Hi, Dave, 

 

See larding below.  I have to say, this still doesn't quite sound like you. 

 

Nick 

 

Nicholas S. Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology

Clark University

http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Friam [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Prof David West
Sent: Monday, October 16, 2017 12:27 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Truth: “Hunh! What is it good for? Absolutely Nothing!”

 

Naw back at ya. I am not picking a fight or being contentious just to be 
contentious. I am trying to be a little dog nipping at the heels of assumptions 
and presuppositions.

 

Because this list is not a scholarly forum where you spend an exquisite amount 
of time picking your words and making your statements as precise as possible I 
am assuming that your language reveals said assumptions/presuppositions. So 
when you use rational man, I think you really deep down mean exactly that. And 
when you shy away from that as in the post I am responding to, you still cannot 
get away from your core position.

[NST==> This I would characterize as an approach to discourse roughly 
equivalent to “in vino veritas”.  It is the assumption that the most accurate 
representation of a person’s view of the world is its most unguarded 
presentation.  Notice that your sentence above presumes a truth of some matter, 
“Thompson’s Real View”.  So far as I am concerned, that presumption concedes 
the ONLY POINT I have been arguing for in our discussion … so far.  It concedes 
the MEANING of the word “truth”.  You will notice that unlike yourself, I have 
not in this conversation EVER argued (yet) for the truth of any matter, other 
than what we are referring to when we refer to truth.  <==nst] 

 

We have two people with two idiosyncratic opinions. Each communicates his/her 
opinion to the other and they interact trying to discern what each other means 
in order to see if their individual opinions are the same, or somewhat the 
same, or substantially the same.  If the conversation leads both parties to 
agreeing with each other that their individual opinions are really the same, 
shared, opinion — even if stated somewhat differently — voila, we have Truth. I 
think this is a fair restatement of what you say (and say when channeling 
Pierce).

[NST==>No, David.  It is absolutely Unfair, and I am surprised to hear your say 
it.   When we speak of truth, we speak of something beyond anything that you, 
or I, or any particular group of people might believe.  But, contra Descartes, 
we do not speak of anything outside of all possibility of human experience.  
What we speak of is that humans will converge on in the very long run, if 
indeed they ever converge.  No convergence, no truth, because, on Peirce’s 
account, that is what the term, truth, means.  Please, David, do not continue 
beyond this point in this message without acknowledging that my thesis is a 
thesis about the MEANING of the term, Truth.  And that we have not yet begun 
the discussion concerning whether there exists any such thing.  Until we see 
eye to eye on that, the discussion is stupid.  It would be like a discussion in 
which I would say, “a unicorn is a horse with a horn in the middle of it’s 
nose” and you keep replying, “NO, NICK.  There ARE no unicorns.  Until we have 
agreed on a definition of a unicorn, the question of its existence cannot even 
come up.xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx <==nst] 

 

However ... the first imposition on the process focuses on the language we use 
to communicate/interact. I believe that Pierce, you, and all of the scientists 
and mathematicians and CS types on this list are going to insist on using a 
very narrow set of languages and would prefer just one

- mathematical logic. Definitely one with well defined terms and formalized 
grammar, i.e. one that is "rational."

[NST==>You are posing here as the romantic outlier, a pose that both Glen and 
Marcus, and many others of us would like to contend you for.  All I can say is, 
if everybody on the list agrees with me, why am I arguing with them all.   
<==nst] 

 

Well of course you say; how else could we proceed?

 

Well, one possibility is that you come over and we drop acid together - or 
better yet the one hallucinogen derived from the Ariocarpus cactus that 
empirical evidence suggests yields consensual hallucinations - and we use that 
'language' to see if our opinions converge.

 

You are nuts, you say.

[NST==>It would be convenient for your argument if I said that, but I don’t.  I 
would say only that at 80 I have a hard enough time moving through my world 
without taking hallucinogens, and so I probably won’t do that.  Also, I can’t 
immediately think of any reason why accuracy of perception or happiness would 
arise from mucking with my cognitive capacities, such as they are.  It aint 
much, but it’s what I got.  <==nst] 

 

AHA! I say. You are privileging YOUR means of communication and simultaneously 
asserting that Truth can only be found within the set of possible conversations 
conducted using YOUR language and YOUR rules of conversation/interaction. 
[NST==>I haven’t [yet] said anything about how truth is found; only something 
about how it is defined.  <==nst]  

 

Now, let us return to your signal. Imagine we have a thousand people listening 
to it. 999 of them use your statistical/probability tests and agree that is is 
simply noise - a random signal. I, on the other hand, recognize that the signal 
is the voice of God, speaking the Language of the Birds, and He is giving me 
clear and precise knowledge.[NST==>Well, you are welcome to that knowledge.  I 
guess I agree with Peirce that knowledge is, at its root, social.  So, 
idiosyncratic knowledge is kind of a contradiction in terms.  <==nst]   

 

So what is True? Is the signal noise or is it knowledge?

 

And further suppose that I write some bad free verse that manages to bypass the 
conscious and speak directly to the subconscious and the 999 slowly begin to 
agree with my position vis a vis the signal? At what point does the Truth shift 
from noise to knowledge? (BTW, I would argue that their simply agreeing with me 
based on what they understand of my poetry, is insufficient - they must 
actually experience and directly perceive the signal before we can be 
accord.)[NST==>Well, assuming that you have accepted my DEFINITION of truth as 
that upon which the human community of inquiry will agree in the very long run, 
we can ask for what constitutes EVIDENCE that something is true.  <==nst]   

 

The main point I made in my polemic, and continue to make: Pierce, science, 
'reasonable and rational' beings can never find more than local Truth, for 
themselves, and it is immoral to impose that Truth on others.[NST==>You 
sentence only makes sense if you havre already stipulated to my DEFINTION of 
truth, right?  <==nst]   

 

Ceding a point - Pierce, and scientists, are not wrong when they assume that 
their approach leads to truth as long as they restrict the domain of 
application to things like Physics, Math, and Logic. I vehemently react, 
negatively, when they blithely assert that the same approach is appropriate for 
finding truth in epistemology, morality, social conventions, public policy, 
governance, etc. etc. 

[NST==>If that is the case, then Peirce would assert, I think, that there is no 
truth of such matters. He disliked literary criticism and other fashion-driven 
enterprises for just that reason.   However, I think he and perhaps some of his 
followers, believed that opinion with respect to some of the matters you 
mention above will in fact stabilize in the very long run.  If it would, then 
indeed there is, by definition, a truth of these matters, also. 

 

Nick <==nst] 

 

dmw

 

On Sun, Oct 15, 2017, at 10:39 AM, Nick Thompson wrote:

> Naw.  Come on Dave.  You're just picking a fight!  I don't meed the 

> "rational man" at all.  All I need is that people either will, or will 

> not, share an opinion in the very long run, and that opinion, by 

> definition, if shared, is what we mean by truth.  And the edge I am 

> talking about here is emotional.  I  am not pressing this view with 

> the ferocity that you take me for.  Persistence, perhaps, but not ferocity.

> 

> Nick

> 

> Nicholas S. Thompson

> Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology Clark University 

>  <http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/> 
> http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/

> 

> 

> -----Original Message-----

> From: Friam [ <mailto:[email protected]> 
> mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Prof David 

> West

> Sent: Sunday, October 15, 2017 12:44 AM

> To:  <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]

> Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Truth: “Hunh! What is it good for? Absolutely 

> Nothing!”

> 

> Hi Nick,I write from Vienna. I will be back in Utah next week and at 

> FRIAM for a couple of weeks starting in mid-December. You can apply 

> cold compresses then, or just toss me in a snow bank.

> 

> The "edge" that you do not recognize is present in your response. 

> First, you propose a probabilistic/statistical "method" for discovery 

> of the 'certainty' of a property of the signal. Why? What makes that 

> method privileged? I.e. what is it about Probability that merits using 

> it as a Philosopher's Stone? More egregious is the use of the term "rational 
> man"

> — this is what I meant about allowing only some individuals at the 

> conversational table.

> 

> see you in December

> 

> 

> On Sat, Oct 14, 2017, at 11:50 PM, Nick Thompson wrote:

> > David,

> > 

> > Somebody has obviously riled you up, wherever you have gone to.  

> > Please come back so I can administer cold compresses.

> > 

> > I can recognize in what you write below the vague outlines of things 

> > I have said about Peirce, but your representation of me has a kind 

> > of edge I don't think I ever would have given it.  Try this:  

> > Imagine that you have a fancy antenna and that it is picking up a signal 
> > from outer space.

> >  Imagine you are interested in the frequency of the signal.  Now, I 

> > say, the signal can either be random or systematic.  Let's say that 

> > the last ten readings on the signal give you a reading of 256hz +/- 

> > 1 hz.  Now, it's entirely possible that such a sample of measurements could 
> > be

> > produced by a random signal.    But now let us double the number of

> > readings, and let us also notice that the variation of the 

> > measurements has also diminished by the square root of two.  Now double 
> > again, and

> > diminish the variation once again by root 2.    And so on.  While we both

> > would have to recognize that there is no certainty that the signal 

> > is not random, still the probabliliy keeps increasing that such a 

> > sample is drawn from a population of measurements with a mean of 

> > 256hz.  It's that way with truth.  It's quite possible that our 

> > experience is random, and no amount of consistency  can ever 

> > convince a rational man that the randomness of any particular chain of 
> > experiences is not random.

> > However, as experience increases in consistency, the same rational 

> > man will be more likely to bet that that chain of experiences will 

> > be confirmed in the very long run of human experiences.  On Peirce,s 

> > account, that is what it means to say that something "is the truth"

> > It is to bet that this string of experiences that we are now in the 

> > midst of will be confirmed in the very long run of human experience.

> > 

> > Notice that I never asserted, for a certainty, that there is 

> > anything at all that is True.  I only gave a Pragmatic[ist] 

> > definition of what truth would be if there ever were any.

> > 

> > Come back.  We miss you. 

> > 

> > Nick

> > 

> > Nicholas S. Thompson

> > Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology Clark University 

> >  <http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/> 
> > http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/

> > 

> > 

> > -----Original Message-----

> > From: Friam [ <mailto:[email protected]> 
> > mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Prof 

> > David West

> > Sent: Saturday, October 14, 2017 4:02 PM

> > To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group 

> > < <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]>

> > Subject: [FRIAM] Truth: “Hunh! What is it good for? Absolutely Nothing!”

> > 

> > Two caveats: first, this might better be a private communication 

> > with Nick since he is the one with the temerity to first (at least 

> > in the past few weeks) use the word 'Truth', although it has been 

> > implicit in a lot of recent threads; and second, the following 

> > contains a lot of assertions and assertions are, at minimum,  

> > ‘Truthy’ in nature, but I am making no such claim, as will be explained 
> > later.

> > 

> > There can be no Truth.

> >        Nothing IS except in context and therefore only local – situated

> > - ‘truths’ are possible.

> >        Until the Universe achieves  ‘heat death’ (at which time there

> > might be a single Truth), everything changes and therefore only 

> > ephemeral ‘truths’ are possible.

> >        All is Maya (illusion) and all Truth and all truths are equally

> > illusory.

> > 

> > There is no / are no means for discovering Truth even if It existed.

> >        To go all postmodern on you: what means/method died and ceded

> > privilege and sole possession of the ‘Royal Road’ to math, logic, 

> > scientific method, rhetoric, and “reason?”

> > 

> > There is no / are no means for expressing, and therefore 

> > communicating or sharing, Truth; were It to exist.

> >        Trivially, this is merely an expression of the first line of the

> > Tao de Ching: “Tao Tao not Tao.”

> >        More importantly it is a generalization of what Peter Naur said

> > about software and software development. Specifically that a program 

> > was the expression of a consensual theory share among those that 

> > developed it. That “theory” exists almost entirely in the minds of 

> > the humans engaged in building the theory; and, that theory cannot 

> > be reduced to documentation and therefore cannot be 

> > transmitted/communicated to other minds. (Actually, transmission 

> > would be possible extant telepathy and simultaneously, empathy.)

> > 

> > As I have understood Nick’s interpretation of Pierce I find him to 

> > be an intellectual terrorist and his approach useful only for 

> > establishing orthodoxy and dogma. A prime reason for believing this 

> > is that the ‘conversation’ espoused by Pierce (and Nick) cannot be 

> > global – every living person at once – and therefore can only result 

> > in a consensus of the few that that is to be imposed on all. A 

> > second reason for this belief is that the only ones allowed at the 

> > conversational table are those proficient in and willing to abide by 
> > specific rules of discussion.

> > This is application of my postmodern stance expressed above.

> > 

> > A corollary of my antipathy towards Pierce, a favorite quote from Hesse:

> > “Those who are too lazy and comfortable to think for themselves and 

> > be their own judges; obey the laws. Other’s sense their own laws 

> > within them.”  Hesse was speaking of ethics but I would extend his 

> > notion to epistemology and metaphysics.

> > 

> > None of the preceding is Truth, merely my truth. Accepting same 

> > essentially makes me a sociopath; but, I hope, an amiable one.

> > 

> > 

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