Thanks Paxton25, for your help there. You came close to drawing the connection I want to make and I think you explained your point well.
I'm asking for clarification. When you wrote: "When only you experience it, it is nowhere", what did you mean? Please elaborate.
eudaimonia,
Mark
When only you experience it, the information has the smallest possible value to you as a function of experience, since it is not likely to encounter any other variables in the act of being processed and therefore, as a function of experience, not likely to have an experience added to it. The only place something can exist and not have experience added to it, is a place with no value itself, that place is nowhere.
When only you experience it, it is nowhere.
Put another way, when the signal that correlates experience, with your person, in your brain, is firing and you don't relate the signal to anything else in your brain, the signal dies. When the signal dies in your brain, it goes to the place where all signals die out: nowhere in your brain.
When only you experience it, it is nowhere; when only you feel the signal, the signal is fading.
This is the directionality of experience. To reverse this directionality, you must share your experience and so enter into a determinative relationship with the world, that restores the information to a meaningful place. In your brain, this means putting a signal somewhere where it will have an effect.
When everybody experiences it, it is
right there.