Wednesday, August 20, 2008

What is Volition?

The question of free will is a difficult and unsettling one, even for the person who believes that our possession of free will is axiomatic. Before we can address the nature of free will, we need to address the nature off will itself, the type of volition that man and the higher animals possess.

Simple organisms such as plants and bacteria act by tropisms. Stimulus, light, they follow it, threat, the bacteria "runs away" - yes or no, based on chemistry.

But humans face complex alternatives and situations where they are not driven to act. No external stimulus requires that we act in one of the myriad ways open to us. Yet, we act. We can choose to act even though no external stimulus forces us to act. At the banquet table, bacteria move toward sugar by chemical necessity. We could eat the beef, the fish, the fruit, the pasta, some or none or all. We could eat the salt or even look in the closet for rat poison. But we neither act of necessity - our beef receptors do not switch on, like sugar receptors driving a bacterial tropism - nor do we, like Buridan's ass, sit in indecision until we starve. Neither does Buridan's ass. We choose among possible alternative courses of action, even though no on-off switch forces us to act.

The ability to act when external stimuli are sub-determinative is volition.

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Does Being Mean Being in Some Place?

Where is your Mind? Does existence imply existence in some place? It depends on the type of existent considered.

For an entity to exist does require that it exist in some place, for place is that which exists between bodies in result of their being extended. Body and place are inseperable in concrete physical reality. We can have placeless bodies only in our imagination. (Even at the level of quantum physics, things have place, even if that place is fuzzy or, due to its size compared to the precision of our instruments, indeterminable.) To be a separate body is to occupy a separate space. Just as a body is its attributes, it also is its relations. The one relationship which exists between all bodies is the relationship of place. Indeed, just as one can consider body to be the primary example of entity, place (location in space) is the primary example of relation. Since existence is the sum of all entities, their attributes, and their relations, it follows that every entity, since it exists within existence, exists in some relation to all other entities. A body is necessarily either here or not here. And if it is not here, it is because it is there - i.e., in some other "here."

But entities are not the only existents. Relations exist too. Awareness is a type of relationship. Location is another type of relationship, as are equality, friendship, and anything that exists metaphorically "between" existents. Consider the relationship fatherhood. Does it have a place? One might be tempted to imagine fatherhood as existing where the father and his child exist. Likewise, consider the relationship of awareness. One might think of awareness existing where the sensing and where the sensed entity exist. But this is naive. I am aware of you existing in California while I exist in New York. Perhaps we are speaking on the phone. Is my awareness through the phone? In one sense, yes. In another sense, no. My awareness does not travel down the wire to you in the way that my voice travels to you as an impulse on the line. If I pass out, that route does not thereby become bereft of "awareness." Neither does my awareness exist in a straght line, or, indeed, in any other spatial relation to you. For awareness is not a substance. The mind is not a thing. Indeed, if a relation existed in a place, this place would itself be a relation. The relation would have a place, which would be a relation, and that relation would also have a place. Indeed, one would have to draw the absurd conclusion that place must have a place, which must have a place, ad infinitum, just as Plato's theory of forms requires an infinite revress of forms of forms.

Place is a relationship of physical entities. Relations, such as awareness or fatherhood or even place itself are not entities, and hence, do not have place. The mind is not a thing, and hence does not have alocation. Dont worry, you haven't lost your mind. It wasn't there in the first place.

Saturday, August 16, 2008

Substance and Entity

Entity is a concept, and, like substance, is a tool by which we grasp reality. Reality in itself is what it is whether we conceive of things as entities, or substances, or existents.

Consider the Chinese language. Unmodified nouns in Chinese are always substances, never entities. In English we have what are called count nouns (entities) such as 'dog' and 'tree' and we have mass nouns such as 'gold' and 'grass' and 'rice.' Count nouns speak of individuals, and can be counted. Mass nouns speak of substances, and cannot. One can own 'a dog' or cut down 'three trees' but one does not own 'a gold' or cut down 'three grasses.' Mass nouns must be quantified with a quantifying word which serves as a unit. One can own a piece of gold or cut a blade of grass. In Chinese, except for quantifiers, all nouns are inherently mass nouns.

From Wikipedia:

Chinese nouns require counters (also termed measure words or classifiers) in order to be counted. That is, when specifying the amount of a countable noun, the counter has to agree with the noun. Hence one must say "兩頭牛/两头牛 two head of cattle", not two cows, with "頭/头 head" being the unit of measurement, or measure word. This phenomenon is common in East Asian languages. (In English, some words, as in the cited example of "cattle", are often paired with a noun used much like the Chinese measure word. Bottle in "two bottles of wine" or piece in "three pieces of paper" are examples; one does not typically say, "two wines" or "three papers", unless talking about types of wine or academic research respectively.)

Substances and entities are different ways of speaking of things that exist physically no matter how we do or do not think of them. One can say look at that body (entity) or look at that flesh (substance). A person can be a "waste of flesh." Now, of course, humans are, by their nature, individuated. It might be hard to say whether a plant with three trunks is a sparse bush or three merged trees. But a living human is an individual, even if the living individual has a parasitic conjoined "twin."

Rand speaks of units as the way by which we measure substance as if it were entity. Chinese, and many other languages do this with all existents by speaking of one body of man and one grain of rice.

Psychoepistemologically, entities are prior, since the first given is the body, which is an entity. We experience existence as a body within a world of bodies. Everything of which we are aware is a body, or exists in relation to a body. It is the bodily, and not material or substance which is given.

In nature, the term which we use depends on scale. Prospectors find nuggets of gold which are big enough to be treated as entities, and they find gold dust, which, due to matters of scale, is treated as if it is a substance. But substances are always definite. The always have some definite extension, some definite amount, even if that amount is so fine grained that we find it difficult to measure. In the end, we find some whole number of atoms of gold, we do not find three and 3/4 of an atom of gold.

Everything that exists is some definite thing. To that extent, we can say that all existents are entities – or are substances comprised of entities. There is a finite number of molecules of gas in a gust of wind. To speak of the molecules as individuals is perverse so far as every day usage is concerned. At our scale, treating air as a mass noun makes sense. But the perspective of language can change according to the needs of mental economy. Whatever our needs, the underlying reality is what it is regardless.

Sunday, August 3, 2008

Physical Monism - The Body as Given


Physical Monism

Materialism is not a primary. It is the learned theory that bodies are comprised of inanimate elemental substances in the chemical sense. But knowledge of matter is not an immediate given. That of which we are directly aware is the bodily which I call the physical. That physical bodies are comprised of matter is a complex scientific theory, not a metaphysical given.

To exist is to be a body, to be of a body, or to be in relation to a body. Body is a perceptual given. Your body, its perceivable attributes, and its relations are your primary given. You are a body that interacts with bodies. Your senses are bodily, and of bodies. Everything that you know, directly or indirectly, you know in relation to your body, which is a Randian entity, perceived directly, but in some Kelleyan perceptual form.

Matter is posited as the substance of body. Matter is not epistemologically prior. All humans are aware of their bodies. The notion of matter is a recent conceptual discovery. Matter is the scientifically discovered non-sentient substance of the body.

Consciousness is a formal relation between the body and its environment, which includes the self. The mind is a complex existent which is discovered. We are not, following Adler, aware of the mind - we are aware of bodies, their attributes, and their relations. The mind is the complex sum of one's conscious and subconscious acts and potentiallities.