This is exasperating. It is entirely pointless to try to have a meaningful discussion with someone who repeatedly dodges addressing a fundamental issue, despite multiple requests. You parade around the outskirts of the conversation, riffing on metaphysical poetry, invoking yoga philosophy, and referencing Carlyle, but you stubbornly refuse to engage directly with the key question: How does your view of the brain and consciousness—this idea of a “reception device”—actually work, in practical terms?Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Fri Dec 27, 2024 10:10 pmAccuse is not the right word, and this is not my intention. My objective is to see you and the ideology that you construct within a context — that of intellectual evolution or perhaps devolution. The qualities or the characteristics I notice in you are the qualities that seem to define the age we are in. When I comment about you I am actually speaking to that. Your adamancy arises from within these absolutisms that you are so involved with. You have no other choice, really, but to *dismiss* any notion that does not conform to the ideology you develop. And to influence you to consider other models is impossible, because of your adamancy, your dismissiveness, etc. You seem to me to operate in a closed loop.
Those are your labels, naturally. And their purpose is dismissiveness. What other choice do you have but to assign them? Unlike you, I do not dismiss metaphysics because what is metaphysical, to everything that is grasped by a “brute” perception, unquestionably exists. I know, I keep repeating this and you will keep rejecting the import of it, but this can’t be helped.rhetorical gymnastics and vague metaphysical speculation
I presented one alternative to the views you have and the purpose of my reference was to demonstrate how different orderings of perception can and will allow for different results. The reason I do this is because I notice that the system that you are developing is destructive to *realms of knowledge* that you, necessarily, must dismiss. It is entirely plausible, if the eye and the ear are compared to *the brain*, that the brain develops to receive consciousness. And consciousness that is latent in this weird Cosmos. Again, I was sort of riffing of of the Carlyle quote. And yes, I get that everything that does not accord with your established views is *fluff*.
Actually I could respond by noting that the idea is compatible, in one example, with some Eastern ideas from yoga-philosophy that man is a perceiving instrument and that he can, and perhaps must, increase his capability to *receive* what is there to receive. Obviously this fits with some of my own notions about receiving impulses from what is *divine* and “angelic” and I regret a little that these ideas seem utterly retrograde to responsible modernists. But please remember that I agreed, largely, with your initial assertion that man finds himself in a terribly conditioned situation with just *a cubic centimeter of chance* to alter the current of causation and conditioning that has him in its grip. Another way to understand the connotation in the symbol of the Fall. And yes, again, I recognize that these present references can only make you gag!You suggest the brain might be a "reception device" for consciousness, akin to an ear hearing sound or an eye seeing light. This is nothing more than unsubstantiated metaphysical hand-waving
Obviously, the *eye* is not the physical eye but more the mind and more our consciousness. And if our *mind* is really what we need to hone, or nourish, or purify (?) then one’s relationship to one’s self really does become different (than what I understand of your anthropological-ideological project).“This life's dim windows of the soul
Distorts the heavens from pole to pole
And leads you to believe a lie
When you see with, not through, the eye.”
That is one way to negatively describe it. There are other, more favorable, alternatives.you retreat into abstractions about "psychological configurations" and "habitual assumptions”
I have definitely been involved in thinking about and addressing what I think are the ramifications of your ideas, what the consequences of your ideas seem to me to be, could be, might be. Your advent here to this forum is very fortunate in my opinion. But obviously (in my case) not for the reasons you’d suppose nor are you achieving (with me) what you seem to desire.You want me to "modify my posture"? Here’s a recommendation for you: stop pontificating about how others are closed-minded and start addressing the actual arguments
Do you acknowledge that memories, learning, and adaptations are stored and processed as physical changes in the brain, or don’t you? If not, explain why. If you do, explain how this aligns or conflicts with the deterministic framework I’ve presented. But no, instead of offering clarity, you retreat into abstractions, throwing in quotes and symbolic musings that do nothing to address the substance of what’s being debated.
You claim I’m closed-minded, adamant, and dismissive—fine, let’s assume for argument’s sake that I am. But what exactly is your excuse for refusing to articulate your position on such a key point? You suggest the brain might “receive” consciousness, yet you offer no evidence, no mechanism, no clear explanation. It’s hand-waving, plain and simple, dressed up in ornate language to disguise its emptiness. You can’t keep tossing out vague metaphysical notions as if they’re some kind of intellectual trump card and expect to be taken seriously.
I’m not asking for poetic musings or symbolic interpretations—I’m asking for specificity. If the brain is a “reception device,” then explain how this works. What is it receiving? From where? By what mechanism? And most importantly, how does this align with or refute the deterministic processes of learning and memory? These are basic, foundational questions, and your refusal to address them directly makes it impossible to take your position seriously.
You accuse me of operating in a “closed loop,” yet here you are, sidestepping the central issues at every turn. You claim to be addressing the ramifications of my ideas, but what you’re really doing is pontificating without offering any substantive critique. If you have something meaningful to say, then say it. Stop hiding behind rhetorical flourishes and metaphysical smoke screens.
Until you’re willing to engage with the actual arguments—without deflecting into abstractions or rehashing the same tired accusations—there’s no point in continuing this. It’s not a conversation; it’s a performance. And frankly, I have better uses for my time.