This part I consider to be superb reasoning and exactly correct.Sojourner<>< said:RP I have a new line of thought regarding existence to entertain you with if you like. Keep in mind I'm not so much as trying to support or challenge your original position as add to the thread in a general sense. It goes something like this:
The concept of void, nothingness or non-existence (however you like) is purely fictitious. It's a product of our cognitive processes. The idea serves only to identify concepts that prove to be false understandings of what is "real". The mental process responsible for this illusion would work something like the following sequence, give or take a few steps. 1) I perceive something with my senses 2)Using cognition, I try to understand what I perceive and I produce an initial idea (mental construct if you will) of what it is. 3) I proceed to test the worthiness of the idea by using various interactions with what it is I am perceiving. 4) The tests prove the idea to be a false understanding of what I perceive, thus the thing which I thought that I was perceiving does not exist.
Likewise, Existence as it applies to human cognition would then be the understanding that our understanding of a particular thing in or aspect of that which we perceive is true and correct.
This part seems to have skipped some steps somewhere.....?Sojourner<>< said:Now if I were to define "reality" as all of that which can be perceived but not necessarily understood then certainly all of reality has the ability to affect something in some way (Note that I am excluding the idea of that which can affect something but cannot be perceived by us since this is a product of reason). Only now we have a problem because this is where our understanding of anything both ceases and begins; there is no "is", "existence" or "non-existence" and all that is left is "reality", whatever it is.
I see the mentioned problem of leaving out the things that we can not perceive directly. Although I don't see why you are leaving those out. Perception occurs through a minimal process of reasoning in itself. Direct perception implies the least amount of speculation by the senses or reasoning.
The degree of directness attainable has a limit. But this limit has nothing to do with whether something existed or had affect. It only says that we can not perceive with absolutely no process of deduction at all. Even a single nerve only transfers a pulse by, in effect, deducing that a trigger preceded its continued response. It deduces by consequence of affects as though to say, "Because I am urged to respond, then I will pass the urge along."
The deduction processing is biochemical in nature, but is still deduction in concept.
Ha ha..Sojourner<>< said:Strangely, being a prisoner within my own mind for the time being I am now forced to attempt to use the same processes I mapped out above to ask myself: "reality", what is it? I think it also strange that God's response when asked his name was "I am that I am" in that it sounds striking reminiscent of the kind of questions and logic we are forced to in dealing with this topic.
Ok my brain hurts now. I think I'll go do something stupid for a while.
Well maybe it will help the slavery aspect of your mind to realize that in ancient Hebrew, the words for "I AM that I AM" are EXACTLY the same words for "I AM that WHICH IS"
So that now maybe your can start making progress toward the resolve of ALL of it?
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