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by esarbe
1853 days ago
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> I feel the inconsistency in your (circular) argument is not getting through. I guess it's not, since I'm not convinced that mine is a circular argument. My argument - to put is simply - is that we are all part of the same system and that there are no divisions. Without divisions, no numbers. I don't need any distinction between 'real' and 'arbitrary' for this to hold, that's a dichotomy you assume on your part. |
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Let me try differently. Your premise seems to be that "base reality" (your words) is a single teeming interconnectedness, indivisibly unique, from which it follows "there are no discrete systems", no categories, from which it follows that counting discrete things is an "artifact of human cognition".
Correct? Did I get your position right?
I simply pointed out that human cognition / imagination, including language and categories and logic and numbers, is as much a part of the base reality (that same teeming interconnectedness) as anything else. You manifest your words = they capture a pattern, patently recognizable from other patterns, transmittable (e.g. to me), with a potential to affect me and others and our future.
The world being interconnected doesn't mean it's undifferentiated. All work is still ahead of you in showing that categories and words are somehow "not intrinsic" (again, your words). Yes they may be a teeming that refers to other teeming, but you haven't shown that's anything special, worthy of singling out as extrinsic.