This report discusses about Logical Empiricism, or Logical Positivism – from its origins, who founded this "movement", its influences, weaknesses, and its contribution to education in general.
Classic and Modern Philosophy: Rationalism and EmpicismMusfera Nara Vadia
Rationalism and the rationalists, such as Plato, Descartes, and so on.
Empiricism and empiricists, such as Aristotle, Locke, Hume, Kant, William James.
Philosophy module 1 - The Meaning and Method of Doing PhilosophyRey An Castro
Philosophy Module 1: The Meaning and Method of Doing Philosophy of Rey An C. Castro, LPT., was created as a tool for teaching Philosophy in senior high school students.
The author aims to help educators and students in teaching and learning Philosophy.
The average households contains a variety of materials which, if not looked after properly, could cause serious problems. Here we have listed some of the most common ones to look out for.
For more home health and safety tips visit:
www.dewarsecure.ie
This report discusses about Logical Empiricism, or Logical Positivism – from its origins, who founded this "movement", its influences, weaknesses, and its contribution to education in general.
Classic and Modern Philosophy: Rationalism and EmpicismMusfera Nara Vadia
Rationalism and the rationalists, such as Plato, Descartes, and so on.
Empiricism and empiricists, such as Aristotle, Locke, Hume, Kant, William James.
Philosophy module 1 - The Meaning and Method of Doing PhilosophyRey An Castro
Philosophy Module 1: The Meaning and Method of Doing Philosophy of Rey An C. Castro, LPT., was created as a tool for teaching Philosophy in senior high school students.
The author aims to help educators and students in teaching and learning Philosophy.
The average households contains a variety of materials which, if not looked after properly, could cause serious problems. Here we have listed some of the most common ones to look out for.
For more home health and safety tips visit:
www.dewarsecure.ie
Health Care Quality Improvement, is never enough, nor too much.
A vital hospital committee is Infection Control Committee, will lead teams to apply internal policies and procedures to meet better than expectations of patients and families.
Targeting a continuous learning process, this presentation helps ER workers to react with positive impacts applied, focusing at the patient for a better quality service
True- and False-Self Manifestations in the Application Process for Internship...James Tobin
In this paper presented at the Western Psychological Association 2013 annual conference in Reno, NV, James Tobin, Ph.D. uses Winnicott's notions of the true and false self to conceptualize common dynamics that occur among clinical psychology graduate students applying for predoctoral internship and postdoctoral training programs.
Here are two slideshows, head trauma, which gives a quick guide to ER team, how to prepare and manage a case with a 1st response, Then - a guideline for Tetanus prophylaxis and management, for suspected cases as hundreds of cases still are found annually. Spread the knowledge!
Dissipation Study of Thiophanate Methyl Residue in/on Grapes (Vitis vinifera ...Dr. Sudeb Mandal
A multi-location field trial was conducted in
India during 2006–2008 to evaluate the dissipation pattern
of thiophanate methyl (75% WP) in/on grapes at two
application rates (500 and 1,000 g a.i. ha-1). The quantitative analysis of the fungicide residues as carbendazim
was performed using a UV/VIS spectrophotometer at the
maximum absorption band of 281 nm. The average
recovery was found 87% and the relative standard deviations (RSD) were below 3.8%. Following the first order
kinetics the fungicide dissipates in grapes with a half-life
(t) value of 4.74–6.52 days irrespective of locations and
doses.
A complex, multifaceted and little discussed construct, power nevertheless influences every relationship in our lives, every context we show up in. Historically humanity has struggled deeply with this facet of our existence. These struggles frequently leave us either limp with frustration or pumped up like puffer fish on our own importance. And when events in our world reach crescendos of chaos and limited resource, the application of power has a nasty track record. Despite the direct relevance of this topic to the quality of our human lives and that of the entire planet, power remains a philosophical runt and a practical hornet’s nest. This paper is an invitation to an ongoing dialogue around and concrete practice of healthy, ethical forms of power in our everyday contexts.
Building on the work of Integral, organizational, and developmental theorists, this presentation offers a summary of some new frameworks for understanding power, its application and its contexts. We will then dive into the concrete tools and practices that provide us with a much-needed set of levers for instituting healthier and more ethical expressions of power in any organizational context. Using case studies from the application of this set of tools in a range of organizations, I discuss what appears to work in practice and the theory behind the practice.
Pemanfaatan Teknologi Informasi di PontianakEnda Esyudha
Pontianak sebagai salah satu kota berkembang mulai memanfaatkan teknologi untuk memajukan kotanya. Analisa terhadap pemanfaatan teknologi tersebut perlu diteliti lebih lanjut agar lebih dapat memberikan manfaat positif yang lebih optimal
Patient focus is a fundamental principle at health care,
Targeting the safety of the patient, once realized by the health care givers, they will certainly perform with a better outcome
This session gives an experience of how a multi-national, multi-gender, multi-generational team developed the framework for delivering a global month long webinar series focused on developing an integral paradigm for the city through a global action research inquiry. This is the Producers’ and Director’s guidelines for how to design a real (or virtual) global eLaboratory (Co-Creating the Future of the Human Hive) using an integral interpretation of Integral City’s master code – “take care of yourself, take care of each other and take care of this place”. The session involves the 4 voices of the city: Cityzens, Civic Managers, Civil Society and Business.
How Dead Is Philosophy ~or~ What Do You Imagine Philosophy Actually Is?noiseTM
High-profile science champions such as Stephen Hawking, Neil DeGrasse Tyson and Bill Nye The Science Guy have all gone on record to have a pop at philosophy as past its sell-by date, now that we have SCIENCE to tell us the truth about the world – even going as far as to proclaim the centuries-old discipline, like jazz or guitar rock*, is dead.
Doctor of philosophy James Wakefield and ex-philosophy teacher Thomas Morton have found themselves on the wrong end of this frustrating pub conversation and, frankly, take umbrage at what seems to be a fundamental misunderstanding of the difference in what science and philosophy respectively do.
In this talk they intend to gather up their "beefs" and air them – in the process outlining a personal take on what philosophy is all about, while making a case for why it is not going away and is worth paying attention to. Even for scientists.
(*perhaps tellingly at least one of the speakers listens to both)
This is a lecture slide for a new module introduced by the Malaysian government which is Falsafah dan Isu Semasa. Commonly taught in Bahasa Malaysia. This slide is in English.
This is the presentation which accompanied my talk "Human Dignity as a Mythological Concept" I gave at the conference "The future of human dignity" in Utrecht, October 10-13, 2016.
A375 Example Taste the taste of the Lord, the taste of the Lord The taste of...franktsao4
It seems that current missionary work requires spending a lot of money, preparing a lot of materials, and traveling to far away places, so that it feels like missionary work. But what was the result they brought back? It's just a lot of photos of activities, fun eating, drinking and some playing games. And then we have to do the same thing next year, never ending. The church once mentioned that a certain missionary would go to the field where she used to work before the end of his life. It seemed that if she had not gone, no one would be willing to go. The reason why these missionary work is so difficult is that no one obeys God’s words, and the Bible is not the main content during missionary work, because in the eyes of those who do not obey God’s words, the Bible is just words and cannot be connected with life, so Reading out God's words is boring because it doesn't have any life experience, so it cannot be connected with human life. I will give a few examples in the hope that this situation can be changed. A375
The Hope of Salvation - Jude 1:24-25 - MessageCole Hartman
Jude gives us hope at the end of a dark letter. In a dark world like today, we need the light of Christ to shine brighter and brighter. Jude shows us where to fix our focus so we can be filled with God's goodness and glory. Join us to explore this incredible passage.
In Jude 17-23 Jude shifts from piling up examples of false teachers from the Old Testament to a series of practical exhortations that flow from apostolic instruction. He preserves for us what may well have been part of the apostolic catechism for the first generation of Christ-followers. In these instructions Jude exhorts the believer to deal with 3 different groups of people: scoffers who are "devoid of the Spirit", believers who have come under the influence of scoffers and believers who are so entrenched in false teaching that they need rescue and pose some real spiritual risk for the rescuer. In all of this Jude emphasizes Jesus' call to rescue straying sheep, leaving the 99 safely behind and pursuing the 1.
2 Peter 3: Because some scriptures are hard to understand and some will force them to say things God never intended, Peter warns us to take care.
https://youtu.be/nV4kGHFsEHw
Why is this So? ~ Do Seek to KNOW (English & Chinese).pptxOH TEIK BIN
A PowerPoint Presentation based on the Dhamma teaching of Kamma-Vipaka (Intentional Actions-Ripening Effects).
A Presentation for developing morality, concentration and wisdom and to spur us to practice the Dhamma diligently.
The texts are in English and Chinese.
Discover various methods for clearing negative entities from your space and spirit, including energy clearing techniques, spiritual rituals, and professional assistance. Gain practical knowledge on how to implement these techniques to restore peace and harmony. For more information visit here: https://www.reikihealingdistance.com/negative-entity-removal/
Exploring the Mindfulness Understanding Its Benefits.pptxMartaLoveguard
Slide 1: Title: Exploring the Mindfulness: Understanding Its Benefits
Slide 2: Introduction to Mindfulness
Mindfulness, defined as the conscious, non-judgmental observation of the present moment, has deep roots in Buddhist meditation practice but has gained significant popularity in the Western world in recent years. In today's society, filled with distractions and constant stimuli, mindfulness offers a valuable tool for regaining inner peace and reconnecting with our true selves. By cultivating mindfulness, we can develop a heightened awareness of our thoughts, feelings, and surroundings, leading to a greater sense of clarity and presence in our daily lives.
Slide 3: Benefits of Mindfulness for Mental Well-being
Practicing mindfulness can help reduce stress and anxiety levels, improving overall quality of life.
Mindfulness increases awareness of our emotions and teaches us to manage them better, leading to improved mood.
Regular mindfulness practice can improve our ability to concentrate and focus our attention on the present moment.
Slide 4: Benefits of Mindfulness for Physical Health
Research has shown that practicing mindfulness can contribute to lowering blood pressure, which is beneficial for heart health.
Regular meditation and mindfulness practice can strengthen the immune system, aiding the body in fighting infections.
Mindfulness may help reduce the risk of chronic diseases such as type 2 diabetes and obesity by reducing stress and improving overall lifestyle habits.
Slide 5: Impact of Mindfulness on Relationships
Mindfulness can help us better understand others and improve communication, leading to healthier relationships.
By focusing on the present moment and being fully attentive, mindfulness helps build stronger and more authentic connections with others.
Mindfulness teaches us how to be present for others in difficult times, leading to increased compassion and understanding.
Slide 6: Mindfulness Techniques and Practices
Focusing on the breath and mindful breathing can be a simple way to enter a state of mindfulness.
Body scan meditation involves focusing on different parts of the body, paying attention to any sensations and feelings.
Practicing mindful walking and eating involves consciously focusing on each step or bite, with full attention to sensory experiences.
Slide 7: Incorporating Mindfulness into Daily Life
You can practice mindfulness in everyday activities such as washing dishes or taking a walk in the park.
Adding mindfulness practice to daily routines can help increase awareness and presence.
Mindfulness helps us become more aware of our needs and better manage our time, leading to balance and harmony in life.
Slide 8: Summary: Embracing Mindfulness for Full Living
Mindfulness can bring numerous benefits for physical and mental health.
Regular mindfulness practice can help achieve a fuller and more satisfying life.
Mindfulness has the power to change our perspective and way of perceiving the world, leading to deeper se
Exploring the Mindfulness Understanding Its Benefits.pptx
Mystical Claims and Embodied Knowledge -- 2013 itc slides tom murray
1. Tom Murray
2013 Integral Theory Conference
Paper copy at www.perspegrity.com/papers
MYSTICAL CLAIMS AND EMBODIED KNOWLEDGE
IN A POST-METAPHYSICAL AGE
4. BELIEF/KNOWLEDGE CATEGORIES: EXAMPLES
Linguistic / symbolic
Concepts
• Taste of chocolate; gut
certainty; meditative state;
playing tennis; intuitions…
• Tree, democracy, interior, c
onsciousness…
• Trees are…; We should…;
the cognitive line leads…
• AQAL, SD, CR, Einstein‘s, …
.
4
Non/pre-Linguistic:
Experience
Model/Theory
Statements
5.
6. OVERVIEW
1. What are mystical/metaphysical claims/beliefs?
2. Reasons for caution and reflection
3. What embodied cognition says about
mystical/metaphysical claims and reality <–> idea gap
4. ‗Post-metaphysical‘ approaches to mysticism
―Theories can do shadow work‖
— so can mystical beliefs
Not questioning mystical, magical, or ineffable
experiences, or the need to share and construct meaning
from it
7. WORKING DEFINITION OF
MYSTICAL/METAPHYSICAL CLAIMS/BELIEFS
• Claims about the overarching or underlying nature of the
universe/Kosmos/everything
• Not provable by science or amenable to measurement; i.e. not
purely physical or psychological phenomena – but still being
about ―reality‖ or ―truth‖ (not about the good or beautiful)
• Common themes:
Consciousness, Being, Reality, Spirit, Life, Non-
dual, Cosmology, other Realms
• Have import to human life/spirit, ethics, ultimate ―meaning‖
• Mystical differs from metaphysical in that its source is direct
experience or intuition (purportedly) with ultimate reality or
transcendental truths
9. KEN WILBER — PHILOSOPHER AND MYSTIC
"the great morphic field of evolutionary potential…pulling all
manifest holons back to their ever-present Ground as Spirit--a
Kosmic field of Agape, gently pulling evolution into greater and
greater consciousness, embrace […] The reality, suchness, or
isness of every holon is actually Spirit…a drive which ultimately
wants to embrace the entire Kosmos […] This ultimate realization
[is] of the ever-present, spaceless and therefore infinite, timeless
and therefore eternal, formless and therefore
omnipresent, Condition of all conditions and Nature of all natures
and radically groundless Ground of all grounds.‖
Ken Wilber, Excerpt A, Volume 2, Kosmos Trilogy Draft
10. MORE MYSTICAL STATEMENTS
"…perspectives are primordial, which is to say they are the most
fundamental or primeval elements of reality, existing at or from the
beginning of time"
Clint Fuhs, ITC 2010 paper on Perspectival Semiotics
"the dimension of the profound," "mystical deeper reality," "timeless
present," "eternal now," and "infinite spaciousness‖
Jeff Carreira (student of Andrew Cohen) audio dialogue with Patricia Albere
"infinite vastness...open suchness... infinite peace...true
self...always already liberated"
Wilber, audio interview with Alan Coombs
11. DR. BRONNER (THE SOAP GUY)
• ... a sense for work-love-song-art-law-play-beauty, a face turned
up from the sod!
• Absolute...ever- evolving, ever-recreating, ever-loving
order!...guided by One...God...all-embracing,
• Eternal One! — We're One! All-One!
• DILUTE ENJOY — 1 SQAP FOR 18 DIFFERENT USES!
12. NON-AD-HOMINEM
The individuals quotes can be assumed to:
• be sincere and authentic
• have had deep experiences and intuitions
• be pointing to important ―truths‖ or deep meaning
• not be absolutist; allow for fallibility and revision
• have a sophisticated and nuanced understanding
13. DON’T TRY TO USE THESE WORDS AT HOME! :-)
Infinite, Omnipresent, Universal, Ulti
mate, Primeval, Primordial, Eternal,
Formless, Ever-
Present, Supreme, Unbounded, Time
less, Spaceless, Radically
Invisible, Radically Empty, Non-
Dual, Ground Of Being
• Poetry? Metaphor? Inspirational oratory?
• Truth claims about (exterior) reality
• For what audience, for what purpose?
16. BERTRAND RUSSELL ON MYSTICAL KNOWLEDGE
• It often deals with universals, infinites, essences, or foundational truths.
• Mysticism has "a certain intensity and depth of feeling in regard to what is
believed about the universe." It has a sense of "certainty and revelation."
Though it sometimes uses logic to justify beliefs, the claims seem to come
from "a way of wisdom, sudden, penetrating, coercive, which is contrasted
with the slow and fallible [process of scientific reasoning]."
• Mystics are attempting "an articulation upon the inarticulate experience gained
in the moment of" what is called insight or intuition.
• There is a "sense of a mystery unveiled [and] revelation" of "a reality behind
the world of appearances and utterly different from it." Truth and essence is
found through profound introspective thought, not through sense experience.
• Can be expressed in deeply poignant, poetic, or metaphorical prose.
• There is a common "belief in unity, and its refusal to admit opposition or
division anywhere"—that "reality is one and indivisible." There is also
commonly a belief that reality, or ultimate reality, is beyond time and space.
17. YOUR EXPERIENCE WITH METAPHYSICAL
BELIEFS?
1. Brainstorm mystical/metaphysical claims/beliefs
you hear in the Integral community.
2. How do you feel when others make such claims?
3. What happens when you mention
mystical/metaphysical claims to your
friends/family?
4. When you explain or justify these beliefs, how do
you support them?
5. Does it matter if we can explain or justify such
claims to others? Why or why not?
18. MYSTICAL / METAPHYSICAL
KNOWLEDGE HAZARDS — RUSSELL
• Tendency for the passion of the mystic to
conflate "the good with the truly real"
• Those who "are capable of absorption in an inward passion" can
experience "the loss of contact with daily things [and] common
objects."
• Focus on pure logic to the exclusion of experience or common
sense– "logic used in the defense of mysticism seems to be
faulty as logic‖
• >>Highest form of thought is a combination of mystical and
scientific understanding...
19. MORE CAVEATS RE PROCLAMATIONS OF THE
ULTIMATE OR ESSENTIAL
• Complex philosophical approaches
and worldviews...reach beyond the
boundaries of the academy and into
the lifeworld" where they are subject
to being watered-down, muddied,
and misappropriated
-Stein 2010
• Ultimately can be:
grandiosity, hegemony, elitism,
demagoguery, proto-fascism,
colonization, assimilation,
totalizing
21. THE IDEA PORTABILITY PRINCIPLE
• Understanding and dealing with the fallibility and
indeterminacy of ideas is more important the greater the
distance between the world views or beliefs of
interlocutors
• Preaching to the (integral) Choir vs.
a) crossing disciplinary boundaries to interact with other
theory/practice communities
b) applying ideas in real contexts
explaining one's purposes to stakeholders
c) disperse ideas into other world views or conceptual frames
22. DISCUSSION:
EMBODIMENT & BELIEF FORMATION
1. How does knowing you are angry, in love, in fearful
resistance, or prejudiced influence what you believe
and how you hold a belief? How does understanding
how shadow works change how you hold a belief?
2. How does knowing that some aspects of love —
such as attraction, bonding, and empathy, are tied to
bio/neuro/chemical processes — change the
experience of being in love?
3. New evidence shows how most
memory, perception, and judgment is influenced by
emotion and cognitive biases — how do you think
this effects the claims of scholars, philosophers, and
mystics?
23. THE EMBODIED MIND
— A Philosophical History of the Fallibility of Reason
1. Traditional Philosophy — mind/reason separate from body (Cartesian) &
pure, universal, transcendent, reliable
2. Enlightenment and Scientific Revolution — removing the influence of
authority, emotion/passion, dogma, instinct/intuition
• Valued: observation, measurement, logic, repeatability/democratic
• But battle: Realists & Empiricists vs. Rationalists & Idealists
3. Kant — reason is limited by underlying structures of the mind
4. Darwin — cognition evolved through natural selection—from animal brains
5. Freud — the unconscious; unpredictable hidden powerful influence on thought
6. Postmodernists — reason is biased by cultural norms & structure of language
7. Cognitive Science — cognitive biases woven into perception, memory, reason
32. STATES REFERRED TO IN BUDDHIST TEXTS
(THE SATIPATTHANA SUTTA, PITAKA SUTTA)
• A series of state experiences (Jhanas) obtainable through
contemplative absorption practices. ...terms include
happiness/joy, rapture/bliss, attention/mindfulness, unification/at
tention/one-pointedness, equanimity/serenity/contentment/utter
peace, infinity of space, and emptiness/formlessness/cessation.
• Common warnings along the path indicated drives (addictive &
obscuring)
• What from the experience gets transferred to theories/concepts
of reality?
• Terms like infinite, boundless, empty, used in mystical ideas may
point to feeling states, more than actual properties of reality.
33. IN "MYSTICISM AND LOGIC" RUSSELL
CONCLUDES THAT
"while fully developed mysticism seems to me [a mistaken
outcome of the emotions], I yet believe that by sufficient
restraint, there is an element of wisdom to be learned by
the mystical way of feeling, which does not seem to be
attainable in any other manner [and which is] to be
commended as an attitude toward life, not as a creed
about the world"
34. 4. EPISTEMIC DRIVES
(FROM COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY TO PHENOMENOLOGY)
Any cognitive drive or tendency that
influences how we produce or share
knowledge or ideas
• Desire for certainty (and the
avoidance of uncertainty and
cognitive dissonance)
• Need to make meaning, see
patterns
• Misplaced concreteness
• Symbolic Impulse
36. POST-METAPHYSICS
• Habermas:
1. post-metaphysical era has "replaced
foundationalism with fallibilism‖ and
2. has a procedural conception of rationality — from
―a rational person thinks this‖ to "…thinks like this‖
• In Integral Spirituality Wilber (2006) says that
"[arguably,] metaphysics…ended with Kant [who realized
that] we do not perceive empirical objects in a completely
realistic, pregiven fashion; but rather, structures of the
knowing subject import various characteristics to the
known object. […] Metaphysics is then a broad name for
the type of thinking that can't figure [out that] reality is not
a perception, but a conception…thinking that falls prey to
the myth of the given." (p. 231).
37. WE WILL ALWAYS NEED METAPHYSICS
• To satisfy our epistemic drives toward meaning, certainty, .... in
areas outside the reach of (current) science/measurement.
• Some things may always appear as mysteries to the human
mind: death, life, infinity, subjectivity, being...
• But we can still avoid unnecessary degrees of
certainty, foundationalism, bias....
38. APPROACHES TO METAPHYSICAL CLAIMS
1. Meaning Generative Claims
2.Indeterminacy Analysis
3. Body Awareness of Epistemic Drives
4.Follow Sean Esbjörn-Hargens!
39. 1. MEANING GENERATIVE CLAIMS
(A 4TH VALIDITY TYPE)
True
Good/Right/Just
Beautiful
&
Meaning-generative
39
42. 4. HUMOR, PLAY, HUMILITY, UNKNOWING, DANCE
(SEE SEAN!)
• Fallibility: "Blind spots and square pegs
and messy -- oh my!‖
• Evolving definition of concept of "integral"
• Ontological (metaphorical) Pluralism:
multiple earths
• Epistemic Drives: "I love
maps, iteration, and symmetry!‖
• Misplaced concreteness: Force-fitting into
quadrants
43. SUMMARY
• Embodiment implies fallibility and indeterminism of
mystical/metaphysical ideas and claims
• Most abstract/foundational/general concepts are the most
indeterminate (epistemic distance)
• The most deeply meaning-full concepts involved highest
epistemic drives (—―ultimate concern‖)
• Honor the mysterious, sacred, mystical, enchanted — and the
need to share and make meaning from them
• With post-metaphysical, fallibilistic, self-critical approaches
• That allows integral theory and meta-theories to do
emancipatory work
47. POST-METAPHYSICS
• Is not anti-metaphysics
• No view from nowhere (privileged perspective): reality
is not out there waiting to be seen (“misplaced
concreteness”)
• Beyond the “myth of the given:” reality is not simply as
it appears
• Perspectival: all truths/experiences come from a
perspective and are partial
• Misplaced concreteness and “map vs territory:”
abstractions are not “real” (independent of us)
• Knowledge is fallible (no absolutes)
• Knowledge is socially constructed
• Concepts and language are indeterminate
TOM MURRAY |
WWW.PERSPEGRITY.COM | MAY
2010
47
48. IDEAS AS REALITY:
STAGES OF MISPLACED CONCRETENESS
• Magical thinking – imagination as reality
• Mythical thinking – stories as reality
• Conventional thinking – norms as reality
• Modern thinking – concepts/models as reality
• Post modern — deep knowing/intuition as one truth
49. POSITIVISM/CERTAINTY VS.
FALLIBILISM/INDETERMINACY
• Positivist attitude: clarity, certainty, action
• knowledge/meaning-generative; problem solving, theorizing
• Negative capability: awe, humility, curiosity
• Limits of language & knowledge & method
• Tolerance for ambiguity, uncertainty, unknowing
• Dealing with the above
TOM MURRAY | WWW.PERSPEGRITY.COM |
AUGUST 2010
49
Espoused fallibility vs.
Stylistic (or illocutionary/enacted) fallibility
50. CALLS FOR HIGHER LEVEL THOUGHT
David Bohm: "underneath [humanity's dilemmas] there's something we don't understand about
how thought works" and that what is needed is a "very deep [and] very subtle" awareness of
thought itself.
Albert Einstein: "the significant problems we face cannot be solved at the same level of thinking
we were at when we created them.‖
• Cultural development as skill of understanding mind, thought, language, knowledge, belief…
=> the ―post-metaphysical turn‖
TOM MURRAY |
WWW.PERSPEGRITY.COM | AUGUST
2010
50
51. SECOND TIER - GOING ―META‖
(FROM ITC-2008)
• Meta-cognition (thinking about thinking)
• Meta-knowledge (knowledge about the nature and limitations of
knowledge); META-BELIEF!
• Meta-learning (learning how to learn, also called triple-loop
learning)
• Meta-dialog (dialog about how we engage in dialog)
• Meta-decision making (making decisions about how we will go
about making decisions)
• Meta-affect (investigating the feeling of our feelings; somatic
awareness of feeling states)
• Meta-leadership (supporting leadership in others)
TOM MURRAY | WWW.PERSPEGRITY.COM |
AUGUST 2010
52. DEVELOPMENT, DISEQUILIBRIUM
AND HUMILITY
Heart/Empathy: Relationally aware -- opening to the suffering of ever wider
circles of relationship
Mind/Cognitive: Construct aware -- foundations of certainty in knowing are
shaken
Spirit/Self: Ego aware -- awake to the profound levels of chaos and vulnerability in
life
External world: Systems aware – chaos: radical connectivity, unpredictability
TOM MURRAY |
WWW.PERSPEGRITY.COM | MAY 2010
52
Editor's Notes
image search?: mysterious/creatures; new age...; mystical; spiritual;
theories, models, claims..
we say map is not territory; we need good maps! can’t ignore new research on cognition and
(—not just philosophical reasoning)CLaims – not experiences
not be naive about what they are saying
- proclaiming knowledge of the infinite—but that’s beyond knowledge! view from everywhere is a view from nowhere...esoteric mysteries offered by spiritual authorities from 19th century occultism, yet are offered in the context of sophisticated post-post-modern frameworks of reality and knowledge buildinginvite forms of “magical thinking” and “misplaced concreteness,” even if those offering the claims do not succumb -we don't use words like these in everyday language, and there is a reason!What is the language game?
not about whether they are true, but about certaintyits not about the people, its about knowledge building and sharing methods and attitudesHow to we talk about these ideas in polite company?Our answers MAY apply to the few geniuses and spiritual adepts among usbut: how to the REST of us interpret, co-create, disseminate, and evolve such ideas?
Often plays with opposites and paradox, pointing beyond them to knowledge that resolves or harmonizes them.
OR What types of arguments/explanations could/should be used for MM integral claims?Group Discussion of Mystical/Metaphysics (MM) Claims/Beliefs
Ex.: Does god have free will? (hartshorne)Do rocks have consciousness?
language about absolutes, ultimate nature, where the/my miscomfort comes fromJordan: attitude adjustment
--in integral theory we are used to thinking about how developmental level, culture, effects beliefs and reasoning – BUT here we look elsewhere
haermas on ‘how we argue’
Best to come up with examples as you discuss:When we know more about the lens/filter/distortions, we ignore at our perilreductionism not necesszryCUT THESE:1: embodied brain and life context influences beliefs, how we hold ours, and how we should build knowledge togetherHow does knowing that a person that you disagree with has trauma or disability related to the a topic — change your interpretation and critique of them? (e.g. on gun control or right to life?)How does knowing your memory is weak in an area change a remembrance? How does knowing that all memory is fallible change your certainty of a remembrance?
culture rises up out of the dark ages to reclaim the glory of rational ordered thought [bequeathed] by the Greekscobbled together hrou
effect all and experts; universal to human naturedozens of them; attentional biasserious impactions for jury testimony, etc. but also for metaphysical discourse
most phenomena are more like chaos than categories. so we should take caution; or periodically revisit our construct definitions and ontologies
when we slice the world into categories we simplify and may ignore what is between or outside them
Graded (fuzzy); 1. boundaries; 2. outside the scheme; 3 Metaphorical PluralismModels and claims work mostly for central exemplars Symbolic Impulsemutually exclusive, black and white, definitive, clear boundaried model of concepts the "simple" model; tendency of thought that biases one to perceive or interpret phenomena (subjectively) as simple. Phenomena in nature are usually (some would say always).The symbolic impulse is exacerbated in contexts that involve emotional charge, importance, or ego attachment,
Theories of truth: A critical introductionChris Argyris "the likelihood of differences in the interpretations of different observers increases the higher one goes on the ladder of inference" Hartshorne: ...god is the most abstract concept; Does god have free will?
Map-territory; myth of the givenconciousness; subjective/objective; quadrantsfreedom; (google it); capitalism;not that these are not REAL; but they don’t have properties “the economy is doing well”Race....democracy, African-American, god, ego, compassion, spirit, evolution, formal operational thinking, left hand quadrant, green meme, or Eros
Enlightenment vs. the taste of chocolateif everyone had higher state experiences we might have concrete claer ways to refer to them, and not have to use highly abstract terms.bhaskar – mundane nonduality
compteing with each other
There is a sense of ease, certainty, and mastery when we can ignore details and differences and trust a sturdy generality. We get a certain satisfaction from ordering things or collecting them into tidy groups. There is a sense of elegance and wholeness when we can embrace many things into a circle of unity, and a sense of power in understanding the essential or universal. The inquisitive and meaning-hungry mind wants to know the causal root, foundation, source, or origin of things.
succession of scientific understandings replacing metaphysical concepts (examples abound in physics and biology).example, physicists have created the place-holder concepts of "dark matter" and "dark energy" in attempts to make meaning of cosmic phenomena we don't yet understand. Even the terms "life" and "disease" may someday be seen as quaint metaphysical constructs holding place for a future deeper understanding. Bhaskar – reality is structured, orderly, lawful in its nature.
How we argue...habermas"believe in" reincarnationThe suggestion here is not to de-valorize rigor but to provide a valid alternative justification mode that allows us to differentiate when we need scientific rigor (or modernist forms of rationality) and when we don't.Explanatory force
structured self-critique of theories and concepts and examples
they activate a number of epistemic drives that threaten to bias cognition. They trigger the pleasurable and ego-fulfilling senses of purity/tidiness, universality/comprehensiveness, totality/power, and fundamentalism. They point to the infinite, the primordial, ever-omni-present that is said to be so vast it is beyond space and time. Such metaphysical ideas can engender states of certainty, conviction, and zealousness that, in the worst cases, are associated with oppression and totalitarianism. In the less extreme case, the reader can surely sense at least a tiny stirring of fervor in the breast when one considers insights of deep meaning and ultimate concern
negative capability ; positive capabilityemancipation; personal and culturaldemi-real
POMO: Focus on what is wrong
OK for Wilber! That certainty and precision creates a force; but WE don’t have to copy it…How can we bring both of these into play?- everybody is partially RIGHT; vs Everybody is (partly) wrong