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Existentialism

De-conversion has an excellent summary of existentialism and how it contrasts with religious fundamentalism. The world is a different place when you try to strip away fantasy and live as true to your experience as possible.

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17 Comments

  1. Lincoln Cannon said,

    July 18, 2008 @ 8:21 am

    All experience is fantasy. :-)

  2. Jonathan Blake said,

    July 18, 2008 @ 8:23 am

    I admit the line between experience of a fantasy world and experience of an objective reality isn’t clear cut, but you know what I mean. :)

  3. Lincoln Cannon said,

    July 18, 2008 @ 8:24 am

    I might. What is an objective reality?

  4. Jonathan Blake said,

    July 18, 2008 @ 8:40 am

    Here’s where the line gets blurry. Everything is part of the objective reality, even our fantasies. Our mind constructs a model of the reality that is within our perception. Our mental model is the map; reality is the territory.

    The map can never include everything about the territory, so it is a kind of fantasy: it simplifies and is therefore inaccurate.

    But there is another kind of fantasy that skeptical existentialism (so far as I understand it) tries to avoid: creating features on the map that do not correspond to the territory based solely on rumors and wishful thinking.

    Take, for example, the Río Buenaventura, a mythical river rumored to run from the Rockies to the Pacific Ocean that was drawn on many maps until 1844 when John C. Fremont proved that it didn’t exist. The river would have been very convenient had it existed. It would have provided a waterway to avoid the perilous trip around Cape Horn. So rumors and wishful thinking put the river on the map.

    Our experience of objective reality will always have an element of fantasy, but we can try to avoid flights of fantasy as much as possible.

  5. Lincoln Cannon said,

    July 18, 2008 @ 9:31 am

    . . . yet, in this case, we cannot experience the territory except through the map. Objectivity, so far as I am concerned, is not the opposite or negation of subjectivity; rather, objectivity is the aggregate of subjectivity. The territory is our maps, for all practical purposes — as soon as we consider territory beyond a map, it becomes part of a map.

  6. Jonathan Blake said,

    July 18, 2008 @ 9:45 am

    Objectivity in the sense of being able to transcend our limited, parochial view of reality is an unattainable ideal. We will always be trapped within the confines of our own minds.

    The sense of objective reality that I’m talking about are the bare facts: “things as they are, and as they were, and as they are to come”. These are the truths that we can only approach with our minds, the things that stimulate our minds to make their models.

    We can improve our maps by consulting others’ maps, but they can never be made perfect. Our brains (or their replacements) can never comprehend the truth of all things. Only the sum total of all truth (i.e. objective reality, the whole megillah) contains all truth, not a finite part of that whole.

  7. Lincoln Cannon said,

    July 18, 2008 @ 10:00 am

    There are two ways to transcend subjectivity: first, to negate subjectivity; second, to extend subjectivity. The first is nihilism. The second is objectivity. To call the latter a trap relative to the former is to succomb, to some extent, to nihilism.

    What are bare facts? What are things as they have been, are and will be? Are they something external or internal to subjectivity? To the extent we consider facts as external to subjectivity, we are nihilists.

    There are two ways to approach truth: first, deconstruction; second, construction. While the former is useful, the latter is essential to escape nihilism. Discovering the stimulators of stimulators, parts of parts and causes of causes is not sufficient to explain that which we create.

    We can improve our maps, pursuing an abstract completion, yet perhaps never attaining a concrete completion. Is there a sum of all truth, except in the abstract?

    Without beginning, gods of gods discovered themselves creating worlds of worlds without end.

  8. Jonathan Blake said,

    July 18, 2008 @ 10:12 am

    What if nihilism represents a true apprehension of reality?

    Existentialism essentially accepts the truth of nihilism but says that while there is no way to find objective meaning to life, meaning is a subjective, personal matter. We each create our own meaning. Existentialists embrace life despite its absurdity. They (with Nietzsche) say yes to life.

    I don’t see how extending the reach of subjectivity can equal objectivity in the ideal sense.

    Is there a sum of all truth, except in the abstract?

    No more abstract that the existence of the universe. The universe (or perhaps multiverse for those so inclined) across all its dimensions is itself the sum of all truth. All truth is circumscribed within that reality (which may prove truly infinite).

  9. Lincoln Cannon said,

    July 18, 2008 @ 11:28 am

    Nihilism definitionally cannot represent a true apprehension of reality. Existentialists or not, we need not appeal to absolutes to maintain appeals to objectivity. The meaning of life need not be absolute to be objective, and not all subjectivism is relativism. While one may posit the meaning of life to be something merely personal (relativism) one may also posit the meaning of life to be something communal (objectivism), without resorting to appeals to anything beyond experience.

    The empiricist claims that knowledge of truth comes from experience. The radical empiricist claims that truth may not be and cannot be known to be more than experience. There may be no absolute behind truth, to which our minds must somehow correspond in order to know truth. Indeed, to “know” otherwise is to know nothing at all; if that is ideal objectivity then ideal objectivity is nihilism — internally contradictory and meaningless. Objectivity, if we are to aspire to it rationally, must be understood in a non-negation relation to subjectivity. We see this in science, which aggregates our experience into objectivity, a knowledge of truth; and it empowers us whether or not it corresponds to any hypothetical and definitionally unknowable absolute — something as queer as a supernatural immaterial God.

    If the metaverse is infinite in any dimension (and who knows whether it is not infinite in all dimensions?) then there is no sum of all truth, except in that abstraction: metaverse.

  10. Lincoln Cannon said,

    July 18, 2008 @ 11:30 am

    . . . metaverse: words of words without end.

  11. Jonathan Blake said,

    July 18, 2008 @ 11:51 am

    Nihilism definitionally cannot represent a true apprehension of reality.

    I don’t follow.

    While one may posit the meaning of life to be something merely personal (relativism) one may also posit the meaning of life to be something communal (objectivism), without resorting to appeals to anything beyond experience.

    Yet the only basis for this communal position is individual subjective judgments. We may come to a consensus among ourselves, it is true. This represents only an alignment of subjective values. Being distributed among individuals, it is only a little less parochial. At its base, however, it is nothing new.

    The empiricist claims that knowledge of truth comes from experience.

    I am not aware of an example of any other kind of knowledge.

    Objectivity, if we are to aspire to it rationally, must be understood in a non-negation relation to subjectivity. We see this in science, which aggregates our experience into objectivity, a knowledge of truth;

    I think we agree on this point though we may be using the terms differently. However, I believe the scientific effort can never apprehend all truth. There will always be some truth beyond our grasp. What we perceive of the world will always be an illusion created by our minds.

    If the metaverse is infinite in any dimension (and who knows whether it is not infinite in all dimensions?) then there is no sum of all truth, except in that abstraction: metaverse.

    Surely you’re not saying that infinity is only an abstraction. :) Whatever exists when taken as a whole is the sum of all truth.

  12. Jonathan Blake said,

    July 18, 2008 @ 12:03 pm

    Nihilism: an extreme form of skepticism: the denial of all real existence or the possibility of an objective basis for truth.

    Let me address this definition of nihilism. As I understand it (perhaps I misunderstand), this is something of an absurd strawman. I don’t know that most nihilists would deny that objective truth exists, just that it is inaccessible (i.e. we have no perfect basis for knowledge).

  13. Lincoln Cannon said,

    July 18, 2008 @ 12:09 pm

    Nihilism and truth(ism) are negations of each other. To believe there is truth, of any sort, is to reveal that one is not a nihilist — at least not fully. To claim “nihilism is truth” is like claiming “this sentence is not true”. The more nihilistic one is, the more one is indifferent to truth. The nihilist who claims there is no truth is not so nihilistic as that who doesn’t care to claim.

    As you point out, the basis for communal positions is individual positions. Even if it is only a little less parochial, it is all we have. Is science only a little less parochial than relativism? I hold science in higher esteem. It is not merely an illusion created by my mind; it is, at least, our experience. In such matters, the difference in attitude can make for important practical differences.

    Infinity is not only an abstraction. It is at least an abstraction. ;-)

  14. Lincoln Cannon said,

    July 18, 2008 @ 12:10 pm

    One need not have an absolute basis for knowledge to aspire to objectivity. To think otherwise is to approach nihilism.

  15. Lincoln Cannon said,

    July 18, 2008 @ 12:10 pm

    An existentialist need not be a nihilist.

  16. Jonathan Blake said,

    July 18, 2008 @ 12:17 pm

    Nihilism and truth(ism) are negations of each other. To believe there is truth, of any sort, is to reveal that one is not a nihilist — at least not fully.

    Perhaps. There are many parts of nihilism that one can believe without denying the existence of objective truth. If that’s not fully nihilist, then so be it. I’m satisfied with being only nihilistic. :)

  17. Lincoln Cannon said,

    July 18, 2008 @ 12:25 pm

    Jonathan, you’re not a nihilist, so far as I am concerned — but it sure does sound frightening. ;-)

    To relate this with theology, I understand the atonement of Christ to be the eternal work of overcoming incongruence between individual wills, anatomical desires, communal laws and environmental laws. We participate in the atonement, joining Jesus as saviours, when we express our wills and desires while seeking expression of others’ wills and desires. Law is to the community as will is to the individual. Good is to the community as happiness is to the individual. Truth is to the community as knowledge is to the individual.

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