yy2bggggs
Master Poster
- Joined
- Oct 22, 2007
- Messages
- 2,435
Never left.W00t! Hes back!
Naively, written words are sequences of letters. Letters are collections of shapes. Shapes are collections of... something like edges.By 'fundamental element' of perception I mean that there must be a basic level of reduction, beyond which, the emergent property no longer exists.
The first problem is that reading words is involuntary, but it's a conscious effort that I have to invest to pick out shapes, and edges are even harder. Letters themselves are a bit easier. As you can see, something odd is afoot with this pattern... it's backwards. Our brain has added layers to the processing, and pushed some of the tasks out.
The second problem is that I haven't found a really good psychic lowest level yet. I can easily find a lowest level, but only if I step outside of the psyche and start analyzing the process... then I get to, well, individual nerves in the eye.
The third problem is that logically speaking, it does not have to work that way. There does not have to be a fundamental piece of things--there could be loops of "fundamental"... in modern math, for example, we build things on axioms, but in science (as a discipline), we just have a bunch of facts, and there's no well defined set of most fundamental facts; you could call one set more fundamental, or the other, and you can derive the same facts both ways. You may be able to find, in certain sorts of perceptual entities, "fundamental" pieces--but in others, there may just simply be a "set of facts".
This is mind, let's keep going... and I'm just going to be speculative a bit (it's just an example). Edges are comprised of psychic pixels. But they have to stand out to be edges... so, psychic pixels are location plus color. But now, as you see, we start climbing back up the chain. Without color and location, however, there are no pixels. But there's also no percept of location alone that I'm aware of. On the other hand, if you combine color and location, it seems that you're tagging two completely different "sorts" of mental things. Still, color is never just color... it's color at a location. So here's a dilemma for you. Which is more fundamental--red, or a psychic pixel?
It looks, to me, like there's simply a bunch of layers, and they co-mingle, but it's hard to find the "most fundamental" ones. In a sense, they all look fundamental. I would argue that if "red" is a quale, "word" should be--if you want to break "word" down, I can break "red" down. But I don't think there's a genuine "more fundamental" direction--they look more like co-mingling layers to me. It looks more like what we have with science than math.
Right, but the problem here is that it's just an analogy. We should be cautious of tendencies to, say, think that there's something epistemically fundamental about atomic theory per se, simply because it works so well in one area. Breaking down matter into atoms is easy--smaller things are more fundamental. Doing the same with perception is not so easy... there are forks in the road I can chase, and there doesn't seem to be a compass direction of "more fundamental".For instance, tangible matter no longer exists as such below the level of the atom, liquids no longer exist as such below a certain level of reduction, genes no longer exists as such -- and so on.
The same is true with red then.Simply put, words are unitary components but they are not fundamental.
