Thoughts on meaning (opinions/criticisms appreciated)
Posted: Mon May 11, 2015 10:50 pm
The human brain cannot perceive outside of patterns. Mathematics is an understanding of that perception of patterns. Physics is the application of the understanding of that perception of patterns. And our picture of the world is the experience of that perception of patterns.
1. The meaning of a statement relies on the possibility that it can be known to be true or false. Meaningful statements cannot exist without the possibility of meaningless statements. The mechanism of meaning exists not in one statement, but in all statements. Therefore, it is impossible to know whether a statement is meaningful or not without prior knowledge of all other possible statements.
2. It is possible to build a structure of meaningless statements, which, in every aspect but what is called meaning, resembles that of a meaningful statement. The distinction is thus: that one can be known to be meaningful and one cannot. Yet for either, there must be an actual distinction between one thing and another thing: patterns must exist.
3. Meaning is built on the assumption that patterns of truth exist. The difference between one thing and another is not meaningful unless there is a pattern which describes why one thing is, and the other is not (actually). Therefore, meaning is reliant on an actual perception of patterns.
4. The human brain perceives in patterns. The human brain is predisposed to structure states in the form of patterns. Therefore, our minds are predisposed to see meaningful and meaningless states prior to any possible knowledge that such states exist.
5. Since the human mind can only perceive in such patterns, one cannot know whether a structure is truly meaningful (expresses an actual pattern) or truly meaningless (does not express an actual pattern), as our minds are wired to see the world in patterns.
6. Outside of the minds pattern seeking, it may be possible to find a true proposition at the end of a series of false statements, or a false proposition at the end of a series of true statements.
7. It is impossible to know the difference between of meaning or meaninglessness, when we intrinsically perceive reality in patterns; and therefore within a mechanism of meaning, for, we cannot say which is an actual pattern and which is a formed pattern, from a perspective that only perceives in patterns.
8. It is possible that truth is random, and that no set of statements can be put together to make a proposition meaningful. The fact that some truths appear to work together (are logically coherent) and some do not (are paradoxes), supports this claim.
9. To claim that life has meaning, or indeed that it does not, is to presuppose the existence of patterns outside of our pattern seeking brains, which is impossible to verify.
(It is impossible for us to conceive anything which is outside of the boundaries of patterns: absolute nothing, infinity etc, etc. Though these things may exist, simply outside the forms of all possible patterns).
10. We are wrong to assume that states contain meaning intrinsically, as such a states are reliant on the knowledge of the existence of patterns. And since the perception of patterns is the starting point for all which we can know (from the existence of colours, to the truth of propositions), and is therefore the lever with which we separate one thing from another, it is impossible to withdraw from this perspective and verify whether patterns actually exist or not.
11. One must, therefore, accept that the human brain cannot witness, or think, of anything which lays outside of the evolved perception of patterns, and so, it is impossible to know whether patterns truly exist or not; and so whether meaning exists or not
12. Though what we consider meaningful may follow from what we consider the pattern of meaning, we cannot understand anything apart from with patterns (and so in a system of meaning): therefore it is impossible to conceive a world in which meaning and the meaninglessness do not follow from our natural notion of meaning and meaninglessness themselves.
1. The meaning of a statement relies on the possibility that it can be known to be true or false. Meaningful statements cannot exist without the possibility of meaningless statements. The mechanism of meaning exists not in one statement, but in all statements. Therefore, it is impossible to know whether a statement is meaningful or not without prior knowledge of all other possible statements.
2. It is possible to build a structure of meaningless statements, which, in every aspect but what is called meaning, resembles that of a meaningful statement. The distinction is thus: that one can be known to be meaningful and one cannot. Yet for either, there must be an actual distinction between one thing and another thing: patterns must exist.
3. Meaning is built on the assumption that patterns of truth exist. The difference between one thing and another is not meaningful unless there is a pattern which describes why one thing is, and the other is not (actually). Therefore, meaning is reliant on an actual perception of patterns.
4. The human brain perceives in patterns. The human brain is predisposed to structure states in the form of patterns. Therefore, our minds are predisposed to see meaningful and meaningless states prior to any possible knowledge that such states exist.
5. Since the human mind can only perceive in such patterns, one cannot know whether a structure is truly meaningful (expresses an actual pattern) or truly meaningless (does not express an actual pattern), as our minds are wired to see the world in patterns.
6. Outside of the minds pattern seeking, it may be possible to find a true proposition at the end of a series of false statements, or a false proposition at the end of a series of true statements.
7. It is impossible to know the difference between of meaning or meaninglessness, when we intrinsically perceive reality in patterns; and therefore within a mechanism of meaning, for, we cannot say which is an actual pattern and which is a formed pattern, from a perspective that only perceives in patterns.
8. It is possible that truth is random, and that no set of statements can be put together to make a proposition meaningful. The fact that some truths appear to work together (are logically coherent) and some do not (are paradoxes), supports this claim.
9. To claim that life has meaning, or indeed that it does not, is to presuppose the existence of patterns outside of our pattern seeking brains, which is impossible to verify.
(It is impossible for us to conceive anything which is outside of the boundaries of patterns: absolute nothing, infinity etc, etc. Though these things may exist, simply outside the forms of all possible patterns).
10. We are wrong to assume that states contain meaning intrinsically, as such a states are reliant on the knowledge of the existence of patterns. And since the perception of patterns is the starting point for all which we can know (from the existence of colours, to the truth of propositions), and is therefore the lever with which we separate one thing from another, it is impossible to withdraw from this perspective and verify whether patterns actually exist or not.
11. One must, therefore, accept that the human brain cannot witness, or think, of anything which lays outside of the evolved perception of patterns, and so, it is impossible to know whether patterns truly exist or not; and so whether meaning exists or not
12. Though what we consider meaningful may follow from what we consider the pattern of meaning, we cannot understand anything apart from with patterns (and so in a system of meaning): therefore it is impossible to conceive a world in which meaning and the meaninglessness do not follow from our natural notion of meaning and meaninglessness themselves.