[MD] relative

118 ununoctiums at gmail.com
Thu Jan 12 15:43:58 PST 2012


Hi Ham,
Indeed, I am arguing against a semantic reality.  I am arguing for an experiential reality.  My point was that a language which deemphases objects or nouns is much more useful.  An experiential reality does not contain objects or subjects, so it is possible to get away from SO.  That is all I am saying.  SO is not a done deal as you claim.

Sent laboriously from an iPhone,
Mark

On Jan 12, 2012, at 9:45 AM, "Ham Priday" <hampday1 at verizon.net> wrote:

> 
> ----- Original Message ----- From: To: <moq_discuss at moqtalk.org>
> On Wed, Jan 11, 2012 at 8:43 PM, "118" <ununoctiums at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Subject: Re: [MD] relative
> 
> 
>> Hi Ham,
>> 
>> I wanted to respond to the following paragraph of yours:
>> 
>>> For some time I have referred to existence as a "differentiated, relational"
>>> system, which seems to have fallen on deaf ears.  The appellation
>>> "definable", however, not only makes "relative" clear in this context, it
>> > offers the possibility of a new perspective on Existence itself.   Why > can't
>>> we discard SO as a "metaphysical" paradigm --which it really isn't--and
>>> instead describe Existence as "Definable Reality".  After all, despite the
>>> fact that the conscious self eludes proper definition, everything it
>>> experiences is definable.  Moreover, if knowledge is what we learn from
>>> experience, then it is the Individual who defines it.  And, when all
>>> individuals define experience in the same way, we have universal knowledge
>>> (which is why people like Marsha prefer the term "conventional").
>> 
>> Most of such language occurs through verbs which could be a different
>> way of viewing reality.  It is also of interest that Pirsig was interested
>> in the American Indians.  Coincidence?
>> 
>> There is of course a theory that says that language structures the way
>> in which we see reality.  There is also discussion of the nounyness of
>> our current language and what we can do about it. ...
> 
> Yes, and there have been a few MDers who have argued for a semiotic reality. Certainly words are what we use to convey images and precepts.  But nouns and verbs don't create objective reality.  It is experiential images and precepts for which the communicators invented language in the first place. have that we They are use creates impressions
> 
> http://www.mythic-cartography.org/2006/10/05/the-mouth-speaks-the-mind-boggles/
> 
> As with any Westerner, Ham, you choose to identify everything with
> nouns and in such a way create everything into objects.  But perhaps
> this is not the only way to see things as you claim.  Perhaps there is
> something to minimizing our SO infatuation, that only takes some
> effort.  In the second link there are links within that can take you
> to strange places if you are willing to step out and experiment.
> 
> For example:
> http://www.mythic-cartography.org/2006/10/02/animism-native-language-and-quantum-linguistics/
> 
> Which contains the following:
> "In the end, though, we still have a language fundamentally oriented
> around abstractions and visual concepts; we tend to “see” what the
> speaker describes. In the Native American language of Blackfoot
> (Alford 2002), if you speak about someone riding a horse, in that
> genderless and fundamentally relative language, the listener receives
> the feeling of riding, not the picture of riding; the movement, sway,
> and balance of riding the horse, not the image of a rider. Notice also
> that the listener identifies empathetically with the one doing the
> riding. You can see someone riding without much impact, but if you
> “feel” someone riding you’ve entered their world (and essentially
> begun tracking them; see any of the many articles I’ve written here on
> the nature of tracking)."
> 
> And so, Bon Voyage!
> 
> Mark
>> 
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