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The investigation of the truth is in one way hard, in another easy. An indication of this is found in the fact that no one is able to attain the truth adequately, while, on the other hand, no one fails entirely, but everyone says something true about the nature of all things, and while individually they contribute little or nothing to the truth, by the union of all a considerable amount is amassed.
Aristotle
It is impossible that there should be a demonstration of absolutely everything; [for then] there would be an infinite regress so that there would still be no demonstration.
Aristotle
Existence means, typically, extant being. With historical sensibility, existence means being in a broad sense of history, current moments, and the future. The quality of "to be" seems like the act of existence.
The domain of reasonable discourse seems split between the evident and the self-evident in existence. Evident, in this frame, means the sensory continuum of experience and its extended continuum into formalized empiricist mechanisms and methodologies.
The self-evident as a being which knows and knows that it knows; no way out of this: existence, then self-evidence, and then evidence. Powerful derivations form from this. An object – dynamic – universe develops a separate station in the process of evolutionary change with a subject emergent in it.
Slowly, subjectivities come birthing forth out of the universe, as a part of the nature of nature. It’s a peculiar happenstance of the ordinary structure of reality. An object universe producing independence of mind within itself, as such. This makes metaphysics a useless subject matter.
Where metaphysics unnecessarily complicates the study of this operational framework. The world becomes existent, ontology, and knowable to some extent, epistemology, but integrated into and of itself, voiding metaphysics, because the knowledge of the structure of reality requires reality. This is so a priori with an evolved/constructed mind with the capacity to know to such a degree or a posteriori through the study of material reality.
The knowing cannot be decoupled from the known because the knowledge exists as a property of a being capable of knowing, which exists in the extant or the known, the potentially known, and the unknown. Even though, the concept of a “property” makes little sense with the demarcation, the line, drawn by an observer. Only existence exists, and properties, the inherencies of an object or process, derive from this, while existence remains the ground state and the self-evident makes the distinctions.
The evident would form the basis of the latter (a priori) and the self-evident the former (a posteriori). In this manner, we come to ontology and epistemology as an integrated loop and metaphysics as moot. Another field dealing with values is axiology.
Axiology is mere as the values held by such minds evolved or constructed within the universe. Those are tautologically necessary for survival, so good enough, plus some room for variation – good and bad for further survival. Valuelessness is the currency of the universe, while values are produced internally to it – global valuelessness and localized value.
It’s akin to metaphysics as without place. A higher-order language isn’t raining down upon the universe. The universe integrates its functionality into itself, while evolved critters appear to have derived some truths about it – mistaking symbol use for some externally derived law (leading to an infinite regress or merely definitional games to close the gap).
This does not require a unicity of reality but becomes assisted with an apparent unicity of it. Assume as such, the physical laws seem to represent it – work, a reframing with merely axiology, epistemology, and ontology, and constrained further, at that. The evidently requires the existence and the self-evident implies existence. The nature of the evidence here means the senses, lower-order, and higher-order, and tools and types to extend them.
Those capable of back-translation into the mind of the being which knows and knows that it knows. Without this translatability, the entire pursuit of knowing remains internal. As noted in other works, existence seems statistical more probably – vastly so – than non-existence. In this, we come to another profundity.
A simple argument for the statistical inevitability of existence over non-existence, so the nature of reality is to exist rather than not. The object universe with apparent unicity across all fundaments becomes an extended first principles assertion without necessary coherence, without the complete mapping of the universe. This means a convenient placeholder for all of science.
“It works,” doesn’t mean true. It means functionally true, operationally factual. Structures and processes are known better than before. This knowledge comes from inside the system, not outside, once more voiding metaphysics.
What happens in this context, we have existence marching merrily along with its statistical probability in existing over not, then separation with technical evolution of complex interconnected, integrated information processors capable of knowing, at a basic level, and knowing that they know, at an advanced level with no known upper limit to the latter.
The self-evident comes from existence in the form of consciousness, not a magical-mystical process or phenomenon, but a technical mastery of mapping the world into a system internal to the universe as a natural occurrence. A sensibility of recursion comes into play here.
Further, the sensory system built into such an organism means the consciousness develops degrees of freedom incomprehension of the apparent unicity of reality for self-developed evidence about the world. These refined and formalized in something akin to science in empiricism if not outright advanced science means the self-evident extends to the evidence in two senses.
One, it’s internal integration only. Two, its further external extension brought back to the internal integration and filtered into the self-evident and its framework too. The frames of referents coalesced in one mind.
From this, the ‘metaphysical,’ in fact, means the epistemological for the ontological, even if unable to sense the rules of the universe. It’s not top-down or bottom-up; it’s integrated internally or not. The integration happens within a system capable of doing so.
Naturally, this excludes metaphysics and requires ontology and epistemology as natural parts of the way the cosmos works and internal minds to it operate, unavoidably. Philosophy needs a complete overhaul and reconstruction in this manner. Furthermore, the axiological simply means the evolved or constructed values of organisms or mechanisms. Things of significance or not, i.e., valued or not, or valued in different ways and to different degrees.
Existence means an integrated whole of the past, the present, and the future, unfolding by its own nature. Sometimes, a separation between the object into subjects with the unavoidable self-evident in the subjectivities and then the occasional evident (and extensions) with more comprehensive couplings of their minds and the universe.
I'm struck by how this makes complex philosophical ideas more accessible and practical.
The integration of subject and object in this framework is beautifully explained.
This article has fundamentally changed how I think about consciousness and reality.
This framework really helps explain how knowledge and reality are interconnected.
The idea of consciousness as information processing makes perfect sense in evolutionary terms.
I love how this perspective maintains wonder while eliminating unnecessary mystery.
The article's emphasis on integration rather than separation is quite powerful.
This really changes how I think about the relationship between mind and reality.
The concept of evolved values rather than universal ones explains so much about human behavior.
I'm fascinated by how this connects to modern physics and our understanding of the universe.
The article's approach to consciousness as natural rather than supernatural is refreshing.
This seems to suggest that our search for ultimate truth might be misguided.
The idea of knowledge being internal to the system rather than external is revolutionary.
I appreciate how this framework eliminates infinite regress problems in traditional philosophy.
The article's take on values as emergent properties rather than universal truths is quite compelling.
This perspective really bridges the gap between scientific and philosophical thinking.
The self-evident is consciousness itself, while the evident is what we observe. At least that's my understanding.
Not sure I fully grasp the distinction between evident and self-evident. Could someone explain further?
The idea of existence as self-organizing rather than top-down designed is beautifully explained here.
I'm struck by how this view makes philosophy more practical and grounded in reality.
The integration of epistemology and ontology reminds me of quantum mechanics where the observer can't be separated from the observed.
This makes me think about how our values and knowledge are necessarily limited by our position within the system.
The concept of existence as statistical probability is fascinating but raises so many questions.
I find it interesting how this view naturalizes consciousness without reducing its significance.
The idea of consciousness as information processing rather than mystery makes so much sense in this context.
This article really challenges traditional philosophical frameworks in a constructive way.
The distinction between functional truth and absolute truth is really important. Scientific knowledge works, but might not be ultimately true.
I'm intrigued by how this perspective eliminates the need for external universal laws while maintaining scientific validity.
The article makes me think about how our understanding of reality is inevitably shaped by our existence within it.
Not convinced about dismissing metaphysics. Even if knowledge is internal to the system, we need ways to think about the system itself.
The concept of back-translation into mind is crucial here. We can only understand what we can translate into our own terms.
I appreciate how this builds on Aristotle's quotes at the beginning. The idea that truth is both hard and easy to find runs through the whole piece.
The article's perspective on philosophy needing a complete overhaul is bold but justified given its arguments.
The integration of past, present, and future in the concept of existence is profound. Makes me think differently about time itself.
I love how the article frames consciousness as a natural occurrence rather than some mysterious force. Really changes my perspective on the mind-body problem.
The statistical probability argument for existence seems circular to me. How can we talk about probability without existence already being a thing?
Anyone else fascinated by the idea that the universe produces independence of mind within itself? It's like the universe becoming conscious of itself.
The article suggests that what we call metaphysics is really just operational understanding from within the system. That makes a lot of sense to me.
I'm still struggling with how the article dismisses metaphysics. If we're talking about the nature of existence itself, isn't that metaphysical by definition?
This reminds me of how scientific instruments extend our senses, but ultimately everything must be translated back into human understanding.
The idea of global valuelessness and localized value is particularly interesting. It explains how meaning can exist in an ultimately meaningless universe.
Actually, I think the article addresses that. The self-evident nature of consciousness is part of its technical implementation within the universe.
Not sure I agree with the previous comment. Technical mastery doesn't explain the subjective experience of consciousness.
The concept of consciousness as a technical mastery of mapping the world internally is mind-blowing. It removes all the mysticism while keeping the wonder.
I actually think the evolutionary perspective on values makes perfect sense. We developed these complex value systems because they helped us survive and thrive.
The article's take on axiology as simply evolved values is quite reductionist. Surely there's more to human values than just survival mechanisms?
I disagree with dismissing metaphysics entirely. Even if we're part of the system, we still need tools to think about the nature of reality itself.
The integration of epistemology and ontology makes perfect sense to me. We can't separate what we know from how we know it, since we're part of the system we're trying to understand.
What strikes me most is the statistical argument for existence over non-existence. I've never thought about it that way before.
I really appreciate how the article breaks down the concept of existence into the evident and self-evident. It makes complex philosophical ideas more accessible.
This perspective seems to completely dismiss metaphysics, but I'm not entirely convinced. Don't we need some framework to understand the relationship between mind and reality?
I find it fascinating how the article explores the relationship between existence and consciousness. The idea that consciousness emerges naturally from the universe rather than being some mystical phenomenon really resonates with me.