On Wednesday, June 19, 2019 at 12:44:35 AM UTC+10, Terren Suydam wrote:
>
> Hi Pierz,
>
> Your writings remind me very much of the work of Gilles Deleuze, a 
> philosopher who similarly shifted ontology from *identity* to *relation, *and 
> explored many interesting consequences of making that shift. My exposure to 
> him came from the excellent Philosophize This podcast, which dedicated 5 
> episodes to Deleuze. If you're interested, check out the first episode 
> here <http://philosophizethis.org/deleuze-pt-1/>.
>

Thanks. I know of Deleuze of course - I believe he killed himself by 
jumping out his Paris apartment window to escape the sufferings of 
emphysema. He's one of the post-modern guys much beloved of the academics 
along with Derrida and Foucault et al. But I am admittedly not familiar 
with his ideas. I've been trying to find philosophers who might have gone 
down this path before but not turned up all that much, so I will definitely 
check him out.

>
> Terren
>
> On Mon, Jun 17, 2019 at 10:15 PM Pierz <[email protected] <javascript:>> 
> wrote:
>
>>
>> I've been thinking and writing a lot recently about  a conception of 
>> reality which avoids the debates about what is fundamental in reality. It 
>> seems to me that with regards to materialism, we find it very difficult to 
>> escape the evolutionarily evolved, inbuilt notion of "things" and "stuff" 
>> that our brains need in order to manipulate the world. Yet QM and 
>> importantly the expected dissolution of time and space as fundamental 
>> entities in physics have made any such simple mechanistic notion of matter 
>> obsolete - what is left of matter except mathematics and some strange thing 
>> we can only call "instantiation" - the fact that things have specific 
>> values rather than (seeming to be) pure abstractions? What does a 
>> sophisticated materialist today place his or her faith in exactly? 
>> Something along the lines of the idea that the world is fundamentally 
>> describable by mathematics, impersonal and reducible to the operation of 
>> its simplest components. With regards to the last part - reductionism - 
>> that also seems to be hitting a limit in the sense that, while we have some 
>> supposed candidates for fundamental entities (whether quantum fields, 
>> branes or whatever), there is always a problem with anything considered 
>> "fundamental" - namely the old turtle stack problem. If the world is really 
>> made of any fundamental entity, then *fundamentally* it is made of magic 
>> - since the properties of that fundamental thing must simply be given 
>> rather than depending on some other set of relations. While physicists on 
>> the one hand continually search for such an entity, on the other they 
>> immediately reject any candidate as soon as it is found, since the question 
>> naturally arises, why this way and not that? What do these properties 
>> depend on? Furthermore, the fine tuning problem, unless it can be solved by 
>> proof that the world *has* to be the way it is – a forlorn hope it seems to 
>> me – suggests that the idea that we can explain all of reality in terms of 
>> the analysis of parts (emergent relationships) is likely to collapse – we 
>> will need to invoke a cosmological context in order to explain the 
>> behaviour of the parts. It's no wonder so many physicists hate that idea, 
>> since it runs against the deep reductionist grain. And after all, analysis 
>> of emergent relationships (the parts of a thing) is always so much easier 
>> than analysis of contextual relationships (what a thing is part of). 
>>
>> To get to the point then, I am considering the idea of a purely 
>> relational ontology, one in which all that exists are relationships. There 
>> are no entities with intrinsic properties, but only a web of relational 
>> properties. Entities with intrinsic properties are necessary components of 
>> any finite, bounded theory, and in fact such entities form the boundaries 
>> of the theory, the "approximations" it necessarily invokes in order to draw 
>> a line somewhere in the potentially unbounded phenomenological field. In 
>> economic theory for instance, we have “rational, self-interested” agents 
>> invoked as fundamental entities with rationality and self-interest deemed 
>> intrinsic, even though clearly such properties are, in reality, relational 
>> properties that depend on evolutionary and psychological factors, that, 
>> when analysed, reveal the inaccuracies and approximations of that theory. I 
>> am claiming that all properties imagined as intrinsic are approximations of 
>> this sort - ultimately to be revealed as derived from relations either 
>> external or internal to that entity.
>>
>> Of course, a purely relational ontology necessarily involves an infinite 
>> regress of relationships, but it seems to me that we must choose our poison 
>> here - the magic of intrinsic properties, or the infinite regress of only 
>> relational ones. I prefer the latter. (Note that I am using a definition of 
>> relational properties that includes emergent properties as relational, 
>> though the traditional philosophical use of those terms probably would not. 
>> The reason is that I am interested in what is *ontologically* intrinsic, 
>> not *semantically* intrinsic.) 
>>
>> What would such a conception imply in the philosophy of mind? 
>> Traditionally, the “qualiophiles” have defined qualia as intrinsic 
>> properties, yet (while I am no fan of eliminativism) I think Dennett has 
>> made a strong case against this idea. Qualia appear to me to be properties 
>> of relationships between organisms and their environments. They are not 
>> fundamental, but then neither is the “stuff” of which organisms and 
>> environments are made. We simply cannot ask about fundamental properties, 
>> but must confine ourselves to the networks of relationships we find 
>> ourselves embedded in, and from which we, as observer-participants, cannot 
>> be extricated. “Third person” accounts, including physics, are abstractions 
>> from aggregations of first person accounts, and none can rise so high above 
>> the field of observation as to entirely transcend their origins in the 
>> first person. Thus there are certainly objective truths, but not Objective 
>> Truths, that is truths that are entirely unbound to any observer and which 
>> nominate the absolute properties of real objective things.
>>
>> Note that the “relationalism” I am proposing does not in any way imply 
>> *relativism*, which flattens out truth claims at the level of culture. Nor 
>> does it make consciousness “primary”, or mathematics. I cannot personally 
>> reconcile the interior views (qualia, if you like, though I think that 
>> terms places an unwarranted emphasis on “what experiences are like” rather 
>> than the mere fact of experience) with a purely mathematical ontology.
>>
>> One obvious objection to this whole idea is the counter-intuitiveness of 
>> the idea of relationships without “things” being related. Yet I think the 
>> fault lies with intuition here. Western thinking is deeply intellectually 
>> addicted to the notion of “things”. David Mermin has interpreted QM in 
>> terms of “correlations only” – correlations without correlata as he puts it 
>> – an application of similar ideas to quantum theory. Part of the objection 
>> I think lies in the semantics of the word “relationship”, which 
>> automatically causes us to imagine two things on either side of the 
>> relation. It would be better to think in terms of a web, then, than 
>> individual, related entities. Or simply say that the related entities are 
>> themselves sets of relationships. Mathematics provides a good example of 
>> such a purely relational domain – a number exists solely by virtue of its 
>> relationships with other numbers. It has no intrinsic properties.
>>
>> Yet what then of the problem of specific values – the instantiation 
>> aspect of materialism? To quote Hedda Mørch:  “… physical structure must be 
>> realized or implemented by some stuff or substance that is itself not 
>> purely structural. Otherwise, there would be no clear difference between 
>> physical and mere mathematical structure, or between the concrete universe 
>> and a mere abstraction.”
>>
>> We can overcome such an objection by invoking the first person 
>> perspective. Mørch credits the specific values of entities in our 
>> environment (some specific electron having this position, that momentum and 
>> so on) to some property of “being instantiated in something intrinsic”, 
>> harking back to Kant’s *Ding an Sich*. Yet there is an alternative way 
>> of viewing the situation.  Let us imagine that each integer was conscious 
>> and able to survey its context in the field of all numbers. Take some 
>> number, let us say 7965. When number 7965 looks around, it sees the number 
>> 7964 right behind it, and the number 7966 right ahead. Trying to understand 
>> itself and the nature of its world, it starts doing arithmetic and finds 
>> that everything  around it can be understood purely in terms of relational 
>> properties. Yet it says to itself, how can this be? Why do the numbers 
>> around me have the specific values they do? What “breathes fire” into those 
>> arithmetical relations to instantiate the specific world I see? Yet 7965 is 
>> wrong. It is ignoring the significance of the first-person relation that 
>> places it within a specific context that defines both it and the world it 
>> sees.
>>
>> Note that I am not, like Bruno, actually suggesting that numbers are 
>> conscious. The point of the thought experiment is merely to show how 
>> specific values can exist within a first person account, without us needing 
>> to invoke some unknowable thing-in-itself or substrate of intrinsic 
>> properties. 
>>
>> Grateful for any comments/critiques.
>>
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