I wanted to reply at this branch point a couple of weeks ago, but could not at 
the time.  

This reply is meant also to Nick’s thread “migraine auras, reprise”, which I 
got on 29 November, and the reverberations on that one.

> On Nov 25, 2025, at 12:58, glen <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Changing gears a bit, I ran across the "as if" personality 
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Identity_disturbance>. I can't help but wonder 
> about a room full of agents "concealing their inner emptiness, living *as if* 
> they had genuine feelings and desires." >8^D I'm at risk of Get-Off-My-Lawn, 
> here. But 90% of the time, when I'm in a room with more than, say, 5 people, 
> it *feels* to me like they're all philosophical zombies, maybe me included.
> 
> Are we all *actually* "as if" personalities? And those who think they're not 
> are delusional?

I understand that Glen’s direction here goes somewhat meta from what I was 
after, and that it becomes its own line of inquiry, at a considerably higher 
level of structural organization than the one I was after.  But, in the 
assurance of becoming tedious, I wanted to re-harp a little on the level of 
description I was after.  

From the other thread:

> On Nov 29, 2025, at 23:07, Nicholas Thompson <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> As often happens, my original post on mental imagery worked itself away from 
> my original purpose, which was to explore the concept of objectivity. 

> Nick  

That was my original purpose, too, because in any conversation that takes the 
conflation of objectivity with intersubjectivity to even be conceivable, I have 
come to think that the conversation doesn’t have its category distinctions 
straight.  My own belief’s being that objective, subjective, and 
intersubjective, are terms that do such different work that there is no way 
they can be either “similes” or “alternatives”, because they are in wildly 
different categories.

I am sure that, after saying it was my purpose to explore the concept of 
objectivity, Nick will reiterate that the thread has veered away from his 
purpose of exploring the concept of objectivity.  So interesting how different 
styles of mind can be….


The reason I will be tedious is that I gave part of the argument below in a 
rant some months ago, when the mystics with their relentless obscurantism were 
driving me crazy (in other lines of conversation), and I was trying to decide 
what categories I thought I could think and speak in, that wouldn’t just 
devolve into this term-circus inherited from loose common speech.

The thing I thought was “new” to my point was the claim that we want a term 
like “objective” to refer to the states (or postures) of mind that we take on 
in relation to assertions in certain circumstances.  If I knew what 
Phenomenology was, I would believe that the argument I want to make is in the 
vein of Phenomenology, meaning about just-what one is doing in engaging 
experientially with some activity or assertion.  But I haven’t read any 
Phenomenology, so I am probably just making up what those guys are about, and 
poaching their name.


The point, though, being that, for me, all this should start in the body.  I 
can’t argue in general terms, so I will argue anecdotally from the only case 
that made me think I have some concrete and crisp contrast to illustrate a 
distinction.

The anecdote is from the good luck that my first experience of scuba diving 
came fairly late into adulthood.  Here’s what I would argue the observation and 
its content are:

1. I have swum throughout childhood, and also breathed for my entire life.  I 
never did both at the same time (meaning, didn’t breathe while underwater).  I 
also had the good fortune to never be waterboarded.  

2. Hence there were two conditions that were familiar to me.  One was 
breathing.  The other was having my head underwater and not breathing.  

2a.  I would argue that, for me, there were two “bundles” of activities and 
states of mind that were internally linked, but externally disjoint.  There 
“is” “however you breathe”, and there “is” “holding your breath when your head 
is under water”.   I would have had no way to disaggregate either of these 
bundles, or even to triangulate on the possibility that there was anything to 
disaggregate.

3. Then came the first time of putting my head underwater with a scuba 
regulator, and initiating breathing through it.  The first inhale was choppy 
with a very fast pace, hesitant and interrupted, and over an interval of 
perhaps a second or two, gave way to the “normal” (or, more-normal, still not 
the same as thoughtless breathing above-water) mode.  That early stage was 
entirely unanticipated, and I think, under any normal use of the term, 
“involuntary”.  

3a.  So, for the first time, I had more than one “state of mind”, or “mental 
posture” I could be in while breathing.  That made it possible to see that 
breathing was not an irreducible activity.  

3b. I say I was lucky to only have this experience fairly late in life, because 
it probably helped to solidify the two irreducible bundles (breathing normally 
versus holding my breath); if I had started scuba very early, I may have had 
such a quick adaptation to the new activity, or it may have been buried in so 
many adaptations to so many new activities, that I might not have noticed it as 
something salient. 

4.  My abstraction step is to say that “taking for granted” that there is air 
outside my head is reported, physiologically, in the normal breathing activity, 
and no-longer taking that “for granted” was reported, physiologically, in the 
very different “doubtful” mode of breathing.  The deliberative and intentional 
layer of acting can be recognized as separate and operating in a context set by 
much-else that is the foundation-posture within which intention operates. 

Anyway, without further belaborment, you get the point:  There are all kinds of 
physiological reports of when I am taking something for granted.  That I am 
standing on a floor in a room and not on top of a flagpole on the Empire State 
building, that my head is not underwater, that there is not an uncaged tiger in 
the room with me, or one of Stephen Miller’s thugs, or some other known 
predatory and sadistic thing whose attention I don’t want on me. 

I wanted to assert that the essence of whatever the term “objective” needs to 
refer to, was the taking-on of this posture of de facto taking something for 
granted.  The mystics who claim they take nothing for granted, and everything 
is a hypothesis, seem to me to be talking nonsense.  Your heart takes all sorts 
of things for granted just by persisting in its beating, as we can verify from 
the cases when it doesn’t do so.  When they say “everything” they might really 
be referring to some relatively high-level cognitive integrations, but of 
course if they admitted that, they wouldn't be able to hide in their 
obscurantism and keep everybody guessing whether they might be magical. 

But back from my rant:  I want to claim, here in my armchair, that if there are 
good, stable foundations for terms like “objective”, or Glen’s (and proper 
usage's) “metaphysical commitments”, they should be these: the myriad things 
that lie below deliberative thought, rooted as deep as physiology in some 
cases, and more shallowly as habit in others, that we _always_ “take for 
granted” as part of coordinated mental functioning.  Things can migrate a bit 
across that boundary — one can come to breathe quite smoothly through a scuba 
regulator — and one of the fascinating things, to me, about the changes that 
take place as we “come to understand” things that are new to us, is that the 
deep fabric of “understanding” involves a reworking of where some activity, 
experience, assertion, etc., and their attendant states of mind, fall w.r.t. 
this split of taking or not taking for granted.

Relative to the above, “intersubjective” is a quite shallow and procedural 
word, having to do with the mechanics of epistemology, and how we scaffold our 
discourse and our growth-activities of coming to understand things.  These 
terms have their own structure, of course, also fine to analyze and get good 
language around, but they are quite different from shifts in postures of mind 
that we might sometimes have parallax to see.  (And then, “subjective’ is a 
typological term, about the categories of phenomena that we associate with 
“sensations” etc., and for which meaning is inherently about relations, of the 
phenomenon to some self, the phenomenon to its sensation-aspect, etc.  So a 
third, entirely distinct, kind of semantic work the term is doing.)  

Back to Glen’s branch in the above thread, I could probably imagine an analysis 
in which some of these distinctions do propagate up to how identity is formed, 
and whether or in what ways it is stable or unstable, as in borderline 
personality disorders and associated.  Or maybe not, and the identity-stability 
question is a distinct matter (?).  

Anyway, thanks for patience or indulgence if anybody read this far, 

Eric




> 
> On 11/24/25 5:06 PM, Steve Smith wrote:
>> I'm finding your Lean4 fascinating for it's balance between intuitive enough 
>> to (almost) read and (known to be) formal enough to trust to be 
>> testable/executeable.
>> Reminds me vaguely of the semester I learned BNF and kept finding myself 
>> expressing (only to myself) observations about the world in that idiom... 
>> later Prolog captured that part of me (for a while) .
> 
> 
> -- 
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