Monday, June 25, 2012

Eyes Of You And Me—Mirrored In the Eye Of God















What We Have Here Is A Spinoza Monism With A Mobius Twist—God
Existing Inside Out

In the process of writing this paper I have deliberately refrained from using religious/spiritual language to describe freedom's synchronic axis. And, indeed, I suppose one of the beauties of the synchronic axis of freedom is that one does not have to take the "leap of faith" to a more spiritual interpretation of freedom (the humanism of James or Dewey will do just fine here). But, the fact remains that my description of freedom is based on two logical primitives, first, the logic that something must “first be" before it can be negated, i.e., the principle behind Descartes’ “cogito ergo sum,” and second, the logic that follows from a double negative—not, not P = P. Self-consciousness, or discontinuity occurring in continuity (while occurring in continuity occurring in discontinuity—the material world), is the affect of the first logical primitive while God/Wholeness/Freedom/Affirmative Ideal is the affect of the second logical primitive. “Creation” begins in the structural primitive of ~~b (not, not being), which, in turn, becomes alive in ~bb (death/life), which, in turn, becomes self-consciousness in b~b~bb. The b~b~bb structure (Piaget's functional center) is responsible for questioning, creativity, analysis, calculations, i.e., all the “constructive structuring that births language, myth, science, ethics/morality/civilization.”

Synchronic structure’s Wholeness is implied; that is, by virtue of synchronic structure, Wholeness remains outside of experience/physical event, i.e., is not part of creation. However, it only takes a small “leap of faith” to conclude that God exists in this affirmed indeterminate Wholeness, exists in this "ground of being," exists in the "affirmative ideal" that is at the center of all creation—the creation that permits the freedom to ask the question: Does God Exit? God and freedom, from this point of view, are the same thing, however, operationally speaking, also from this point of view, God is all-knowing, all-powerful and all- present (knowledge, power, and temporality being a product of the synchronic structure that implies Wholeness/God). What we have here, ultimately, is a Spinoza monism with a Mobius twist, a God simultaneously existing inside out. In this Mobius twist we find the final answer to the questions, "Who participates?" and "What is participated in?" In the immediately grasped indeterminate, all-embracing oneness of God's freedom lies the source of the knower and consequently the knower's freedom. F. S. Northrop tells us how wondrously close we are to God when he says:

"Now it is precisely this ineffable, emotional, moving quale that constitutes what is meant by spirit and the spiritual. Thus in order to do justice to the spiritual nature of human beings and of all things it is not necessary to have recourse to idle speculations, by means of which one tries to pierce through the glass beyond which we now see darkly, to supposedly unaesthetic material substances behind, or into some unreachable and unknowable realm where mental substances are supposed to be. On the contrary, the spiritual, the ineffable, the emotionally moving, the aesthetically vivid — the stuff that dreams and sunsets and the fragrance of flowers are made of — is the immediate, purely factual portion of human nature and the nature of all things. This is the portion of human knowledge that can be known without recourse to inference and speculative hypotheses and deductive logic, and epistemic correlations and rigorously controlled experiments. This we have and are in ourselves and in all things, prior to all theory, before all speculation, with immediacy and hence with absolute certainty." [F.S.C. Northrop, The Meeting of East and West, 1946, p.462]


In other words, the same intuitive sensitivity and religiously felt compassion that you and I experience (that in one form or another all nature's creature’s experience) is also experienced by God. Reciprocal movement, the same reciprocal movement that brings into existence language, myth, science, ethics/morality and civilization, also brings our emotional life to God. When I experience love, caring, happiness and reverence, so too God! It’s a two way street—a two sided reality that we share with Divinity. The telling factor behind this whole process comes with the knowledge that the "I" of God and the "I" of you and me are one in the same. Here I am reminded of the penetrating words of the Christian mystic, Meister Eckhart who is reported to have said, "The eye in which I see God and the eye in which God sees me are one and the same." Again, the liberation of God's non-being becomes God's immanence in the here and now while, at the same time, there exists an implied transcendent God; that said, divine immanence is extremely important to you and me because it is, in addition to being Divine, the reality—of the good, the bad, and the ugly/nauseating.

Saturday, June 23, 2012

New Episteme-New Relationship With Nature














[The following two paragraphs are a brief summary of a theme developed in F.S. Northrop's book: “The Meeting of East and West,” 1946—see chapter entitled The Solution of the Basic Problem, p.436]


The new physics speaks in a strange language—the language of a new and exciting world. Where this physics will take us is presently unclear but, with evidence accumulating everyday, what is becoming clearer is that it is incorrect to think of our relationship to nature in terms of the three-term relationship of Locke's mental substance, appearance and material particles. Berkeley, Hume and Kant addressed the
inadequacy of this three-term relationship. In brief, John Locke did not have to
choose this three-term relationship to explain Newton's particles. He could have
said that mathematical space and time is the vehicle which allows for an
analytical account of the aesthetic continuum and that the observer and what
appears for the observer are determinations of this aesthetic continuum. He could have said this but he did not because it would have been extremely difficult, given the interpretation of Newtonian physics at the time.

Now we know that it is more accurate if we describe our relationship to nature
in the form of a two-term relationship. The first term of the two-term relationship is the theoretically postulated, hypothetically designated, component of experience while the second term is the immediately sensed determinate portion of the aesthetic continuum. This aesthetic component of experience is relative to every individual while the theoretic component occurs in a public space characterized by repeatable experiences. Confirmation of the theoretical component of our experience becomes the key word here and this confirmation may be formal, as in a scientific result, or it may be informal, as in the best that pragmatism has to offer - if it works, use it.


On the other hand, if we remain in the episteme that Foucault characterizes as "belonging to the questioning of that to which one belongs," then responsibility becomes absorbed into the power/knowledge relationship of "responsible to whom for what ends." Certainly Foucault argues this position and, I might add, it is not a coincidence that Foucault characterized the modern episteme as "man's obsession with what eludes him." Man "must traverse, duplicate and reactivate in an explicit form the articulation of thought on everything within it, around it, and beneath it which is not thought...a constantly renewed interrogation" (Order of Things, p. 324).

“Yes,” we are living in what Foucault has described as the “modern episteme,” but “No,” that does not mean that we have to remain here. The door is open and what we must do is walk through it—and into a new relationship with nature (in the language of Foucault, a new episteme). Characterizing this episteme will be the realization (hopefully) of our Mother Nature/Self/Divinity connection and our participation in the liberation process that is this Divinity.

Friday, June 22, 2012

Another Look At The Power/Knowledge Relationships Of Michel Foucault













Power/Knowledge Relationships—Another Obstacle On The Path To Liberation

Social organization and social structure are born out of the power arrangements
which best reflect the prevailing episteme. According to Foucault, man (as a
conceptual entity) and scientific knowledge are born out of these power
arrangements. Blanchot describes the theme that surfaces "above the analysis" in
Foucault's books:

"Thus, already in The Archaeology of Knowledge, where we seem to indulge in the
illusion of an autonomous discourse (an illusion with which literature and art
perhaps bewitch themselves), there are announced the multiple connections
between knowledge and power, and the obligation to recognize the political
effects that are produced, at any given moment in history, by the ancient desire
to disentangle the true from the false. Knowledge, power, truth? Reason,
exclusion, repression?" [Foucault, Blanchot, 1987, p. 80]

These power/knowledge relationships, when considered in the context of the
liberation process, become just another obstacle that stands in the way of
liberation. These "pockets of power," in the form of social structure and social
organization, may be thought of as static elements in the liberation process;
that is, from the point of view of the people who tend to benefit from these
"pockets of power" they are static, but, from the point of view of the people
who are "locked out" of these "pockets of power" they are oppressive. In other
words, although power/knowledge relationships dictate the options available in
terms of accessing one's environment, ultimately, there is no preferred state of
privilege and control; it all becomes an obstacle in the liberation process.

Of course, in the real world, I realize I have just described the stratification of the "haves" and "have-nots;" and, I suppose, Foucault would be content to leave it at that. One cannot deny that built into the power structure of social organization is the secured status and privilege of the groups that possess the most power. And further, this security, more often than not, becomes secured by denying power (access to the environment) to the "underprivileged." That said, it should be noted that the power/knowledge consequence of the liberation process, as it becomes manifest in the highly differentiated attributes of society (Durkheim) contributes positively to the individuals well being, health, growth, and freedom—all the freedom that satisfies needs, permits access to one’s environment, provides security, encourages aesthetic appreciation, provides moral examples, and, promotes justice—attests to this fact. At the very least, in so far as change is inherent in the liberation process, it remains open to positive results. Hopefully, change for the better will/ought to happen, but, in all likelihood, for this kind of change to occur, it will require (in Foucault's language) the birth of a whole new episteme. This new episteme has already taken root in the logical implications generated by the new physics.

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Time Of Mind—Concept In Need Of Explanation And A Home















There Is Something Deficient In Our Idea Of Time Concluded

Why Relativity Theory And Quantum Mechanics Are Irreconcilable Scientific Theories

Discontinuity occurring in continuity (~bb) not only permits the fruits of civilization to manifest, it also allows individuals to actualize their own personal potentials— actualization that gives pleasure and meaning to life. But, "time of mind" is not recognized by science. Time, for science, has nothing to do with actualizing potential; time is merely an objectified measure of scale. As we attend to psychological "mind stuff" time speeds up. Nature's meaningful and cyclic events are, typically, how we think of time, but that kind of time is not the time encountered in inquires concerning the meaning and significance of embodied physical events. If we are ever going to appropriately respond to the big questions, "time of mind" must be included, in one form or another, in this response. The physicist Edward Harrison, in his discussion of Relativity, tells us that this second nature of time (he calls it the time of becoming) is precisely what is needed if we are to put a "human face" on science. He says:

"In one sense we are aware of time as a state of being throughout which things
are diversified. From this point of view the now embraces all time—the past,
present, and future—in a state of being. This is the aspect of time that has
been spatialized and woven into the fabric of space-time. But in another sense
we are also aware of time as an act of becoming, of one state of being flowing
and wheeling into another state of being…The now of today with its past,
present, and future is different from the now of yesterday with its past,
present, and future. The tapestry of being in each act of becoming is rewoven.
This aspect of time defies spatial representation. It has been omitted from the
physical universe because we have so far not learned how to express it either
linguistically or mathematically. To condemn the act of becoming as an illusion
oversimplifies the world in which we live….If we cannot put the now with its act
of becoming into the physical universe, then it seems safe to say that we cannot
put consciousness and its awareness of free will into it either. We have failed
to represent in the physical universe even the rudest aspects of ourselves as
experiencing individuals. Possibly the next major step in the design of universe
will be the discovery of a more sophisticated way of representing time." (Masks
Of The Universe, 1985, p. 155-56)


In the time of becoming, civilizations are born, endure, and are sometimes
destroyed. Anthropologically speaking, at the time when animals refused to
passively accept their environment and instead worked to actively transform that
environment was also the time when animals acquired the rudimentary
beginnings of “time of mind” (the implicative-affirmative's symbol-generating capacity) i.e., the birthright of inquiry, analysis, conscience and imagination. So, we might ask, is it possible to reconcile this new concept of "time of mind" with the time-concepts of science? Or, to put it another way, maybe this new concept of time can help us to better understand why relativity theory and quantum mechanics are irreconcilable scientific theories.

Because observations occur in the space of continuity, determinism and locality
there is an unavoidable clash of worlds-the world of continuity, determinism and
locality (Relativity) clashes with the world of discontinuity, indeterminism,
and non-locality (quantum physics). Bottom line-Relativity accurately describes
natural phenomena. Einstein's equations, when applied to the world of physical
events, provide accurate information concerning our status as participating
self-conscious agents in the physical universe. Likewise, quantum mechanics
accurately describes natural phenomena. The phenomena being described are
"fuzzy" because, as it is throughout the synchronic structure of freedom, the space
that separates also embeds and connects. At the quantum level, self-consciousness confronts its own ground condition in the form of the "phenomenal strangeness" of quantum physics. Ultimately, from its most holistic perspective, the synchronic structure of freedom tells us existence is a product of opposites; opposites are necessary for existence to exist. Therefore, were it not for synchronic structure (wholeness preserving opposites) self-consciousness, with its attributes of discontinuity, non-locality, and indeterminism would not/could not exist without opposites, i.e., determinism, continuity, and locality. In other words, if it were not for the existence of determinism, continuity, and locality we would not be free in a world of our own experience (by degrees, experience of our own choosing), seeking truth, justice, and religious meaning!

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

The Synchronic Structure Of Time













There Is Something Deficient In Our Idea Of Time Continues

Time, As Such, Doesn't Exist, But As A Utilitarian Experience, What We Do With
Time, Ends Up In That Familiar Experience We Call Temporality

Freedom effectively replaces temporality as an operational concept. Freedom, in
the sense of the logical proposition -- not, not being, —here represents
difference, but implies sameness. From the synchronic point of view, on a
fundamental level, difference and sameness may be understood as two sides to the
same coin. But, this symmetry is lost when freedom moves from this base level to a higher level of freedom, i.e., from not-life to life. Reciprocal movement, on this higher level moves in one direction only, -- no assimilation—no life, however, since nothing gets out of life alive, mortality conserves reciprocal movement. Freedom, now in this higher liberated state, is free to evolve into higher life forms.

But what about human time, the time that so perplexed Parmenides, Augustine and
Kant? What about “time as the determinism” that left the French mathematician Laplace no other option other than to declare that the existence of God was an unnecessary hypothesis? As I have already pointed out, human time comes to us by way of our senses and by way of constructed, logically consistent, scientific models used
to measure time. Humans, like all the other animals, assimilate information from
their environment as they adjust schemes-of-assimilation to better accommodate their environment. What makes humans unique in this process is their capacity to create symbolic models that help them to better accommodate and assimilate their environment, which, at least in part, is a utilitarian experience.

[Footnote: Concerning the utilitarian experience of time, Dr. Bronowski has this to say: “…..the animal lacks any apparatus, such as human speech, by which he can bring to mind what is not present. Man has freed himself from this dominance in two steps. First, he can remember what is out of sight. The apparatus of speech allows him to recall what is absent, and to put it beside what is present; his field of action is larger because his mind holds more choices side by side. And second, the practice of speech allows man to become familiar with the absent situation, to handle and to explore it, and so at last to become agile in it and control it."] Edited by John D. Roslansky, Creativity, A Discussion at the Nobel Conference, 1970, p.4

Time, as we normally think of it, doesn't exist, but as a utilitarian experience, what we do with time, ends up in that familiar experience we call temporality. Operationally speaking, the time of being arises in the experience of discontinuity occurring in continuity, and we call this experience "time." When we use implication to construct temporal models of time we are using "time" to understand time, -- to understand the how-to-processes that help us to accommodate/assimilate our environment. On this operational level, human time is merely a by-product of discontinuity occurring in continuity, but then so too is language, number, logic, and self. The human temporal moment then, carries within itself not one account of temporality, i.e., the video time of sequential physical events; it also carries within itself "the center of action," as Piaget calls it. Mind and identity are discovered in this "center of action," (personal identity being that degree of permanence that we experience in the midst of constant flux). And, more importantly, the forward movement of our knowledge (information) is discovered in this liberated and liberating space that gets called "time."

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

There Is Something Deficient In Our Idea Of Time













Three Levels Of Time

Off hand, I can think of two real world areas of relevance that the synchronic
structure of freedom speaks directly too. One is far removed from normal experience,
i.e., quantum effects, and the other is so close to experience that we ignore it
most of the time. It is to the latter that I will briefly direct my comments. If
my memory serves me correctly, I believe it was St. Augustine who said, "When I
do not think about time I know exactly what it is, but when I am asked to
describe it, I find that I know nothing about what it is." Temporality, as most
of us are aware, is a very peculiar phenomenon.

Time may be described on three levels. Theoretical physics (both quantum
mechanics and relativity theory) measures time in its physical aspect, that is,
"the t-coordinate is an undifferentiated continuum, and, if this coordinate is
`taken for real' as has been the tendency among many scientists and
philosophers, the familiar distinction between past, present and future, so
important in human affairs, comes to be regarded as a mere peculiarity of
consciousness." [Kenneth G. Denbigh, Three Concepts of Time, 1981, p. 4.] We
also encounter the concept of non-reversible time in the physical sciences. In
thermodynamics and in the biological sciences the arrow of time becomes
unidirectional. According to the second law of thermodynamics energy dissipates
while entropy (disorder) increases. In our consciousness of the everyday
succession of events we also experience a unidirectional arrow of time. We
cannot unsee, unhear, unknow, etc. our experience of the processes of perception
and cognition. So, we might ask, which time is real time? Conceivably there is
something deficient in our idea of time. Now let's look at time from the
perspective of freedom's synchronic dimension.

Monday, June 18, 2012

Fuzzy Quantum World—Explanation
















At The Depths Of The "Material World" There Exists A Fuzzy World That Exhibits Behavior Only When We Observe It

Everyday, via our five senses, inquiry, analysis, conscience, and imagination, we participate in physical events. The physical event world, even from a scientific point of view, used to be defined as a “determinate, continuous, and local material world;” now, thanks to quantum mechanics, that world, by definition, has changed. Now, the world that we participate in is, at least at the level of the very small, defined by non-locality, indeterminateness, and discontinuity. This strange turn of events becomes a whole lot less strange when considered in light of synchronic structure’s evolution. Accordingly, evolution (the evolution of the V structure) produced our determinate, continuous, and local physical event world out of the ~~b structure, a structure characterized by non-locality, indeterminateness, and discontinuity. Our everyday experience then, i.e., our "time of mind experience,” evolved (via structure’s capacity for self-regulation and transformation) out of ~~b, into ~bb, and finally into b~b~bb, or the “time of mind experience” of discontinuity occurring in continuity/identity while occurring in continuity occurring in discontinuity/physical event. Thus, freedom and its opposite exist in the form of a co-dependent relationship in order to “preserve wholeness." Self-consciousness then is the condition that separates and permits its opposite to occur, or, put another way, a determinate, continuous, and local world exists because self-consciousness exists outside of the physical event environment in a discontinuous, indeterminate, and non-local way. As long as science keeps its investigations focused on the material world, as long as science doesn't penetrate deep into that area where the integrity of the physical universe breaks down, where the deterministic motions of mass points no longer exist, reductionist methods of science work perfectly. However, at the depths of the "material world" there exists a fuzzy world that exhibits behavior only when we observe it—when we separate ourselves from it. There we find a physical reality with no uniquely definable location, a physical reality that exists in several states at the same time, a physical reality structured by a mathematical equation. Freedom's synchronic structure not only predicts this fuzziness, it explains it. Fuzziness at the quantum level occurs because the space that separates and embeds, on the quantum level, also connects, “preserving wholeness” in the process. The V structure, not only “preserves wholeness," it also implies the Great Affirmation that sustains freedom, consciousness, and self-consciousness, but before I get to that post I need to tie up a few lose ends.

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Participatory Moment Of A Conscious Self















Products Of Time Of Mind—Revolutions Around The Sun, Vibrations Of
Atoms, Biological Clock Decay

There you have it; my pictured description of the V shape/structure. What
follows now, is commentary on the significance of this structural
interpretation of nature.

Freedom and logical form demonstrate a co-dependent relationship; that is,
freedom and logical form develop together. When freedom and logical form merge
in the participatory moment of a conscious self, identity is the result, and in
the wake of identity imagination follows. More specifically, the possibilities
contained in the participatory moment of a conscious self are immense, but the
immediate consequence is that identity is preserved in the midst of constant
change. This becomes clear when you consider that in discontinuity occurring in
continuity (~bb) an awareness of not-being exists and, by implication, something
must be before it can not-be (Descartes' “cogito ergo sum” is another example of
this consequence). This is not the end of it, however, for awareness of implied
identity occurs in the presence of factual events and with the identity of
events, freedom moves forward in the form of an implied knowledge of one's
environment. In itself, this "passage of time" does not produce a great deal of
knowledge, but because we bring the logical relationships implicit in synchronic
structure—the logical operators of “and, or, and implies”—to bear on the experience of an event, we may form judgments concerning the significance and the probable cause of an event. These judgments are determined valid across a continuum which ranges from sensation divorced from theory at one end, to, at the other end, sensation reinforced by the most advanced and respected scientific theory available.

I am not suggesting that physical events occur only for humans. As the V
structure indicates, there is an empirical side to everything. Life accommodates
and assimilates an empirical environment in order to survive. The evolution of
star stuff, the liberation of the necessary conditions that support life, and the
participatory moment of a conscious self—all entail the empirical side of the
V structure. Absent an empirical side, the freedom side of the V structure could
not/would not exist. For humans, however, the physical event extends well
beyond the sum of the conditions that come together to insure survival. The
material world (the physical event) is open to scientific investigations, and these investigations, in addition to being a product of deliberation and questioning, are also carried out in a space/time environment (the empirical side of the V structure) that resists change, and where continuity, determinism, and locality occur, i.e., in the physical properties Einstein so staunchly defended when faced with the strangeness of quantum reality. One might ask, when it comes to “doing science,” given the V structure, can we trust the results of our investigations? And the answer to this question is: we have no recourse other than to trust that which makes logical sense and occurs in a predictable manner. What differentiates predictable events from say events found at the ~bb level of structure is that predictable events, as well as human events in general, negate (as the V structure indicates) the liberated structure that constitutes human consciousness. Physical events negate the structure that knowingly participates in physical events. There is no room in the physical event for a consciousness that questions, there is only room for the electro-chemical firing of synapses occurring in squishy grey matter that gets labeled brain, a brain that upon manipulation can induce and create predictable conscious activity. There is no room in the physical event for the ~bb structure that is the source of the symbol-generating movement of free thought—the movement that makes thinking possible, that makes "time of mind" possible. Physical time or revolutions around the sun, vibrations of an atom, biological clock decay, all exist as products of "time of mind," which, in turn, is embedded in a space/time physical event.