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Tuesday, 16 August 2011

V: Reality: draft notes


[I’ve received back the writing-book I left at my sister’s place. Forgive me for simply copying out my scribbles before turning it into a proper essay. But I’m so excited to have it back!

Note that it is recorded verbatim, except for edits indicated thus:
-- strikethrough was in manuscript, now to be ignored
-- text in square brackets is replacement or additional text for clarification]


Sunday 14th August 2011 Still @ Mary’s
7am in bed.
[Para deleted here, unconnected with the topic]

I think my essay on Reality will be a key to my contribution to the book with Bryan. I think that if we can clarify Reality (which means above all clarifying unreality) then we are on the way to clarifying Belief and unbelief. Once we have done that, we are in a position to unravel the confusions about Reason.

The steps I have outlined are not mere philosophy—not a mere hobby for the philosophically-minded, so to speak. Clarity brings with it not perhaps agreement, but a cessation of conflict. Which is in itself a good. Which is in itself a point where we could call in our roulette chips & leave the casino with our winnings, well satisfied.

But to me it would be merely a prelude. Merely a way to prevent the leakage of energy, the leakage of philosophical attention and the fuelling of conflict. Goods in themselves, as I said. But not the thing which truly interests me. [In hindsight I want to say “But not the thing which fascinated me in the first place.”]

That is the business of paradox. I suspect it is no different from that which Albert Camus calls the Absurd. Not that he even invented the concept. As he explains in The Myth of Sisyphus, others had already identified it, written about it. He merely started where they left off. Whether in the present investigation we take the matter forward, beyond where Camus reached, is almost immaterial, because the ground he covered is worthy of infinite exploration, covering as it does the whole of human experience, & broad enough to encompass a panoply of viewpoints.

But for a start, it will be enough to have a clear view of reality.

Reality
The only satisfactory method, I suggest, for getting a grip on this slippery topic is to take the totality of everything, and subtract from it all that is unreal, and see what we have left.

Or there is another way of doing it. We could deny a single absolute meaning to the word “reality”. We could acknowledge that like most words, perhaps all, it can mean different things in different contexts. Along these lines, we might acknowledge that the main usefulness of the word “reality” is to make distinctions. It is useful, sometimes, to pause in what we are doing, and say “meanwhile, back in the real world ...” Or we may say “Get real”.

So with either approach, we arrive back at the same point, the acknowledgement of unreality ... (to be continued)

Schema
|
___________________
past (unreal, because only approached through thought, memory, documents, video etc)
___________________
present: is REAL!?
--sensual - but how does that work? - Reaches consciousness and then interpreted/processed (e.g. flavour = combination of different sense inputs)
--feelings - emotional
--reason
--fantasy
___________________
Future
--unreal, because it might not be so - only consists in the form of thoughts plans, models [afterthought: machine settings!] etc
So it's hard to choose amongst all this. It's hard to establish anything that’s indubitably real, for there are opportunities at every turn for unreality to creep in and taint reality.

Somewhere at the back of our minds [we know that] the question “Does God exist?” is a false one and we know it?. Does what exist? We are forced to define God first, to know whether God exists or not. It doesn’t make sense. [If we can define what it is that doesn’t exist, then that thing must exist. Does a unicorn exist? Yes, in myth. So we know what a unicorn is. Are unicorns real? No. So] I prefer the question “Is God real?”

For we are familiar with reality and unreality. We know that a world in which pigs can fly is an unreal world, a fairy-tale world. There will always be those who disagree, those who say that the fairy-tale world is real. But we will [can] deal with that. We say that they are living in cloud-cuckoo-land. They believe in the reality of that which is not.

The notion of consensus. [So now we have arrived at a way to define reality in a sensible way. Take all that there is, out in the world and in the consciousness of its entire population, and subtract the unreal. But ultimately we rely on consensus to agree what is real. If I’m on a lonely footpath under a bright starry sky, when a UFO lands, and little green men climb out and ask me to take them to my leader, it’s unreal. If a hundred people are on the scene and eighty-three of them, say, more or less confirm what I claim to have seen, it’s real. Not because it’s proof. Not because we have laboratory conditions to back up the claim. It’s simply the way we do things, the way we as non-scientists use the word real.]

8 comments:

  1. Your "schema" reminds me a bit of my "wave model", although applied to a completely different purpose, and in a completely different setting. That being said, I'm not sure that I would go so far as to declare the past "unreal." It's true that it no longer exists. But it did exist as a prior state of things. It's not just a fantasy dreamed up by our memories. It leaves it's traces even in the present. For example, they're tearing down the old hospital here in town. I drive by the half demolished building. I don't believe that this ruined structure simply arrived here ex nihilo and popped into existence in the present. I'm fairly sure you don't believe this either. I would hope not. Does the complete hospital exist? No...not any more, but it DID exist and the remains of its existence are still standing. I just don't think that something no longer existing is the same as "unreal." Unicorns are unreal. My cat that died in January is real no longer.

    As for the future, I'd be closer in agreement with you about it being unreal. If it exists at all, it would only be in the form of potential. If I throw a ball, I can speculate that it will land in the grass some feet away. Most of the time I will be right, which I think demonstrates that this speculation isn't completely baseless. And yet, something unexpected could happen. A bird could swoop down and grab the ball, or it could go through a window. Of course, these things take me by surprise because of my own limited knowledge. If I could see the bird, the window, if I knew the exact velocity and arc of the ball, I'd be in a far better position to foresee nearly every potential outcome.

    So I'm guess I'm saying, it's true that only the present exists right now, but it contains the wreckage of the past and the seeds of the future, evidence of a continuum of time.

    I'm sure I'll have more to say about this later. I admit this was a fairly sloppy comment.

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  2. I've decided that the best way to respond to all this is, rather than getting bogged down arguing individual points, just to give my approach to this "reality" issue. Now, you're free to approach this problem in whatever way you want to, and it's not my place to say who's right or wrong, because my approach isn't really about right or wrong. It's about how I choose to deal with the world.

    You see I put all these kinds of doubts to rest a long time ago. It's all very simple to me now. I take the world as I find it. I see no more reason to doubt the world's existence, than it has reason to doubt my existence. After all, it was here long before I was. As for doubting my ability to perceive and understand the world, this seems like a pointless exercise in futility. Again, I take the world as I find it, and I find the world I perceive and understand to be pretty damn fascinating. There are pinball machines, fortune cookies, time, space, consciousness, art, music, plenty of things to keep my brain employed and my interest stimulated and my heart beating. So why would I want to wrack myself with anxiety over whether I'm capable as a human of perceiving it and understanding it "as it is"? I just assume that I am, until this world I see itself gives me reason to think otherwise, which it sometimes does in the form of some "loose thread in the veil" as I mentioned before. Then I investigate, I explore, I ponder. I engage the world as I find it, rather than sitting around doubting my faith in it. That to me is a lot more fun.

    But this is just my choice. This is how I choose to deal to with the world. This is how I choose to live my life.

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  3. Of course, it's not that I'm not interested in the truth. I am. I just don't see doubting simply for the sake of doubting as a productive means of reaching it. In my experience, it seems to take you farther from the the truth rather than closer. The world fades away in the distance and your left stumbling around in the dark, tangled up in a increasingly convoluted system of doubts. That just doesn't sound like the truth to me.

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  4. Ah, I'm grateful to you for all these points. They will be valuable in extending the draft into a proper essay or what-you-may-call-it.

    For example, I realized from your objection that I cannot say that the past has no reality, in that a consensus would agree with you that it is real. So I shall have to explain that there are different types or layers of reality, which we all accept, but probably not different layers at the same time.

    As for your point that you have settled all these things in your own mind and find nothing left to doubt, I'm sympathetic to that too.

    But what I would ask you to consider is this. Though you may have settled your approach to reality, you are only able to do it (I'm assuming) by adopting the approach that millions of others are wrong. Which as the draft essay mentions, is a cause of conflict in the world. If there is an understanding which allows the other views to be accommodated, then the conflict A=right, B=wrong can be amended to a disagreement: A finds this approach natural, B prefers that approach. Without any fundamental contradiction.

    But I agree with you that one doesn't want to retreat from the world in an increasingly convoluted system of doubts. It seems to me you are there describing Sartre's Being and Nothingness.

    To me, everything you have said is a valid critique which can make a positive contribution. It's up to you of course what you want to do. It seems to me we are still fluid in this. There is still work to do, for both of us, if we choose to do it.

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  5. For clarification, I am not trying to pursue "the truth". I'm not really aware of such a thing. I wouldn't even call what I am trying to do "doubting".

    It is more like exploring different ways of looking at the everyday experience; exposing the assumptions we make, the abstractions we take for granted, alternative but possible abstractions we refuse to countenance, because they could not co-exist with the abstractions we take for granted.

    And to show that the reality that seems so solid mostly isn't solid at all. It is just made of stuff that we take for granted, without being able to know that it is fact. At the same time, we deny to our opponents the same kind of thing.

    I'm just telling you the direction I want to go here. The actual writing of it will be something else entirely. As I said before, it will be a cascade of ideas, each deviating from the conventional attitudes.

    But not trying to persuade anyone of anything, just showing possibilities, demonstrating different ways of looking.

    I know that this has to be built up via building-blocks. 1 building-block = 1 post here.

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  6. reading again your comments above, you speak a lot about "the world". But the world is something inside you as well as outside you. The coherent world that you long ago decided upon is a construction. I'll be very happy to anatomise that with you, if it's not too boring for you to do that.

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  7. "What is truth?" Pilate asked. "I find no fault in this man."

    Yet his truth was different from what he was being presented.

    If the majority of a group of people share in a mass delusion or hallucination and claim to see the face of the Virgin Mary in the clouds or in an oil stain on the floor of the local Jiffy Lube, does that make it true? If I claimed that a mole on my left knee cap grew a mouth and told me strange and eldritch secrets of the truth of the universe and I got a hundred people to believe me, would it be true?

    "Truth" is a slippery thing. I think you need a bigger net.

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