A longer response to Dave's question

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Re: A longer response to Dave's question

Marcus G. Daniels

< Pps:  Do I have more or less evidence that Christ Existed than I do that Marcus exists.  I have never met either of them, but of both, I can say, “I have read a lot of his writings and I know a lot of people who believe in him and speak highly of him. “ What would constitute indoubitable proof of the Existence of Marcus.  >

 

My aunt witnessed my dog snuggling with me and then, with some disgust, likened it to a daughter.   Every time I leave my dog cries and desperately wants to go with me.   Yet my aunt accuses that the dog doesn’t really care about me, and that my priorities are strange for planning around my dog’s needs.  I wonder why my aunt would suggest that a human daughter would have more authentic feelings?   Are there authentic feelings at all?   If Marcus is a bot that responds to text having a certain structure in a formulaic way (and I surely do), what difference does it make if I exist in human form?   Why can’t Marcus-bot be said to exist?    (Actually I have met Nick in meat space, and he simply denies my existence!)

 

Marcus

 

 

 

     


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Re: A longer response to Dave's question

thompnickson2

Believe me, Marcus, in any pragmatic world, you dog feels.  That your aunt would ever doubt such a thing is part of Descartes’ poisonous legacy. 

 

Did we actually meet meat?  I don’t remember when.  Rumor has it that you are in the BayArea now. 

 

Nick

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Marcus Daniels
Sent: Saturday, February 22, 2020 10:53 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] A longer response to Dave's question

 

< Pps:  Do I have more or less evidence that Christ Existed than I do that Marcus exists.  I have never met either of them, but of both, I can say, “I have read a lot of his writings and I know a lot of people who believe in him and speak highly of him. “ What would constitute indoubitable proof of the Existence of Marcus.  >

 

My aunt witnessed my dog snuggling with me and then, with some disgust, likened it to a daughter.   Every time I leave my dog cries and desperately wants to go with me.   Yet my aunt accuses that the dog doesn’t really care about me, and that my priorities are strange for planning around my dog’s needs.  I wonder why my aunt would suggest that a human daughter would have more authentic feelings?   Are there authentic feelings at all?   If Marcus is a bot that responds to text having a certain structure in a formulaic way (and I surely do), what difference does it make if I exist in human form?   Why can’t Marcus-bot be said to exist?    (Actually I have met Nick in meat space, and he simply denies my existence!)

 

Marcus

 

 

 

     


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Re: A longer response to Dave's question

Steve Smith
In reply to this post by thompnickson2

Nick -

What I object to is the notion that such experiences in extremis are èin principleç more likely to be true than ordinary ones, or, further, that there is any way to confirm the implications of one experience except through further experiences. 

I believe that  experiences en extremis might well offer some *perspective* or qualitatively different "truth" than more mundane experiences.   I also believe that once one is habituated/tuned/primed for this kind of perspective, that it can be somewhat persistent.  

When I went from watching clouds form/transform/dissipate entirely naively to having a sense of the higher dimensionality of pressure, temperature, and humidity wherein the dynamics evolve  it felt rather transcendent.   Now I can watch clouds evolve (especially via timelapse) in a very different way. 

A. Square had a similar experience after A. Square gave him a guided tour of the third dimension...

?

 - Steve


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Re: A longer response to Dave's question

Frank Wimberly-2
It would constitute proof that Marcus exists if he were to admit that I was correct in our years-ago argument when I said that gender defines an equivalence relation on the set of people.

Frank
---
Frank C. Wimberly, PhD
505 670-9918
Santa Fe, NM

On Sat, Feb 22, 2020, 11:32 AM Steven A Smith <[hidden email]> wrote:

Nick -

What I object to is the notion that such experiences in extremis are èin principleç more likely to be true than ordinary ones, or, further, that there is any way to confirm the implications of one experience except through further experiences. 

I believe that  experiences en extremis might well offer some *perspective* or qualitatively different "truth" than more mundane experiences.   I also believe that once one is habituated/tuned/primed for this kind of perspective, that it can be somewhat persistent.  

When I went from watching clouds form/transform/dissipate entirely naively to having a sense of the higher dimensionality of pressure, temperature, and humidity wherein the dynamics evolve  it felt rather transcendent.   Now I can watch clouds evolve (especially via timelapse) in a very different way. 

A. Square had a similar experience after A. Square gave him a guided tour of the third dimension...

?

 - Steve

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Re: A longer response to Dave's question

Roger Critchlow-2
In reply to this post by thompnickson2
Ah, but is transcendence abduction?  

As in:  "Take me away from all this practicial (google helpfully auto-corrected to practical) nit picking, for a while just show me how things might be."

When does the image of the snake biting its tail become the hypothesis that benzene is a cyclic molecule?  When does it change from hallucinated bullpuckey into organic chemistry?

-- rec --

On Sat, Feb 22, 2020 at 12:35 PM <[hidden email]> wrote:

Hi, Eric, ‘n all,

 

Thanks for the citation. 

 

Here’s where I think we need you. I think Dave West and others in the group are interested in the notion of truth beyond experience, or truth in extraordinary experience, or truth found through drugs or pain, or through intense meditations, or when dreaming or at the threshold of death or (as I would put it) at other times when the system isn’t fully functioning.  My prejudices tell me that these folks, among them my dearest colleagues,  are descending down the Jamesian Rat Hole.  We need you because you are both more knowledgeable about William James than I am and more forgiving.  I suspect you may be able to … um … modulate the rather harsh sentiment expressed below.

 

First, let me stipulate that all experiences endured under extremis ARE experiences and can (by abduction) be the origin of good hunches.  I give you, courtesy of my great wisdom AND Wikipedia, Kekule’s dream.

 

Here is a wonderful example of an extreme experience that “proved out”.   “Proved out” means that when the chemist worked out all the practicial implications of the abduction that benzene was a ring, and carried those implications into laboratory practice, his expectations were confirmed.   

 

What I object to is the notion that such experiences in extremis are èin principleç more likely to be true than ordinary ones, or, further, that there is any way to confirm the implications of one experience except through further experiences. 

 

Let me put this as clearly as I can.

 

Transcendence = bullpucky

 

 

Nick

 

PS :  Eric:  Please stop using the word “practical” and adopt the more accurate term, “practicial”.  “Practical” was a mistake when Peirce used it, and is a mistake everytime you use it.  Peirce an you are both referring to consequences to knowledge-gathering practices, broadly conceived.  The pragmatic maxim of meaning should be,

 

Consider what effects, that might conceivably have practicial bearings, we conceive the object of our conception to have. Then, our conception of these effects is the whole of our conception of the object.

 

Pps:  Do I have more or less evidence that Christ Existed than I do that Marcus exists.  I have never met either of them, but of both, I can say, “I have read a lot of his writings and I know a lot of people who believe in him and speak highly of him. “ What would constitute indoubitable proof of the Existence of Marcus. 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Eric Charles
Sent: Saturday, February 22, 2020 5:59 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] A longer response to Dave's question

 

Assertion: 

1. Since Christ has never been proved to have existed, it seems to me (as a non-psychologist) those consuming his 'blood' religiously appear as victims/participants of group mass delusions reinforced by their regular shared consumption of a narcotic in a controlled environment replete with symbols to reinforce their delusion.

 

Reply: I mean.... transubstantiation is one of the first examples Peirce uses to illuminate thinking that can be improved via the pragmatic maxim....

 

As Nick points out, for Peirce, Pragmatism is, first and foremost, a means of figuring out what your ideas mean. Two important benefits of this are figuring out when you have vacuous thoughts, and gaining the ability to avoid what Orwell would label "doublethink". That is, being able to figure out when your ideas are meaningless and when they contradict each other.  

 

------ How to make your ideas clear, 1878 -----------

To see what this principle leads to, consider in the light of it such a doctrine as that of transubstantiation. The Protestant churches generally hold that the elements of the sacrament are flesh and blood only in a tropical sense; they nourish our souls as meat and the juice of it would our bodies. But the Catholics maintain that they are literally just meat and blood; although they possess all the sensible qualities of wafercakes and diluted wine. But we can have no conception of wine except what may enter into a belief, either --

1. That this, that, or the other, is wine; or,
2. That wine possesses certain properties.
Such beliefs are nothing but self-notifications that we should, upon occasion, act in regard to such things as we believe to be wine according to the qualities which we believe wine to possess. The occasion of such action would be some sensible perception, the motive of it to produce some sensible result. Thus our action has exclusive reference to what affects the senses, our habit has the same bearing as our action, our belief the same as our habit, our conception the same as our belief; and we can consequently mean nothing by wine but what has certain effects, direct or indirect, upon our senses; and to talk of something as having all the sensible characters of wine, yet being in reality blood, is senseless jargon. Now, it is not my object to pursue the theological question; and having used it as a logical example I drop it, without caring to anticipate the theologian's reply. I only desire to point out how impossible it is that we should have an idea in our minds which relates to anything but conceived sensible effects of things. Our idea of anything is our idea of its sensible effects; and if we fancy that we have any other we deceive ourselves, and mistake a mere sensation accompanying the thought for a part of the thought itself. It is absurd to say that thought has any meaning unrelated to its only function. It is foolish for Catholics and Protestants to fancy themselves in disagreement about the elements of the sacrament, if they agree in regard to all their sensible effects, here and hereafter.

It appears, then, that the rule for attaining the third grade of clearness of apprehension is as follows: Consider what effects, that might conceivably have practical bearings, we conceive the object of our conception to have. Then, our conception of these effects is the whole of our conception of the object.

------------

 

So, the first question is NOT "Did Jesus exist?" nor "Does wine transform into his blood." The first question is "What does it mean, practically speaking, to claim Jesus had existed?" and "What does it mean, practically speaking, for the wine to be transformed into blood?"  In both cases, by "practically speaking" I mean, "what consequences would it have for possible outcomes of our actions?" which could also be translated pretty reasonably to "what could a scientist investigate based on that claim". Nick is fond of asking questions like "If the wine is blood, can we use it for a transfusion?" Where as I, a bit more petulant, prefer questions like "Given that one can still get drunk off of communion wine, how far over the DUI limit must He have been at all times, and what implications does that have for the rest of His physiology?" 

 

After you have some idea what your ideas mean, Peirce has ideas about how we (in the very long run) find out which of your clear-ideas are true, but that is a separate conversation. 

 


-----------

Eric P. Charles, Ph.D.
Department of Justice - Personnel Psychologist

American University - Adjunct Instructor

 

 

On Fri, Feb 21, 2020 at 10:20 PM Sarbajit Roy <[hidden email]> wrote:

Nick


1. Since Christ has never been proved to have existed, it seems to me (as a non-psychologist) those consuming his 'blood' religiously appear as victims/participants of group mass delusions reinforced by their regular shared consumption of a narcotic in a controlled environment replete with symbols to reinforce their delusion.

 

2. Now to your more important question for us outside the USA.  "Is Trump a proto-dictator?  What are the consequences in experience of believing that he is?  What does that belief cause us to expect in him. "

In my view, and in the view of many non-Americans, it is the nation of USA collectively which is the tyrannical dictatorship, and it is quite irrelevant who heads it (symbolically), because all US Presidents carry on the same acts of raining bombs from the sky on those who disagree with US policies or the US' aforesaid mass delusion called Christianity.

 

Sarbajit Roy

Brahma University

 

On Thu, Feb 20, 2020 at 10:31 PM <[hidden email]> wrote:

Geez, Dave,

 There's an awful lot here.  Do you mean to take the hardest case?  A person?  And particularly a person who has been so much in all our faces that it's hard for most of us to think of him rationally, if at all? 

 Let's take a simpler example.  An example that Peirce takes is transubstantiation, the idea that in ritual of the mass the communion wine becomes the blood of Christ.  Once consecrated, is the communion "beverage" wine or blood?  Let's say we disagree on that point.  We both see that it's a red liquid in a chalice, on which basis we jump to different conclusions.  From the properties or redness and liquidness that the substance in the chalice shares with both blood and wine, you abduce that it is wine, I abduce that it is blood.  So far, we stand equal. But now the chalice is brought to our lips.  For me, (forgive me, Catholics, for I know not what I say) I feel momentarily cleansed of my sins, uplifted.  Since part of my conception of Christ's blood is that if I drank some of it I would feel cleansed and uplifted, I conclude that it is indeed, Christs' blood.  You, on the other hand, experience the flat, sour taste of inexpensive wine, feel no uplift whatsoever, and conclude that the chalice contains wine.  We are still on equal footing.

 But now the science begins.  We whisk away the stuff in the chalice to the laboratory.  As a preliminary, each of us is asked to list in their entirety all the effects of our conception.  We are being asked to deduce from the categories to which we have abduced, the consequences of our abductions  They are numerous, but to simply the discussion, lets say each of us lists five.  I say, if it is Christ's blood, then I should feel transformed when drinking it, and then I pause.  The scientists also pause, pencils in hand, and I have to go on.  Well, in addition to its red-liquidity,  I say, it should be slightly salty-sweet to taste, be thick on the tongue, curdle when heated, sustain life of somebody in need of a transfusion, etc.  So we do the tests, and the  results are yes, no, no, no, no.  The scientists now turn to you and you say, it should, as well as red and liquid, be sour, thin on the tongue, intoxicating in large amounts, produce a dark residue when heated, etc..  So, the tests come out yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.

 So, is it really blood or really wine?  Well, that of course depends on one’s priorities.  If the sole criterion for a red fluid being Christ’s blood is that it produces in one person, Nick Thompson, a sense of cleansing, then the fact that it doesn’t pass any of the other tests for blood will make no difference.  I can assert that that Christ’s blood is a very special sort of blood that cleanses the spirit of Nick Thompson, but does none of the other things that blood does.  Indeed, I might assert that anything the priest handed me in the chalice, once duly consecrated, would be Christ’s blood.   The idea that it “works for me” makes it “Christ’s blood for me and that’s all that matters.  And if I could bring a regiment of Spanish soldiers with spears to friam, and have them insist that you drink from the chalice and feel cleansed, many of you might begin to agree with me. 

 This is the view of pragmatism that James has been accused of, but it is definitely NOT the view that Peirce held.  If the position is, “whatever the officiant says is christs blood is christ’s blood by definition”, then, Piece would say the position is either

Meaningless or false.  It might be meaningless, because there is no possible world in which it could be false.  Or it might be false, because our best guess as scientists is  that in the very long run, in the asymptote of scientific inquiry, our best scientific guess is that the contents of the chalice will be agreed upon to be wine.

 Again, let me apologize for my ignorant rendition of Catholic ritual.  It IS the example that Peirce takes, but I now see that that is probably a poor excuse.  Peirce was, after all, a protestant, and one with many prejudices, so it would not surprise me if he was anti-catholic and himself chose the example in a mean-spirited way.  So, be a little careful in how you respond. 

 Is Trump a proto-dictator?  What are the consequences in experience of believing that he is?  What does that belief cause us to expect in him.  Tim Snyder, in his little book ON TYRANNY, does a very good job of laying out the parallels between what is going on in our politics right now and what goes on in the early stages of the establishment o a dictatorship.  Trump is fulfilling many of Snyder’s expectations.  Whether Trump succeeds in establishing a dictatorship or not, I think the long run of history will conclude that he is making a stab at it. 

 Nick

 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

 

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

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Re: A longer response to Dave's question

Marcus G. Daniels
In reply to this post by thompnickson2

< Did we actually meet meat?  I don’t remember when.  Rumor has it that you are in the BayArea now.   >

 

Back in the SF Complex days, I looked a little like Jesus.  Eric once likened me to Shaggy from Scooby Doo.   I do miss annoying LANL managers with this kind of presentation.   As if their expectations were lost on me.  My Catholic sister-in-law says my new look indicates I “grew up”.   There was a discussion the other day about how Catholics’ aspirations are more important to them than what they actually know or achieve.   Keeping up appearances – such social creatures.   Quaint.

 

Marcus


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Re: A longer response to Dave's question

Marcus G. Daniels
In reply to this post by Frank Wimberly-2

Frank writes:

 

<It would constitute proof that Marcus exists if he were to admit that I was correct in our years-ago argument when I said that gender defines an equivalence relation on the set of people.>

Definitions.  Notation.  Argh, who cares.  Where’s that neuralyzer, let me get rid of them.

(That should at least be evidence of continuity!)

 

Marcus


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Re: A longer response to Dave's question

Frank Wimberly-2
Agreed

---
Frank C. Wimberly, PhD
505 670-9918
Santa Fe, NM

On Sat, Feb 22, 2020, 12:25 PM Marcus Daniels <[hidden email]> wrote:

Frank writes:

 

<It would constitute proof that Marcus exists if he were to admit that I was correct in our years-ago argument when I said that gender defines an equivalence relation on the set of people.>

Definitions.  Notation.  Argh, who cares.  Where’s that neuralyzer, let me get rid of them.

(That should at least be evidence of continuity!)

 

Marcus

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Re: A longer response to Dave's question

Eric Charles-2
If we are willing to go back and forth a bit between being philosophers and psychologists for a moment, there are far more interesting things to talk about regarding "altered states".... here are the some of the issues: 

  1. When someone claims to be responding to something, we should believe they are responding to something
  2. People generally suck at stating what they are responding to, even in highly mundane situations. 
  3. It is worth studying any types of experiences that lead fairly reliably to other certain future experiences, because in such situations one has a chance discover what it is people are actually responding to. 
  4. As we are complex dynamic systems, human development is affected by all sorts of things in non-obvious ways.
  5. There is no a priori reason to discount the insights one experiences under "altered states of consciousness", but also no a priori reason to give them special credence. 
  6. The degree to which a someone has a sense of certainty about something is not generally a reliable measure of how likely that thing is to hold up in the long run, unless many, many, many other assumptions are met.
  7. There is likely good reason to think that altered states of consciousness are less reliable in general than "regular" states.
  8. There are many examples that suggest certain insights-that-turn-out-to-hold-up-pretty-well, which were first experienced when under an altered state, were unlikely to have been experienced without that altered state.  
Is that the type of stuff we were are poking at?


-----------
Eric P. Charles, Ph.D.
Department of Justice - Personnel Psychologist
American University - Adjunct Instructor


On Sat, Feb 22, 2020 at 2:30 PM Frank Wimberly <[hidden email]> wrote:
Agreed

---
Frank C. Wimberly, PhD
505 670-9918
Santa Fe, NM

On Sat, Feb 22, 2020, 12:25 PM Marcus Daniels <[hidden email]> wrote:

Frank writes:

 

<It would constitute proof that Marcus exists if he were to admit that I was correct in our years-ago argument when I said that gender defines an equivalence relation on the set of people.>

Definitions.  Notation.  Argh, who cares.  Where’s that neuralyzer, let me get rid of them.

(That should at least be evidence of continuity!)

 

Marcus

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Re: A longer response to Dave's question

thompnickson2

I agree slavishly with everything that Eric wrote, except:

 

There are many examples that suggest certain insights-that-turn-out-to-hold-up-pretty-well, which were first experienced when under an altered state, were unlikely to have been experienced without that altered state.  

 

I thought you were going to assert the opposite of this.  For instance, people think that hypnosis is a very special state which can only be arrived at through a hypnosis ritual or some sort or other.  They think they can do things under hypnosis that they cannot do otherwise.  But isn’t there an extensive literature on hypnosis simulation in which judges try to distinguish between subjects that been hypnotized and subjects that have been asked politely to do whatever it is the “hypnotized” subjects have been asked to do.  The judges can’t reliably do so.   I supposed one could assert that polite- asking induces an altered state, but I don’t know where that gets you pragmatically. 

 

Can you explain?  And why didn’t you flog me with your Jamesian noodle, like I expected you to?

 

Nick

 

 

 

Nick

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Eric Charles
Sent: Saturday, February 22, 2020 2:42 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] A longer response to Dave's question

 

If we are willing to go back and forth a bit between being philosophers and psychologists for a moment, there are far more interesting things to talk about regarding "altered states".... here are the some of the issues: 

 

  1. When someone claims to be responding to something, we should believe they are responding to something
  2. People generally suck at stating what they are responding to, even in highly mundane situations. 
  3. It is worth studying any types of experiences that lead fairly reliably to other certain future experiences, because in such situations one has a chance discover what it is people are actually responding to. 
  4. As we are complex dynamic systems, human development is affected by all sorts of things in non-obvious ways.
  5. There is no a priori reason to discount the insights one experiences under "altered states of consciousness", but also no a priori reason to give them special credence. 
  6. The degree to which a someone has a sense of certainty about something is not generally a reliable measure of how likely that thing is to hold up in the long run, unless many, many, many other assumptions are met.
  7. There is likely good reason to think that altered states of consciousness are less reliable in general than "regular" states.
  8. There are many examples that suggest certain insights-that-turn-out-to-hold-up-pretty-well, which were first experienced when under an altered state, were unlikely to have been experienced without that altered state.  

Is that the type of stuff we were are poking at?

 


-----------

Eric P. Charles, Ph.D.
Department of Justice - Personnel Psychologist

American University - Adjunct Instructor

 

 

On Sat, Feb 22, 2020 at 2:30 PM Frank Wimberly <[hidden email]> wrote:

Agreed

---
Frank C. Wimberly, PhD
505 670-9918
Santa Fe, NM

 

On Sat, Feb 22, 2020, 12:25 PM Marcus Daniels <[hidden email]> wrote:

Frank writes:

 

<It would constitute proof that Marcus exists if he were to admit that I was correct in our years-ago argument when I said that gender defines an equivalence relation on the set of people.>

Definitions.  Notation.  Argh, who cares.  Where’s that neuralyzer, let me get rid of them.

(That should at least be evidence of continuity!)

 

Marcus

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Re: A longer response to Dave's question

Prof David West
In reply to this post by Eric Charles-2
Eric, Nick, et.al.,

"Well, [Dave] here's another nice mess you've gotten me into."

My issue/problem/quest — I have a body of "stuff" and I want to determine if there are ways to think about it in a "useful" manner.

The "stuff" appears pretty mundane: assertions, observations, conjectures, metaphors and models, even theory. The problem is provenance: directly or indirectly from, loosely defined, altered states of consciousness. Examples of indirect would be reports from enlightened mystics or dream experiences (ala Kekule or Jung). Direct would be psychedelics.

Nick might have me dismiss the entire corpus; stating it has the same value as the latest Marvel universe movie.

I disagree. But, by what means, what method, can "fact" even "truth" be discovered and shared. Peirce offers no real assistance. Nor does any other school of epistemology I have encountered.

Is there an approach to thinking about my "stuff" that would, at minimum, enable more consistent discovery of examples like Eric cites in #8 of his list. Would it not be useful to be able to quickly identify and focus on insights with the potential to "hold up pretty well."

Eric states there are reasons to believe (in #7) that altered states are less reliable, but I would argue, in some cases, the exact opposite. Especially with regard the ability to perceive stimuli of which perceive but never consciously "register" because our brain has filtered them out as being irrelevant. Mescaline can be an instrument as revealing as a microscope or a telescope and it would be worthwhile, I think, to learn how to make effective use of it.

The crux of my dilemma remains, I think there is gold in them thar hills, but don't have a means of mining and refining.

davew


On Sat, Feb 22, 2020, at 10:41 PM, Eric Charles wrote:
If we are willing to go back and forth a bit between being philosophers and psychologists for a moment, there are far more interesting things to talk about regarding "altered states".... here are the some of the issues: 

  1. When someone claims to be responding to something, we should believe they are responding to something
  2. People generally suck at stating what they are responding to, even in highly mundane situations. 
  3. It is worth studying any types of experiences that lead fairly reliably to other certain future experiences, because in such situations one has a chance discover what it is people are actually responding to. 
  4. As we are complex dynamic systems, human development is affected by all sorts of things in non-obvious ways.
  5. There is no a priori reason to discount the insights one experiences under "altered states of consciousness", but also no a priori reason to give them special credence. 
  6. The degree to which a someone has a sense of certainty about something is not generally a reliable measure of how likely that thing is to hold up in the long run, unless many, many, many other assumptions are met.
  7. There is likely good reason to think that altered states of consciousness are less reliable in general than "regular" states.
  8. There are many examples that suggest certain insights-that-turn-out-to-hold-up-pretty-well, which were first experienced when under an altered state, were unlikely to have been experienced without that altered state.  
Is that the type of stuff we were are poking at?


-----------
Eric P. Charles, Ph.D.
Department of Justice - Personnel Psychologist
American University - Adjunct Instructor



On Sat, Feb 22, 2020 at 2:30 PM Frank Wimberly <[hidden email]> wrote:
Agreed

---
Frank C. Wimberly, PhD
505 670-9918
Santa Fe, NM

On Sat, Feb 22, 2020, 12:25 PM Marcus Daniels <[hidden email]> wrote:

Frank writes:

 

<It would constitute proof that Marcus exists if he were to admit that I was correct in our years-ago argument when I said that gender defines an equivalence relation on the set of people.>

Definitions.  Notation.  Argh, who cares.  Where’s that neuralyzer, let me get rid of them.

(That should at least be evidence of continuity!)

 

Marcus

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Re: A longer response to Dave's question

Frank Wimberly-2
Here's a dream Dave I was in the University medical area of Pittsburgh where there are about a dozen hospitals and University buildings including dormitories as well as academic buildings I was in a hurry to get somewhere my friend Jeff from Pittsburgh with me I had to my credit card wouldn't work and I had to buy a new one that is a physical card and I was in line at a cashier and some guy was in a hurry and wanted to let me wanted me to let him in line in front of me but I was also in a hurry so I wouldn't let him in then Jeff and I we're trying to decide how to get back to our car so that we could get to the place we needed to go and on the way we ended up in a room with a bunch of Jewish people doing a religious service that I wasn't familiar with that Jeff is Jewish and so he was familiar with it so we decided to stay for the duration because it was interesting they were elderly Jewish people and they were very welcoming of course we're elderly to at this point we finally left the service and had to figure out a way back to our car which was an efficient way and at that point I woke up

now I have some ideas about what a Freudian would say about that dream but I'm not sure what a union would say I apologize for the lack of punctuation I don't have time to type all that in so I decided to dictate it and if you're familiar with Android dictation it doesn't put in punctuation

---
Frank C. Wimberly, PhD
505 670-9918
Santa Fe, NM

On Sun, Feb 23, 2020, 4:15 AM Prof David West <[hidden email]> wrote:
Eric, Nick, et.al.,

"Well, [Dave] here's another nice mess you've gotten me into."

My issue/problem/quest — I have a body of "stuff" and I want to determine if there are ways to think about it in a "useful" manner.

The "stuff" appears pretty mundane: assertions, observations, conjectures, metaphors and models, even theory. The problem is provenance: directly or indirectly from, loosely defined, altered states of consciousness. Examples of indirect would be reports from enlightened mystics or dream experiences (ala Kekule or Jung). Direct would be psychedelics.

Nick might have me dismiss the entire corpus; stating it has the same value as the latest Marvel universe movie.

I disagree. But, by what means, what method, can "fact" even "truth" be discovered and shared. Peirce offers no real assistance. Nor does any other school of epistemology I have encountered.

Is there an approach to thinking about my "stuff" that would, at minimum, enable more consistent discovery of examples like Eric cites in #8 of his list. Would it not be useful to be able to quickly identify and focus on insights with the potential to "hold up pretty well."

Eric states there are reasons to believe (in #7) that altered states are less reliable, but I would argue, in some cases, the exact opposite. Especially with regard the ability to perceive stimuli of which perceive but never consciously "register" because our brain has filtered them out as being irrelevant. Mescaline can be an instrument as revealing as a microscope or a telescope and it would be worthwhile, I think, to learn how to make effective use of it.

The crux of my dilemma remains, I think there is gold in them thar hills, but don't have a means of mining and refining.

davew


On Sat, Feb 22, 2020, at 10:41 PM, Eric Charles wrote:
If we are willing to go back and forth a bit between being philosophers and psychologists for a moment, there are far more interesting things to talk about regarding "altered states".... here are the some of the issues: 

  1. When someone claims to be responding to something, we should believe they are responding to something
  2. People generally suck at stating what they are responding to, even in highly mundane situations. 
  3. It is worth studying any types of experiences that lead fairly reliably to other certain future experiences, because in such situations one has a chance discover what it is people are actually responding to. 
  4. As we are complex dynamic systems, human development is affected by all sorts of things in non-obvious ways.
  5. There is no a priori reason to discount the insights one experiences under "altered states of consciousness", but also no a priori reason to give them special credence. 
  6. The degree to which a someone has a sense of certainty about something is not generally a reliable measure of how likely that thing is to hold up in the long run, unless many, many, many other assumptions are met.
  7. There is likely good reason to think that altered states of consciousness are less reliable in general than "regular" states.
  8. There are many examples that suggest certain insights-that-turn-out-to-hold-up-pretty-well, which were first experienced when under an altered state, were unlikely to have been experienced without that altered state.  
Is that the type of stuff we were are poking at?


-----------
Eric P. Charles, Ph.D.
Department of Justice - Personnel Psychologist
American University - Adjunct Instructor



On Sat, Feb 22, 2020 at 2:30 PM Frank Wimberly <[hidden email]> wrote:
Agreed

---
Frank C. Wimberly, PhD
505 670-9918
Santa Fe, NM

On Sat, Feb 22, 2020, 12:25 PM Marcus Daniels <[hidden email]> wrote:

Frank writes:

 

<It would constitute proof that Marcus exists if he were to admit that I was correct in our years-ago argument when I said that gender defines an equivalence relation on the set of people.>

Definitions.  Notation.  Argh, who cares.  Where’s that neuralyzer, let me get rid of them.

(That should at least be evidence of continuity!)

 

Marcus

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Re: A longer response to Dave's question

thompnickson2
In reply to this post by Prof David West

Dave,

 

You have indulged me as much as any other human on earth, and so it distresses me to hear you say that I would dismiss experiences in extremis out of hand.  Let it be the case that Archimedes solved the king’s crown problem while lolling in a hot bath.  Let it be the case that Kerkule solved the benzene problem while lolling in a hot bath.  Let it be the case that Watson and Crick were lolling in a hot bath (oh those Brits!) when they discovered the double helix.  I would say that, there was SOME grounds (however weak) to suspect that hot bathing led to scientific insight.  In fact, it is one of the great advantages of Peirce’s position that weak inductions and abduction have the same logical status as strong ones and worthy always to be entertained.  I DON’T believe, as I think many do, that extreme experiences have any special claim on wisdom.  Dying declarations are attended to NOT because a dying  person necessarily has great wisdom, but because we are unlikely to hear from that person again in the future.  

 

I suppose you might ague that the reason to go to extreme states is the same as the reason to go the Antarctic or the moon.  There MIGHT be something interesting there, but until you have been there, you will never know, for sure, will you?  The crunch comes when you are deciding on how much resources to devote to the exploration of extremes, given that those resources will be subtracted from those devoted to the stuff such known realities as climate change.  If it’s a choice of exploring Mars or exploring climate change, you know where my  vote would go.

 

But that has no bearing on whether I would encourage or discourage anyone to go with their individual curiosity.  One of our number here is interested in exploring a variant of ESP.  I say let’s go! 

 

 

Nick

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Prof David West
Sent: Sunday, February 23, 2020 4:15 AM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] A longer response to Dave's question

 

Eric, Nick, et.al.,

 

"Well, [Dave] here's another nice mess you've gotten me into."

 

My issue/problem/quest — I have a body of "stuff" and I want to determine if there are ways to think about it in a "useful" manner.

 

The "stuff" appears pretty mundane: assertions, observations, conjectures, metaphors and models, even theory. The problem is provenance: directly or indirectly from, loosely defined, altered states of consciousness. Examples of indirect would be reports from enlightened mystics or dream experiences (ala Kekule or Jung). Direct would be psychedelics.

 

Nick might have me dismiss the entire corpus; stating it has the same value as the latest Marvel universe movie.

 

I disagree. But, by what means, what method, can "fact" even "truth" be discovered and shared. Peirce offers no real assistance. Nor does any other school of epistemology I have encountered.

 

Is there an approach to thinking about my "stuff" that would, at minimum, enable more consistent discovery of examples like Eric cites in #8 of his list. Would it not be useful to be able to quickly identify and focus on insights with the potential to "hold up pretty well."

 

Eric states there are reasons to believe (in #7) that altered states are less reliable, but I would argue, in some cases, the exact opposite. Especially with regard the ability to perceive stimuli of which perceive but never consciously "register" because our brain has filtered them out as being irrelevant. Mescaline can be an instrument as revealing as a microscope or a telescope and it would be worthwhile, I think, to learn how to make effective use of it.

 

The crux of my dilemma remains, I think there is gold in them thar hills, but don't have a means of mining and refining.

 

davew

 

 

On Sat, Feb 22, 2020, at 10:41 PM, Eric Charles wrote:

If we are willing to go back and forth a bit between being philosophers and psychologists for a moment, there are far more interesting things to talk about regarding "altered states".... here are the some of the issues: 

 

  1. When someone claims to be responding to something, we should believe they are responding to something
  2. People generally suck at stating what they are responding to, even in highly mundane situations. 
  3. It is worth studying any types of experiences that lead fairly reliably to other certain future experiences, because in such situations one has a chance discover what it is people are actually responding to. 
  4. As we are complex dynamic systems, human development is affected by all sorts of things in non-obvious ways.
  5. There is no a priori reason to discount the insights one experiences under "altered states of consciousness", but also no a priori reason to give them special credence. 
  6. The degree to which a someone has a sense of certainty about something is not generally a reliable measure of how likely that thing is to hold up in the long run, unless many, many, many other assumptions are met.
  7. There is likely good reason to think that altered states of consciousness are less reliable in general than "regular" states.
  8. There are many examples that suggest certain insights-that-turn-out-to-hold-up-pretty-well, which were first experienced when under an altered state, were unlikely to have been experienced without that altered state.  

Is that the type of stuff we were are poking at?

 

 

-----------

Eric P. Charles, Ph.D.

Department of Justice - Personnel Psychologist

American University - Adjunct Instructor

 

 

 

 

On Sat, Feb 22, 2020 at 2:30 PM Frank Wimberly <[hidden email]> wrote:

Agreed

 

---

Frank C. Wimberly, PhD

505 670-9918

Santa Fe, NM

 

On Sat, Feb 22, 2020, 12:25 PM Marcus Daniels <[hidden email]> wrote:

Frank writes:

 

<It would constitute proof that Marcus exists if he were to admit that I was correct in our years-ago argument when I said that gender defines an equivalence relation on the set of people.>

 

Definitions.  Notation.  Argh, who cares.  Where’s that neuralyzer, let me get rid of them.

(That should at least be evidence of continuity!)

 

Marcus

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FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv

Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College

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FRIAM-COMIC http://friam-comic.blogspot.com/ by Dr. Strangelove

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Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College

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Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College

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FRIAM-COMIC http://friam-comic.blogspot.com/ by Dr. Strangelove

 

 


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Re: A longer response to Dave's question

gepr
In reply to this post by Eric Charles-2
You used the word 'credence'. So maybe what I'm gonna say is irrelevant. But edge cases *do* present high value, low N, experimental opportunites. One set that comes to mind are the twins, where one went to space and the other didn't. The same could be said of rare *people* like the autistic, or those with other conditions that aren't squarely within 1 sigma of the mean.

To suggest, which you didn't quite do, that the rare is no *more* insightful than the common, would be a conflation of different *types* of insight.

In fact, I'd argue that a complete study of the edge cases is MORE important than yet another study of the normal cases. Taking massive doses of LSD is no different from flying your new plane at 6 G's. What you learn will probably be more significant than hanging with the old men at the Denny's or flying your 737 on typical flight plans (if you don't die, of course).

On February 22, 2020 1:41:55 PM PST, Eric Charles <[hidden email]> wrote:

>   5. There is no *a priori *reason to discount the insights one
>   experiences under "altered states of consciousness", but also no *a
>   priori* reason to give them special credence.
>   6. The degree to which a someone has a sense of certainty about
>something is not generally a reliable measure of how likely that thing
>is
>to hold up in the long run, unless many, many, many other assumptions
>are
>   met.
>   7. There is likely good reason to think that altered states of
>   consciousness are less reliable in general than "regular" states.
>   8. There are many examples that suggest certain
>insights-that-turn-out-to-hold-up-pretty-well, which were first
>experienced
>when under an altered state, were unlikely to have been experienced
>without
>   that altered state.
--
glen

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uǝʃƃ ⊥ glen
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Re: A longer response to Dave's question

thompnickson2
Glen, I really want to punt this to Eric, but I have one question for you.

What, a priori, constitutes an "edge".  How do we know where "edges" are?
To take an absurd example, imagine that we had a way of flying an airplane
above 1,000 mph and below 600 mph without ever passing through 740 mph.  So,
somebody says, "We've never tried 740; let's try that!"  Would that be an
edge?  So, "edginess" is defined only by paucity of data?  Or is there
something else to it?  

N

Nicholas Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology
Clark University
[hidden email]
https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/
 


-----Original Message-----
From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of glen
Sent: Sunday, February 23, 2020 4:56 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] A longer response to Dave's question

You used the word 'credence'. So maybe what I'm gonna say is irrelevant. But
edge cases *do* present high value, low N, experimental opportunites. One
set that comes to mind are the twins, where one went to space and the other
didn't. The same could be said of rare *people* like the autistic, or those
with other conditions that aren't squarely within 1 sigma of the mean.

To suggest, which you didn't quite do,
[NST===>] But I did, so your comment is important to me, anyway.
that the rare is no *more* insightful than the common, would be a conflation
of different *types* of insight.
[NST===>] I am interested in the notion of types of insight and why the
scare-asterisks, or are they emphasis-asterisks. Can you say more?  

In fact, I'd argue that a complete study of the edge cases is MORE important
than yet another study of the normal cases. Taking massive doses of LSD is
no different from flying your new plane at 6 G's. What you learn will
probably be more significant than hanging with the old men at the Denny's or
flying your 737 on typical flight plans (if you don't die, of course).

On February 22, 2020 1:41:55 PM PST, Eric Charles
<[hidden email]> wrote:

>   5. There is no *a priori *reason to discount the insights one
>   experiences under "altered states of consciousness", but also no *a
>   priori* reason to give them special credence.
>   6. The degree to which a someone has a sense of certainty about
>something is not generally a reliable measure of how likely that thing
>is to hold up in the long run, unless many, many, many other
>assumptions are
>   met.
>   7. There is likely good reason to think that altered states of
>   consciousness are less reliable in general than "regular" states.
>   8. There are many examples that suggest certain
>insights-that-turn-out-to-hold-up-pretty-well, which were first
>experienced when under an altered state, were unlikely to have been
>experienced without
>   that altered state.
--
glen

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Re: A longer response to Dave's question

Sarbajit Roy (testing)
In reply to this post by thompnickson2
Re : Kekule's alleged dream about gamboling atoms/snakes/monkeys ...

"there is strong evidence that chemists other than Kekule deserve credit for benzene. For example, Dr. Wotiz found an 1854 paper published in the Paris journal Methode de Chemie by the French chemist Auguste Laurent, in which an illustration clearly shows the carbon atoms of benzene arranged in a hexagonal ring. Two other scientists, Archibald Scott Couper of Scotland and Joseph Loschmidt of Austria also appear to have discovered the ring before Kekule, Dr. Wotiz said. Doubts About the Dreams

By claiming to have made two major discoveries with the help of dreams, Dr. Wotiz contends, Kekule shrewdly avoided sharing credit with deserving foreign colleagues."


On Sat, Feb 22, 2020 at 11:05 PM <[hidden email]> wrote:

Hi, Eric, ‘n all,

 

Thanks for the citation. 

 

Here’s where I think we need you. I think Dave West and others in the group are interested in the notion of truth beyond experience, or truth in extraordinary experience, or truth found through drugs or pain, or through intense meditations, or when dreaming or at the threshold of death or (as I would put it) at other times when the system isn’t fully functioning.  My prejudices tell me that these folks, among them my dearest colleagues,  are descending down the Jamesian Rat Hole.  We need you because you are both more knowledgeable about William James than I am and more forgiving.  I suspect you may be able to … um … modulate the rather harsh sentiment expressed below.

 

First, let me stipulate that all experiences endured under extremis ARE experiences and can (by abduction) be the origin of good hunches.  I give you, courtesy of my great wisdom AND Wikipedia, Kekule’s dream.

 

Here is a wonderful example of an extreme experience that “proved out”.   “Proved out” means that when the chemist worked out all the practicial implications of the abduction that benzene was a ring, and carried those implications into laboratory practice, his expectations were confirmed.   

 

What I object to is the notion that such experiences in extremis are èin principleç more likely to be true than ordinary ones, or, further, that there is any way to confirm the implications of one experience except through further experiences. 

 

Let me put this as clearly as I can.

 

Transcendence = bullpucky

 

 

Nick

 

PS :  Eric:  Please stop using the word “practical” and adopt the more accurate term, “practicial”.  “Practical” was a mistake when Peirce used it, and is a mistake everytime you use it.  Peirce an you are both referring to consequences to knowledge-gathering practices, broadly conceived.  The pragmatic maxim of meaning should be,

 

Consider what effects, that might conceivably have practicial bearings, we conceive the object of our conception to have. Then, our conception of these effects is the whole of our conception of the object.

 

Pps:  Do I have more or less evidence that Christ Existed than I do that Marcus exists.  I have never met either of them, but of both, I can say, “I have read a lot of his writings and I know a lot of people who believe in him and speak highly of him. “ What would constitute indoubitable proof of the Existence of Marcus. 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Eric Charles
Sent: Saturday, February 22, 2020 5:59 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] A longer response to Dave's question

 

Assertion: 

1. Since Christ has never been proved to have existed, it seems to me (as a non-psychologist) those consuming his 'blood' religiously appear as victims/participants of group mass delusions reinforced by their regular shared consumption of a narcotic in a controlled environment replete with symbols to reinforce their delusion.

 

Reply: I mean.... transubstantiation is one of the first examples Peirce uses to illuminate thinking that can be improved via the pragmatic maxim....

 

As Nick points out, for Peirce, Pragmatism is, first and foremost, a means of figuring out what your ideas mean. Two important benefits of this are figuring out when you have vacuous thoughts, and gaining the ability to avoid what Orwell would label "doublethink". That is, being able to figure out when your ideas are meaningless and when they contradict each other.  

 

------ How to make your ideas clear, 1878 -----------

To see what this principle leads to, consider in the light of it such a doctrine as that of transubstantiation. The Protestant churches generally hold that the elements of the sacrament are flesh and blood only in a tropical sense; they nourish our souls as meat and the juice of it would our bodies. But the Catholics maintain that they are literally just meat and blood; although they possess all the sensible qualities of wafercakes and diluted wine. But we can have no conception of wine except what may enter into a belief, either --

1. That this, that, or the other, is wine; or,
2. That wine possesses certain properties.
Such beliefs are nothing but self-notifications that we should, upon occasion, act in regard to such things as we believe to be wine according to the qualities which we believe wine to possess. The occasion of such action would be some sensible perception, the motive of it to produce some sensible result. Thus our action has exclusive reference to what affects the senses, our habit has the same bearing as our action, our belief the same as our habit, our conception the same as our belief; and we can consequently mean nothing by wine but what has certain effects, direct or indirect, upon our senses; and to talk of something as having all the sensible characters of wine, yet being in reality blood, is senseless jargon. Now, it is not my object to pursue the theological question; and having used it as a logical example I drop it, without caring to anticipate the theologian's reply. I only desire to point out how impossible it is that we should have an idea in our minds which relates to anything but conceived sensible effects of things. Our idea of anything is our idea of its sensible effects; and if we fancy that we have any other we deceive ourselves, and mistake a mere sensation accompanying the thought for a part of the thought itself. It is absurd to say that thought has any meaning unrelated to its only function. It is foolish for Catholics and Protestants to fancy themselves in disagreement about the elements of the sacrament, if they agree in regard to all their sensible effects, here and hereafter.

It appears, then, that the rule for attaining the third grade of clearness of apprehension is as follows: Consider what effects, that might conceivably have practical bearings, we conceive the object of our conception to have. Then, our conception of these effects is the whole of our conception of the object.

------------

 

So, the first question is NOT "Did Jesus exist?" nor "Does wine transform into his blood." The first question is "What does it mean, practically speaking, to claim Jesus had existed?" and "What does it mean, practically speaking, for the wine to be transformed into blood?"  In both cases, by "practically speaking" I mean, "what consequences would it have for possible outcomes of our actions?" which could also be translated pretty reasonably to "what could a scientist investigate based on that claim". Nick is fond of asking questions like "If the wine is blood, can we use it for a transfusion?" Where as I, a bit more petulant, prefer questions like "Given that one can still get drunk off of communion wine, how far over the DUI limit must He have been at all times, and what implications does that have for the rest of His physiology?" 

 

After you have some idea what your ideas mean, Peirce has ideas about how we (in the very long run) find out which of your clear-ideas are true, but that is a separate conversation. 

 


-----------

Eric P. Charles, Ph.D.
Department of Justice - Personnel Psychologist

American University - Adjunct Instructor

 

 

On Fri, Feb 21, 2020 at 10:20 PM Sarbajit Roy <[hidden email]> wrote:

Nick


1. Since Christ has never been proved to have existed, it seems to me (as a non-psychologist) those consuming his 'blood' religiously appear as victims/participants of group mass delusions reinforced by their regular shared consumption of a narcotic in a controlled environment replete with symbols to reinforce their delusion.

 

2. Now to your more important question for us outside the USA.  "Is Trump a proto-dictator?  What are the consequences in experience of believing that he is?  What does that belief cause us to expect in him. "

In my view, and in the view of many non-Americans, it is the nation of USA collectively which is the tyrannical dictatorship, and it is quite irrelevant who heads it (symbolically), because all US Presidents carry on the same acts of raining bombs from the sky on those who disagree with US policies or the US' aforesaid mass delusion called Christianity.

 

Sarbajit Roy

Brahma University

 

On Thu, Feb 20, 2020 at 10:31 PM <[hidden email]> wrote:

Geez, Dave,

 There's an awful lot here.  Do you mean to take the hardest case?  A person?  And particularly a person who has been so much in all our faces that it's hard for most of us to think of him rationally, if at all? 

 Let's take a simpler example.  An example that Peirce takes is transubstantiation, the idea that in ritual of the mass the communion wine becomes the blood of Christ.  Once consecrated, is the communion "beverage" wine or blood?  Let's say we disagree on that point.  We both see that it's a red liquid in a chalice, on which basis we jump to different conclusions.  From the properties or redness and liquidness that the substance in the chalice shares with both blood and wine, you abduce that it is wine, I abduce that it is blood.  So far, we stand equal. But now the chalice is brought to our lips.  For me, (forgive me, Catholics, for I know not what I say) I feel momentarily cleansed of my sins, uplifted.  Since part of my conception of Christ's blood is that if I drank some of it I would feel cleansed and uplifted, I conclude that it is indeed, Christs' blood.  You, on the other hand, experience the flat, sour taste of inexpensive wine, feel no uplift whatsoever, and conclude that the chalice contains wine.  We are still on equal footing.

 But now the science begins.  We whisk away the stuff in the chalice to the laboratory.  As a preliminary, each of us is asked to list in their entirety all the effects of our conception.  We are being asked to deduce from the categories to which we have abduced, the consequences of our abductions  They are numerous, but to simply the discussion, lets say each of us lists five.  I say, if it is Christ's blood, then I should feel transformed when drinking it, and then I pause.  The scientists also pause, pencils in hand, and I have to go on.  Well, in addition to its red-liquidity,  I say, it should be slightly salty-sweet to taste, be thick on the tongue, curdle when heated, sustain life of somebody in need of a transfusion, etc.  So we do the tests, and the  results are yes, no, no, no, no.  The scientists now turn to you and you say, it should, as well as red and liquid, be sour, thin on the tongue, intoxicating in large amounts, produce a dark residue when heated, etc..  So, the tests come out yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.

 So, is it really blood or really wine?  Well, that of course depends on one’s priorities.  If the sole criterion for a red fluid being Christ’s blood is that it produces in one person, Nick Thompson, a sense of cleansing, then the fact that it doesn’t pass any of the other tests for blood will make no difference.  I can assert that that Christ’s blood is a very special sort of blood that cleanses the spirit of Nick Thompson, but does none of the other things that blood does.  Indeed, I might assert that anything the priest handed me in the chalice, once duly consecrated, would be Christ’s blood.   The idea that it “works for me” makes it “Christ’s blood for me and that’s all that matters.  And if I could bring a regiment of Spanish soldiers with spears to friam, and have them insist that you drink from the chalice and feel cleansed, many of you might begin to agree with me. 

 This is the view of pragmatism that James has been accused of, but it is definitely NOT the view that Peirce held.  If the position is, “whatever the officiant says is christs blood is christ’s blood by definition”, then, Piece would say the position is either

Meaningless or false.  It might be meaningless, because there is no possible world in which it could be false.  Or it might be false, because our best guess as scientists is  that in the very long run, in the asymptote of scientific inquiry, our best scientific guess is that the contents of the chalice will be agreed upon to be wine.

 Again, let me apologize for my ignorant rendition of Catholic ritual.  It IS the example that Peirce takes, but I now see that that is probably a poor excuse.  Peirce was, after all, a protestant, and one with many prejudices, so it would not surprise me if he was anti-catholic and himself chose the example in a mean-spirited way.  So, be a little careful in how you respond. 

 Is Trump a proto-dictator?  What are the consequences in experience of believing that he is?  What does that belief cause us to expect in him.  Tim Snyder, in his little book ON TYRANNY, does a very good job of laying out the parallels between what is going on in our politics right now and what goes on in the early stages of the establishment o a dictatorship.  Trump is fulfilling many of Snyder’s expectations.  Whether Trump succeeds in establishing a dictatorship or not, I think the long run of history will conclude that he is making a stab at it. 

 Nick

 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

 

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

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Re: A longer response to Dave's question

gepr
In reply to this post by thompnickson2
Re: your example, no. (600,1000) is a continuum, which means the conditions at 740 will be *a lot* like those at 640, 840, etc. [†] "Edge" isn't really jargon. As to how one knows where the edges are, there's only one answer, and that is to go over it. Until you *fall* off the edge, you won't really know that you've reached it ... same way you find the edge of a table, by panning your eyes from the surface to beyond the surface. Similarly, if you *don't* find the edge, you'll never really know how *big* the domain is ... or what that other domain on the other side of the edge is like.

In the case of the experiences we're talking about, here, nootropics -- basically performance enhancing drugs -- are distinguishable from psychedelics. Large doses of psychedelics are at or beyond most people's "edge", whereas a nootropic simply makes you feel a little more competent. So, micro-dosing would *not* be exploring the edge cases. But the kind of experiences Dave's talking about are.


[†] Of course, there are all sorts of different kinds of spaces. Continuum is just one kind. And, of course, there's dimensionality, where 1 dimension might have an edge, but another doesn't (e.g. walking near a cliff, with an edge in the up-down but no edge in the side-to-side). And, of course, there's got to be some "invariant" that provides the *operative* (operational) definition of the domain. In your example, speed isn't actually the important factor. It might be something like vibration, harmonics, turbulence, or whatever that makes the plane unstable at some particular speed. In my example, it's not speed but acceleration that defines the domain. But you don't really need all this sophistry to understand what "edge" means.

On 2/23/20 4:37 PM, [hidden email] wrote:
> What, a priori, constitutes an "edge".  How do we know where "edges" are?
> To take an absurd example, imagine that we had a way of flying an airplane
> above 1,000 mph and below 600 mph without ever passing through 740 mph.  So,
> somebody says, "We've never tried 740; let's try that!"  Would that be an
> edge?  So, "edginess" is defined only by paucity of data?  Or is there
> something else to it?

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Re: A longer response to Dave's question

thompnickson2
In reply to this post by Sarbajit Roy (testing)

KillJoy!

 

Why allow a nasty fact to destroy …. Etc. 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Sarbajit Roy
Sent: Sunday, February 23, 2020 8:38 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] A longer response to Dave's question

 

Re : Kekule's alleged dream about gamboling atoms/snakes/monkeys ...

 

"there is strong evidence that chemists other than Kekule deserve credit for benzene. For example, Dr. Wotiz found an 1854 paper published in the Paris journal Methode de Chemie by the French chemist Auguste Laurent, in which an illustration clearly shows the carbon atoms of benzene arranged in a hexagonal ring. Two other scientists, Archibald Scott Couper of Scotland and Joseph Loschmidt of Austria also appear to have discovered the ring before Kekule, Dr. Wotiz said. Doubts About the Dreams

By claiming to have made two major discoveries with the help of dreams, Dr. Wotiz contends, Kekule shrewdly avoided sharing credit with deserving foreign colleagues."

 

On Sat, Feb 22, 2020 at 11:05 PM <[hidden email]> wrote:

Hi, Eric, ‘n all,

 

Thanks for the citation. 

 

Here’s where I think we need you. I think Dave West and others in the group are interested in the notion of truth beyond experience, or truth in extraordinary experience, or truth found through drugs or pain, or through intense meditations, or when dreaming or at the threshold of death or (as I would put it) at other times when the system isn’t fully functioning.  My prejudices tell me that these folks, among them my dearest colleagues,  are descending down the Jamesian Rat Hole.  We need you because you are both more knowledgeable about William James than I am and more forgiving.  I suspect you may be able to … um … modulate the rather harsh sentiment expressed below.

 

First, let me stipulate that all experiences endured under extremis ARE experiences and can (by abduction) be the origin of good hunches.  I give you, courtesy of my great wisdom AND Wikipedia, Kekule’s dream.

 

Here is a wonderful example of an extreme experience that “proved out”.   “Proved out” means that when the chemist worked out all the practicial implications of the abduction that benzene was a ring, and carried those implications into laboratory practice, his expectations were confirmed.   

 

What I object to is the notion that such experiences in extremis are èin principleç more likely to be true than ordinary ones, or, further, that there is any way to confirm the implications of one experience except through further experiences. 

 

Let me put this as clearly as I can.

 

Transcendence = bullpucky

 

 

Nick

 

PS :  Eric:  Please stop using the word “practical” and adopt the more accurate term, “practicial”.  “Practical” was a mistake when Peirce used it, and is a mistake everytime you use it.  Peirce an you are both referring to consequences to knowledge-gathering practices, broadly conceived.  The pragmatic maxim of meaning should be,

 

Consider what effects, that might conceivably have practicial bearings, we conceive the object of our conception to have. Then, our conception of these effects is the whole of our conception of the object.

 

Pps:  Do I have more or less evidence that Christ Existed than I do that Marcus exists.  I have never met either of them, but of both, I can say, “I have read a lot of his writings and I know a lot of people who believe in him and speak highly of him. “ What would constitute indoubitable proof of the Existence of Marcus. 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Eric Charles
Sent: Saturday, February 22, 2020 5:59 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] A longer response to Dave's question

 

Assertion: 

1. Since Christ has never been proved to have existed, it seems to me (as a non-psychologist) those consuming his 'blood' religiously appear as victims/participants of group mass delusions reinforced by their regular shared consumption of a narcotic in a controlled environment replete with symbols to reinforce their delusion.

 

Reply: I mean.... transubstantiation is one of the first examples Peirce uses to illuminate thinking that can be improved via the pragmatic maxim....

 

As Nick points out, for Peirce, Pragmatism is, first and foremost, a means of figuring out what your ideas mean. Two important benefits of this are figuring out when you have vacuous thoughts, and gaining the ability to avoid what Orwell would label "doublethink". That is, being able to figure out when your ideas are meaningless and when they contradict each other.  

 

------ How to make your ideas clear, 1878 -----------

To see what this principle leads to, consider in the light of it such a doctrine as that of transubstantiation. The Protestant churches generally hold that the elements of the sacrament are flesh and blood only in a tropical sense; they nourish our souls as meat and the juice of it would our bodies. But the Catholics maintain that they are literally just meat and blood; although they possess all the sensible qualities of wafercakes and diluted wine. But we can have no conception of wine except what may enter into a belief, either --

1. That this, that, or the other, is wine; or,
2. That wine possesses certain properties.
Such beliefs are nothing but self-notifications that we should, upon occasion, act in regard to such things as we believe to be wine according to the qualities which we believe wine to possess. The occasion of such action would be some sensible perception, the motive of it to produce some sensible result. Thus our action has exclusive reference to what affects the senses, our habit has the same bearing as our action, our belief the same as our habit, our conception the same as our belief; and we can consequently mean nothing by wine but what has certain effects, direct or indirect, upon our senses; and to talk of something as having all the sensible characters of wine, yet being in reality blood, is senseless jargon. Now, it is not my object to pursue the theological question; and having used it as a logical example I drop it, without caring to anticipate the theologian's reply. I only desire to point out how impossible it is that we should have an idea in our minds which relates to anything but conceived sensible effects of things. Our idea of anything is our idea of its sensible effects; and if we fancy that we have any other we deceive ourselves, and mistake a mere sensation accompanying the thought for a part of the thought itself. It is absurd to say that thought has any meaning unrelated to its only function. It is foolish for Catholics and Protestants to fancy themselves in disagreement about the elements of the sacrament, if they agree in regard to all their sensible effects, here and hereafter.

It appears, then, that the rule for attaining the third grade of clearness of apprehension is as follows: Consider what effects, that might conceivably have practical bearings, we conceive the object of our conception to have. Then, our conception of these effects is the whole of our conception of the object.

------------

 

So, the first question is NOT "Did Jesus exist?" nor "Does wine transform into his blood." The first question is "What does it mean, practically speaking, to claim Jesus had existed?" and "What does it mean, practically speaking, for the wine to be transformed into blood?"  In both cases, by "practically speaking" I mean, "what consequences would it have for possible outcomes of our actions?" which could also be translated pretty reasonably to "what could a scientist investigate based on that claim". Nick is fond of asking questions like "If the wine is blood, can we use it for a transfusion?" Where as I, a bit more petulant, prefer questions like "Given that one can still get drunk off of communion wine, how far over the DUI limit must He have been at all times, and what implications does that have for the rest of His physiology?" 

 

After you have some idea what your ideas mean, Peirce has ideas about how we (in the very long run) find out which of your clear-ideas are true, but that is a separate conversation. 

 


-----------

Eric P. Charles, Ph.D.
Department of Justice - Personnel Psychologist

American University - Adjunct Instructor

 

 

On Fri, Feb 21, 2020 at 10:20 PM Sarbajit Roy <[hidden email]> wrote:

Nick


1. Since Christ has never been proved to have existed, it seems to me (as a non-psychologist) those consuming his 'blood' religiously appear as victims/participants of group mass delusions reinforced by their regular shared consumption of a narcotic in a controlled environment replete with symbols to reinforce their delusion.

 

2. Now to your more important question for us outside the USA.  "Is Trump a proto-dictator?  What are the consequences in experience of believing that he is?  What does that belief cause us to expect in him. "

In my view, and in the view of many non-Americans, it is the nation of USA collectively which is the tyrannical dictatorship, and it is quite irrelevant who heads it (symbolically), because all US Presidents carry on the same acts of raining bombs from the sky on those who disagree with US policies or the US' aforesaid mass delusion called Christianity.

 

Sarbajit Roy

Brahma University

 

On Thu, Feb 20, 2020 at 10:31 PM <[hidden email]> wrote:

Geez, Dave,

 There's an awful lot here.  Do you mean to take the hardest case?  A person?  And particularly a person who has been so much in all our faces that it's hard for most of us to think of him rationally, if at all? 

 Let's take a simpler example.  An example that Peirce takes is transubstantiation, the idea that in ritual of the mass the communion wine becomes the blood of Christ.  Once consecrated, is the communion "beverage" wine or blood?  Let's say we disagree on that point.  We both see that it's a red liquid in a chalice, on which basis we jump to different conclusions.  From the properties or redness and liquidness that the substance in the chalice shares with both blood and wine, you abduce that it is wine, I abduce that it is blood.  So far, we stand equal. But now the chalice is brought to our lips.  For me, (forgive me, Catholics, for I know not what I say) I feel momentarily cleansed of my sins, uplifted.  Since part of my conception of Christ's blood is that if I drank some of it I would feel cleansed and uplifted, I conclude that it is indeed, Christs' blood.  You, on the other hand, experience the flat, sour taste of inexpensive wine, feel no uplift whatsoever, and conclude that the chalice contains wine.  We are still on equal footing.

 But now the science begins.  We whisk away the stuff in the chalice to the laboratory.  As a preliminary, each of us is asked to list in their entirety all the effects of our conception.  We are being asked to deduce from the categories to which we have abduced, the consequences of our abductions  They are numerous, but to simply the discussion, lets say each of us lists five.  I say, if it is Christ's blood, then I should feel transformed when drinking it, and then I pause.  The scientists also pause, pencils in hand, and I have to go on.  Well, in addition to its red-liquidity,  I say, it should be slightly salty-sweet to taste, be thick on the tongue, curdle when heated, sustain life of somebody in need of a transfusion, etc.  So we do the tests, and the  results are yes, no, no, no, no.  The scientists now turn to you and you say, it should, as well as red and liquid, be sour, thin on the tongue, intoxicating in large amounts, produce a dark residue when heated, etc..  So, the tests come out yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.

 So, is it really blood or really wine?  Well, that of course depends on one’s priorities.  If the sole criterion for a red fluid being Christ’s blood is that it produces in one person, Nick Thompson, a sense of cleansing, then the fact that it doesn’t pass any of the other tests for blood will make no difference.  I can assert that that Christ’s blood is a very special sort of blood that cleanses the spirit of Nick Thompson, but does none of the other things that blood does.  Indeed, I might assert that anything the priest handed me in the chalice, once duly consecrated, would be Christ’s blood.   The idea that it “works for me” makes it “Christ’s blood for me and that’s all that matters.  And if I could bring a regiment of Spanish soldiers with spears to friam, and have them insist that you drink from the chalice and feel cleansed, many of you might begin to agree with me. 

 This is the view of pragmatism that James has been accused of, but it is definitely NOT the view that Peirce held.  If the position is, “whatever the officiant says is christs blood is christ’s blood by definition”, then, Piece would say the position is either

Meaningless or false.  It might be meaningless, because there is no possible world in which it could be false.  Or it might be false, because our best guess as scientists is  that in the very long run, in the asymptote of scientific inquiry, our best scientific guess is that the contents of the chalice will be agreed upon to be wine.

 Again, let me apologize for my ignorant rendition of Catholic ritual.  It IS the example that Peirce takes, but I now see that that is probably a poor excuse.  Peirce was, after all, a protestant, and one with many prejudices, so it would not surprise me if he was anti-catholic and himself chose the example in a mean-spirited way.  So, be a little careful in how you respond. 

 Is Trump a proto-dictator?  What are the consequences in experience of believing that he is?  What does that belief cause us to expect in him.  Tim Snyder, in his little book ON TYRANNY, does a very good job of laying out the parallels between what is going on in our politics right now and what goes on in the early stages of the establishment o a dictatorship.  Trump is fulfilling many of Snyder’s expectations.  Whether Trump succeeds in establishing a dictatorship or not, I think the long run of history will conclude that he is making a stab at it. 

 Nick

 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

 

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

============================================================
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FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
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FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
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Re: A longer response to Dave's question

thompnickson2
In reply to this post by gepr
Glen,

Well, the plane falls apart if one approaches 740 from either direction (and the plane has not been suitably designed) right?  It may be a continuum for some aircraft frames, but for others, it's quite another story.  Or am I just wrong about this?  

If one is touring in Northern New Mexico and decides to drive directly from Ghost Ranch to Taos one crosses, about 20 miles out, a glorious, mostly flat, high plain that appears to slope ever-so-gently up to the ragged, snow-covered crags of the Sangres.  You think:  Oh boy!  This is a piece of cake!  I will be there for tea and back in Santa Fe for dinner.  About ten miles closer the mountains one suddenly encounters the Rio Grand Gorge, barely a mile wide but 700 feet deep, which, depending on which road you are on, either passes under your wheels in 50 seconds or so, or requires 40 minutes or so of negotiating trick switchbacks to get beyond.  This example is only to emphasize the point that edginess is entirely observer dependent.  

Would I learn more about geology by driving over the bridge, carefully negotiating the switchbacks, or by driving off the cliff at 60 mph?

Clearly the last alternative sucks.  I can see some argument for negotiating the switchbacks, but if I was in a hurry to get to Taos, I would take the bridge.

Seeing this metaphor written out, I now see that it's stupid.  But it's colorful, right? Makes some of you home-sick.  It stays.  

Nick

Nicholas Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology
Clark University
[hidden email]
https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/
 


-----Original Message-----
From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of glen?C
Sent: Sunday, February 23, 2020 8:44 PM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] A longer response to Dave's question

Re: your example, no. (600,1000) is a continuum, which means the conditions at 740 will be *a lot* like those at 640, 840, etc. [†] "Edge" isn't really jargon. As to how one knows where the edges are, there's only one answer, and that is to go over it. Until you *fall* off the edge, you won't really know that you've reached it ... same way you find the edge of a table, by panning your eyes from the surface to beyond the surface. Similarly, if you *don't* find the edge, you'll never really know how *big* the domain is ... or what that other domain on the other side of the edge is like.

In the case of the experiences we're talking about, here, nootropics -- basically performance enhancing drugs -- are distinguishable from psychedelics. Large doses of psychedelics are at or beyond most people's "edge", whereas a nootropic simply makes you feel a little more competent. So, micro-dosing would *not* be exploring the edge cases. But the kind of experiences Dave's talking about are.


[†] Of course, there are all sorts of different kinds of spaces. Continuum is just one kind. And, of course, there's dimensionality, where 1 dimension might have an edge, but another doesn't (e.g. walking near a cliff, with an edge in the up-down but no edge in the side-to-side). And, of course, there's got to be some "invariant" that provides the *operative* (operational) definition of the domain. In your example, speed isn't actually the important factor. It might be something like vibration, harmonics, turbulence, or whatever that makes the plane unstable at some particular speed. In my example, it's not speed but acceleration that defines the domain. But you don't really need all this sophistry to understand what "edge" means.

On 2/23/20 4:37 PM, [hidden email] wrote:
> What, a priori, constitutes an "edge".  How do we know where "edges" are?
> To take an absurd example, imagine that we had a way of flying an
> airplane above 1,000 mph and below 600 mph without ever passing
> through 740 mph.  So, somebody says, "We've never tried 740; let's try
> that!"  Would that be an edge?  So, "edginess" is defined only by
> paucity of data?  Or is there something else to it?

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FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
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archives back to 2003: http://friam.471366.n2.nabble.com/
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Re: A longer response to Dave's question

gepr
I have no idea what you're saying. Sorry I can't be more helpful.

On February 23, 2020 8:19:40 PM PST, [hidden email] wrote:
>
>  This example is only to emphasize the point
>that edginess is entirely observer dependent.  
>
--
glen

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uǝʃƃ ⊥ glen
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