Güney27 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 05, 2024 5:13 pm
Federica,
of course his thinking isn’t a hundred percent harmonic with PoF, but that isn’t necessary. He is very accurate in his account for how we gain an orientation trough our capacity of thinking. He is saying that apes had this ability too in some sense ( I don’t know for sure but I think he believes in the standard evolutionary approach), but it isn’t so important for the idea he tries to express.
If you read trough for examples Jung’s work, you would surely recognize that he states things that seem incompatible with PoF, or aren’t express as clearly, but you could still learn other important things about his study of the soul life of humans. We all noticed that there are antroposophist that idealize Steiners persona and anthroposophy, and don’t really think that there isn’t something valuable in the works of others. I noticed that tendency in myself, and i don’t think that it is a good tendency. RS work is certainly very detailed in its expression of higher order processes that shape our current expression, but there are other expressions too (maybe in less detail, or with a focus on other aspects). I thought for example that PoF and Jung hadn’t much in common, but reading more into both works, shows exactly the opposite. If the tendency mentioned about would be shaping my perspective, I would be limited and wouldn’t have come to certain insights and paths of thinking so to say. I don’t say that you are limited in your thinking, I just want to highlight certain observations I made about the topic, and to hear other perspectives.
I have moved this topic since it has more to do with the basics of cognition than with Levin and the morphological spaces.
In the substack you shared, there is the great insight that we do not just perceive an external world that is out there, condensed in a certain way, and just waiting to be perceived as such. Rather, we co-create it by receiving the concepts and ideas that connect with the objects of perception. What he calls “objects” we usually call concepts and ideas. Anyway, it’s true that human evolution has led to the intellectual soul, which implies certain technological manipulation of the sensory spectrum through conceptual laboring (what he calls toolbox). In reality that didn’t unfold as described, since we didn’t evolve from animals, but I agree there is an attention to the phenomenology of cognition and a rejection of the naive approach to reality. That's good. Now, once described that evolution, the author says, speaking of "objects":
"
Rather, they are psychological projections we throw onto the material world in order to manipulate it. That is because we do not perceive the material world itself, we can only use our senses—like sight and touch—to take in information and try our best to predict ‘what is there’ and how we should engage with what is there."
which is a bit worrying: does he mean there is a world-in-itself that we do not have access to? It really seems this is what he means, and we all know the fallacy contained in this dualistic perspective. It’s not a matter of idolizing Steiner - I agree with you, that would be inappropriate - it’s a matter of inquiring whether or not this author has captured aspects of the one truth, like Steiner and others did. Then things get worse with the following statement:
“
So reality, as we think of it, is a landscape of projections”
As we know, reality is not a landscape of projections. Probably, this is the (little sloppy) thought of someone who, after the nice insight, has fallen back to a viewpoint from which “reality” is conceptualized on the back of the physical world. And the thought may have been: “the world looks material, but it’s actually not. We think it up, we generate it, and what we perceive is our own creation”. This is true in the sense that our perceptions arise from senses and from concepts together. But the quick conclusion that reality is that layer of “conjured up” projections is not true. He gives the example of seeing a deer in the distance, only to realize it was actually a piece of wood. He says:
"
The material thing that was ‘actually there’ did not transform from a deer into a mass of wood"
But as we know, there is no material thing in itself actually there.
We could go on analyzing what he reasons out sentence by sentence. There are a few more issues down the road. Again, what’s great is the attention applied to the process of cognition. But the phenomenology is not maintained all the way through, with the necessary discipline of thought that we find in PoF, which would lead to the focus point of thinking activity. Rather, some die-hard mental habits of our times slip into the reasoning and deflate it. The fallibility of perception is true. However, the author is too quick to conclude that reality is a landscape of projections. Do you agree with that?
"On Earth the soul has a past, in the Cosmos it has a future. The seer must unite past and future into a true perception of the now." Dennis Klocek