ON THE DYNAMICS OF BEING AND THE REAL

ANIL MITRA PHD, © 1999 – 2000
STATUS SET AND REFORMATTED
June 4, 2003

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Document status, June 4, 2003

Inactive, discontinue for Site II

Replacement: content has been absorbed to Metaphysics


CONTENTS

SYMBOLS USED. 1

I - A CASUAL INTRODUCTION. 1

II - MY AMBITION. 2

III - THE ROLE OF IMAGINATION, EXPERIMENT OR OBSERVATION AND INTUITION. 3

IV - DYNAMICS OF REALITY AND THE HYPOTHESIS OF BEING. 4

V - THE TRUTH THAT IS KNOWN. 4

 


SYMBOLS USED

KB

=

Knowledge and being

NSPU

=

Nature, society, mind or psyche, universal-unknown or Being

EIT, E'

=

Experiment [new idea, concept], implies, true?, new idea

I - A CASUAL INTRODUCTION

We were talking about love - what it is! The purpose was not to define love but to ask what are we doing when we imply that there is something, e.g. love, and try to say what that thing is. The example used was of two mental health patients, hospitalized in an acute care facility, in bed together for a brief period. I said that they experienced love; it may have been the only kind of experience of love that they may ever have. I was not judging the quality of the love or whether the act was healthy or whether it should be permitted. Someone, married twenty years, judged angrily "that's not love." I disagreed saying love is many things to many people; I did not want to prejudge; I did not want to exclude anyone from love regardless of circumstance or capacity. I thought, tentatively, you are in love when you feel in love. That could be for a brief period or for an extended one.

What is love? It is a human-social relation. In this sphere there are no pre-givens because we are creating as we are understanding. Values are involved, too. One society may value individual worth and so promote feeling; another may value a stable environment for upbringing and so define love as a value and as stable; the actual thing will be multi-valued in any given society with different weights; opinion, criticism, action, reality and survival will be arbiters. There are realms, in this case, the social one, where ideas such as "love" [i] are multi-valued and multi-functional - this is related to but not the same as ambiguous, [ii] are just not given by nature and to be discovered but are also creating.

But in the realm of physics and some other sciences we are, it seems, only knowing and not creating. Force, mass and acceleration are fairly universal and our definitions approach intrinsic qualities; the concepts evolve: from concepts and theories we have predictions; some agree; others do not; concept-theory is modified and more of experience comes within the compass of reality; concept-theory approaches nature and intrinsic qualities. We may say.

But when we consider existence; that it may come about from nothing/no-thing we see that existence and its nature come into being at the same time and there is nothing absolute about the existent or its nature; nor is the distinction between existence and its nature [pattern, structure] absolute. And so I want to see the realm of the absolute in science also as fluid.

Individuals have some influence on creation of and in the social realm. Consider “love” – it has biological and social elements. Because of biology there are aspects of love that are the same for all societies. Because of the social component, the nature and expression has variation among societies and individuals.

In contrast, the conventional wisdom is that the physical realm is given to human individuals and societies. Of course we can make physical changes: we can alter the arrangements of physical entities: that is what makes technology possible. However, whereas humans have influence over the essential nature of love they do not influence the essential nature of matter. Thus the fundamental nature of physical entities as described in quantum mechanics, the theory of space, time and matter may be discovered but not created by human beings.

What of biological properties of organisms? That seems to be part way between the social and the physical. We can change the characteristics of the individuals in a species through selection and even through alteration of the genetic code. We cannot yet create organisms but we can, in small ways, alter there “essence” – and that is, in fact, being involved in the process of creation… for creation is not something that happened at some distant past time but is ongoing.

The same is true for the physical realm. Although the bulk of “creation” may have occurred at some distant past time near the “origin of the universe,” and we may infer that from the fact that we do not detect changes in the fundamental physical laws and constants, this is a guarantee only that we have not detected change. And, of course, “the origin of the universe” is a name for our ignorance of what is beyond or what came before or will come after. Therefore, we may learn to affect the change in the physical essences.

This brings us to the question of the limits of [human] being. We have concepts of such limits but clearly these concepts are very limited; and, likely, they are vastly conservative.

This brings me back to the sphere of the human. What is the nature of that and what are its limits in time, space, imagination and being? First, in the conventional compass of four score years and of the physical body: what are the limits of being, and knowing? There are the meditative experiments of the Yoga; and there are my experiments in being. Yoga says that we can know the identity of Atman [= the individual soul; also = reality as known by introspection] and Brahman [= the universal; also = reality as known through the world and experience in the world; but in both cases there is no a posteriori limit on these two realities]. As an example consider that the individual is part of evolution; consider that though the individual dies it also came into existence and this is a pointer to the non-absolute nature of death. This is reincarnation without absolute and determinate karma. What can I know and be in relation to these karmic possibilities?

And round to the sphere of the social. We now see ourselves as creative in the spheres of the mind; possibly of the physical; and therefore, though not without limits, in the social.

But what are these limits? If I am ignorant about nature and if what I regard as certain knowledge is only a practical hypothesis is not the same true about the limits that I set? I accept some limits as immediate but none as absolute.

II - MY AMBITION

Whatever the origin and path, the goal: what is the maximum that an individual can be/do/know.

This makes me full of awe.

The answer [though it started as intellectual] is not only through thinking and knowledge. It is also with one's whole self [being] and life. I.e., cannot be answered by sitting down one Sunday afternoon and dreaming, or by graduating from a degree program... though these are part of the process... before searching all KB must experience what others did/learned and specially what cultures/societies did/learned, specially my one [or two or three...].

How

1.       Map = all KB

2.       Experience, learn

3.       Repeat

In the common and the immediate, K may be [at least seem, but this is not really common experience] black and white but on the boundary between K and un-K, between B and un-realized, there must be fluidity.

Being, reality are themselves fluid in long time, distant places [origins, what came before origins...?] and other remotes - very small = atoms, DNA..., the unconsciousness...

In turn that fluidity ® the common, e.g. knowledge of disease, psychology [Freud as extension of common sense... Nagel's article]... because the common and its meaning are part of the whole.

Why so long?

Therefore, a "whole life." Must go to the boundary of K, B, Reality = live out; transform, construct, experiment, discover...

Experiment with realms of Being = ideas, test. Ideas = others, mind; test = what use and what result. Nature-Society-Mind-Being [N-S-P-U; P because p = psyche, and U because u = unknown; and even Society is a trip. N ® S ® P ® ®® U.

And my own "baggage." But its not all mere baggage. I think my experience makes my thought and experience, if less neat and clean than some academic system, more real. "SV" was, and is, partially, a choice.

The story

Structure

Points to reflect from above

Narrative

III - THE ROLE OF IMAGINATION, EXPERIMENT OR OBSERVATION AND INTUITION

Imagination

The purpose of this part is to establish the idea that imagination is necessary to the growth of knowledge. Similarly, other forms of experimental construction are necessary to the growth of other forms or aspects of being. I also want to criticize the practical idea that knowledge grows by careful accumulation of information -- what is sometimes called the practical approach.

Consider a major vehicle for the expression of knowledge -- language. Was language discovered by searching and accumulation? Or consider ideas -- were ideas discovered by searching? No, ideas and language were not discovered at all. Are ideas new? Consider that five billion years ago there were no ideas [on earth] simply because there were no creatures.

The history of knowledge, e.g. in the common sphere and in science – which are so very interactive, shows that imagination and observation interact. Imagination determines for what it is that we look; observation [experiment] finds it. Imagination tells us to look for a neutrino or, even a tree, and tells us that what we saw in fact corresponded to the neutrino. The interaction is more intricate than described with much interaction and many sources and kinds of corroboration. Without the imaginative construction of ideas [in evolution of percepts; note, also, the interaction of ideas and percepts] we see nothing but chaos.

There are two main spheres where knowledge is sometimes supposed to grow or become known by slow accumulation. They are the common sphere and science.

Lets look at science first. What are the key constructs of science? First establish the key areas of science; these must be: the realms of the physical, of life, of society and the mind. Of these, the best established are the natural sciences - physical and life science. The major aspects must be form and dynamics. Thus the major aspects of physical science must be particles and fields; and the dynamics of the same. Were particles discovered? These things are way to small to be seen. The Greek philosophers considered, alternatively, matter to be continuous and to be atomic well before anything was established. Later in connection with the behavior of gasses, an atomic or molecular hypothesis was assumed and properties of gases predicted. Comparison allowed calculation of the masses [weights] of atoms and molecules. Extension of the ideas allowed the establishment of formulas of compounds. All this was well before anything like a direct verification of the existence of atoms was possible. It was not just imagination of the existence of atoms but also of their properties and how they might interact, all highly speculative in a sense - i.e. imaginative, that permitted these developments. Of course it was well into the 20th century before doubts about the atomic constitution of matter mostly disappeared and an idea became regarded as fact. Next, look at the life sciences. Things like the circulation of blood, the nature of nerve impulses. Five hundred years ago no one had any idea that there were any such things; today these are known facts. When we know that a vein carries blood, or a nerve transmits an electrochemical impulse we can cut up a cadaver directed by that knowledge and see veins and nerves and brains and know what it is that we see. But when we have no idea what it is that we are looking for, no idea that blood circulates or where it circulates through, what we see when we cut a cadaver even if we are careful observers is meat and tubes and so on. The discovery of circulation by William Harvey, the discovery of nerve transmission were slow difficult acts that included a significant imaginative input. Or, consider evolution. What is it that we actually see? Do we see evolution in action? Mostly, no -- though we can see adaptive changes in bacteria, fruit flies, moths in industrial areas but these are minor examples and are seen because we know what we are looking for as a result of the already established ideas and theories of evolution. Come back to the question - what do we actually see? We do see a great variety of living organisms; that is interesting because there is a kind of continuum to that variety and we must be interested to ask not only where do the organisms and species come from but, also, what is the source of the variety and its continuum. The variety and continuum are important because they do form part of the argument for evolution. But we are still focusing on what we see; in addition to the variety of living organisms we see only some dead fossils. Its hard to see fossils of non-vertebrates; soft tissue does not preserve well. So the whole idea of evolution -- the idea itself, the various constituent ideas that constitute the theories, the use of sparse fossil data [not as sparse as some opponents of evolution hold] and the discovery of alternative kinds of evidence, the detailed application to the variety of organisms and structures [eyes...] was a vast imaginative act. Remember, also, that evolution did not come into a vacuum; it stood against the weight of established religion that was held not only by the people but also by the scientists themselves who, therefore, had to persevere against their own established faith and cherished prejudice. What of the "sciences" of mind? Despite the discipline of psychology, science must be regarded as "groping" in this sphere: what is mind, how is it possible that inert matter can have feeling, think?

When we look back there are a number of reasons that we do not see the imagination. First, what was an imaginative construction is now seen as a fact. This is not wrong, but the transition from a tentative, imaginative construction to an established fact takes a relatively long period in which the ideas are slowly confirmed in many different ways and areas of application and in many ways some involving long trains of reasoning from the hypothesis to the prediction. Second, when the textbooks are written various competing ideas that were not successful and were so forgotten; we do not see, in looking back, the imaginative process or its highly tentative and experimental nature.

The previous paragraph explains, to a large degree, why imaginative construction is not appreciated in the common sphere. Actually, there is a distrust of imagination. Not a complete distrust; and it is true that imagination is held in higher regard in the modern west than it had been; but there is still distrust of imagination in its application to the real world... and some of that distrust comes from not appreciating the role of imagination in knowing. The distrust of imagination is not unrealistic. On a day to day basis, facts are important. Not every imaginative act constructs something that describes a part of the world. Imagination is difficult; some people are better than others; there always has been a tension between seers and the common.

When it comes to all KB, imagination, experiment, construction are essential. Without them there is nothing. Imagination is not just important, it is necessary. It's the only way something can become more than it is.

Experiment

Already talking about experiment above. What do I mean by experiment? It is something whose outcome I do not know. So, of course opening up to "failure." But, given that the [at least "a"] process of coming to know in areas where I [humankind, other being] do not know is: E ® I ® T? ® E'... failure is not Failure, it is part of getting to know. But also, by experiment, I mean not only ideas but experiment with my being... what can I do, what can I become. Hinted at this earlier when I talked about the limitations of my body in time and space and at the connection to evolution; and through the ideas of and like Yoga [yoga is yoke or union = a discipline for seeing, knowing the relationship between the finite me and the infinite all; except while the "sacred" texts are sometimes venerated as absolute, I think they are an experiment... but one of the better experiments done by humanity in this realm. Vision quest may be another such experiment; a third experiment that of people such as Meister Eckhart.] But the key idea is that in an area where I do not know what the possibilities are I must use my imagination and experiment with my life. SV is such an experiment, living in nature is another. Others: yoga type exploration, v.q., etc. see sources [J, J99... ]... but more importantly, experiment with ways = dynamics of reality and limits.

Yoga, for example, is a kind of experiment with being.

Intuition

Intuition is a guide. What do I mean by intuition. It's a sense. You have to work in areas of dark and semi-light to develop intuition. Some people have a lot of it [good intuition... everyone can have not so good intuition] and it can be cultivated. Why? Because you can not have final clear knowledge of what you are looking for if you are looking for something that you do not completely know? Why look? Where would we be if no one looked? There would be no science, no America, no civilization. Is that good? Some people say "NO" but, except for the looking they would not have anything to say no to, they probably would not even be. How? The light/dark area. Working in this area opens you up to: making educated guesses and improving that facility; it opens you up to your unconscious and the relation [a dynamic one as in subliminal messages, and as in reminders to self after having consciously thought of a problem, as in reminders to dream...] between conscious and unconscious processing and how to cultivate that relationship. And considering that the structure of the mind is related to the structure of the brain that arose in evolution and must contain some kind of innate map or at least mapping ability --probably a little of both-- the unconscious/conscious relation is a tap into at least some aspects of what is beyond the world of light where everything is seen as though it were perfectly known.

Intuition lives among the following boundaries: light and dark or knowledge and ignorance, observation and imagination, conscious and unconscious, percept and concept – or the multitude of data and the integration of data into objects, the process and the result of knowing.

IV - DYNAMICS OF REALITY AND THE HYPOTHESIS OF BEING

Dynamics of Reality

Test the real using all ways and sources. Ways: knowledge imagination and selection, action and construction or transformation of being; and the interaction of knowledge and transformation.

The idea is testing out the nature of reality by (i) using all sources, (ii) testing the nature of [what are thought to be] limits, search and construction, (iii) learning how to do this. More details elsewhere.

Hypothesis of Being

We saw rational doubts about the limits of being. A crude hypothesis “the hypothesis of being” is the idea that the individual can know and be all. To refine this hypothesis: eliminate nonsensical expressions such “the individual can be what cannot be,” and refine the hypothesis by introducing a hierarchy of being, a dynamic process of transformation, and questioning the nature of limits and boundaries.

A crude hypothesis. Individual being can KB all. Eliminate nonsense examples. Refine. More details...

V - THE TRUTH THAT IS KNOWN

Ways of knowing. Knowing that I know. [Knowing2 that I know1.]


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