This document discusses various philosophical concepts related to truth, correspondence, representation, and meaning. It examines coherence theories of truth and justification, and explores ideas around value incommensurability, representation theory, and semiotics. Key topics covered include the relationship between truth and empirical proof or justification, the nature of representation and reality, and whether truth is determined solely by correspondence with the world.
Correspondence and Representation are important 'meta' concepts - yet their incommensurability aspects are revealing 'great and mighty' things which man 'knew not' of.
This document is a dissertation submitted by a student for their BA degree in philosophy. The 8,194 word document contains an abstract, introduction, three chapters, and a conclusion examining whether the later philosophy of Wittgenstein can be considered a form of transcendental idealism. Chapter 1 defines transcendental idealism according to Kant and contrasts it with realism and idealism. It also discusses an interpretation of Wittgenstein's early philosophy as a form of transcendental solipsism. Chapter 2 evaluates Bernard Williams' argument that Wittgenstein's later philosophy retains elements of transcendental idealism. Chapter 3 examines the nature of Wittgenstein's later philosophy in the Philosophical Investigations. The conclusion argues that
The document discusses Heidegger's concept of Dasein and the destruction of the subject-object distinction. It argues that Heidegger's understanding of truth and intelligence as grounded in Dasein's being-in-the-world means that artificial intelligence as currently conceived, which is based on a subject-object framework, is impossible. The document examines how Heidegger's work moves beyond Descartes' dualism and the Western philosophical tradition established by Plato and Aristotle to argue that truth is relative rather than absolute.
This document summarizes and analyzes myths of origin from polytheistic and Judeo-Christian traditions. It discusses cosmogonies (origins of the cosmos) from Hindu, Egyptian, Phoenician, Greek, and Zoroastrian myths which describe a transition from chaos to order. It also examines Genesis which presents creation ex nihilo by God's divine word rather than from preexisting chaos. The author argues that while myths seek to explain mysterious origins, Judeo-Christian tradition presents a unique conception of time and creation by a singular, transcendent God.
.There are different paths to reality, they are determined by the knower, being instrumental methodological study object, epistemological axis, among others. Reality presents several faces, what is observable and what is perceived sensory empirical data obtained correspond to the visible, the main thing is to discover the hidden side, which is behind the perceptible or data. Epistemology is the whole process of obtaining scientific knowledge, ranging from the pre knowledge to get to know the hidden side, one thing is what is seen and what is not, and one that is not seen, is really it is.
1) The author argues that Wilber's integral approach could be improved by making it more fully integral at all times of human value realization, not just at certain moments.
2) An example is given of how the descriptive, evaluative, normative, and interpretive methods are all necessary to fully understand and realize a value.
3) The author emphasizes distinguishing between epistemology and ontology when considering nondual experiences from Eastern traditions, noting that such experiences speak more to phenomenology than metaphysics.
The document discusses improving Ken Wilber's integral approach by making it more fully integral. It argues that for a value to be fully realized, all quadrants (perspectives) and levels (stages of development) must be integrated at once, not just included separately. It provides an example showing that descriptive, evaluative, normative, and interpretive ways of knowing are each necessary to complete our understanding, though each is also distinct. The document suggests leading with shared non-propositional practices and pneumatology (spirit) in interfaith dialogue to foster understanding before discussing doctrinal differences.
The Search for the Origin book 1 chap 1Miguel Cano
Given the current confusion of values, it would be convenient to return to nature to find possible grounds on which to build a system of common and universal values that can harmonize the various conflicting and contradictory views today.
This book analyzes several classic controversies such as the conflict between materialism and idealism, the debate about the origin and evolution of life and the universe, the controversy between determinism and freedom, and the problem between the individual and the totality.
As conclusion, a number of general principles of nature are enumerated, which are very useful to harmonize the different scientific, philosophical and religious traditions.
Correspondence and Representation are important 'meta' concepts - yet their incommensurability aspects are revealing 'great and mighty' things which man 'knew not' of.
This document is a dissertation submitted by a student for their BA degree in philosophy. The 8,194 word document contains an abstract, introduction, three chapters, and a conclusion examining whether the later philosophy of Wittgenstein can be considered a form of transcendental idealism. Chapter 1 defines transcendental idealism according to Kant and contrasts it with realism and idealism. It also discusses an interpretation of Wittgenstein's early philosophy as a form of transcendental solipsism. Chapter 2 evaluates Bernard Williams' argument that Wittgenstein's later philosophy retains elements of transcendental idealism. Chapter 3 examines the nature of Wittgenstein's later philosophy in the Philosophical Investigations. The conclusion argues that
The document discusses Heidegger's concept of Dasein and the destruction of the subject-object distinction. It argues that Heidegger's understanding of truth and intelligence as grounded in Dasein's being-in-the-world means that artificial intelligence as currently conceived, which is based on a subject-object framework, is impossible. The document examines how Heidegger's work moves beyond Descartes' dualism and the Western philosophical tradition established by Plato and Aristotle to argue that truth is relative rather than absolute.
This document summarizes and analyzes myths of origin from polytheistic and Judeo-Christian traditions. It discusses cosmogonies (origins of the cosmos) from Hindu, Egyptian, Phoenician, Greek, and Zoroastrian myths which describe a transition from chaos to order. It also examines Genesis which presents creation ex nihilo by God's divine word rather than from preexisting chaos. The author argues that while myths seek to explain mysterious origins, Judeo-Christian tradition presents a unique conception of time and creation by a singular, transcendent God.
.There are different paths to reality, they are determined by the knower, being instrumental methodological study object, epistemological axis, among others. Reality presents several faces, what is observable and what is perceived sensory empirical data obtained correspond to the visible, the main thing is to discover the hidden side, which is behind the perceptible or data. Epistemology is the whole process of obtaining scientific knowledge, ranging from the pre knowledge to get to know the hidden side, one thing is what is seen and what is not, and one that is not seen, is really it is.
1) The author argues that Wilber's integral approach could be improved by making it more fully integral at all times of human value realization, not just at certain moments.
2) An example is given of how the descriptive, evaluative, normative, and interpretive methods are all necessary to fully understand and realize a value.
3) The author emphasizes distinguishing between epistemology and ontology when considering nondual experiences from Eastern traditions, noting that such experiences speak more to phenomenology than metaphysics.
The document discusses improving Ken Wilber's integral approach by making it more fully integral. It argues that for a value to be fully realized, all quadrants (perspectives) and levels (stages of development) must be integrated at once, not just included separately. It provides an example showing that descriptive, evaluative, normative, and interpretive ways of knowing are each necessary to complete our understanding, though each is also distinct. The document suggests leading with shared non-propositional practices and pneumatology (spirit) in interfaith dialogue to foster understanding before discussing doctrinal differences.
The Search for the Origin book 1 chap 1Miguel Cano
Given the current confusion of values, it would be convenient to return to nature to find possible grounds on which to build a system of common and universal values that can harmonize the various conflicting and contradictory views today.
This book analyzes several classic controversies such as the conflict between materialism and idealism, the debate about the origin and evolution of life and the universe, the controversy between determinism and freedom, and the problem between the individual and the totality.
As conclusion, a number of general principles of nature are enumerated, which are very useful to harmonize the different scientific, philosophical and religious traditions.
THE CYCLES OF DIVINE CREATION & THE UNIVERSAL MATHEMATICAL MATRIXWilliam John Meegan
This article is about a system of Astrological Cycles: i.e. Cycles of Divine Creation, I discovered through meditation on the Judeao Christian Scriptures in the first and second chapters of Genesis initiated in January 1977. Over the past thirty-eight years, off and on, I have been working to put a conceptual understanding to these cycles. Finally, this article goes back to the genesis of my discovery up to the present article.
The Skepticism and the Dialectic as Instruments of Apprehension of Knowledge:...QUESTJOURNAL
ABSTRACT: The rationalist aspect of philosophy has in Plato and Descartes two of its main exponents. These are two distant thinkers about twenty centuries in time, but they have several possibilities of theoretical approaches, especially when used as guiding the study of his works the epistemological issues related to the dialectic (platonic) and the logical skepticism (Cartesian). Among these multiple possibilities of understanding of philosophy (and, more precisely, the epistemological perspective) of these philosophers, i will look for in the lines bellow to develop a brief essay regarding the role of dialog and doubt methodical as possibilities of research in epistemological work of these authors that became classics of human knowledge.
This document discusses the mathematical system encoded within Dante Alighieri's epic poem La Divina Commedia. It notes that the poem is structured into 3 volumes containing a total of 100 chapters and 14,233 verses. The chapters are evenly distributed among the volumes and their verse counts end in specific digit sums. This reveals patterns that correspond to mystical elements of fire, earth, air and water. The document argues this mathematical structure represents an ancient esoteric science of encoding hidden knowledge in literature.
The document discusses philosophical concepts related to the self, ego, and their relationship to ideas of oneness and multiplicity. It explores perspectives of intra-objectivity from Eastern nondualism as an experience of unitary being, versus inter-objectivity from Western dualism involving separation. The self is proposed to connect to oneness or the unitary whole, while the ego connects one to multiplicity through relationships. A metaphor is provided of a fishing net with tentacle-like ropes representing individuals, to illustrate these concepts.
MATRIX OF WISDOM: How was it created? An Esoteric CommentaryWilliam John Meegan
The most powerful religious symbol on the face of the earth is THE UNIVERSAL MATHEMATICAL MATRIX, which is a commentary on the MONAD. THIS PDF presentation shows how this matrix was intuited out of the psyche and created and how it is used in the Judeao Christian Scriptures and why it is the WORD OF GOD and definitive evidence of the existence of God.
This paper analyzes Al-Kindi's argument for the necessary existence of a One True Being from which all other beings are derived. It focuses on Al-Kindi's distinction between real and metaphorical unity/multiplicity. The paper argues that Heidegger's notion of "being-in-the-world" resolves issues with establishing a connection between the simple unity of the One and contingent multiplicity. By introducing phenomenology and understanding being as inherently being-in-the-world, Heidegger demonstrates the necessity of multiplicity and shows why proofs of external existence are not needed.
Kant developed a theory of perception that held humans can only understand the external world through both experience and a priori knowledge, not just experience alone. He believed the human mind plays an active role in constructing our understanding of objective experiences. Kant also developed an ethical theory that evil acts do not lead to happiness and good human qualities cannot be used for evil ends. Additionally, he sought to bridge rationalism and empiricism by proposing that both reason and the senses can be sources of knowledge, but that our knowledge is limited by the conditions of our experience.
Considerations on Being Human Alongside a Moral way to LiveVictoria King
This document provides an overview of Victoria King's paper considering what it means to be human and live a moral life from the perspectives of philosophers Kierkegaard and Wittgenstein. King examines Kierkegaard's view that becoming human involves becoming aware of one's finite existence and gaining freedom through faith. King also discusses how Kierkegaard believes evil can be a form of self-actualization. The document then analyzes Wittgenstein's perspective that moral responsibility extends beyond any single religious group.
This paper is an attempt to demonstrate how the Soul's Two-Part Psyche: i.e. ego-consciousness and the unconscious mind creates the illusion of the outer world.
The MATRIX OF WISDOM is a commentary on the Soul: i.e. MONAD: God/Man Christ. This matrix is known all over the world by all religions and mystery schools. This matrix inexplicably teaches the psyche about itself and for the most part that is what this paper is about.
This document provides an overview of Peirce's classification of philosophy into three branches: phenomenology, normative science, and metaphysics. It locates the discipline of logic as a subdivision of normative science, which investigates universal and necessary laws relating phenomena to ends like truth, right, and beauty. The document introduces Kant's conception of logic and possibility before focusing on Peirce's view of logic as examining good and bad in relation to cognition, aiming for clarity through distinguishing concepts.
This document provides a summary of the key differences between the author's view of nonduality and Ken Wilber's approach. It discusses:
1) The author agrees with Wilber's description of nondual experiences but disagrees with aspects of his epistemology.
2) The author sees a nondual epistemic approach as important but thinks Wilber's goes too far in some respects.
3) All philosophies of mind are necessarily self-referential, but the author finds a nondual approach most consistent, though not in the essentialist way Wilber describes.
The role of causality and conceptual coherence in assessments of similarityLouise Spiteri
1) The document discusses theories of concept formation and how concepts are understood. It focuses on the roles of similarity, conceptual coherence, and causality in how concepts are formed and understood.
2) Similarity-based theories of concepts posit that concepts are defined by shared attributes among members, but the document argues similarity alone does not fully explain conceptual coherence.
3) Knowledge-based theories argue conceptual understanding depends on causal relationships between attributes and people's knowledge of these causal links.
paradigmatic controversies, contradictions, and emerging confluencesfelipemtz89
This document discusses paradigmatic controversies and emerging confluences in qualitative research. It summarizes the author's previous work which identified four research paradigms - positivism, postpositivism, critical theory, and constructivism - according to their ontological, epistemological and methodological assumptions. Since then, the participatory paradigm has been added. The author aims to further analyze the issues by rearranging them to reflect current thought, including debates around validity, the role of values, and the influence of feminist and other perspectives on the researcher's role in communities.
This document provides definitions and explanations of key philosophical concepts from Immanuel Kant's Critique of Pure Reason. It includes entries on concepts like appearance, apperception, a priori, analytic/synthetic judgments, and categories. The entries are compiled from multiple scholars and include the original German term, Kant's usage, and commentary explaining the significance and development of each concept.
Rural Library Services: Lessons from Five Rural Public Libraries in West Bengalinventionjournals
International Journal of Humanities and Social Science Invention (IJHSSI) is an international journal intended for professionals and researchers in all fields of Humanities and Social Science. IJHSSI publishes research articles and reviews within the whole field Humanities and Social Science, new teaching methods, assessment, validation and the impact of new technologies and it will continue to provide information on the latest trends and developments in this ever-expanding subject. The publications of papers are selected through double peer reviewed to ensure originality, relevance, and readability. The articles published in our journal can be accessed online.
The document discusses the evolving nature of dimensions and how our perception and understanding of dimensions is influenced by factors like our minds and scientific/mathematical advances. It provides examples of how dimensions are defined differently in various contexts and disciplines, and how dimensions are not limited to the 3 we can intuitively visualize. The fractal dimensions of the proposed Tower project are meant to separate perception of space from expectations of Euclidean geometry.
Morphemes are the smallest units of meaning in a language and can be classified into two main categories: lexical morphemes and grammatical morphemes. Lexical morphemes convey meaning on their own like nouns and verbs, while grammatical morphemes indicate grammatical relationships and cannot stand alone, such as articles and prepositions. Morphemes can also be classified as free or bound depending on whether they can occur independently or must be attached to other morphemes.
THE CYCLES OF DIVINE CREATION & THE UNIVERSAL MATHEMATICAL MATRIXWilliam John Meegan
This article is about a system of Astrological Cycles: i.e. Cycles of Divine Creation, I discovered through meditation on the Judeao Christian Scriptures in the first and second chapters of Genesis initiated in January 1977. Over the past thirty-eight years, off and on, I have been working to put a conceptual understanding to these cycles. Finally, this article goes back to the genesis of my discovery up to the present article.
The Skepticism and the Dialectic as Instruments of Apprehension of Knowledge:...QUESTJOURNAL
ABSTRACT: The rationalist aspect of philosophy has in Plato and Descartes two of its main exponents. These are two distant thinkers about twenty centuries in time, but they have several possibilities of theoretical approaches, especially when used as guiding the study of his works the epistemological issues related to the dialectic (platonic) and the logical skepticism (Cartesian). Among these multiple possibilities of understanding of philosophy (and, more precisely, the epistemological perspective) of these philosophers, i will look for in the lines bellow to develop a brief essay regarding the role of dialog and doubt methodical as possibilities of research in epistemological work of these authors that became classics of human knowledge.
This document discusses the mathematical system encoded within Dante Alighieri's epic poem La Divina Commedia. It notes that the poem is structured into 3 volumes containing a total of 100 chapters and 14,233 verses. The chapters are evenly distributed among the volumes and their verse counts end in specific digit sums. This reveals patterns that correspond to mystical elements of fire, earth, air and water. The document argues this mathematical structure represents an ancient esoteric science of encoding hidden knowledge in literature.
The document discusses philosophical concepts related to the self, ego, and their relationship to ideas of oneness and multiplicity. It explores perspectives of intra-objectivity from Eastern nondualism as an experience of unitary being, versus inter-objectivity from Western dualism involving separation. The self is proposed to connect to oneness or the unitary whole, while the ego connects one to multiplicity through relationships. A metaphor is provided of a fishing net with tentacle-like ropes representing individuals, to illustrate these concepts.
MATRIX OF WISDOM: How was it created? An Esoteric CommentaryWilliam John Meegan
The most powerful religious symbol on the face of the earth is THE UNIVERSAL MATHEMATICAL MATRIX, which is a commentary on the MONAD. THIS PDF presentation shows how this matrix was intuited out of the psyche and created and how it is used in the Judeao Christian Scriptures and why it is the WORD OF GOD and definitive evidence of the existence of God.
This paper analyzes Al-Kindi's argument for the necessary existence of a One True Being from which all other beings are derived. It focuses on Al-Kindi's distinction between real and metaphorical unity/multiplicity. The paper argues that Heidegger's notion of "being-in-the-world" resolves issues with establishing a connection between the simple unity of the One and contingent multiplicity. By introducing phenomenology and understanding being as inherently being-in-the-world, Heidegger demonstrates the necessity of multiplicity and shows why proofs of external existence are not needed.
Kant developed a theory of perception that held humans can only understand the external world through both experience and a priori knowledge, not just experience alone. He believed the human mind plays an active role in constructing our understanding of objective experiences. Kant also developed an ethical theory that evil acts do not lead to happiness and good human qualities cannot be used for evil ends. Additionally, he sought to bridge rationalism and empiricism by proposing that both reason and the senses can be sources of knowledge, but that our knowledge is limited by the conditions of our experience.
Considerations on Being Human Alongside a Moral way to LiveVictoria King
This document provides an overview of Victoria King's paper considering what it means to be human and live a moral life from the perspectives of philosophers Kierkegaard and Wittgenstein. King examines Kierkegaard's view that becoming human involves becoming aware of one's finite existence and gaining freedom through faith. King also discusses how Kierkegaard believes evil can be a form of self-actualization. The document then analyzes Wittgenstein's perspective that moral responsibility extends beyond any single religious group.
This paper is an attempt to demonstrate how the Soul's Two-Part Psyche: i.e. ego-consciousness and the unconscious mind creates the illusion of the outer world.
The MATRIX OF WISDOM is a commentary on the Soul: i.e. MONAD: God/Man Christ. This matrix is known all over the world by all religions and mystery schools. This matrix inexplicably teaches the psyche about itself and for the most part that is what this paper is about.
This document provides an overview of Peirce's classification of philosophy into three branches: phenomenology, normative science, and metaphysics. It locates the discipline of logic as a subdivision of normative science, which investigates universal and necessary laws relating phenomena to ends like truth, right, and beauty. The document introduces Kant's conception of logic and possibility before focusing on Peirce's view of logic as examining good and bad in relation to cognition, aiming for clarity through distinguishing concepts.
This document provides a summary of the key differences between the author's view of nonduality and Ken Wilber's approach. It discusses:
1) The author agrees with Wilber's description of nondual experiences but disagrees with aspects of his epistemology.
2) The author sees a nondual epistemic approach as important but thinks Wilber's goes too far in some respects.
3) All philosophies of mind are necessarily self-referential, but the author finds a nondual approach most consistent, though not in the essentialist way Wilber describes.
The role of causality and conceptual coherence in assessments of similarityLouise Spiteri
1) The document discusses theories of concept formation and how concepts are understood. It focuses on the roles of similarity, conceptual coherence, and causality in how concepts are formed and understood.
2) Similarity-based theories of concepts posit that concepts are defined by shared attributes among members, but the document argues similarity alone does not fully explain conceptual coherence.
3) Knowledge-based theories argue conceptual understanding depends on causal relationships between attributes and people's knowledge of these causal links.
paradigmatic controversies, contradictions, and emerging confluencesfelipemtz89
This document discusses paradigmatic controversies and emerging confluences in qualitative research. It summarizes the author's previous work which identified four research paradigms - positivism, postpositivism, critical theory, and constructivism - according to their ontological, epistemological and methodological assumptions. Since then, the participatory paradigm has been added. The author aims to further analyze the issues by rearranging them to reflect current thought, including debates around validity, the role of values, and the influence of feminist and other perspectives on the researcher's role in communities.
This document provides definitions and explanations of key philosophical concepts from Immanuel Kant's Critique of Pure Reason. It includes entries on concepts like appearance, apperception, a priori, analytic/synthetic judgments, and categories. The entries are compiled from multiple scholars and include the original German term, Kant's usage, and commentary explaining the significance and development of each concept.
Rural Library Services: Lessons from Five Rural Public Libraries in West Bengalinventionjournals
International Journal of Humanities and Social Science Invention (IJHSSI) is an international journal intended for professionals and researchers in all fields of Humanities and Social Science. IJHSSI publishes research articles and reviews within the whole field Humanities and Social Science, new teaching methods, assessment, validation and the impact of new technologies and it will continue to provide information on the latest trends and developments in this ever-expanding subject. The publications of papers are selected through double peer reviewed to ensure originality, relevance, and readability. The articles published in our journal can be accessed online.
The document discusses the evolving nature of dimensions and how our perception and understanding of dimensions is influenced by factors like our minds and scientific/mathematical advances. It provides examples of how dimensions are defined differently in various contexts and disciplines, and how dimensions are not limited to the 3 we can intuitively visualize. The fractal dimensions of the proposed Tower project are meant to separate perception of space from expectations of Euclidean geometry.
Morphemes are the smallest units of meaning in a language and can be classified into two main categories: lexical morphemes and grammatical morphemes. Lexical morphemes convey meaning on their own like nouns and verbs, while grammatical morphemes indicate grammatical relationships and cannot stand alone, such as articles and prepositions. Morphemes can also be classified as free or bound depending on whether they can occur independently or must be attached to other morphemes.
La lectura de frases es una técnica de enseñanza que involucra dividir un texto en pequeñas secciones o frases y leerlas en voz alta de forma secuencial para ayudar a los estudiantes a comprender mejor lo que están leyendo. Esta estrategia permite que los estudiantes se concentren en una pequeña cantidad de información a la vez y les da la oportunidad de procesar el significado antes de avanzar a la siguiente frase.
O documento descreve o depoimento de Pedro Henry Neto, ex-deputado federal, sobre sua carreira política e relações com outros políticos como José Janene e Paulo Roberto Costa. Henry Neto afirma ter ingressado no PP em 2001 e conhecido Janene e Costa em 2004, quando Janene realizou um jantar para apresentar Costa à bancada do partido após este ser indicado para a diretoria da Petrobras.
The document discusses different colors and their meanings or associations in common phrases. It provides two examples for several colors: blue is associated with unexpected events and sadness, green with relaxation and approval, gray with unhappy moods and unauthorized sales, red with worthlessness and memorable joy, pink with the smallest finger and decorative scissors, purple with nobility, and black with dark comedy and threats.
El documento proporciona instrucciones para completar ejercicios relacionados con la tabla periódica. Los estudiantes deben identificar dónde se ubican los metales y no metales en la tabla, resaltar diferentes familias y períodos, y completar un sudoku químico utilizando símbolos de elementos como metales y no metales.
LIN is a three-year collaborative project between Irish Institutes of Technology (IoTs) and Dublin Institute of Technology (DIT) funded by the Strategic Innovation Fund. The goals of LIN are to develop an academic development program, a centralized repository and portal, and a national excellence in learning and teaching awards system. The first annual LIN conference will take place on October 10th in Athlone to foster a student-centered learning environment, with themes including innovations in teaching and learning, working within a modular environment, and assessment within modules.
Table tennis, also known as ping pong, is a sport that is played by two or four players standing on opposite sides of a table divided by a net. Players hit a ball back and forth using small rackets, trying to make the ball land on their opponent's side of the table without bouncing more than once. Table tennis originated in England in the 1890s and has evolved to become a popular recreational and competitive sport played around the world by people of all ages.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive function. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms.
Este documento presenta un prólogo que introduce el tema del libro, que es contar la historia de España de una manera positiva para que los españoles se sientan orgullosos de su pasado. Explica que la memoria histórica de España ha sido deformada y es necesario rescatar las grandes hazañas españolas. También presenta a José Javier Esparza, quien estará a cargo de este proyecto en un programa de radio.
The document discusses several topics related to 3D modeling and digital preservation of archaeological and historical artifacts in Ireland, including:
1) It provides examples of several historical grave slabs, tombs, and effigies that have been digitally preserved and modeled, such as those from Carrickfergus Castle, Clonmacnoise, and Waterford.
2) It introduces photogrammetry and other 3D modeling techniques like structure from motion, reflectance transformation imaging, and lidar that have been used to create 3D models of artifacts and structures.
3) It highlights some funded projects in Ireland that have used 3D imaging to digitally survey and preserve objects, including an Ogham stones project
This document discusses the benefits of corporate social responsibility (CSR) programs and provides examples of successful CSR campaigns. It begins by outlining some of the awards and recognition that SPN Ogilvy has received for its CSR work in developing blood donation programs and health initiatives in Russia. It then discusses how CSR can benefit companies, employees, society, and governments. Key factors for an effective CSR program are described as integrating it into a company's priorities, ensuring it is relevant to audiences and the brand, choosing the right representatives, developing a unique format, and providing comprehensive communication support. Examples are given of how LG Electronics and Dove have implemented long-term CSR programs that engage employees and partners while empowering communities.
Incommensurability - correspondence and seeking of truthKeith Scharding
Ethics and the search for truth; bridging the conceptual gap between evolutionary thought and creation theories - presentation of the 'new metaphysics'; quantum computing and nanotechnology plus 'cosmic insights. The correspondence principle and the question of incommensurability with traditional viewpoints are referenced.
This document provides an introduction to a manuscript that explores humanity's religious and philosophical quests for meaning. It discusses how humans pursue truth, beauty, and goodness through descriptive sciences, evaluative cultures, normative philosophies, and interpretive religions. The author presents a framework with phenomenology, axiology, epistemology, and theology situated within both immanent and transcendent frames. The introduction sets up how the manuscript will examine different approaches to interpreting reality while pursuing a growth in human authenticity.
Put your Hands on the Plough: And Never Look BackPeter Anyebe
Given a paradigm shift in which there are four, 4 realms of existence that include spirit, soul, mind, and matter rather than the current one, 1 realm that includes only matter; the possibility of causal openness and closure become apparent.
Thus energy exists in all four, 4 realms, but in different forms, to describe an open system that allows the free movement of energy between the realms.
In the spirit it is an idea, in the mind it is objectivity, in matter it is procedure, and in the soul, power.
But the system is also closed, to the extent that it obeys reciprocity, continuity, and conservation, for maturity.
An Analysis of the Phenomena That Have Led Some Philosophers to Introduce the...inventionjournals
The standpoint that all observable phenomena in the universe are fitting inestimable material for science if they are studied by the scientific method is basically positivistic. All things and facts which can be immediately learned by observation, together with their relationship and uniformities which is discoverable by reason without exceeding the limit of empirical observation, are designated as positivism. In positivism the belief in the sensory observation of empirical phenomena, that is empiricism – therefore plays a predominant part. Methodologically therefore positivism is in controversial opposition to the metaphysical abstraction of traditional of traditional philosophy. The term metaphysical is applied to everything that aims to go beyond the sphere of empiricism and seek the hidden essence of phenomena or the ultimate cause of things
This document discusses several philosophical concepts and theories. It begins by asking what the name of the philosophical study of existence is, with the answer being ontology. It then provides examples of ontological questions and discusses the different types of existence according to ontology. The document also discusses concepts in epistemology such as theories of truth and inductive vs deductive reasoning. It explores ideas in ethics like what ethics deals with and defines aesthetics. Finally, it examines concepts in philosophers like Parmenides, Democritus, Russell, Meinong and others.
The document discusses different philosophical perspectives on the nature of reality. It addresses two main aspects: 1) the nature of reality itself and 2) the relationship between reality and human factors like perception and language. There are differing views such as realism, which holds that an objective reality exists independently of human views, and anti-realism, which argues reality is dependent on social constructs and consensus. The nature of truth is also debated, with some arguing it corresponds to objective facts while others see it as subjective based on agreement.
This document discusses different theories of truth that philosophers have proposed over time. It begins by introducing Aristotle's correspondence theory that truth corresponds to facts in the world. It then discusses Tarski's definition of truth using truth conditions and sentences. Later theories discussed include coherence theories that focus on internal consistency within systems of belief, and pragmatist theories that truth is what is useful or aids survival. The document concludes by discussing deflationary theories that truth is a redundant concept used to make generalizations rather than a substantial property.
The truth of science for justice and peace(4)merlyna
The document discusses the relationship between science, truth, justice and peace. It argues that scientific truth seeks to represent reality through observation and modeling nature's laws. While science alone does not consider ideas of justice, when viewed as a communal project, science intersects with justice through principles like equal access to knowledge and respecting human rights. Ultimately, building lasting peace requires the continuous efforts of both pursuing truth through scientific research and promoting global justice.
Terministic Screens Chapter Three Terministi.docxtodd191
Terministic Screens
Chapter Three
Terministic Screens
1
Directing the Attention
We might begin by stressing the distinction between a "scientistic" and a
"dramatistic" approach to the nature of language. A "scientistic" approach
begins with questions of naming, or definition. Or the power of language to
define and describe may be viewed as derivative; and its essential function
may be treated as attitudinal or hortatory: attitudinal as with expressions of
complaint, fear, gratitude, and such; hortatory as with commands or
requests, or, in general, an instrument developed through its use in the social
processes of cooperation and competition. I say "developed"; I do not say
"originating." The ultimate origins of language seem to me as mysterious as
the origins of the universe itself. One must view it, I feel, simply as the
"given." But once an animal comes into being that does happen to have this
particular aptitude, the various tribal idioms are unquestionably developed
by their use as instruments in the tribe's way of living (the practical role of
symbolism in what the anthropologist, Malinowski, has called "context of
situation"). Such considerations are involved in what 1 mean by the
"dramatistic," stressing language as an aspect of "action," that is, as
"symbolic action."
The two approaches, the "scientistic" and the "dramatistic" (language
as definition, and language as act) are by no means mutually exclusive.
Since both approaches have their proper uses, the distinction is not being
introduced invidiously. Definition itself is a symbolic act, just as my
proposing of this very distinction is a symbolic act. But though at this
moment of beginning, the overlap is considerable, later the two roads
diverge considerably, and direct our attention to quite different kinds of
observation. The quickest way to indicate the differences of direction might
be by this formula: The "scientistic" approach builds the edifice of language
with primary stress upon a proposition such as "It is, or it is not." The
"dramatistic" approach puts the primary stress upon such hortatory
expressions as "thou shalt, or thou shalt not." And at the other extreme the
distinction be-
45
comes quite obvious, since the scientistic approach culminates in the kinds
of speculation we associate with symbolic logic,
while the dramatisdc culminates in the kinds of speculation that
find their handiest material in stories, plays, poems, the rhetoric of oratory
and advertising, mythologies, theologies, and philosophies
after the classic model.
The dramatistic view of language, in terms of
"symbolic action," is exercised about the necessarily suasive
nature of even the most unemotional scientific nomenclatures. And we shall
proceed along those lines; thus:
Even if any given terminology is a reflection of reality, by its very
nature as a terminology it must be a selection of reality; and to th.
This document discusses an emergentist account of religion from a biosemiotic and panentheistic perspective. It defines key terms like emergentism, biosemiotics, and religious categories. It then reflects on the implications of a theological anthropology grounded in human value realization and solidarity. It argues for recovering pre-Hellenistic understandings that saw all levels of reality as interconnected.
This document discusses an emergentist account of religion from a biosemiotic and panentheistic perspective. It defines key terms like emergentism, biosemiotics, and religious categories. It then reflects on the implications of a theological anthropology grounded in human value realization and solidarity. It argues for recovering pre-Hellenistic understandings that saw all levels of reality as interconnected.
This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
it describes the bony anatomy including the femoral head , acetabulum, labrum . also discusses the capsule , ligaments . muscle that act on the hip joint and the range of motion are outlined. factors affecting hip joint stability and weight transmission through the joint are summarized.
A review of the growth of the Israel Genealogy Research Association Database Collection for the last 12 months. Our collection is now passed the 3 million mark and still growing. See which archives have contributed the most. See the different types of records we have, and which years have had records added. You can also see what we have for the future.
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
Executive Directors Chat Leveraging AI for Diversity, Equity, and InclusionTechSoup
Let’s explore the intersection of technology and equity in the final session of our DEI series. Discover how AI tools, like ChatGPT, can be used to support and enhance your nonprofit's DEI initiatives. Participants will gain insights into practical AI applications and get tips for leveraging technology to advance their DEI goals.
Main Java[All of the Base Concepts}.docxadhitya5119
This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
LAND USE LAND COVER AND NDVI OF MIRZAPUR DISTRICT, UPRAHUL
This Dissertation explores the particular circumstances of Mirzapur, a region located in the
core of India. Mirzapur, with its varied terrains and abundant biodiversity, offers an optimal
environment for investigating the changes in vegetation cover dynamics. Our study utilizes
advanced technologies such as GIS (Geographic Information Systems) and Remote sensing to
analyze the transformations that have taken place over the course of a decade.
The complex relationship between human activities and the environment has been the focus
of extensive research and worry. As the global community grapples with swift urbanization,
population expansion, and economic progress, the effects on natural ecosystems are becoming
more evident. A crucial element of this impact is the alteration of vegetation cover, which plays a
significant role in maintaining the ecological equilibrium of our planet.Land serves as the foundation for all human activities and provides the necessary materials for
these activities. As the most crucial natural resource, its utilization by humans results in different
'Land uses,' which are determined by both human activities and the physical characteristics of the
land.
The utilization of land is impacted by human needs and environmental factors. In countries
like India, rapid population growth and the emphasis on extensive resource exploitation can lead
to significant land degradation, adversely affecting the region's land cover.
Therefore, human intervention has significantly influenced land use patterns over many
centuries, evolving its structure over time and space. In the present era, these changes have
accelerated due to factors such as agriculture and urbanization. Information regarding land use and
cover is essential for various planning and management tasks related to the Earth's surface,
providing crucial environmental data for scientific, resource management, policy purposes, and
diverse human activities.
Accurate understanding of land use and cover is imperative for the development planning
of any area. Consequently, a wide range of professionals, including earth system scientists, land
and water managers, and urban planners, are interested in obtaining data on land use and cover
changes, conversion trends, and other related patterns. The spatial dimensions of land use and
cover support policymakers and scientists in making well-informed decisions, as alterations in
these patterns indicate shifts in economic and social conditions. Monitoring such changes with the
help of Advanced technologies like Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems is
crucial for coordinated efforts across different administrative levels. Advanced technologies like
Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems
9
Changes in vegetation cover refer to variations in the distribution, composition, and overall
structure of plant communities across different temporal and spatial scales. These changes can
occur natural.
বাংলাদেশের অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা ২০২৪ [Bangladesh Economic Review 2024 Bangla.pdf] কম্পিউটার , ট্যাব ও স্মার্ট ফোন ভার্সন সহ সম্পূর্ণ বাংলা ই-বুক বা pdf বই " সুচিপত্র ...বুকমার্ক মেনু 🔖 ও হাইপার লিংক মেনু 📝👆 যুক্ত ..
আমাদের সবার জন্য খুব খুব গুরুত্বপূর্ণ একটি বই ..বিসিএস, ব্যাংক, ইউনিভার্সিটি ভর্তি ও যে কোন প্রতিযোগিতা মূলক পরীক্ষার জন্য এর খুব ইম্পরট্যান্ট একটি বিষয় ...তাছাড়া বাংলাদেশের সাম্প্রতিক যে কোন ডাটা বা তথ্য এই বইতে পাবেন ...
তাই একজন নাগরিক হিসাবে এই তথ্য গুলো আপনার জানা প্রয়োজন ...।
বিসিএস ও ব্যাংক এর লিখিত পরীক্ষা ...+এছাড়া মাধ্যমিক ও উচ্চমাধ্যমিকের স্টুডেন্টদের জন্য অনেক কাজে আসবে ...
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
1. “Out of the mouths of babes; praise is perfected” – Holy Bible
Correspondence Principle and Incommensurability
Heart/Soul | Mind/Spirit - Metaphysics – A Correspondence Theory of Truth
Rhetoric and Communication Design – Correspondence or incommensurability
Representation Theory – Truth and Justification - Justice – Coherent or Abhorrent
Semiotic Communications Theory – Visualization and Representation
Modality and Representation
Whilst semiotics is often encountered in the form of textual analysis, it also involves
philosophical theorizing on the role of signs in the construction of reality. Semiotics
involves studying representations and the processes involved in representational
practices and to semioticians, 'reality' always involves representation.
Daniel Chandler
Axioms of Activity Occurrence Theory
Semiotics, semiotic studies, or semiology is the study of signs and symbols, both
individually and grouped into sign systems. It includes the study of how meaning is
constructed and understood.
This discipline is frequently seen as having important anthropological dimensions.
However, some semioticians focus on the logical dimensions of the science. They
examine areas belonging also to the natural sciences - such as how organisms make
predictions about, and adapt to, their semiotic niche in the world (see semiosis). In
general, semiotic theories take signs or sign systems as their object of study: the
communication of information in living organisms is covered in biosemiotics or
zoosemiosis.
Inference and Meaning - 'Correspondence' as Axiomatic Semantics
The coherence of Objective Truth to Empirical Proof is reflective of a trustworthy observer and the
relevance of this “truth” to what philosophy terms discourse. When the Infinite “transfigures” its
“totality” what will transpire – this question awaits!
Immanuel Kant
2. Is the truth or falsity of a statement determined only by how it relates to the world, and
whether it accurately describes (i.e., corresponds with) that world?
Truth cannot be quot;determinedquot; by its correspondence with reality alone - but its
representation forms a basis through which truth [as Identity] can be understood.
Incommensurable Values
First published Mon Jul 23, 2007 --- Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Values, such as liberty and equality, are sometimes said to be incommensurable in the
sense that their value cannot be reduced to a common measure. The possibility of value
incommensurability is thought to raise deep questions about practical reason and rational
choice as well as related questions concerning topics as diverse as akrasia, moral
dilemmas, the plausibility of utilitarianism, and the foundations of liberalism. This entry
outlines answers in the contemporary literature to these questions, starting with questions
about the nature and possibility of value incommensurability.
Quantum Computing
A ‗square‘ Quantum Analogy Quantum Logic for Photon Detection
Incommensurability between values must be distinguished from the kind of
incommensurability associated with Paul Feyerabend (1978, 1981, 1993) and Thomas Kuhn
(1977, 1983, 1996) in epistemology and the philosophy of science. Feyerabend and Kuhn
were concerned with incommensurability between rival theories or paradigms — that is, the
inability to express or comprehend one conceptual scheme, such as Aristotelian physics, in
terms of another, such as Newtonian physics. In contrast, contemporary inquiry into value
incommensurability concerns comparisons among abstract values (such as liberty or
equality) or particular bearers of value (such as a certain institution or its effects on liberty
or equality). The term ―bearer of value‖ is to be understood broadly. Bearers of value can be
objects of potential choice (such as a career) or states of affairs that cannot be chosen
(such as a beautiful sunset). Such bearers of value are valuable in virtue of the abstract
value or values they instantiate or display (so, for example, an institution might be valuable
in virtue of the liberty or equality that it engenders or embodies).
In retrospect – History provides the example of the changes that took place when the
‗horseless carriage‘ replaced man‘s noble friend – the horse as a primary means of ‗fast‘
transportation. This same ‗incommensurability‘ exist where nanotechnology will replace
conventional thermodynamics.
3. Ontology#1 -- (the metaphysical study of the nature of being and existence)
From Bonjour: - Is the Coherence Theory Adequate for ―Truth‖
Truth is said to consist in the agreement of knowledge with the object. According to this
mere verbal definition, then, my knowledge, in order to be true, must agree with the object.
Now, I can only compare the object with my knowledge by this means, namely, by taking
knowledge of it. My knowledge, then, is to be verified by itself, which is far from being
sufficient for truth. For as the object is external to me, and the knowledge is in me, I can
only judge whether my knowledge of the object agrees with my knowledge of the object.
Such a circle in explanation was called by the ancients Diallelos. And the logicians were
accused of this fallacy by the skeptics, who remarked that this account of truth was as if a
man before a judicial tribunal should make a statement, and appeal in support of it to a
witness whom no one knows, but who defends his own credibility by saying that the man
who had called him as a witness is an honorable man.[23]
Classical definition of knowledge as:
(i) Belief
(ii) True
(iii) Justified
The quot;knowerquot; has quot;apprehensionquot; of being justified.
This quot;apprehensionquot; needs be quot;coherentquot; to quot;othersquot;.
The purpose of quot;needfulquot; justification must seemingly be itself a conceptual
apprehension in that the knower comprehends that others
may not necessarily see things this way.
Does this ‗represent‘ a quot;coherence theory of justificationquot;!
Is such an apprehension of the ‗given‘ as necessarily non-conceptual and
non-propositional – hence [Counter-intuitive]? Is this ‗coherence‘ immune from error?
What if the quot;apprehensionquot; of what is ‗given‘ is not quot;coherentquot; at all?
Is this the discernment of the difference between intuitive and the counter-intuitive.
Do Truth and 'Correspondence' in a coherent representation – become discourse.
Science – Perception - Reality - empirical truth; without sprit - are deemed abstract.
What relevance does the OT requirement for testimony of quot;two or three witnessesquot; have to the ( 3) synoptic
gospels?
What distinguishes Christianity from all other religions is not its morality - Buddhism
promotes moral behavior; not its longevity - Hinduism is older; but its claim that God
became man and redeemed the world by his own sacrifice. This is Christianity's strongest
attribute, since it can stand the test of history and historical empiricism. We can prove what
4. others only theorize, meditatively conjure, or feel. It is also Christianity's greatest
vulnerability, because if one could disprove Jesus and his resurrection, one would
disprove Christianity itself. If Buddha never lived, the moral principles of Buddhism would
survive. If Krishna was not a manifestation of God, the philosophical ideas of Hinduism
would still be entertained. But if Jesus did not live, die, and rise again immortal in his
physical body, then the very basis of Christianity is destroyed. Judicial and Islamic expert
Sir Norman Anderson remarked, Christianity is, truly, quot;the witness of historyquot; - it‘s original
followers died not for a system of rituals or a list of behaviors, but for the empirically
verified and historically preserved fact of the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
As the apostle Paul said, quot;if Christ is not raised, our faith is vain and we are of all people
most miserablequot; (1 Cor. 15:17).
Emmanuel Levinas calls God – ‗the absolute other‘ and in Otherwise than Being he uses the
term the ‗otherwise than being‘ (Totality and Infinity. Dickens University Press 2001 pp. 34-35)
You shall know the truth and the truth shall set you free!
Laws as rules of inference – ‗Justification‘ as Purpose in ―meaning‖
Despite its obvious interest and importance, however, it does not seem to me that the
semantic conception of truth helps in any way to solve the problem of truth with which we
are presently concerned, viz. the problem of how a true empirical belief or statement is
related to the world of which it is true. The key point to be noted is that what appears on the
right-hand side of an equivalence of form (T) such as is a consequence of a Tarski-type truth
definition is a translation of the sentence whose truth it is intended to explicate; in fact, in
the case of a meta-language which contains its object-language as a sub-component, what
appears on the right is just the object-language sentence itself. Thus such equivalence
seems to tell us only (i) that an object-language sentence is true if and only if its meta-
language translation can be correctly asserted, i.e. is true, and (ii) what that translation is,
where it may be just the sentence itself. Now (i) seems only to represent a necessary,
though clearly not a sufficient, condition of adequacy for a translation; (ii) on the other hand
conveys an important relation between the two languages. But it is hard to see that either (i)
or (ii) says anything about the nature of truth.
Coherence theory of truth is integral to all comprehensive systems
A pervasive tenet is the idea that truth is primarily a property of whole systems of propositions and
can be ascribed to individual propositions only derivatively according to their coherence with the
whole
Holistic Systems - Squaring the Jacobean and finding its determinant
Holism (from???? holos, a Greek word meaning all, entire, total) is the idea that all the properties of a given
system (biological, chemical, social, economic, mental, linguistic, etc.) cannot be determined or explained by the
sum of its component parts alone. Instead, the system as a whole determines in an important way how the parts
behave.
The general principle of holism was concisely summarized by Aristotle in the Metaphysics: quot;The whole is more than
the sum of its partsquot;. Reductionism is seen as the opposite of holism. Reductionism in science says that a
5. complex system can be explained by reduction to its fundamental parts. Essentially, chemistry is reducible to
physics, biology is reducible to chemistry and physics, and psychology and sociology are reducible to biology, etc.
Theories of truth
·Consensus theory
·Correspondence theory
·Deflationary theory
·Epistemic theories
·Indefinability theory
·Pragmatic theory
·Redundancy theory
·Semantic theory
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy:
Truth
Coherence theory
Correspondence theory
Deflationary theory
Identity theory
Revision theory
Tarski's definition
Axiomatic theories – Semantic [the Adage] /Wisdom
The Ontogeny of Environmental biology - Adaptation and the Tree of Life
Ontogeny (also ontogenesis or morphogenesis) describes the origin and the development of
an organism from the fertilized egg to its mature form. Ontogeny is studied in developmental
biology.
Ontogeny [Phylogenic] corresponds commensally with Ontology within the framework of a much
more comprehensive metaphysics (providing axiomatic semantics) - it also reconciles 'casualty'
with creation through the 'tree of life' concept even where such a concept is rejected [a divine
creator]. As with all (visionary concepts) this one meets with the normal 'framework' problem –
[incommensurability with lesser theories [lacking dimension] or which do not experience CHANGE.
http://www.geosociety.org/pubs/gsatoday/grgsat/0007-2.htm
http://www.astrobio.net/articles/images/phylogenic_tree_lg.jpg
http://www.nai.arc.nasa.gov/news_stories/news_detail.cfm?ID=94
6. Phylogenic Tree of Life – Two Dimensional The Tree of Life: Cold Start?
A phylogenetic tree of living things based on RNA
data and proposed by Carl Woese, showing the Comparing among many different organisms the
separation of bacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes. sequence of a gene that encodes a ribosomal RNA
Trees constructed with other genes are generally (rRNA), Woese drew the first comprehensive tree of
similar, although they may place some early- life. One surprise in the tree was the appearance of
branching groups very differently, thanks to long bacteria that thrive in high temperatures
branch attraction. The exact relationships of the three (hyperthermophiles), near or at the root of the tree. The
domains are still being debated, as is the position of tree, and supporting research from other fields, led to
the root of the tree. It has also been suggested that the speculation that life originated in very hot
due to lateral gene transfer, a tree may not be the environments, perhaps in the hydrothermal vent systems
best representation of the genetic relationships of all found deep underwater around the globe. Woese's
organisms. For instance some genetic evidence original tree, and the resulting speculation that life arose
suggests that eukaryotes evolved from the union of in a hot environment have become widely accepted
some bacteria and archaea (one becoming the among researchers, and have taken on the status of
nucleus and the other the main cell). textbook explanations of the origin of life.
The primordial dichotomy in the Physiology of EukaryoteProkaryote (Processing of gene
Information) cells is the fundamental principle guiding ethical utilization of bioengineering
technologies. Explore the Tree of Life - 2009 Was Darwin Wrong about „The Tree‟?
The correspondence principle with its commensality | incommensurability paradigm can be
applied to 'ontogeny' where an quot;idea of valuequot; is discerned. This quot;idea of valuequot; must
represent ‗integrity‘ as well; holistically. Global Seed Banks meet this requirement.
CORRESPONDENCE forms a commensal relation with science so the two may coexist
peacefully in a shared mental framework – noetic [eidetic] noesis. Representation Theory
utilizes the correspondence principle in this way.
The Question of Ontogeny and the Ontological has some interesting ASPECTS
The convergence of Philosophy and theology
Semantic Ontology‘s provide ‗order‘ for Insight and understanding
Correspondence and Ontogeny found commensurable in Semantic Ontology.
7. Light Propagates at an ‗astronomical‘ distance – Deep Space Objects in ‗Rapid Development‘
Visualization utilizes a powerful lens [Hubble Space Telescope] to view a Millennial Moment.
1987 2004
You can now see the prophecy of Hubble scientist George Sonneborn fulfilled.
The Biblical statement in Matthew 6:22 says quot;if your eye be single your body will fill with
lightquot;. Let us look at the two pictures together, in the beginning and now.
Then think to yourself, why has this happened, for what purpose is this happening?
There is another eye of God as you know which the Hour Glass Nebula is. That is the all
Seeing Eye. This is the cosmic pineal, this is the cosmic third eye and what happens inside
of a persons brain when the pineal lights is what is happening in the cosmos now.
Joy to the world – the Lord has come; Hosanna in the Highest
8. Metaphysics and Epistemology
Augustine's Confessions: Issues and Commentaries This text was a breakthrough by which
Augustine imposed on philosophy and theology central issues: the self, election as identification,
philosophy seen from the point of view of salvation (spiritual exercise), time as history and
eschatology, being as creation, biblical text as interpreting the reader, etc. But all those
themes have a recent renewed intensity because postmodern thought and mainly phenomenology
(Heidegger, Arendt, Derrida, etc.) have pointed out that Augustine, to some extent, might not have
been involved in standard metaphysics. The reading is based on the Latin text (Bibliotheque
augustinienne, Paris); some knowledge of Latin may be helpful. Translations: either H. Chadwick
(Oxford, 1991) or M. Boulding (New York, 1997) Jean-Luc Marion. Spring 2004.
Physics imparts the property of ‗super symmetry‘ to the metaphysics; this is why without ethics
‗the metaphysics‘ are erroneous; the concept of a monopole is perfectly harmonious with
conception and perception as well – through this learning and insight are accomplished
The question of incommensurability to a ‗classical observer‘ is of the utmost importance;
Especially when ‗interpreting‘ natural phenomenon such as SN 1987a and this is because
Of the ‗metaphysical‘ principles which allow such interpretation to be ‗represented‘. The
Micro – Macro debate is never more coherent than when dealing with the ‗microscope‘ of
‗Deep Space‘ – instantiation or instanton;
Molecular ring currents induced by magnetic monopoles
Transverse resistivity ρxy for the single crystal, thin film and calcium doped thin film
(image credit: Z Fang et al. 2003 Science 302 92).
These researchers; such as David Akers term it – ―Magnetic-monopole spin resonance‖
Space Systems Division, Lockheed Missiles and Space Company, Sunnyvale, California 94086
Here is the ‗counter intuitive‘ viewpoint concerning ONTOLOGY!
http://www.shirky.com/writings/ontology_overrated.html
9. K-Theory and non-commutative geometry – NON STANDARD STUFF
Ultrafilters – Ultraproducts; but unfortunately the ‗corruption of ultra power‘
ON THE FINE STRUCTURE OF SPACETIME
‗This‘ formalism of quantum mechanics ftp://ftp.alainconnes.org/2000.pdf
Being discovered as; quot;infinitesimal variablesquot; gives a framework where continuous variables can
coexist with infinitesimal ones, at the only price of having more subtle algebraic rules where
commutativity no longer holds. The new infinitesimals have an quot;orderquot; (an infinitesimal of order one
is a compact operator whose characteristic values mu_n are a big O of 1/n). The novel point is that
they have an integral, which in physics terms is given by the coefficient of the logarithmic
divergence of the trace. Thus one obtains a new stage for the quot;calculusquot; and it is at the core of
noncommutative differential geometry.
10. Spread-spectrum
techniques are methods by which
energy generated in a particular
bandwidth is deliberately spread
in the frequency domain,
resulting in a signal with a wider
bandwidth. These techniques are
used for a variety of reasons,
including the establishment of
secure communications,
increasing resistance to natural
The most celebrated invention of interference and jamming, and to
prevent detection.
frequency hopping was that of actress
Hedy Lamarr and composer George
Antheil, who in 1942 received U.S. Patent Code division multiple access
2,292,387 for their quot;Secret (CDMA) is a channel access
Communications Systemquot;. method utilized by various
radio communication
technologies. It should not be
confused with the mobile
phone standards called
cdmaOne and CDMA2000
(which are often referred to as
simply quot;CDMAquot;), that use CDMA
as their underlying channel
access methods.
THE METAPHYSICS OF REASON - http://diacentro.physics.auth.gr/rtalks/pdfs/nikolaidis01.doc
The real problem of BRST supersymmetry - Physics requires Metaphysics
Incommensurability is the real issue within this micro-macro dichotomy!
The Question of Metaphysical ‗Validity‘ is not confined to scientific research:
Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge? Where is the knowledge that we have lost in
information?quot;
T.S. Eliot, The Rock (1934) pt.1
11. Dirac quantization condition
First, and above all for Dirac, the logic that led to the theory was, although deeply sophisticated, in
a sense beautifully simple. Much later, when someone asked him (as many must have done before)
quot;How did you find the Dirac equation?quot; he is said to have replied: quot;I found it beautiful.quot; Second, it
agreed with precise measurements of the energies of light emitted from atoms, in particularly where
these differed from ordinary (non-relativistic) quantum mechanics.
Attempts to find monopoles
A number of attempts have been made to detect magnetic monopoles. One of the simplest is
to use a loop of superconducting wire that can look for even tiny magnetic sources, a so-
called quot;superconducting quantum interference detectorquot;, or SQUID. Given the
predicted density, loops the size of a soup can would expect to see about one monopole
event per year. Although there have been tantalizing events recorded, in particular the event
recorded by Blas Cabrera on the night of February 14, 1982 (thus, sometimes referred to as
the quot;Valentine's Day Monopolequot;), there has never been reproducible evidence for the
existence of magnetic monopoles. The lack of such events places a limit on the number of
29
monopoles of about 1 monopole per 10 nucleons.
The predicted magnitude and generalized rarity of ‗magnetic monopoles‘ speaks of things
Which may ‗approach‘ the Infinite and are present in things which are ‗very peculiar‘?
THE HOUR GLASS NEBULA and the Cosmic Ontogeny of Astronomic Observation
You can see the same pattern in the Hour Glass Nebula of the intersecting circles which we
also found in Supernova 1987a. We can see a close up of the all Seeing Eye in the
hourglass nebula. So here we observe the all seeing eye of God. And we now have the third
eye of God on fire.
The single eye that Jesus referred to in Matthew 6:22. And something spectacular is
happening just as was the prophecy from NASA Hubble Scientist George Sonneborn.
Let us go to the NASA announcement of developments in Supernova 1987a
It is written – ―and man was made in God‘s Image‖ - AS IT IS ABOVE SO IT IS BELOW
As we have shown most recently, the human brain and the cosmic brain are the same.
As you can see here the web configuration in the human cerebral cortex is the same as the
web configuration in the universe.
13. Reading the Kristevan Semiotic and Symbolic: Nina Sadur's quot;Kol'tsaquot; and Marina Kulakova's quot;Reka po
imeni Masterquot; Canadian Slavonic Papers, Sep-Dec 2003 by Sutcliffe, Benjamin M
ABSTRACT: The contemporary author and playwright Nina Sadur's short story quot;Kol'tsaquot; reflects
how Julia Kristeva's dichotomous concepts semiotic and symbolic work with objects and dreams
influencing the lives of two teenage girls. The semiotic is chaotic and resists organization, while
Kristeva links the symbolic to the rational world. quot;Kol'tsaquot; shows that ultimately coherent meaning is
doomed. Marina Kulakova's prose poem quot;Reka po imeni Masterquot; depicts a teacher, initially paired
with the symbolic, who is ultimately subsumed by the semiotic silence and shifting seasons of the
remote village where she works. Kulakova, primarily a poet, has been published in Russia but
remains unknown in the West.
U istiny svobodnye odezhdy. The truth wears loose-fitting clothes.
Marina Kulakova
Julia Kristeva's opposed terms; semiotic and symbolic - suggest different modes of
signification in two works by contemporary Russian authors: Nina Sadur's short story
quot;Kol'tsaquot; and Marina Kulakova's prose poem quot;Reka po imeni Master.quot; A Kristevan analysis
allows us to make several crucial distinctions concerning varying ways of perceiving the
world and how these operate within works devoted to depicting ambiguity. Kristeva's
Revolution in Poetic Language describes the semiotic and symbolic as two modalities of
what is, for us, the same signifying process. We shall call the first the semiotic and the
second the symbolic. These two modalities are inseparable within the signifying process
that constitutes language, and the dialectic between them determines the type of discourse
(narrative, metalanguage, theory, poetry, etc.) involved [...]. Because the subject is always
both semiotic and symbolic, no signifying system he produces can be either 'exclusively'
semiotic or 'exclusively' symbolic, and is necessarily marked by indebtedness to both.
Definitions of Ontogeny should include:
Metamorphosis and Cytology – dynamic Ontogeny
Complex Adaptive Systems – Systems Ecology
Information Behavior and Biological Adaptation [Eugenesis]
Facilitation of Genetic Integrity - Eukaryotic | Prokaryotic
The Dynamic Ecology of Successional Communities
Potential Theory and its ―dynamic‖ functionality
Ethics of the Common Good – Protection Paradigms
The primordial dichotomy in the Physiology of Eukaryote Prokaryote (Processing of gene
Information) cells is the fundamental principle which must guide the ethical utilization of
bioengineering technologies.
14. Phylogenic – Morphological Structures; Systemic Functions and Cellular ‗organs‘
• Action Potential
• Chemical Synapse
• Cochlear Structures
• Endocytosis and Exocytose
• Eukaryote Prokaryote (Processing of gene Information)
• Gastric Secretion
• Lysosome
• Neuromuscular Junction
• Oxygen Carbon Dioxide
• Sarcomere
• Signal Amplification
• Thyroid Hormone
Explore the Tree of Life
The source of this ‗Tree of Life‘ concept is of course the Book known as the BIBLE.
It is ‗referenced in the first book – GENESIS || as ‗the way of the tree of life‘ growing in
The ‗Garden of Eden‘ and this ‗way‘ is guarded by ‗spirit beings‖ [Angels].
This ‗new representation‘ is based upon thermodynamic considerations and is a step
towards reconciliation of Science with Faith.
Representation of ―the tree of life‖ is of course about commensality but theories can be
incommensurable in Correspondence with ‗historic record‘
National Institute of Biomedical Imaging
Bioengineering (NIBIB)
International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC)
Converging Technologies for Improving Human Performance
Nanotechnology
Biotechnology
Information Technology - Cognitive Science
15. http://www.skepticfiles.org/science/931129ts.htm
Until Roberts and Sharp announced their finding, at the same
meeting in June 1977 held at Cold Spring Harbor, it was
thought that the genetic information embedded in DNA was
continuous. This understanding arose in large part from work
on prokaryote systems, such as E. coli. But in eukaryotes,
the genetic information is, in the vast majority,
interrupted by nucleotide regions that do not code for
proteins. These are called intervening sequences or introns.
The domains that carry protein coding amino acids are known
as exons, because their information is expressed. In these
structures, the genetic information is split into pieces,
hence the name quot;split genes.quot;
http://www.nsf.gov/crssprgm/nano/reports/program_converging_tech_sch050127.pdf
Misogyny - Issues in bioethics which relate to this dichotomy are:
cloning,
Frozen embryos – can these be used for ‗embryonic stem cell‘ Research?
debate over GMOs
xenotransplantation
privacy issues in genetic testing
Research and Development – Bioengineering | Nanotechnology
Converging new technologies in industry and medicine
Brain, mind and behavior
Human-machine interface
Reshaping organizations and business
Enhancement of cell functions
Legal and ethical issues
Computer interfaces with nano-bio-cognitive
International research activities components - Government programs
http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-114924599.html
This article is a brief introduction to the extraordinarily complex phenomenon of life and to
its molecular basis. We begin with the amazing diversity of life forms and the equally
amazing unity in the molecules underlying life's processes. The challenge of accounting for
both the variety and the commonalities among organisms is met by evolutionary theory;
despite controversies, all scientific approaches to understanding life build on a shared core
that can briefly be stated. One of the great insights of the last generation of biologists was
16. the chemical instantiation of these evolutionary theories, whose discovery has driven
biology toward the study of the structure and function of biological molecules. After an
introduction to some of these key molecules and to the central dogma of molecular biology,
we can begin to see the outlines of how such molecules can accomplish the tasks required
of simple and then more complex life forms. The introduction concludes with a brief account
of some of the new instruments and model systems that are now so rapidly advancing
scientific understanding of life.
We deem necessary to:
1- Promote an active policy towards the protection of intellectual property rights (IP) for
many of the key issues. IP agreements between Funding Agencies must contemplate the
claims of other institutions (i.e.: universities or firms where research is carried out)
2- Promote international establishment of standards for products derived from NT. Many
physical or chemical properties may already be measured for regular materials or
components but NT contribution may increase significantly some limit values for new
materials (viscosity, chemical stability, among many others)
3- Promote the remote use of instruments to break the gap between research laboratories
and even to allow the access of the manufacturing sector to NT.
4- Establish local committees to study potential risks in practices. Investigate risks and
hazards and write rules or exchange best practices to overcome them (as done previously
with genetic constructions or dangerous chemicals). Would general regulations and
standards like those of FDA or EPA be applicable?
5- Include safety and ethical issues as a separate chapter in research meetings. Once risks
are clearly identified, the compliance with protocols, safety rules and ethics should be an
issue for 1) project proposals at financing agencies and academic and business laboratories
2) release of products to the market 3) appropriate disposal mechanisms. Many countries
have established national committees to evaluate these practices for the introduction and
handling of Genetic Modified Organisms, among others.
Bioengineering and Bioethics – Ontogeny and Metaphysics http://www.non-gmoreport.com/
Bioethics and Biologic Integrity – ALL ORGANIC MOVEMENT – FOOD LABELING
A genetically modified organism (GMO) is an organism whose genetic material has been
altered using techniques in genetics generally known as recombinant DNA technology.
Recombinant DNA technology is the ability to combine DNA molecules from different
sources into the one molecule in a test tube. Thus, the abilities or the phenotype of the
organism, or the proteins it produces, can be altered through the modification of its genes.
[Controversy - Genetically modified food and Transgenic plants [such as grown in Paraguay]
Transnational Corporations and their EU [European Union] trade sanctions have created a
global marketplace bureaucracy. Making GMO‘s in the case of GMF and transgenic plants
very dangerous indeed due to constraints on sanctioning ‗competitive advantages‘. Also
many of the TNC‘s which are accused of promoting transgenic plants and consequently
GMFs; coincidentally they are also the sponsors of the World Trade Organization;
Bilderberg Meetings and the ‗euphamous‘ Tri-lateral Commission (Club of Rome).
17. Ontogeny is defined traditionally in its relationship to Phylogeny; as the ―origin‖ and
―development‖ of cellular structure and function, to biological molecules, bioenergetics, to the
genetics of both prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms, and to the elements of molecular biology.
Ontogeny (also ontogenesis or morphogenesis) describes the origin and the development of an
organism from the fertilized egg to its mature form. Ontogeny is studied in developmental biology.
The idea that ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny, that is, that the development of an organism
exactly mirrors the evolutionary development of the species, is discredited today. However the
phenomenon of recapitulation, in which a developing organism will for a time show a similar trait or
attribute to that of an ancestral species, only to have it disappear at a later stage is well
documented. For example, embryos of the baleen whale still develop teeth at certain embryonic
stages, only to later disappear. A more general example is the emergence of what could develop
into pharyngeal gill pouches if it were in a lower vertebrate in almost all mammalian embryos at
early stages of development. (April, 2001). Excerpt [amongst many others – courtesy of
Wikipedia]
Morphogenesis and Cytology provide the ontogeny necessary to ―appreciate‖ the living world which
has well sustained ―the habitants‖. Succession works within dynamic ecosystems providing a
sound basis to explain the diversity of life in its global ―Biomes‖ [Ecosystems]. Mother Nature is a
―fitting‖ and ―appropriate‖ ontology which is universally accepted. Mankind has ―just begun‖ to
understand the principles which sustain ―living systems‖; Space Exploration is one indicator of this.
Only a few years ago very few references to Ontogeny – it has greatly increased its
―semantics of concern‖ in recent years.
The Ontogeny of Environmental biology || Adaptation and the Tree of Life
Zoonosis - Reference > Zoonosis Updates
Zoonosis (pronounced zoo-e-no-sis) is any infectious disease that may be transmitted from other
animals, both wild and domestic, to humans or from humans to animals.
The word is derived from the Greek words zoon (animal) (pronounced as zoo-on) and nosos
(disease). Many serious diseases fall under this category. The plural of zoonosis is zoonoses, from
which an alternative singular zoonose is derived by back-formation.
The simplest definition of a zoonosis is a disease that can be transmitted from other animals to
humans. A slightly more technical definition is a disease that normally exists in other animals, but
also infects humans. The emerging interdisciplinary field of conservation medicine, which
integrates human and veterinary medicine, and environmental sciences, is largely concerned with
zoonosis.
Systems and Cybernetic Convergence
18. Correspondence or incommensurability – Human/Computer
Conceptual Role Semantics and Cognitive Design Patterns
Complex Adaptive Systems || Systems Ecology Representation
Ecosystem Ecology
System Definition Model _ Dynamic Systems Initiative
Generative Metamodel - Model Integrated Computing
Solves Axiomatic Semantics Problem - of Declarative/Imperative
Atlantic Zoo - Meta-Modeling | Meta-languages
Generative Modeling Tools (GMT) project
set of prototypes - Model Driven Engineering (MDE)
Semantic Web || Information Behavior
Entity Relationship Model - relevant relation [Occam‟s Principle]
Relevance in correspondence with another
Correspondence - in response to - in conjunction with - in spite of
Conformity
Congruence
Agreement
Accordance
Copying
Picturing
Signification
Representation
Reference
Satisfaction - Correspondence with a relevant portion of reality
Question of Reality - quot;classical observerquot;
Facts - States of affairs –Situations - Events
Objects and their Aspect Orientation
Sequences of objects – Dimensional Aspects
Sets
Properties
Tropes - entropic constraints; environments; relationship hierarchy
8. The Correspondence Theory and Its Competitors
Against the traditional competitors—coherent-ist, pragmatist, and verificationist and other
epistemic theories of truth—correspondence theorists raise two main sorts of objections.
First, such accounts tend to lead into relativism. Take, e.g., a coherent-ist account of truth;
since it is possible that ‗p‘ coheres with the belief system of S while ‗not-p‘ coheres with the
belief system of S*, the coherent-ist account seems to imply, absurdly, that contradictories,
‗p‘ and ‗not-p‘, could both be true. To avoid embracing contradictions, coherent-ists often
19. commit themselves (if only covertly) to the objectionable relativistic view that ‗p‘ is true-for-
S and ‗not-p‘ is true-for-S*. Second, the competing accounts tend to lead into some form of
idealism or anti-realism. E.g., it is possible for the belief that p to cohere with someone's
belief system even though it is not a fact that p; also, it is possible for it to be a fact that p
even if no one believes that p, or if the belief that p does not cohere with anyone's belief
system. Cases of this form are frequently cited as counterexamples to coherent-ist accounts
of truth. Coherent-ists tend to reject such counterexamples by insisting that they are not
possible after all—a reaction that commits them to the anti-realist view that the facts are
(largely) determined by what we believe.
B. according to the identity theory of truth, true propositions do not correspond to facts,
they are (identical with) facts: the true proposition that snow is white = the fact that snow is
white. This non-traditional competitor of the correspondence theory threatens to collapse
the correspondence relation into identity. In response, a correspondence theorist might
point out: First, the identity theory is defensible only for propositions as truth bearers, and
only if propositions are construed in a certain way, namely as having objects and properties
as constituents rather than ideas or concepts of objects and properties. Hence, even if the
identity theory of truth were accepted for propositions (so construed), there would still be
ample room (and need) for correspondence accounts of truth with respect to other types of
truth bearers. Second, the identity theory rests on the assumption that that-clauses always
denote propositions, so that the ‗that-clause‘ in ―the fact that snow is white‖ denotes the
proposition that snow is white. The assumption can be questioned. ‗That-clauses‘ can be
understood as ambiguous names, sometimes denoting propositions and sometimes
denoting facts. The descriptive phrases ―the proposition…‖ and ―the fact…‖ can be
regarded as serving to disambiguate the succeeding ambiguous ‗that-clauses‘.
Content - Didactic Pedagogy is essential to the comprehension of ‘Classical Philosophy’. This
advocacy defines ‘arts’ as well as ‘letters’; a discourse of creative – if purposeful;
communication. The ‘aesthetics’ of walking and talking are part of its ‘charm’.
http://www.elea.org/Parmenides/
Parmenides wrote his didactic poem ‘On Nature’ and the 'speculation' began - the concept of
metaphysics is often traced to this writing. Ontology is the being; Greek Scholars of the present
day - 2007 | 5768 places it's etymology in the 'garden of Eden' - where Adam walked with the
Lord and 'named' all of the creatures there; pleasing 'his father'. This naming hence is ontology
- the being which is immovable. Parmenides did not have access to the book of Genesis so it may
be surmised that On Nature is about Mother Earth as so many endemic people believe and
practice. In metaphysics ontology is the study of Nature – Physos (Greek) - it is directly related
to 'consciousness' as BEING; from the perspective of a ‘classical observer’ (who in fact is
everyone and no one in particular). Ontologies are Ontology - this is the sense of it.
20. Noesis is a state of knowing – comprehensive understanding of an ontologic presence; being. It
is not ‘knowledge’ as such; for it is written – ‘The fear of the God is the beginning of knowledge,
the fear of the Lord is the beginning of Wisdom.’
The Parmenidean Paths of Inquiry - http://www.elea.org/Parmenides/Parm-comment.htm
An Interpretation
The following is my interpretation of the philosophy of Parmenides of Elea, the Greek father
of metaphysics. His only work, On Nature, is written in rather obscure verse, and so his thesis
can be viewed from a variety of perspectives, of which mine is only one (although a fairly
standard one). Parmenides' most important principle, hereafter called quot;Parmenides' Principlequot;,
was that anything rationally conceivable must exist. Nonbeing is not a thing and can neither be
thought of nor spoken about in any meaningful or coherent way. Parmenides forbade talking as
if there are possible things that nonetheless do not exist. He illustrated this principle by
showing us three possible methods of inquiry, of which only one is valid. The following chart
summarizes them.
Parmenides' Principle from Allan F. Randall
Consistent,
1. The Way of Objective Truth: Necessarily, all possibilities exist.
Coherent
Consistent,
2. The Unthinkable Way:: Necessarily, no possibilities exist.
Incoherent
Inconsistent,
3. The Way of Subjective Belief: Some possibilities exist, some do not.
Incoherent
Bioethics however must encompass a much greater metaphysics; and that is one which includes
understanding of Systems (Complex and Adaptative); and their discrete principles – especially
Living Systems and their Ontogeny. Seekers of truth; for this is the ‘LOVE’ of wisdom – indeed
the continuing history of philosophy itself is one of the ‘subjects’ of discourse; the ethics of
COMMON GOOD its objective; Virtue is it’s reward. It is well taken that in ‘allegory’ Parmenides
has provide NATURE for this purpose. Natures Ontogeny has developed teleological systems for
commensality and biodynamic pathways of procreation. The conclusion of ON NATURE
provides insight into this ‘impasse’ – An Ontogeny for Ontology:
19quot;Thus, according to belief, these things were born and now are, and hereafter, having grown
from this, they will come to an end. And for each of these did humans establish a distinctive
name. 20One and unchanging is that for which as a whole the name is: 'to be'.quot;
21. Logic is bound by human cognition in terms of this insight (as intuition) – this
subjective/objective dichotomy if you will; and can shine the light of understanding upon the
counterintuitive and non-binding logic of chaos; and its ‘reprobate’ ideologies. Mankind’s
responsibility for ‘things which were born and that now are’ is not diminished through the
providence of science.
Greek Philosophy produced ‘Ethics’ – Hebrew Theology Commandments and a Covenant with God.
Nichomachean Ethics (sometimes spelled 'Nichomachean'), or Ta Ethika, is a work by Aristotle
on virtue and moral character which plays a prominent role in defining Aristotelian
ethics. It consists of ten books based on notes from his lectures at the Lyceum and were
either edited by or dedicated to Aristotle's son, Nicomachus.
Nichomachean Ethics focuses on the importance of habitually behaving virtuously and
developing a virtuous character. Aristotle emphasized the importance of context to ethical
behavior and the ability of the virtuous person to recognize the best course of action. Aristotle
argued that eudaimonia is the goal of life, and that a person's pursuit of eudaimonia, rightly
conceived, will result in virtuous conduct.
Eudaimonia (Greek: εὐδαιμονία) is a classical Greek word commonly translated as
'happiness'. Etymologically, it consists of the word quot;euquot; (quot;goodquot; or quot;well beingquot;) and
quot;daimōnquot; (quot;spiritquot; or quot;minor deityquot;, used by extension to mean one's lot or fortune). Although
popular usage of the term happiness refers to a state of mind, related to joy or pleasure,
eudaimonia rarely has such connotations, and the less subjective quot;human flourishingquot; is often
preferred as a translation.
The Perseus Project is a digital library project of Tufts University that assembles digital
collections of humanities resources. It is hosted by the Department of Classics. It suffers,
unfortunately, from very frequent computer hardware problems, and as such its resources
[1]
are often unavailable. The project is mirrored in Berlin and Chicago.[2]
The Ethics; Treatise on the Emendation of the Intellect; Selected Letters -
by Benedictus de Spinoza (Author) quot;If Socrates' execution was the key event in Plato's life
that shaped his subsequent career in philosophy, Spinoza's excommunication from the Jewish
community of Amsterdam...quot; (more) Key Phrases: equally great emotion, absolutely infinite entity,
fictitious idea, Corollary Hence, Proof All
22. Jonathan Barnes’s Aristotle (2000) provides an excellent and brief introduction to Aristotelian
philosophy. In terms of impact on the Ethics, perhaps Aristotle’s most significant concept is that
of the teleology of nature. According to Aristotle, nature works toward a telos, or end goal. His
biological work aims constantly at the question of what purpose different aspects of plants and
animals serve. He classifies humans as “rational animals,” meaning that our telos is rational. In
other words, our function in life is to realize our full potential as rational beings. If we are not
fully rational, we are falling short of our true nature.
This teleological view gives Aristotle’s Ethics a clear sense of direction. Our goal in life is to
achieve our true nature, and this true nature consists essentially of rationality. The purpose of a
moral education, then, is to teach us how we may become perfectly rational and immune to the
temptations of our lower animalistic parts.
Ethics is just one of a number of fields that Aristotle classifies as “practical science.” Unlike the
natural sciences, which examine the world around us, these sciences deal with the practical
aspects of human society and how best to arrange this society. The practical sciences are all
closely connected, and Aristotle frequently expounds on the connection between the good life
for the individual and the kind of state that could make this good life possible. Hence, Aristotle’s
Politics is an important companion and sequel to his Ethics.
While the Nicomachean Ethics is Aristotle’s most popular work on ethics, there is a second work
called the Eudemian Ethics, which is far less widely read. Most scholars agree that the Eudemian
Ethics was written earlier in Aristotle’s career and represents a less mature view. Books V, VI,
and VII of the Nicomachean Ethics are also found in the Eudemian Ethics.
Aristotle – Louvre Queen Ester – Jews for Jesus w3c Standards
23. A Solution to Plato's Problem:
The Latent Semantic Analysis Theory of Acquisition,
Induction and Representation of Knowledge
Abstract -8
How do people know as much as they do with as little information as they get? The problem
takes many forms; learning vocabulary from text is an especially dramatic and convenient case
for research. A new general theory of acquired similarity and knowledge representation, Latent
Semantic Analysis (LSA), is presented and used to successfully simulate such learning and
several other psycholinguistic phenomena. By inducing global knowledge indirectly from local
co-occurrence data in a large body of representative text, LSA acquired knowledge about the full
vocabulary of English at a comparable rate for school-children. LSA uses no prior linguistic or
perceptual similarity knowledge; it is based solely on a general mathematical learning method
that achieves powerful inductive effects by extracting the right number of dimensions (e.g., 300)
to represent objects and contexts. Relations to other theories, phenomena, and problems are
sketched.
The Latent Semantic Analysis Model
The model we have used for simulation is a purely mathematical analysis technique. However,
we want to interpret the model in a broader and more psychological manner. In doing so, we
hope to show that the fundamental features of the theory that we will later describe are
plausible, to reduce the otherwise magical appearance of its performance, and to suggest a
variety of relations to psychological phenomena other than the ones to which we have as yet
applied it.
We will explicate all of this in a somewhat spiral fashion. First, we will try to explain the
underlying inductive mechanism of dimensionality matching upon which the model's power
hinges. We will then sketch how the model's mathematical machinery operates and how it has
been applied to data and prediction. Next, we will offer a psychological process interpretation of
the model that shows how it maps onto but goes beyond familiar theoretical ideas, empirical
principles, findings and conjectures. We will then, finally, return to a more detailed and
rigorous presentation of the model and its applications. An Informal Explanation of the Inductive Value of
Dimensionality Matching
24. Truth, Coherence and Correspondence in the Metaphysics of F.H. Bradley
Absolute Idealism and Analytic Philosophy – The Incommensurability Paradigm
Quantum Phenomenology – KTheory is a product of this transitional discourse
Starting with the Descartes' cogito, quot;I think, therefore I amquot;--and taking an uncompromisingly
rational, rigorously phenomenological approach--I attempt to derive the basic principles of
recursion theory (the backbone of all mathematics and logic), and from that the principles of
feedback control theory (the backbone of all biology), leading to the basic ideas of quantum
mechanics (the backbone of all physics). What is derived is not the full quantum theory, but a
basic framework--derived from a priori principles along with common everyday experience--of
how the universe of everyday experience should work if it operates according to rational
principles. We find, to our surprise, that the resulting system has all the most puzzling features
of quantum physics that make physicists scratch their heads. Far from being quot;bizarrequot; and
quot;weirdquot;, as is usually thought, the strangest paradoxes of quantum theory turn out to be just
what one ought to expect of a rational universe. It is the classical, pre-quantum universe of the
nineteenth century that has irrational, mystical components. The quantum-mechanics-like
theory that is developed is, furthermore, most compatible with the strictest, most
uncompromisingly rationalist of the standard interpretations of quantum mechanics, those
which add no ad hoc elements to the theory, and which generally trace their history to the
relative state formulation of Everett (also called the quot;many worldsquot; interpretation). These
interpretations take the universe to be quite literally describable as a quantum wave function.
As with any project this far-reaching in scope, I confess I have had to make some working
assumptions along the way. I have attempted to isolate these, and clearly label them as points of
possible future revision--they are marked in the text with an asterisk (*).
A critique of Allan Randall’s poignant insights:
Paradox gives rise to enigma – the enigma of existence itself; in that it is ‘integral’ – meaning;
that entropy cannot ‘be broken’. Pedagogy purports Logic and Recursion Theory as a
basis for ‘Metaphysics’ – yet Eidetic Intuition provides for a greater comprehension of what is
seen and observed without contradicting either logic or recursion. So-called Mathematical
Control Theory provides for rigorous computation of stochastic processes; yet the stochastic
is seen as infinitely reducible [Bose – Einstein] – modern computer science utilizes recursion:
and provides ‘proof’ that recursion is a ‘metaphysical’ paradigm. No matter what aspect or
perspective one appreciates – this ‘fundamental harmony’ is essential to appreciating classical
and modern philosophy as well; commensurable with man’s stewardship.
25. Implicit Ambiguity Resolution – inter-subjectivity; the soul of reciprocity - regime of
representation that has prevailed in philosophy since Descartes; correction of semantic drift -
semiotic representation affecting or effecting || self affecting reflexivity symbolism denotes
intending objects through signs question of the reflexivity of awareness || counter-intuitive
defining consciousness as 'auto-affection' becoming autocracy counter-intuitive root of
reflexivity || essence of Cartesians Intractability and Conflict Resolution
Toward Better Concepts of Peace – what is the purpose of discourse anyway?
IN SOME THEORETICAL MODELS, researchers think that distinct sets of cognitive processes
interpret a sentence at each posited level of representation, and they claim that distinct mental
representations result from those computations. That approach predicts that the qualitatively
different processing principles for syntax and semantics arise from the existence of
qualitatively different neural processing (Chomsky, 1986; Clifton, Speer, & Abney, 1991;
Ferreira & Clifton, 1986; Frazier, 1987; Marslen-Wilson & Tyler, 1987; Rayner, Garrod, &
Perfetti, 1992). In contrast, other models have proposed that a semantic representation is
assembled directly, without an intermediate syntactic representation (McClelland, St. John, &
Taraban, 1989; Mitchell & Holmes, 1985). In that perspective, syntactic information is
integrated with lexical or semantic and pragmatic information in a continuous process of
mapping on to a meaningful representation of the whole sentence (Altman, Garnham, & Dennis,
1992; MacDonald, Pearlmutter, & Seidenberg, 1994; Spivey-Knowlton & Tanenhaus, 1994;
Taraban & McClelland, 1990).
Hypotheses
Despite the different variables taken into consideration (Kotz, Holcomb, & Kounios, 1992), the
observations allow us to hypothesize that, at least under certain experimental conditions, the
N400 and the P600 are elicited as functions of the representational level of the anomaly, both
semantic and syntactic (Osterhout & Holcomb, 1995). From our perspective, the identification
of different wave variations should invite us to consider the existence of distinct components
that intervene in sentence decoding. They are fairly diversified phenomena, nevertheless co-
occurring in the process of sentence comprehension (Osterhout, McLaughlin, & Bersick, 1997).
Moreover, in the present research, we analyzed a specific sentence-level context, and we cannot
apply our results to other cognitive processes, such as word level. The principal paradigms of
analysis point out the difference between word-level processes, which include the recognition
of isolated words (words in single-word context), and sentence-level processes, which include
the recognition of words in sentence context and the computation of syntactic structure
(Balconi, 2001a; Osterhout & Holcomb). The
26. choice of sentence level is motivated by the need to compare more rigorously syntactic and
semantic information processing and to explore the dichotomy between structural and
semantic representations of words in sentence context. (Ainsworth-Darnell et al., 1998;
Osterhout & Nicol, 1999; Van Petten, 1993)
One of the basic concerns of classical mathematical logic has been a rigorous definition of
“mathematical proofquot;. A proof may be discovered by luck, genius or accident. But once
discovered it is mechanically checkable. Thus the most general type of mechanically checkable
procedure provides a definition of the most general kind of proof. An investigation of
“mechanical checkabilityquot; leads naturally to the notion of “computable processquot;. Recursion
theory is that branch of mathematical logic which studies computability theory. From its very
inception recursion theory has been so closely associated with theoretical computer science
that it is sometimes difficult to tell where one begins and the other ends.
Complexity is seen as ‘ultra’ to which ‘filters’ are applied for the sake of these rigorous
paradigms – Living Systems however manifest a purpose which purports ‘commonality’ and
their complexity is beyond recursive techniques; yet mathematical logic proposes to define it.
The classical viewpoint IS commensurable with Quantum Theory and its communications
theory – if and only if; what is being communicated is information propagated by a living system
itself; purposefully to maintain this existence and ‘adapt’ [taxis] to an ‘ever’ changing
environment – even where that environment is the living organism itself and its ecologic
community of adaptation. Thereby the ontogeny of complex adaptive systems becomes
commensurable with Quantum Mechanics and its rigorous mathematical recursion and
feedback ‘taxis’.
Eidetic Noesis - however; has serious problems with morality and the bioethics which
stewardship must maintain – this excerpt from basic Engineering goals and objects:
eal@eecs.berkeley.edu 1 Introduction
Engineers have a major advantage over scientists. For the most part, the systems we analyze are
of our own devising. It has not always been so. Not long ago, the principle objective of
engineering was to coax physical materials to do our bidding by leveraging their intrinsic
physical properties. The discipline was one of “applied science.” Today, a great deal of
engineering is about coaxing abstractions that we have invented. The abstractions provided by
microprocessors, programming languages, operating systems, and computer networks are only
loosely linked to the underlying physics of electronics.
27. The rapid improvements in the capabilities of electronics during the last half of the 20-th
century are, in part, the reason for this separation. The physical constraints imposed by limited
memory, processing speed, and communication bandwidth appeared to evaporate with each
new generation of computers. What appeared to one generation as luxuriously inefficient
abstractions became the bread and butter of the next generation. The separation of “computer
science” from “electrical engineering” is both a consequence and a cause, fueling the separation
and reflecting it at the same time.
At the same time, the systems science that was incubated in the study of electronic circuits
(control systems, communications theory, and signal processing) has also become more
abstract. Although these disciplines were created by true “electrical engineers” (“true” means
that they were engaged with electrical systems), many of the practitioners today rarely
encounter electricity directly. Their techniques are often realized in “embedded” software,
ironically building on the abstractions that are only loosely connected to the electronics that
their theory originally helped to create. The theories, however, have not adapted as well as one
might hope to world of software. Perhaps these theories remain too wedded to their physical
heritage. (quotation)
Science and its twin children – magic and engineering have never exhibited restraint in the area
of abstinence from temptation to experiment – even when such experiments violate all laws and
the ‘norms’ of cultural decency. Medical Practice has become a major source of this malfeasance
– where ‘malpractice’ is merely the retribution of ‘insurance’ claims; not the criminal culpability
for deliberate and recurring acts of subversion. Into this void has stepped ‘Bioethics’ and its
paradigms for the common good and proper caretaking of its communities.
The Mosaic Effect and the Ecologic Patch Phenomenon
ONTOLOGIES FOR CRISIS MANAGEMENT Session ID: INT-04
Motivation _ Crisis Intervention and Information Architecture
What is a crisis? When does a crisis begin, and when does it end? What factors are
likely to aggravate or alleviate a crisis? How is a crisis different from an emergency, or
a disaster? Who are the players, stakeholders, actors and agents responsible for action
during a global emergency and what are their roles? What and whose procedures are
to be followed? What protocols are in place to support coordination and communication
among the various agents? What infrastructures are in place? How can community
“resilience” fit into the picture? Where are the bottlenecks? How can information
systems be deployed and used to improve crisis management and support the
optimization of resources and relief operations when the need arises? How can
28. transparency and collaboration be balanced with security and privacy measures during
a crisis? How feasible is a common shared ontology for emergency management? Will
such an ontology scale to international levels and who will drive this process and
manage its evolution?
These, and many more, are “ontological challenges” that pertain to the emergency
management functions across all levels of government, non-government organisations,
industry, and community groups. During a crisis incident, they all need to collaborate
and cooperate and share information and resources to respond and recovery from the
disaster. Under these conditions, it is critical that they share a common ontology to
support their crisis functions and decision making roles.
This session aims to provide an opportunity to allow researchers and practitioners to
present their views, and to stimulate experts to further investigate the underlying
“ontological challenges” that are at the heart of technical information cooperation
during an international crisis.
Ontologies are critical to the design and management of complex and sustainable
information systems and are central to information flow in crisis management. The
need to improve and open up knowledge and research in the area for “ontologies for
crisis management” is becoming compelling and relevant to real-world requirements.
Ontological challenges relating to crisis management need to be asked, and answered,
in order to provide mechanism to widen adoption, interoperability, usefulness,
efficiency, robustness, reliability, availability and accountability of information systems,
during emergencies.
The ontologies need to represent a wide cross section of dynamic emergency functions
and to support dynamically adaptive real time scenarios as changes occur quickly and
need to be propagated widely. Reasoning and decision making must be transparent
and flexible with the support of crisis ontologies. The boundaries of this emerging
research area is vast and still be determined.
Ontology research has been increasing over the past years with the Semantic Web
providing new technologies to solve ontological needs across disciplines and domains.
Ontology management still faces many challenges when taken at the broader level – in
particular at an international level - across many different stakeholder areas. How can
ontologies support the many agencies and groups involved in a crisis?
Emergency 2.0
LA Fire Department is clearly raised in the same spirit, as the people working there quickly
absorbed the Web 2.0 tools into their activity to make it more effective and people caring.
LAFD_ALERT service Flickr Photo Gallery YouTube Channel at BlogTalkRadio.com
Along the blog, the LA Fire Department inserted Twitter into its online panoply of citizen
services and set its designation as a reliable tool for emergency response in ordinary or crisis
situations. Brian Humphrey and Ron Myers from LAFD said that the attributes the Web 2.0 tools
possess — “desirable, beneficial, justifiable and sustainable” — motivated their choice.
29. Intuition: Discernment Of Conscience
There are, in fact, two such vortices at work in the Pacific Ocean, the other one lying just off the coast of
Japan (another major producer of plastic waste on the Pacific Rim. According to Greenpeace:
An enormous island of trash twice the size of Texas is floating in the Pacific Ocean somewhere between
San Francisco and Hawaii. Chris Parry with the California Coastal Commission in San Francisco said the
so-called Great Pacific Garbage Patch, has been growing a brisk rate since the 1950s, The San Francisco
Chronicle reported Friday.
The trash stew is 80 percent plastic and weighs more than 3.5 million tons.
30. http://alipr.com/ Automatic Linguistic Indexing of Pictures - Real Time
Content-based image retrieval (CBIR) using Aspect Oriented Context Sensitive Workflows.
Content-based image retrieval (CBIR), also known as query by image content (QBIC)
and content-based visual information retrieval (CBVIR) is the application of computer
vision to the image retrieval problem, that is, the problem of searching for digital
images in large databases. (see this survey[1] for a recent scientific overview of the CBIR
field)
quot;Content-basedquot; means that the search will analyze the actual contents of the image. The
term 'content' in this context might refer to colors, shapes, textures, or any other
information that can be derived from the image itself. Without the ability to examine image
content, searches must rely on metadata such as captions or keywords, which may be
laborious or expensive to produce.
representative CBIR systems APIR QBIC VisualSEEk Photobook
support content-based retrieval by color, texture, and shape
Block-Based Neural Network Architecture
Passive Aggressive Model for Image Retrieval
PLSA-based image auto-annotation: constraining the latent space. In: ACM Multimedia
cross-media relevance models
Bioinformatics – Semantic Web Tools || Information Architecture and 'the human condition';
The network may not always completely mask the computing infrastructure behind it, but it
hides considerable detail and mostly allows access through quot;Web-yquot; protocols, languages, and
standards such as HTTP, RSS, XML, Javascript, and REST. On July 24, 2004 I responded just after
that with,
quot;So the user-created bottom-up categorical structure development with an emergent thesaurus
would become a Folksonomy?quot;
Eidetic Linguistics Indexing using Semiotic Representation - The Semiotics of Folksonomy
It is not that technology provides 'opportunity' but exponentially expanded 'ACCESS' to
opportunity; this drives ‘business applications’ of 'semantic web technology'. Prayer and
meditation are still required for 'perfection' of decision making - especially in their discrete
application to real life situations. Use of Semantic Modeling - the power of algorithms’ applied
to content syndication on the Web can be conceptualized;
31. structured topic correlation
syntactic syndication approaches
automated reasoning support
Web Ontology Language – Web Services Process Model Ontology (WSPMO)
rich semantics-based mechanism for expressing subscriptions and published content
Polyhedron representation - octoroons; fractal Geometry (topology) - Correspondence Theory
Stanford SIMPLIcity system - Automatic Linguistic Indexing of Pictures
Quaternions - minding your p's and q's - gimble locks and lie big algebras
rendering animated polygonal models with real-time lighting and shadows – SIMD
Folksonomy in the context sensitive generation of Microformats
Visualization - cleaning our lenses
Semantics – the meaning of words; is a ―course‖ discipline at best – and its
relationship to what today is called Information theory is equally ―disputed‖. Here is a
quote – ―Information is a semantic unity” - which others have argued as ―ontologies
are tautological; or they are not Ontology‖. This quotation from Tim Berners-Lee; the
WWW protagonist; presents a ―catharsis‖ of: A Semantic Web is not Artificial
Intelligence (search for Article).
Information becomes the ―paradox‖ to be resolved through an ―ontological‖ tautology. This
is ―systems thinking‖ at its best – logic abhors tautology – being is ―immersed‖ in it.
Ontogeny
quot;Cause and effect, means and ends, seed and fruit cannot be severed; for, the effect already
blooms in the cause, the end pre-exists in the means, the fruit in the seed.quot;
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Ontogeny of Environmental biology
Zoonosis- Reference > Zoonosis Updates Adaptation and the Tree of Life
The word is derived from the Greek words zoon (animal) (pronounced as zoo-on) and
nosos (disease). Many serious diseases fall under this category. The plural of zoonosis
is zoonoses, from which an alternative singular zoonose is derived by back-formation.
The simplest definition of a zoonosis is a disease that can be transmitted from other
animals to humans. A slightly more technical definition is a disease that normally
exists in other animals, but also infects humans.
The emerging interdisciplinary field of conservation medicine, which integrates human
and veterinary medicine, and environmental sciences, is largely concerned with
zoonoses.
32. Genome research and its malediction – Evolutionary Biology
Moabite Stone Fringetail Purple Finch
An Idea of Value for Semantic Ontologies
Semantic Ontologies express the basis of relationships; true correspondence and mutual
understanding amongst quot;sentient beingsquot;. One must differentiate Ontology as being from
the comprehended ontological in order to appreciate that quot;beingquot; is what generally is
termed quot;consciousnessquot; – living systems as ALIVE; ONTOGENY. The sense of naming
―creatures‖ within the ―Tree of Life‖ is fundamental to ONTOLOGY.
Semantics offers a dichotomy to consider; Etiology and Ethology - causation and casualty.
Etiology is ontological and is the root of quot;myth and folklorequot; - Ethology may explain why
certain quot;speciesquot; [of the human genera] are fond of making up stories about the Natural
world. Etymology then must consider ontogeny, etiology and a generalized Ethology of a
human family which evolution denies.
General theory of reflection - Gödel and Tarski
Metalogical foundations - make the logic of choice an inter-changeable parameter
Reflective logical and semantic frameworks
Nuprl's constructive type theory as a reflective Metalogical framework
The Structure of Post-Axiomatic Mathematics
Research relations between formulas and functions on sets of formulas
Meta-Formulas - Need for Theory of Formulas
The Concept of Truth in Formalized Languages
On the Concept of Logical Consequence
Independence of the Axiom of Choice and the Generalized Continuum Hypothesis
relationship of relativity theory and idealistic mathematics in the light of philosophy
33. The Group Concept - Notes
``The theory of groups is, as it were, the whole of mathematics stripped of its matter and reduced to pure form''.
Jules-Henri Poincaré (1854-1912)
Correspondence or Incommensurability?
Technologic Considerations
Representation Theory + commensality or incommensurability
Categorical Geometry :: Fractal Geometry [topologic perfection]
Partial differential equations and harmonic functions
Tesseract and hypercube
Super strings Theory :: grand set theory :: symmetry :: supersymmetry
Self-rationalization [dangerous practice]
Differentiates four levels for possible analysis
Correspondence principle :: Quantum Mechanics – Inequalities | Uncertainty
Ontogeny and its ONTOLOGY – questions of a philosophical nature
After reading a modern philosopher like Edward Levinas – ‘Totality and Infinity’; the matter
is much clearer - ontology and noesis are co-adjunct operators in the quot;metaphysicsquot; - In the
time of Golden Age of Greek Philosophy this noetic framework was the didactic [teaching] of
geometry, ethics and logic. Yet – it is difficult to practice what you preach if your society is
extremely immoral or even depraved. Today the quot;Golden Age of Physicsquot; has propelled a
global society into quot;stellar spacequot; using another aspect of this quot;noetic frameworkquot; and that
is eidetic noesis - which is quot;photographicquot; quality visualization. Yet the semantics remain
unchanged - this is good!
This is most certainly true of bioethics - one of the most compelling quot;interdisciplinaryquot;
fields; where even the most basic conceptions of western civilization can be challenged due
to the quot;misanthropyquot; of its quot;unethical experimentationsquot;. One of the most recent example of
this is the quot;AIDS holocaustquot; which by now is threatening to become just as destructive to
human populations as WW2.
34. The River: Origins of the Aids Pandemic
Zoonosis - evolution - symbiosis; these terms may apply to HIV/AIDS pandemic quot;prognosisquot;
but will survive not a quot;parsecquot; in the hysterical world of the World Health Organization and
it's pharmacological based medicine. An important footnote is that ‗indeed‘ - the Salk
vaccine was wholly adequate to ‗effectively prevent‘ Polio Mellitus.
Knowledge representation system
The true crisis in correspondence - especially with quot;realityquot; is realizing the very great deceit
which has been perpetrated historically.
Cosmic convergence is heralded by the vast changes in Earth's global weather patterns
[thermodynamics]; this physical yet unpredicted change; transcends the havoc of waste and
destruction which mankind's greed has contributed. Spiritual Consciousness; in sympathy
with those suffering terrible loss; looks to a quot;Holy Godquot; whose quot;ways are far past finding
outquot;. The spirit our ears and eyes receives ―patience‖ from: to understand or if not - to
search for the truth....this is harmony with cosmic convergence. The millennia are
converging; space and time are actually warped by the incredible power of the cosmos
which is quot;investedquot; in our quot;Planet Earthquot;. The millennia have quot;jubileesquot;; celebrations of
history and cultural traditions. Globally the amount of intercultural reconciliation is greater
than any one could ever have predicted. Why is this?
The Millennia are being quot;discoveredquot; This means our unity will be restored Meaning and
Purpose are co-adjunct motivators of ontology; and society in general. Without meaning,
purpose is counter-intuitive and begets as it is colloquially stated - quot;the vicious circlequot;.
Millennial Moments Mood: chillin' Now Playing: En-Raptures - Topic: Historic Insights
Discernment of Harmonic Convergence of the ―physical‖ requires Spiritual Consciousness -
this so-termed ―higher consciousness‖ is ―ontogenous‖ – One with being. Infosystems
Intelligence The holistic unity of the natural world is an ontogeny; in and of itself. Our
ontological perception of it is also an ontogeny - observation by a living soul. This unity of
body and soul is known as spirituality. And we are forewarned— only two spirits exist; that
which is good and that which is reprobate…..these spirits act derisively [against each other]
and are the source of hostility and it‘s human neurosis. Ontogeny is based upon living
systems and their highly discrete purpose [survival]. The Hebrew Scriptures inscribe that
Almighty God dwells in unapproachable light….his creation must be endowed with some
very great qualities as well.
35. There is apparently considerable misunderstanding about quot;ethicsquot; and its moral values.
When it is written that quot;all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of godquot;; sin must be
atoned for.....crime therefore will be punished. Deceit; hypocrisy and it's quot;counter-
intelligencequot; are all works and character traits of that quot;wicked onequot; which the Holy Spirit will
rebuke.
Whether it is the quot;axiomatic semantics of first order logicquot; or the ideologue of folk wisdom -
quot;god fearingquot; people; what ‗ought to‘ - will be. The milieu does not seem to grasp this;
secular humanism and its evolutionary theories clutch at madness - why is this? Man is evil
from his youth onwards - who can know it! The global Opium trade is one long-term
example of this.
Ontogeny provides the quot;superstructurequot; which a living world and its living systems abide
in. This quot;cosmosquot; is more than the elements; it is also the very nature of reality. Super
symmetry - time reversal invariance - holistic ecology; these all quot;emanatequot; from a quot;creatorquot;.
The uncanny similitude between the aloe plant and moon jelly fish transcends habitat; but
requires ideal conditions for optimal growth. Such ‗morphological symmetry‘ permeates
Nature.
It is written that quot;the worlds are made of things which do not appearquot;!
It must be immediately observed by anyone taking part in the quot;developmentsquot; which are
being termed Web 2.0 - that all computer language based technologies are quot;convergingquot;;
ie....becoming interoperable with each other. This was the whole point of the quot;Semantic
Webquot; and its quot;Ontologiesquot;. Those who declare quot;paradigm shiftsquot; and quot;subversionquot;
practices while maintaining semantic quot;ambivalencequot; to a general usurpation of ethical
practices and privacy requirements counsel quot;acquiescencequot; while quot;jackingquot; up the prices of
their quot;inefficientquot; products regularly. Paradigm shifts of this kind generate quot;semantic driftquot;;
a dangerous practice in the highly abstract realm of cyberspace. Silicon Snake Oil
salesman everyone - all probability is ultimately ONE. Perhaps another point well taken that
on ‗millennium‘ – mankind‘s UNITY is becoming restored - rapidly.
Semiotics, semiotic studies, or semiology is the study of signs and symbols, both individually
and grouped into sign systems. It includes the study of how meaning is constructed and
understood.
This discipline is frequently seen as having important anthropological dimensions. However, some
semioticians focus on the logical dimensions of the science. They examine areas belonging also to
the natural sciences - such as how organisms make predictions about, and adapt to, their semiotic
niche in the world (see semiosis). In general, semiotic theories take signs or sign systems as their
object of study: the communication of information in living organisms is covered in biosemiotics or
zoosemiosis.
36. [1]
Syntactics is the branch of semiotics that deals with the formal properties of signs and symbols.
Terminology
The term, which was spelled semeiotics (Greek: ζημειωηικός, semeiotikos, an interpreter of signs),
was first used in English by Henry Stubbes (1670, p. 75) in a very precise sense to denote the
branch of medical science relating to the interpretation of signs. John Locke used the terms
semeiotike and semeiotics in Book 4, Chapter 21 of An Essay Concerning Human Understanding
(1690). Here he explains how science can be divided into three parts:
All that can fall within the compass of human understanding, being either, first, the nature of things,
as they are in themselves, their relations, and their manner of operation: or, secondly, that which
man himself ought to do, as a rational and voluntary agent, for the attainment of any end, especially
happiness: or, thirdly, the ways and means whereby the knowledge of both the one and the other of
these is attained and communicated; I think science may be divided properly into these three sorts.
—Locke, 1823/1963, p. 174
Locke then elaborates on the nature of this third category, naming it Σημειωτικη
(Semeiotike) and explaining it as quot;the doctrine of signsquot; in the following terms:
[2]
Nor is there anything to be relied upon in Physics, but an exact knowledge of medicinal
physiology (founded on observation, not principles), semeiotics, method of curing, and tried (not
[3]
excogitated, not commanding) medicines.
—Locke, 1823/1963, 4.21.4, p. 175
In the nineteenth century, Charles Peirce defined what he termed quot;semioticquot; as the
quot;quasi-necessary, or formal doctrine of signsquot; that abstracts quot;what must be the
characters of all signs used by...an intelligence capable of learning by experiencequot;
(Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, paragraph 2.227). Charles Morris followed
Peirce in using the term quot;semioticquot; and in extending the discipline beyond human
communication to animal learning and use of signals.
Saussure, however, viewed the most important area within semiotics as belonging to
the social sciences:
37. It is... possible to conceive of a science which studies the role of signs as part of social
life. It would form part of social psychology, and hence of general psychology. We shall
call it semiology (from the Greek semeîon, 'sign'). It would investigate the nature of
signs and the laws governing them. Since it does not yet exist, one cannot say for
certain that it will exist. But it has a right to exist, a place ready for it in advance.
Linguistics is only one branch of this general science. The laws which semiology will
discover will be laws applicable in linguistics, and linguistics will thus be assigned to a
clearly defined place in the field of human knowledge.
—Cited in Chandler's quot;Semiotics For Beginners, Introduction.
A Question of Totality - what Metaphysics can be!
Metaphysics Defined - http://members.aol.com/Srabbitt1/index3.html
According to Funk & Wagnall‘s Dictionary, Metaphysics is defined as: (1) ―The branch of
philosophy that investigates principles of reality transcending those of any particular
science, traditionally including cosmology and ontology. (2) ―All speculative philosophy‖.
The second definition, at first glance, appears vague and almost meaningless in its
generality. The term ―speculative‖ carries with it the secondary meaning of risk along
with that of contemplation, although we do not understand what risk lies in philosophy
other than taking it seriously! The first definition appears to be quite PC (Politically
Correct) and speaks in clearly nonjudgmental tones. It too seems simple enough, provided
you know how to define philosophy, transcendence, cosmology and ontology.
Philosophy - (1) The general inquiry into the most comprehensive principles of reality
in general, or of some sector of it, as human knowledge or human values‖
(2) The love of wisdom, and the search for it.
(3) A Philosophical system; also a treatise on such a system.
(4) The general laws that furnish the rational explanation of anything: the philosophy
of banking.
(5) Practical wisdom; fortitude
Transcendence - To be independent of, or beyond
Cosmology - The general philosophy of the universe considered as a totality of parts
and phenomena subject to laws
Ontology - The branch of metaphysics dealing with the philosophical theory of reality
While Philosophy‘s multitude of meanings seem to encompass most of human
intellectual activity, the other defined terms seem straight forward. Rather than restate
38. the metaphysics definition (1), we leave it to you to plug in the appropriate definitions,
including the philosophical definition of choice. For the more skeptical among you, or those
most pressed for timely answers for new comers that can fit into a ―Blipvert‖ of two lines
in a chat room, Metaphysics definition (2) seems reasonable.
So is that it? Have we learned all we need to know about Metaphysics, ―the definition‖?
Certainly not! Delving ever deeper into the meaning of our room‘s name sake, I discovered
an historically oriented, and perhaps more illuminating definition. With all due respect
to its source ―A History Of Philosophy‖ by A.G. Fuller (Prof. at USC), we have a definition
which better satisfies the savage soul.....
Metaphysics - ―In its popular and general sense – denotes; the investigation of the essential
and absolute nature of reality as a whole or of the nature of being as such.
Cf. ontology.
The search for first principles; originally meant - ―what comes after physics‖; and was used
originally of the works of Aristotle that followed his Physics in the collection made by
Andronicus.
Used by Aquinas (St. Thomas) to designate knowledge of supernatural entities;
by the Cartesians (Rene), of immaterial entities;
By Kant, of constructive attempts to know the nature of things as they are in themselves,
and of theories regarding objects of faith, like G-d, freedom and immortality;
By Bergson and other intuitionists, of the immediate acquaintance with the real given by
direct intuition of its nature, as contrasted with the falsifications of the nature of the real by
the intellectual process....‖
So metaphysics wasn‘t that easy to define after all, was it?
RECENT ADVANCES IN METAPHYSICS - E. J. Lowe
1. Philosophy, metaphysics and ontology
There is a widespread assumption amongst non-philosophers, which is shared by a good
many practicing philosophers too, that 'progress' is never really made in philosophy, and
above all in metaphysics. In this respect, philosophy is often compared, for the most part
unfavorably, with the empirical sciences, and especially the natural sciences, such as physics,
chemistry and biology. Sometimes, philosophy is defended on the grounds that to deplore the lack
of 'progress' in it is to misconceive its central aim, which is challenge and criticize received ideas
and assumptions rather than to advance positive theses. But this defense itself is liable to be
attacked by the practitioners of other disciplines as unwarranted special pleading on the part of
39. Philosophers, whose comparative lack of expertise in other disciplines, it will be said, ill-equips
them to play the role of all-purpose intellectual critic. It is sometimes even urged that philosophy
is now 'dead', the relic of a pre-scientific age whose useful functions, such as they were,
have been taken over at last by genuine sciences. What were once 'philosophical' questions
have now been transmuted, allegedly, into questions for more specialized modes of scientific
inquiry, with their own distinctive methodological principles and theoretical foundations.
This dismissive view of philosophy is at once shallow and pernicious. It is true that philosophy is
not, properly speaking, an empirical science, but there are other disciplines
of a non- empirical character in which progress most certainly can be and has been made,
such as mathematics and logic. So there is no reason, in principle, why progress should
not be made in philosophy.
The four-category ontology has no difficulty in saying what 'ties together' the particular properties
— that is, the modes — of an object. An object's modes are simply 'particular ways it is': they are
characteristics, or features, or aspects of the object, rather than constituents of it. If properties were
constituents of an object, they would need, no doubt, to be tied together somehow, either very
loosely by coexisting in the same place at the same time, or more tightly by depending in some
mysterious way either upon each other or upon some still more mysterious 'substratum', conceived
as a further constituent of the object, distinct from any of its properties. It is precisely because a
mode is a particular way this or that particular object is that modes cannot 'float free' or 'migrate'
from one object to another — circumstances that pure trope theorists seem obliged to
countenance as being at least metaphysically possible. Moreover, the four-category ontology allows
us to say that the properties of a kind are tied to it, in the laws to which it is subject, in a manner
which entirely parallels, at the level of universals, the way in which an individual object's modes are
tied to that object. In both cases, the tie is simply a matter of the 'characterization' of a propertied
entity by its various properties and consists in the fact that the properties are 'ways' the propertied
entity is.
Fig. 2 - below may help to highlight the main structural features of the four-category
ontology as I have just outlined it. In this diagram I use the term 'attribute', as
suggested earlier, to denote the category of property-universals and, for simplicity of
presentation, I am ignoring relational universals. (needs quotation)
Kinds characterized by Attributes
Instantiated by exemplified by instantiated by
Objects characterized by Modes
Fig. 2: The four-category ontology
40. An object O may exemplify an attribute A in either of two ways. O may instantiate a kind K which is
characterized by A, in which case O exemplifies A [dispensational]. Alternatively, O may be
characterized by a mode M which instantiates A, in which case O exemplifies A concurrently. It
may perhaps be doubted whether the four-category ontology provides an adequate metaphysical
foundation for the more esoteric reaches of modern physics, such as the general theory of relativity
and quantum physics. But I believe that even there it will serve well enough.
THE METAPHYSICS OF REASON
ABSTRACT: We will briefly review the developments in Physics and Mathematics during the last
century. We find that while Science was born and grown under the auspices of Cartesian principles,
the 20th century Physics and Mathematics defy the Cartesian premises. The emerging
unified viewpoint on cosmos renounces the dualisms (subject-object, reason-faith, and
cogitation-being) and incorporates elements of the traditions.
Modern Mathematics was marked by Cantor‘s study of infinity. An infinite quantity breaks the usual
axiom that «the whole is greater than (Sum of) its part». An infinite quantity is the same as a part of
it. Cantor found that there is a hierarchy of infinities.
The «simplest» infinity, 0 , corresponds to the infinity of integers (set N). The next level of
infinity, 1, is represented by the real numbers (set R). The chain of infinity continues with no end
(0 , 1 , 2 , 3 …). How two levels of infinity are connected?
We move from one level of infinity to the next level by invoking the requirement of totality.
For example starting from the set of integers N, the set of all subsets of N belongs to R.
Every time we use the requirement of totality we move to a higher level of representation,
where different laws apply (for example the rules of arithmetic with 0 , are not the
same as the rules of arithmetic with 1 ). It is not an accident that most of the paradoxes
in Mathematical Logic involve the mixing of different levels; recall Russell‘s paradoxes
where we use the notion «the set of all sets».
Mathematical systems cannot be purified of any internal contradictions, or presented as
constructions of pure logic. Gödel has shown that we cannot separate mathematics from meta-
mathematics. His ingenious numbering of mathematical propositions indicated that a proposition
accepts a double reading: as a proposition of theory and as a statement (or a comment) about the
propositions of the theory. Furthermore Gödel using the diagonal lemma of Cantor formulated
the proposition G: there is a theorem, which is self-referenced as a non-theorem. From now
on, we know that the dichotomy into true or false statements is not correct. We may
encounter un-decidable statements, statements which cannot be classified as true or false.
The true statements exceed in number the proven statements and the continent of truth cannot be
explored using only the analytical method [2]. From Gödel‘s proof we understand that any
organized system breaks down when we employ self-preferentiality, when the system is