CONSCIOUSNESS, MIND AND THE WORLD

AREA 4 THE WORLD AND CONSCIOUSNESS ARE IDENTICAL 5

Idealism: Unification of the Concepts of the Idea and the Object

At this stage of the present exploration there are still the notions of the one consciousness - mind/idea…and the object of consciousness: “matter?”

How shall we introduce organicity into this conceptual state of affairs? The answer is as follows: the concept of consciousness has been reviewed and revised. The same must be done for the concept of the idea itself

It is usual to think, in the standard material paradigm of the modern world, of consciousness as consciousness of an object. The content of consciousness is the idea. On this view, the world has matter and ideas. This is not necessarily a dualism for the idea may be a manifestation or reduction of matter without having been explained or even being explainable in material terms

However if everything is a form or manifestation of idea - if ideas are real and the original substance - then we have a clear and simple monism. This is the form of idealism. It is simpler than materialism in that since, by our existence, we have ideas and thus idealism does not require any further substance or hypothesis with ontological content…and even if the having of ideas is said to be delusion or illusion then what are delusions or illusions if not ideas? It is an error to think that idealism is in opposition or in contrast to materialism. It materialism is symbolized by the mountain, then idealism is symbolized by the mountain, the wind, the clouds and mist that surround the peak…and the valleys below…and the ground of the mountain: the earth. Idealism requires no hypothesis. It need not be a philosophy or a metaphysics or an ontology. It is or can be seen as the name for experience; or one really wants it to be something more than the intrinsic state of our existence then we could call idealism the acknowledgement of our existence

Idealism: Objections and Responses: a somewhat lengthy catalog

Some basic objections to idealism

1. Idealism and Power. The challenge to the paradigm of practicality and power… It is tempting to call this the material and or the prevailing paradigm of politics and commerce of everyday life of the Western World…but the material paradigm is much more than a scientific paradigm based in, say, physics and is of much broader prevalence than the “West.” It is the paradigm of power, politics, survival, the ego and the given. Scientific or philosophical materialism is a special case of this paradigm

2. The notion of the Idea as Ethereal and non-material, and

3. The Challenge of Materialism. The existence of matter and the need to satisfy the requirements of practical or everyday materialism…and scientific and philosophical materialism6

Responses to the objections 1 - 3: 1. Universalization, reality and simplicity; 2. There are grades of idea…from vision, to feeling to hardness to thing-object-matter. The idea or notion of object as not-idea is incomplete. “Objects” have very much an ideal existence…that is fundamental, existential and experiential. Their existence also as material objects requires an additional hypothesis or position beyond that of the reality of experience: that of the external world. The external world is thought - whether practically and in effect or analytically and in fact - to be necessitated by the equation of idealism and solipsism. The equation of solipsism and idealism follows from the isolation of consciousness as discrete, monadic and isolated entities. Solipsism is in contradiction to the existence of a real world with distinct individuals and distinct ideas. However, a world of distributed and unitized - by occasional rather than continual communication - consciousness, idealism does not imply or equate to solipsism. The ideal world is one of individuals that are also a unity. 3. Idealism is thus consistent with “The existence of matter and the need to satisfy the requirements of practical or everyday materialism…and scientific and philosophical materialism”…but is also simpler and requires fewer hypotheses. The absence of awareness is the material case

…there are too many posited categories that are and should be grades or shades in the continuum of a single category. This means that the world is actually simpler…but in no way loses its variety of forms and phenomena, in no way reduces the variety and richness of [human] experience…and further, to be explained below, eliminates or gives meaning to alienation - connects humankind and world. This latter result is similar to the action principle of the Gita. Alienation is the result of the stark aspect of reflexivity. A positive aspect is freedom and agency in transformation of self, culture and world

…the sources of the posited categories, in addition but also in some relation to the power principle, are the disciplinary or specialization of modern institutions and academics…and egoism

…what categories? Mind/matter, egoism/altruism, real/nominal, rational/empirical, hidden/visible, inner/outer or external world, subject/object, ultimate/proximate, pragmatism-utilitarianism/objectivism, consciousness-subjective/behavioral-psychological… Regarding the latter it is true that we recognize the mental in others through empathy and by behavior: action, expression and affect…but why are we asserting that a smile is “just behavior” and not mind? So mind is recognized by mind and this generalizes to the formal and the conceptual, the recognition of mental process or their absence in alien mind, in computers

Reformulation of some of the objections: But, common sense, science and philosophy teach that there’s an objective world out there…outside of consciousness

Response: The objection refers to the stark, discrete, central form of consciousness. There is also the less defined, the felt, and the hard where the idea of distinction between subject and object breaks down - where subject and object are in fusion…where the world is in the essential nature of consciousness to the point that the statement is not necessary, and reveals doubts of being and alienation fostered by analysis and power - which, good or bad, is the case. What has been called consciousness is the discrete, vivid very self-conscious form cultivated in a culture in isolation from the conditions of its existence. What the objection labels “the world out there” is the diffuse, dim…the outpost of the stark. The external world is also an “idea” or concept that needs, in the process of reconceptualization, be relabeled “hypothesis” rather than “fact” or “established.” The external world is the range of forms called matter, nature, society, and universe. We have discovered the world “it is us.” The label “external world” is the label for the outpost and the boundary of consciousness that is also imbued by the material paradigm with the character of the central and the stark element of consciousness

Further reformulation of objection 1. In the twentieth century the reign of science overtly by its overwhelming success and covertly by its power and dazzling of the collective conscious, the democracy of numbers, and the subjection of all institutions including that of learning to economic criteria resulted in a minimization of philosophy. Philosophy, in the eyes of many, assumes a lesser, auxiliary role. We contemplate the end of philosophy

Response: The situation described in the objection is a symptom of capitulation in the face of the forces listed; it is a collective loss of faith in reality fostered by alienation, by the same forces, from the world and the real being of humankind. At the same time as the forces described operate there is also a certain disenchantment with the professionalization of the disciplines and the practical arts…a disenchantment based in realism over method and also in the aging of a certain energy and internal contradictions of the socialization of what was once magic

The dazzle of the science and technology of the twentieth century, in the context of this response, is like the fascination with the “siddhis" in the practice of yoga. The “siddhis” are supernatural powers experienced on the way to yoga. As such they are “dangerous” in that they detract from the final goal of union with the real which may be translated into knowledge of the real in the present context

Note that to say that science as practiced by a Newton or a Heisenberg is magic is not a criticism of the subject matter or the uses but points to the singular aspects of the disciplines and the main actors. The institution of science substitutes instances of success for the real, ideas for being, method for action, and social progress for natural evolution

Exploration of being - see Being and The Absolute - goes beyond the limitations apparently imposed by the dominant paradigms of second half of the twentieth century

Further objections, criticisms and debate:

4. Idealism as Tautological. But idealism, even with reconceptualization, universalization and gradation of the idea says nothing - it is almost tautological - the concept of the idea is merely redefined to include matter. Materialism at least shows something - that, for example, ideas are manifestations or aspects of matter

Response: Materialism - scientific or other- does not show that ideas “reduce” to matter although that demonstration may be part of a materialist program. I have discussed the issues of idealism and materialism at length elsewhere. The simplest refutation of strict materialism is that it does not and cannot explain experience. The form of idealism considered here is not an exclusive idealism; it does not exclude matter; it does not claim that matter is an illusion or a fiction; it does not require or force a choice. It asserts that matter is a form of idea

Idealism is most definitely saying something. One thing it is saying is that a materialist system - based, for example, in physics and biology - will not and cannot explain experience i.e., it will not explain the subjective aspect of awareness and consciousness. The system of idealism that I am considering shows why such materialist explanations cannot be given but it may also show that the explanatory gap, though it is infinite in one sense, is transparent and easily bridged in another. As more and more is known about matter - physics and biology - more and more mental phenomena will be explained and understood and consciousness - the fact but not the subjectivity of it - may well be explained. That will be impressive and scientifically significant with further implications and consequences in general and for physics and biology in particular…but the materialist mode of description will not and need not explain the subjective side of consciousness7: the explanation will be in an “as if” mode

The gap between the “as if” and the subjective modes of awareness or consciousness - sometimes called the third and first person modes - may be paper thin. I expect, however, that this will require reworking and broadening of the concept of consciousness and the idea so that in the subjective limit the concepts will reduce to the normal stark and very present form of consciousness that we know well…and in the objective limit the concepts will reduce to matter

In this view, then, the scientific explanation of consciousness itself - the subjective part…”the hard problem” may well be a non-problem - an artifact of our cultural paradigms and institutions

Thus idealism is not without content

The idea is not redefined - rather it is re-conceptualized

Materialist explanation does indeed have power but this is neither a refutation of idealism nor a proof of materialism

Idealism does not refute the existence of material being. There should not be any need or desire to do this from an idealist perspective. Idealism gives meaning to matter

Idealism conflates subject and object but also gives special meaning to the object

Materialism denies the subject as a category but may seek to explain it as an aspect of matter

There is a framework within which, practically, there is no reason to choose between idealism and materialism because in a specific practical sense there are no consequences to that choice. Even though idealism is simpler, more inclusive and more direct it is only when broader frameworks are considered that the choice is significant

5. Consciousness as Biological the obsolete dualistic Cartesian categories of mind and matter should be discarded and consciousness should be recognized as a material or biological phenomenon

Response: At issue here are [1] the more basic divide between subject and object, between internal and external. These practical dualisms are the foundation of the metaphysical Cartesian dualism. Treating consciousness as a biological phenomenon elevates the practical divide to a metaphysics or ontology. The present idealism bridges the divide and implies no change for the use and utility of material explanation which goes through in the “as if” mode. [2] In the immediate realm the introduction of idealism as described here introduces conceptual consistency but no practical advantage, [3] In the global or long term the idealism provides the consistency described above, maintains the practicality of biological and material explanation in their known domains of validity, shows a way to completed understanding and integration of the disparate and incomplete of our modern cosmologies

6. An Idealist Metaphysics cannot be established

Response: It should not be in the nature of idealism to be scientific or provable empirically. The claims of idealism are not empirical - not verified by looking at the world. Rather the claims are about the place of “looking.” Idealism is therefore not to be proven inductively. Nor is the assertion of idealism - that the character of the world is that of the idea - analytic

Idealism is not a fact in a universe of facts

Idealism addresses the nature of the world. It is about the whole of being and the distinctions within being. It addresses a distinction of convenience: world and being, the object and the idea

The idea behind idealism is the integral nature of world and experience

It is a statement regarding the whole of being and therefore neither empirical nor rational

A statement or view regarding the whole of being is not empirical in the sense of being known through experience nor would one expect to prove an assertion of this type for proof is relative - to primitives and so on. Rather, such an assertion would be one of integration, recognition, economy

It is a-hypothetical. It is the nature of the world that follows from making no assertion

When that is spoken it is idealism

However, idealism is not without content. We walk in the world and live in it without projection without assertion and therefore without distortion. It is the final economy. Materialism, pragmatism…say something about the world… And, valuable though this may from various points of view to say something is to distort. The silence of idealism is positive. It is the ultimate mental discipline…to leave the world as it is

But in a world where there are many voices it is necessary for that which needs no voice to be spoken

Idealism is not without content as noted, also, in the foregoing discussion. Further its intrinsic content is the self-recognition of being. It is very close to being saying “I Am” and saying no more. It provides context, clarity, simplicity but not reduction. To what will we reduce the whole of being?

A minor objection relates to the issue of simplicity. The content of the objection appears to be about the unfamiliarity of the content. However, it is simple in relation to the degree of assumption or hypothesis being made, the number of categories required or even categoriality itself, the closeness to experience and the synthesis of the content of experience with the content of the material mode of description. Although idealism is made to stand in opposition to materialism and sometimes to empiricism it is not so

7. The Separateness of Experience. My experiences are mine and are separate from the experiences of others

A related distinction: death and birth are absolute

Response: The response will be aphoristic…and by pointing to exception

The atomic elements are elemental and transmutation is impossible

The world does not disappear at night

Sight is sight and sound is sound. This is violated by synesthesia

Shared delusions

Twins

Husband/wife

Poetry

Music

The social taboo against bonding

The cult of individuality

An experiment… Connect or graft the eyes of one organism to that of another of the same species

A question… In enculturation, culture conditions what is perceived. A perception is made. Whose perception is it?

8. But consciousness is localized

This objection has been addressed in the discussions above. I revisit it because I want to point to an old analogy

Response: We notice the air [usually] only in its perturbations - the breeze, our breath…but not in its pervasion of the atmosphere

It is certain forms of consciousness that are localized

This analogy to the form of matter… Matter is localized in particles. But particles are not points. And the fields of interaction among “particles” also partake of the form of matter. Some of the confusion in modern quantum mechanics - though certainly not all - is due to applying old distinctions and models

9. The Reconceptualization of Consciousness is Another Name for Matter could it be that in “re-conceptualizing consciousness” I am merely renaming matter?

Response: Perhaps the motivation for this objection is the trap of the old terminology and viewpoints

In the re-conceptualization the realm of consciousness expanded. Perhaps awareness or some other perception-relation word would be better with consciousness, as discussed above, as a special case

Note that relation is another word that refers to something grounded but is made tepid by projection of alienation-detachment and anti-grounding onto the world by the politics of power and symbols

Matter remains a special case. It is materialism, not matter, that is rejected…and not because it is “inferior” but because it is more hypothetical and is contained by idealism

The Issue of Materialism in the Form of Atomism

If I say “everything, each particle, is awareness” that immediately raises the question “What is a particle?” This is considered in the essay Being and The Absolute

Idealism vs. Neutral Monism

A motive to idealism is in the following dual: 1. The inadequacies of materialism in explaining experience, and 2. Revision of the concept of the idea. One may argue, however, that materialism will grow to include experience - in primal form and that the revision of the concept of the idea is too far from the natural meaning of the idea. It may be replied that the generic concept of materialism excludes experience and that the revision of the concept of the idea is faithful to its grounding in experience, in the mental and is also sufficiently broad to provide foundation for a metaphysics. And so, the debate, the dialog, the conversation may continue

An alternative that cuts through the dialog, permits founding in the given categories, is non-dogmatic, allows for discovery, includes the fullness and mystery of being and the imperatives of materialism is a suitably interpreted neutral monism. One approach to this is the theory of being of the third circle