On 1/27/2012 5:21 AM, Charles Bell wrote:
> So,. you don't a thing about how O'ist epistemology works, do you?
It so happens that I do, language development being one of my few
areas of formal expertise, but luckily it doesn't matter for this
anyway. That's because I'm not making any claims whatsoever about
Objectivist epistemology. None, zero, nada...doesn't interest me
for this at the moment, and this is just you trying to distract the
issues. I am speaking EXCLUSIVELY of the distinctions between the
living and the non-living and whether end-attainment, purpose, goal
seeking or valuing have ANYTHING AT ALL to do with that distinction.
My position is plainly that they do not and your position is plainly
that they do. After all this time, you didn't know that?
Is that what you thought this was about...what objectivist epistemology
has to say about it? Why would you even care? Aren't you interested
in what the distinctions ARE? If you're not, then take a hike. If you
are, then we can continue.
> Let us now examine the process of forming the simplest concept...
No, let's not. It's already been established that you believe
the way to discern the distinctions between the living and the
non-living is to look inside our minds, and I believe the way
is to look at the living and the non-living.
So no, I'm not going to let you keep distracting. While there
is a sort of meta-topic that I do indeed believe your
approach is the perfect antithesis of Objectivism, and mine is
consistent with it, this discussion is not about that.
This discussion is EXCLUSIVELY about the distinctions between the
living and the non-living and whether end-attainment, purpose, goal
seeking or valuing have ANYTHING AT ALL to do with that distinction.
Now if you don't want to talk about that any longer, that's fine with
me. We can argue another time about whether your evasion is "according
to Objectivism," or my approach of looking at the objects, is.
If you do, then we can continue. So snip everything you wrote about
concept formation and so on, since analyzing concepts won't help us
with identifying distinctions between the living and non-living.
Though yes, I will acknowledge that to you, it's the only way to
get there. That's the way it is for every Subjectivist on every
topic.
>> As you should know, I do believe that with sufficient intelligence,
>> that could be known. Otherwise, the assertion reduces to mysticism.
>>
>
> Nibbe's criticism was that your claim can be just as easily applied to
> humans as to a sunflower.
Right...that's because Nibbe isn't a nutcase. It was an understandable
point and it was addressed.
> <<Within the context of his awareness, this is a valid definition:
> man, in fact, does move and make sounds, and this distinguishes him
> from the inanimate objects around him.>>
I don't know from where this cite is coming, but it has nothing to
do with anything here. There are many living organisms that /don't/
move or make sounds, so this is not a relevant distinction here
whatsoever.
>> But the fact is that we /don't/ know and we /do/ abstract in a
>> context of non-omniscience, not to mention a perspective of
>> non-omniscience.
>
> This is gibberish.
Yeah? Is this gibberish too...
"Man is neither infallible nor omniscient; if he were, a
discipline such as epistemology--the theory of knowledge--
would not be necessary nor possible: his knowledge would
be automatic, unquestionable and total. But such is not
man's nature. Man is a being of volitional consciousness:
beyond the level of percepts--a level inadequate to the
cognitive requirements of his survival--man has to acquire
knowledge by his own effort, which he may exercise or not,
and by a process of reason, which he may apply correctly or
not."
Rand, Consciousness and Identity in ITOE
Oh look Charles, she added a sentence for you...
"Nature gives him no automatic guarantee of his mental
efficacy; he is capable of error, of evasion, of psychological
distortion."
> You don't a thing about how O'ist epistemology works, do you?
See, that's an example of all three. "How O'ist epistemology
works" has NOTHING to do with the distinctions between the living
and the non-living.
And yet you keep bringing it up. It's an error because I do
know a few things about "how O'ist epistemology works." It's
evasion because it's just a silly way for you to avoid the
actual topic, and it's psychological distortion because you
have nowhere else to go. That's how it always is for a Subjectivist.
Or I should say, you have nowhere else to go that you're willing
to share publicly? Maybe that'll change going forward.
>> No, YOU call it "near-determinism"
>
> The term goes back to, at least, the early computing days following
> WWII and particlularly by Arthur Burks in his book, /Chance, Cause,
> Reason/, in distinction to its approximate synonym, stochastic, which
> has has strictly mathematical application in there being one or more
> random variable in an otherwise determinable equation: Determinsm,
> Near-determinism, and Tychism covers everything and disepnses with
> fuzzy terms like hard or soft determininism and indeterminsim in a
> causal (not uncaused and random) universe.
When we have a discussion about your wild theories of determinism
and their history, feel free to copy and paste this paragraph into
it. Till then, it's nothing but complete evasion on your part.
Complete distraction, really. The topic is not about the history
of deterministic theories. The topic is about the distinctions
between the living and the non-living and whether there is ANY
meaningful distinctions between them that have ANYTHING to do
with ANY kind of purpose, end-attainment, goal-seeking or values.
My position is that there is not; your position is that there is.
And the ONLY way you have managed to get there is, "I choose to
invent a meaning for these terms for which I cannot point to any
correspondent distinction in reality, and then appeal to wild
reasons that my imagination makes the distinction correspondent."
> "Purpose" means "purpose", not teleology,
Being as charitable as I am when it comes to word usage,
I've never quibbled about this. You can use "purpose"
to mean whatever the hell you want it to mean.
And you /choose/ to use it to mean, "that which the living
does (or has) and that which the non-living doesn't." I
acknowledged this years ago and have spent the rest of the
time pointing out that this says NOTHING AT ALL that isn't
contained in the concepts <living> and <non-living>.
What you CAN'T do, what you HAVEN'T done and what you'll NEVER
do, is point to an actual distinction between the living and
non-living that has ANYTHING at all to do with ANY sort of
purpose EXCEPT an appeal to your mind.
You appear not to understand this, so maybe a bit of clarity
is called for. On the point of "self-generation," as we're
using the concept here (really, as Rod had defined it), you
can point to EVERY living organism and say, "See, that object
engages that action" AND you can point to EVERY non-living
object and say, "See, that object doesn't."
That's what an identified distinction is. Yes, it's done with
concepts and classifications, but it's done ABOUT objects. You
could do the same with particular replicative functions, and
even maybe attributes of the molecules involved themselves. All
of these things can be identified IN THE OBJECT.
What you CAN'T do, what you HAVEN'T done and what you'll NEVER
do, is point to an actual distinction between the living and
non-living that has ANYTHING at all to do with ANY sort of
purpose EXCEPT an appeal to your mind.
> and your problem is that you
> never bothered to read Binswanger's book though you thought you could
> comment on it as if you understood one word in it, and the point is:
Doesn't matter, because this isn't about Binswanger's book; it's
about the distinctions between the living and the non-living.
> "purpose" applies to animate action and not inanimate motion.
That's it. That's the whole of your case. There's absolutely
nothing else there except a plain declaration.
> When an
> animal hunts for food, there is an obvious purpose for his motion
> unrelated to any speculative theory on the food being there as a
> (Aristotelean) final cause -- that the Essence of a prey, as a
> purpose, acted in backward causation for creation of the predator, but
> when a meteorite falls, gravity has not a purpose for its fall, and
> the meteorite has no purpose to have gravity act on it *unless* one
> applies final causation in the Essences involved, and why would one do
> that? Your problem is that your cannot distinguish between the word
> "purpose" and "final cause", "finalization" and "teleology" when
> "purpose" simply means "purpose."
Except that when I ask you, "So what is the purpose," your answer
consists ONLY of purposes that YOU attribute to the organism.
"What's the purpose of the raccoon fleeing?" "To get away from
Trapper Bob." But when I say, "Then the purpose of the rock
rolling down the hill is to get to the bottom," your ONLY
retort is to start appealing to teleology without admitting
it, or entering wild theories about triple determinism that
pretend to distinguish them but don't...as if even if they
did, it would have something to do with purpose.
This is all because you CAN'T come up with a legitimate
distinction that has ANYTHING to do with purpose, ends,
goal seeking or valuing. If you could, you would.
That's also why you keep focusing on the raccoon and not
the plant or the bacterium, even though this distinction
supposedly applies to those objects too. You see how
readily absurd that looks and leaves you with no appeal
whatsoever except crazy sub-atomic theories that you don't
know the first thing about anyway.
Doesn't matter, though. If you had a distinction, you'd
point to it in the BACTERIUM or the PARAMECIUM, but you
won't even talk about those. Little wonder, eh?
You're through, Charles, and this position has been wiped
out since the B.E. threads. It was wiped out last year and
it's wiped out now. So you can either end it, start coming
out with the crazy ad homs about how I can't distinguish
the living from the non-living even though I clearly can,
or get to the damn point and start SHOWING some distinction
between the bacterium and the rolling rock that is an ACTUAL
distinction between them that has ANYTHING AT ALL to do
with purpose, end-attainment, goal-seeking or valuing.
You've done more than enough pointing to your wild
imagination; it's time to start pointing to the objects.
Are you ready to move forward or not?
jk