Nick,

Please see below.

*-- Russ *


On Mon, Apr 9, 2012 at 12:14 PM, Nicholas Thompson <
[email protected]> wrote:

Well, “relation to a relation” is my way of talking, not Peirce’s.  he uses
the word “sign”, but he uses that term in such contorted and ephemeral ways
that I have started to try to understand him WITHOUT using it.


[Russ] Does this mean that we are no longer talking about whether feeling
is synonymous with relation to a relation?



Sorry, I didn’t mean to be snarky.  It is “inner” and it is a kind of
“sanctum”, isn’t it?   The second meaning from Dick.com is “A private or
secret place to which few other people are admitted.”  Isn't that a fair
reading of your position with respect to emotions and motivations?  IE.,
that our behaviors arise from such a privileged causal place?


[Russ] I don't think I said much about emotions or motivations
specifically. I generally talk about subjective experience.
That includes the experience of having emotion. Motivation may be something
else. I don't think of my subjective experience as  “A private or secret
place to which few other people are admitted.” Although as far as I know,
it's not possible for anyone else to share my subjective experience -- at
least given current technology. It may be in the future thought. That's not
very sanctum-like -- although if we ever do develop technology that allows
people to share other people's subjective experience, it will certainly
 raise many privacy issues.



I think Peirce imports *teleonom*y into biology, but not teleology.  You
recall that my general position is that everybody else but me confuses
causality at a lower level with structure at a higher level.  I.e., when we
say that joe wants a hot fudge Sunday, we are not referring to an inner
causal demon who is pressing Joe toward the Sunday shop, rather we are
referring to an organization of Joe’s behavior over time with respect to
icecream shops and the presense of some triggering even that sets that
structure in motion in the present instance.  On my account, thinking that
joes Sundae hunger cause his sundae eating is hypostization.  I think
Peirce would agree with this position.


[Russ] Merriam-Webster defines *teleonomy *(nice word; I didn't realize
there was a word for that) as "the quality of apparent purposefulness of
structure or function in living organisms due to evolutionary adaptation." I
already have what I think is a good explanation of teleonomy: mutation
produces what in effect is some functionality in the world, which happens
enhance survival. I see that as applying to biological organisms in
general. If that's what you and Peirce are saying, I guess we agree.
Otherwise, I'm not sure where we are.  I wouldn't disagree with your
description of Joe's behavior.

[Russ] This seems to be drifting into a discussion of "free will" rather
than subjective experience. Sam Harris recently gave quite a convincing
talk about "The Illusion of Free Will <http://goo.gl/FQFMc>." As far as I'm
concerned, though, denying free will does not require denying the reality
of subjective experience.



Rushing, but not snarky,


Nick
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