, a synthesis of mind and matter dissolves the problem, as does eliminative idealism (since we can be sure that we exist). It is this egological idealism that is immediately punctured by the il y a and our knowledge that the world transcends a total understanding.
Thorongil May 11, 2018 at 22:27 #177561
Quoting darthbarracuda
Possibility.


Which is not nothing....

Quoting darthbarracuda
That which does not exist and never has is possibility.


Nonsense. A square circle never has, nor does, nor ever will exist. It is not a possibility.
_db May 11, 2018 at 22:29 #177562
Quoting Thorongil
Nonsense. A square circle never has, nor does, nor ever will exist. It is not a possibility.


Then what exactly is it? You said it yourself: "It is not a possibility." Then what is it?
Thorongil May 11, 2018 at 22:31 #177563
Quoting darthbarracuda
Then what exactly is it? You said it yourself: "It is not a possibility." Then what is it?


Nothing. To speak of a square circle is to speak of nothing at all. It is synonymous with nothingness.
_db May 11, 2018 at 22:35 #177564
Reply to Thorongil Right, but I wanna know what nothing is. If a square circle is synonymous with nothing, then what does nothing mean? What is nothing?
Thorongil May 11, 2018 at 22:37 #177565
Quoting darthbarracuda
but I wanna know what nothing is


To know what is not is a contradiction in terms.
_db May 11, 2018 at 22:48 #177568
Reply to Thorongil How do you know what a square circle is, then? Fine, let me ask you this: do you recognize the ontological distinction between a being and its Being?
Thorongil May 11, 2018 at 22:59 #177569
Quoting darthbarracuda
How do you know what a square circle is, then?


I don't, that's the point. And not only don't I know it, I can't know it.

Quoting darthbarracuda
Fine, let me ask you this: do you recognize the ontological distinction between a being and its Being?


I don't know. Maybe. I'd have to know more about what you mean by these terms. I acknowledge, by the way, that things can come to be having once been not. You can call this becoming or actualizing a potential or manifesting an essence or whatever. All that means is that it was possible for that thing to be. But that's different from absolute nothingness, which it is not even possible to be.

apokrisis May 11, 2018 at 23:07 #177572
Quoting darthbarracuda
At dusk, we may experience what Levinas calls the il y a - the "there is" without anything being. We are bewildered that a world exists that transcends our experience, with unfathomable depths where no understanding can penetrate. The il y a refutes idealism.


To address this bit, what are you actually experiencing but some counter-image, some umwelt, of your own imagining? It doesn’t escape the charge of being idealistic.

Consider what science says is the actual material story. There was a Big Bang. Now it is trailing away into a generalised Heat Death. That is a truer image. At least in terms of mathematical concepts cashed out in controlled acts of measurement.

So that more concrete story now gives us complementary forms of states of nothing. One is so hot that nothing material has stable form. The other is so cold that all material differences are statically frozen.

So how accurate is your il y a in the light of the scientific facts? (Talk of decay may be a nod to them.)

But then do those facts transcend our experience? No. They are also just the construction of another umwelt, another interpretation, another idea that has meaning for us ... an idea that actually is constructing “us” also, as that kind of observer of those kinds of observables.

The point is that idealism can’t be refuted by some sudden transcendent access to the thing-in-itself. But then idealism itself loses its troublesome aspect - the claim of mind being primal being - when the situation is understood semiotically. The very act of trying to grasp that which is beyond in a usefully meaningful way results also in their being some particular “us” existing in that particular unwelt, or state of interpretance.

That is why existence has to be understood semiotically as a recursive and irreducible complex thing. No simple metaphysics can free us from that. We have to see ourselves as part of the creative equation.

The difficult next step is to work towards an umwelt that is the most objectively minimal kind of idealism. Which is what science should be doing.






_db May 11, 2018 at 23:08 #177573
Quoting Thorongil
I don't, that's the point. And not only don't I know it, I can't know it.


So because you can't know it means it is...what? Nothing? What do you mean by nothing?

I want to know what you mean when you say something is nothing, i.e. what it means to not-exist. That we can coherently predicate certain things that do not exist is clear enough - for we can already say that such-and-such does not exist, or that it did exist but no longer does, or that it never existed. Many factual claims depend on the reality of nothing.

What I want to know is what this nothing is. Distinguishing between a being and its Being is necessary for this question to make sense. For even if we say something doesn't exist, i.e. it is not, we are still saying something about the being in question.

The point I'm trying to make is that "nothing" is still "something", just not the something we are used to in the everyday world of existing things.
_db May 11, 2018 at 23:25 #177577
Quoting apokrisis
To address this bit, what are you actually experiencing but some counter-image, some umwelt, of your own imagining? It doesn’t escape the charge of being idealistic.


Nor was it supposed to. Specifically, the il y a refutes egological idealism, procedural solipsism in which something only is when the ego assimilates it into the totality. That there is Other that resists this assimilation is what is understood via the il y a. It is a "primordial", pre-theoretical encounter with something transcending ourselves. Dusk is a good time for such an encounter since it's often filled with shadows, representing objects that cannot be fully seen. There is mystery, unknowability. There is a world that eludes our total comprehension and which will always be alien in some way. That dusk is a good time to experience the il y a does not mean it is a psychological illusion rooted in some way to contingent states of the world. I only use dusk as a example.

The il y a identifies that which cannot be assimilated to our conceptual system. We can talk about Big Bangs, supermassive black holes, vibrating strings or strange quarks, but we are still talking about something. Something that exists. We "know" what existence is - look outside! See all the things that exist!, you may say. Yes, many things exist, but I want to know what it means to exist. What the Being of a being is.

You are probably aware that Heidegger and his contemporary philosophical phenomenologists were aware of semiotics and worked on sign theory themselves. Semiotics is not a replacement for the question of Being, although it certainly is relevant.
Thorongil May 11, 2018 at 23:48 #177581
Quoting darthbarracuda
What do you mean by nothing?


Nothing.

Quoting darthbarracuda
I want to know what you mean when you say something is nothing


Language is playing tricks on you. Absolute nothing cannot strictly be thought or even spoken of.

Do you accept the principle of sufficient reason? I'm curious, as one way of formulating it is to say that from nothing, nothing comes.

Quoting darthbarracuda
The point I'm trying to make is that "nothing" is still "something", just not the something we are used to in the everyday world of existing things.


That's a relative nothing, which I agree is conceptualizable.
_db May 12, 2018 at 00:00 #177584
Quoting Thorongil
Language is playing tricks on you. Absolute nothing cannot strictly be thought or even spoken of.


Yet here you speak of it. Clearly we can speak of something about absolute nothing, if we are to say it cannot be spoken of. For this to be true would require that there be something about absolute nothing that makes it impossible to think or speak about. If we cannot speak about nothing, then we cannot speak about how we cannot speak about nothing, because the fact that we cannot speak about nothing is, itself, about nothing, so we have fallen into a performative contradiction,

As it stands, Heidegger was acutely aware of the charge that Being, the is, is merely a linguistic copula. He obviously denied and in my opinion thoroughly refuted that view.
apokrisis May 12, 2018 at 00:03 #177586
Quoting darthbarracuda
Semiotics is not a replacement for the question of Being, although it certainly is relevant.


But Peircean semiotics gave a credible model of being as pure naked spontaneity. It supplies a mathematical, hence scientific, image. That gives a better purchase on the issue than a poetic description. The poetic view already presumes an experiencer as part of the equation - the story of this vague nothingness that is beyond any determinate somethingness.

The Il y a fails to de-subjectise the issue. So I agree about the direction it might signal for our metaphysical thoughts, but to cash that direction out, I find semiotics goes the furthest in striving for a mathematical level of abstraction.
Thorongil May 12, 2018 at 00:49 #177591
Quoting darthbarracuda
Yet here you speak of it. Clearly we can speak of something about absolute nothing, if we are to say it cannot be spoken of. For this to be true would require that there be something about absolute nothing that makes it impossible to think or speak about. If we cannot speak about nothing, then we cannot speak about how we cannot speak about nothing, because the fact that we cannot speak about nothing is, itself, about nothing, so we have fallen into a performative contradiction,


Yes, this eloquently describes the trap I spoke of. When we speak of absolute nothing, we're not talking about "something" to which these words refer, because an absolute nothing cannot be referred to by definition. Absolute nothing is not a funny kind of something. It is the complete absence of anything and everything. I wouldn't call this a contradiction so much as a paradox or a quirk or language.

Quoting darthbarracuda
As it stands, Heidegger was acutely aware of the charge that Being, the is, is merely a linguistic copula. He obviously denied and in my opinion thoroughly refuted that view.


Where does he refute it? This interests me because Schopenhauer is adamant that being is merely a linguistic copula (although I'm not sure he's consistent about this).
_db May 12, 2018 at 05:21 #177620
Quoting Thorongil
Yes, this eloquently describes the trap I spoke of. When we speak of absolute nothing, we're not talking about "something" to which these words refer, because an absolute nothing cannot be referred to by definition. Absolute nothing is not a funny kind of something. It is the complete absence of anything and everything. I wouldn't call this a contradiction so much as a paradox or a quirk or language.


But again: you tell me that "absolutely nothing" cannot be referred to by definition, yet all around do just exactly that. It's not a funny kind of something. It is the complete absence of anything and everything.

It seems clear to me that when you say we cannot refer to absolutely nothing by definition and thus cannot be referred to at all makes the same error the atheist does when insisting the god of Thomas Aquinas adhere to man-made languages. It is inappropriate to see the nothing as something - yet it is still "something", just as God is not a thing but is still "something".

Quoting Thorongil
Where does he refute it? This interests me because Schopenhauer is adamant that being is merely a linguistic copula (although I'm not sure he's consistent about this).


Most prominently in his magum opus Being and Time. The ontological difference is crucial to his entire system of thought.
_db May 12, 2018 at 05:32 #177623
Quoting apokrisis
But Peircean semiotics gave a credible model of being as pure naked spontaneity. It supplies a mathematical, hence scientific, image. That gives a better purchase on the issue than a poetic description. The poetic view already presumes an experiencer as part of the equation - the story of this vague nothingness that is beyond any determinate somethingness.


But of course - Dasein is the allegedly-privileged mode of understanding Being. It is where the question of Being arises. At least in some.

"Spontaneity" has a metaphysical ring to it but fails to offer a suitable replacement for Heidegger's Sein. It's still ontic, it's still scientific and thus cannot fulfill the requirement necessary to answer the question of Being. Akin to using metal detectors to find plastics.
Thorongil May 12, 2018 at 16:59 #177682
Quoting darthbarracuda
yet it is still "something"


This describes relative nothing, which is similar to, as you say, the hyper-thingness of God in Aquinas. God is not a thing, and so "nothing," but not non-existent either and so not absolutely nothing.
Thorongil May 12, 2018 at 17:00 #177683
Quoting darthbarracuda
Most prominently in his magum opus Being and Time.


I found this work to be obscurantist drivel the first time I tried reading it. Maybe I will understand it better if I have something to look for in it, like the claim that being isn't a copula.
_db May 12, 2018 at 17:54 #177697
Reply to Thorongil Sure, yeah. You could try reading Being and Time alongside a companion guide, Richard Polt's Heidegger: An Introduction is quite good in my opinion - you can probably even read that first without Being and Time, even.

Heidegger is obscure and could have written more clearly in some places. It is what it is, but I think the charge of obscurantism is over-inflated. Heidegger is hard to read but he's not that hard.

Quoting Thorongil
This describes relative nothing, which is similar to, as you say, the hyper-thingness of God in Aquinas. God is not a thing, and so "nothing," but not non-existent either and so not absolutely nothing.


I have never heard of relative nothing apart from in this discussion. But again, by comparing "relative" nothing to absolutely nothing, you are still making judgments as to what absolutely nothing is.
Thorongil May 12, 2018 at 17:58 #177700
Quoting darthbarracuda
I have never heard of relative nothing apart from in this discussion.


This surprises me. It's a distinction found in Kant and Schopenhauer. It's crucial for Schopenhauer's soteriology in particular.
_db May 12, 2018 at 18:00 #177703
Reply to Thorongil Well, color me embarrassed.
Thorongil May 12, 2018 at 18:02 #177707
Reply to darthbarracuda I think they use Latin terms, which may obscure the concepts. I can try looking it up.
Thorongil May 12, 2018 at 18:40 #177721
Reply to darthbarracuda In Kant, it's found in the CPR at the very end of the Remark on the Amphiboly of Concepts of Reflection.

Schopenhauer discusses it in WWR Vol. 1, pg. 409 (Payne translation). The distinction is between nihil privativum and nihil negativum.
_db May 12, 2018 at 18:41 #177722
Reply to Thorongil Thanks, I'll check it out.