CONSCIOUSNESS, MIND AND THE WORLD
AREA
5 EXPLORATION OF THE WORLD
Exploration as Ongoing Discovery of the Variety and Extent
of the World
The
world is one…but exploration is compound8, involving the world itself - the real,
ideas or the ideal, and words as symbols - of
significance and convenience - for ideas and, in a community, for communication.
This includes definition, specification, delineation or mapping of variety. Among
other things ideas - and concepts - correspond to patterns, unities whether
transitory or otherwise
Exploration
is a process with relations and interactions among real, idea, word. Ideas,
including ideas of nature, change rapidly relative to the slower changes of the
natural realm. This is a partial [and provisional] characterization of the natural
realm. In contrast, in the socio-cultural realm, ideas and objects may change
at comparable rates and have dynamic interactions
This,
too, involves conceptualization: world divided into real/idea…as
constituted of something like an ideal-conceptual/perceptual-mental realm, a
social or socio-cultural realm - the community of individuals and a natural
realm…that words refer directly to ideas and indirectly to elements of
the world. I can come back and review and modify. However, I am using the
distinctions for convenience rather than as categories
I
particularly do not want to imply any categorical distinction between real and
idea. An aspect of idealism and the dynamics of the real is that of a strong
interaction - if not identity - between real and idea
The
present application of these considerations is to consciousness though the origins
as far as my own thought are in reflection and, of course, the tradition.
The example of consciousness forces us into a larger or whole realm - structured,
of course - and the analysis then, it turns out, has implications for the
foregoing conceptualizations
Introduction: This is a broad topic and I have
written on it many times. It would keep coming up in many ways. “Science”
is used in many ways and to many purposes…some
so far from any ideal or unitary meaning that it becomes clear that it is an
umbrella term without, in its manifold use, any specific designation. I should
first specify what I mean by science. This is many faceted and could be
approached in many ways: the idea, the disciplines, the culture, the myth - science
as it is perceived outside the culture, the institution, the ideal and the
operational. The idea could be very simple: knowledge that through
repeated criticism and test has become established in our culture as secure…and
so on. I want to emphasize, however, that the other ways to look at and
understand science are significant. These various ways or modes are not, in
essence, in opposition but are complementary. Within the modes there may be
opposition such as verification vs. selectionism or science as an independent
institution vs. science as a transactional institution. The institution of
science includes the ways in which science is built into the fabric of society.
I may say that science is multifaceted, and transactional rather than unitary
and concrete…and despite this it has a unitary character. But my purpose
here is to avoid repetition of the issue of exploration and science over and
over. So I ask what is it about the idea of science that I find limited? It is
the idea of knowledge that, though it interacts with action, is separate from
human action. As such there are two criticisms. The first is the lack of real
action and therefore the lack of groundedness. But at the same time there is
another criticism that is the over caution of science that detracts from its
contact with the real… These criticisms also apply to the idea of
knowledge that is separate from action. For the separation from action leads to
empty action if not apathy of action
The
issue of respecting science arises. Science is important in the world today as
a primary approach to knowledge and as a fundamental source of basic and
applied knowledge, provides significant understanding of our world and
universe; science is a world-wide institution and as such is very well funded
and has numerous practitioners. In some senses there are too many practitioners…the
sheer numbers, while a source of a wide variety of information, also result in
a dilution of the significance and standards. My position is this: I believe
that use and practice of the ideas and principles of science is true respect;
that respect of science is consistent with work in which the tenets of science
such as materialism, the atomic hypothesis to name two are suspended and
alternatives explored as long as this is stated and the two modes are not
confused; that proper questioning is as agreement and sometimes more so. The
idea of authority has various meanings but, given limited or bounded
rationality “rigid acceptance without question” is not one of them;
and for the same reason arbitrary and ad hoc rejection of received ideas is not
true openness
Knowledge
and science may be contrasted with belief. There is an underlying assumption of
a separation from the world in which we can have a science, knowledge of
it. However, there is not an infinity of time in which to leisurely seek
objective, secure and timeless knowledge. Practically there are separations
between knowledge and action. The idea of knowledge as separate from the loop
of action is without final foundation. It is the projection of a phase of
culture. What is that knowledge that is the part of [human] thought while
engaged in action, in the world? Do I have to wait till knowledge is completed
before action? Yet this is part of an implicit model of knowledge and science,
cultivated in part due to its power in many places and academies. It includes a
denial. It is though the hearth of action without final knowledge is a fake. That
is not the case. Action is the essence of being. That temporal form of
knowledge called belief is not mere belief…it lies halfway between the
ideal of final knowledge and the faith of devotion…it is rejected by both
extremes in their escapes from the world…but it real - it is our
engagement with the world straddling the polarized quests for certainty -- and
therefore may be called the ethical action principle of belief
Exploration
and Science…
Exploration is the fundamental action of being in search of Being…i.e. in
search of the whole in the areas of extent in process, modes, and monads. The
modes include the elements of the “chain of being” but also subject-object
and interior-exterior. Thus for exploration and being: embedding in the real is
also freedom. This follows, as discussed in the present circle of essays, from
the nature of genesis. Exploration sees being as an integral question and
answer…but question and answer that are not separated and are part of
being in its depths rather than merely symbolic. Exploration includes science
and the idea of ideas separate from action. Again, by the nature of genesis and
growth of the world groundedness requires real action and separation. The world
contains separation and distinction and variety: these are the richness of the
world. Exploration seeks to experience the whole in itself, the richness in
itself and the relations among and between these. Exploration is contact with
the real
The
question arises as to the relations between esoteric/academic disciplines such
as the fields of science, academic philosophy, revealed religion…and
common experience
What
do I mean by common experience? Is it not related to the esoterica…are
the esoterica not extensions of common experience. Is it what remains if the
esoteric disciplines are lost? Is it related to our evolutionary situation…these
are some considerations
What
is not accessible to common experience is not basic truth
On Words and Meanings9
I
think of a word and have numerous associations…other words, ideas,
things, relationships…I enter the realm of meaning
Some
points of view argue that meaning is determined by use10. Here I argue that this is a valid
idea but that “use” is not a simple concept…and that this
valid idea is nested in a larger view that is a dialog between “use”
and understanding placed in a context of the world and its processes. A reason
is that the world is in a process - in a number and variety of processes. If,
in the beginning, there was nothing then at which point is “use” determined?
When were words coined? What was the occasion and intention at the coinage? Did
the originator - I do not mean to imply that origination was a discrete
occasion or the work of a singular individual - have an intent? Can an
individual experience the meaning of words? There is a dialog between use based
in the world and meaning seated in the mind without either actually dominating
the other
Ideas
and words have an ordinary, day-to-day, practical realm [within the real, or
otherwise] and so have an ordinary, day-to-day, practical meaning. Of course,
the idea of an ordinary, day-to-day, practical realm is not definite…for
it varies among individuals, communities, cultures and societies and over time…even
the significance of the ordinary vary and change…and these changes are
clearly “nonlinear” in that there are interactions among the
elements and factors of change and so changes of meaning may be sudden,
discontinuous and even show inversion at times
If
we think of words and concepts as relations to the real then, as adaptations,
they have no immediate need to be precise or exact and nor is there an
immediate meaning for precision or exactness to be derived from adaptation. Exactness
is revealed as a projection from the stark aspects of experience rather than as
a universal experience or desiderata. From this, perhaps initial, perspective
the relations need only to be “sufficiently” good. In cases of
bounty idea-concepts from all realms - natural, social, ideal, universal - can
be pure fiction. Clearly, there is a pragmatic factor at play but that does not
imply - or deny - any pragmatism. Concepts of truth are not ruled out; they may
derive from some refinement or higher order adaptation; and they may derive
from an individual or a culture facing the questions of choice in making their
language in to an instrument fashioned according to select imperatives. At the
same time, these freedoms may also be subject to forces of the real
I
may think of adaptation as a name for mutual conditioning of the elements in
the processes of the world
These
and the following issues speak to the difficulties of any naïve philosophy of
ordinary experience, or any naïve ordinary language philosophy, or naïve
pragmatism. For the total system of uses of words and language involve origins
before antiquity and the multi-valencies and interactions of uses that vary
from necessity to freedom…this includes the thought that in the origin
and mint of language use and coinage of words are inspired in one function or
one individual - a shaman or a priestess - but in a complex society somewhat
removed from the original forge of its language, in which the institution of
language is “established” the “functions” of use,
meaning and analysis have differentiation among the public-at-large, the
practitioners, and the specialists…but this differentiation is not at all
split according to the class - nor need it be. Although establishment is in the
past, there is an ongoing origination in a relation between “natural”
language and “constructed” or artificial language with incomplete
separation among use/meaning, public/specialist, and natural/artificial. It may
be the mystique or the hubris of the specialist that permits a clean separation
in imagination, perhaps only outside of consciousness, that results in the idea
of construction as artificial. The difficulties, then, of the idea of an
ordinary language philosophy, or a pragmatism, or any kind of ontological or
epistemic utilitarianism is more that the distinctions they imply are temporary
and partial, not absolute, rather than incorrect and they become artificial
only when turned into an ontology, an epistemology, or a theory of semantics
Going Beyond Ordinary Meaning...Fiction and Reality
The
above shows that going beyond the ordinary is somewhat artificial for it is
ordinary to go beyond the ordinary. There is a significant realm of meaning
defined by use but this remains in relation to other institutions of meaning11 and in transition in mutuality
with the world and relations to the world. This historical mutuality means that
individuals, groups, “public-at-large,” societies and cultures,
civilizations are agents of ideas, words, meanings and their changes12…but that these elements and
their changes are subject to the forces of the world, of the real
In
saying this it is, of course, a mistake to view the agents and bearers of
cultural change to be outside the real. This error at once substitutes a barren
and stern epistemic stranglehold on what are the exuberance and variety of
truth and the real
At
other times I may use “truth” with hallowed tones. Sometimes the “barren
and stern stranglehold” becomes, in the hands of a magician, an ice-mountain
of pristine beauty. That, too, is proper
What
ways and motives are there in establishment and change in words, meanings and concepts?
The drive to relate idea-word-meaning-concept to the world comes under the
umbrella labeled truth. This sounds like the correspondence theory but when we
remember that the system is also in the world it also implies coherence. I
might as well drop these two C-words… There are motives to “improve”
the day-to-day and the common [shared by the public and the “keepers”
of meaning]…there is the motive to go beyond - the motive to adventure - in
realms of mind and nature: humankind stepping ahead, metaphorically, of the
known dimensions and territories of real…the motivations to love…the
motive to survival, of keeping up, metaphorically, with the real and its
varieties and changes
There
is, of course, value to established words, ideas, concepts and meanings. Old
word associations, however, are also found to be blocks…especially as the
ideal elements [words, concepts, meanings…] are successful and form
circles, systems or conglomerates - tightly woven or otherwise: we are ever a
mix of old and new and subject to old associations even as we attempt to
overcome them in the enterprise or phase of transition. This points to a value
in new words and other ideal elements
Clearly,
words partake of a nominal and a real character. These are not exclusive. The
nominal aspect is obvious… the primary ultimate limitation on the
real character of ideal elements is the existence of the real
The
ideal elements - ideas, concepts, meanings, words…- are layered, compound
and complex. Simplicity and minimality consistent with reality is a value, has
elegance and is conducive of incisive understanding. What is elegance and
realism in one realm of use may be error and confusion in another
However,
this is not an apology for relativism. In going from the ordinary to the
universal it may be necessary to discard the comfort of familiar ideas. But,
since the realms are interwoven, the enterprise is of value even in the realm
of the ordinary