Given the second circle of my glorious seminar is approaching its end (next week will be the 7nth, and the circle ends in the 8th), the apogee of this part of it will be the coming more analytic examination of Zeno's paradoxa, and the views of his teacher, Parmenides of Elea.
In essence the Eleatics presented the claim that there is actually nothing in the phenomena humans can either sense or think of, which is 'real', apart from (perhaps) some kind of shadow of a shadow of the edge of some reality above human fields of thought. That shadow of a shadow was termed as a likeness of the Parmenidian concept of "Oneness" ("Everything is One" would be the most famous of Parmenides' claims). The idea of that distant 'One' is very closely echoed in Plato himself, and his notion of "Archetypes" and "Eide", which are argued by Socrates to be 'things-in-themselves' that are fully independent of human thought or other experience, eternal, and existent as categories on some higher plane. Any human thought or other view is possible due to idols (ie again shadows in some manner) of those Archetypes, and thus human thought is inherently very poor next to 'reality' and the realms of those eternal Categories and Forms.
The paradoxa of Zeno
Zeno wrote a book where he tried to show that those making fun of his teacher (Parmenides) by claiming that his view of only ONE existing and not a multitude of objects (eg many people, or plants, materials of various kind etc) is irrational, are led to even more laughable schisms with logic than Parmenides might be. He tried to do this by focusing on the human notion of 'infinity', and juxtapose it to how we view things through our senses. Eg if a faster runner is for the moment behind a slower runner (Achilles and the tortoise) we would always view with our senses the faster runner catching up, and then moving in front. But if we use the mental (non sensory) factor of infinite sets we can imagine, then Achilles can be seen to be locked for an infinity behind the tortoise. Zeno did not mean something irrational along the lines of "the faster runner won't overtake the slower one"; he meant that our senses are creating illusionary input which itself is not part of a 'reality'.
The paradoxa were examined by future thinkers, eg already by Aristotle philosophically, and Archimedes with his own proto-calculus. But the context of Zeno's work is the Eleatic vs Democritian debate of whether all things are infinitely divisible, or reach some 'atomic' state at some point. Atom, of course, was coined to be used in this manner by Democritos himself, in the early 5th century BC, where most of those philosophers lived -Parmenides, Zeno, Democritos and his followers Anaxagoras and Protagoras, and also young Socrates).
So now, after my excellent text, here is the question in this thread:
The glorious question of the thread
If one supposes that there is some quality or state in the whole of our cosmos which allows the view that there can exist a "reality" (regardless of whether we can pick it up or not, due to our finite manner of thinking, and our bounded sensory input), what would be the least prerequisite for such a "reality" existing? In other words: would it be enough for that to have some next level/order of being where "truth" is also a property? So that our own, lesser level, is in the lie, but a next level is a true one?
Or would more complicated things have to be in place so as to argue there can be something real at all?
In general the question is tied to whether or not 'reality' can be idealised as meaning 'the view forming by there being no point of view at all' or 'by there being at the same time conscious infinite different points of view'. The former is often a basis of Idealism. The latter is tied to hybrids of philosophy with theology (eg horrible Cartesian booklets
). Afterall any set/bounded/finite point of view is inherently contaminating the phenomena with a bias of its own, and remains subjective.
In essence the Eleatics presented the claim that there is actually nothing in the phenomena humans can either sense or think of, which is 'real', apart from (perhaps) some kind of shadow of a shadow of the edge of some reality above human fields of thought. That shadow of a shadow was termed as a likeness of the Parmenidian concept of "Oneness" ("Everything is One" would be the most famous of Parmenides' claims). The idea of that distant 'One' is very closely echoed in Plato himself, and his notion of "Archetypes" and "Eide", which are argued by Socrates to be 'things-in-themselves' that are fully independent of human thought or other experience, eternal, and existent as categories on some higher plane. Any human thought or other view is possible due to idols (ie again shadows in some manner) of those Archetypes, and thus human thought is inherently very poor next to 'reality' and the realms of those eternal Categories and Forms.
The paradoxa of Zeno
Zeno wrote a book where he tried to show that those making fun of his teacher (Parmenides) by claiming that his view of only ONE existing and not a multitude of objects (eg many people, or plants, materials of various kind etc) is irrational, are led to even more laughable schisms with logic than Parmenides might be. He tried to do this by focusing on the human notion of 'infinity', and juxtapose it to how we view things through our senses. Eg if a faster runner is for the moment behind a slower runner (Achilles and the tortoise) we would always view with our senses the faster runner catching up, and then moving in front. But if we use the mental (non sensory) factor of infinite sets we can imagine, then Achilles can be seen to be locked for an infinity behind the tortoise. Zeno did not mean something irrational along the lines of "the faster runner won't overtake the slower one"; he meant that our senses are creating illusionary input which itself is not part of a 'reality'.
The paradoxa were examined by future thinkers, eg already by Aristotle philosophically, and Archimedes with his own proto-calculus. But the context of Zeno's work is the Eleatic vs Democritian debate of whether all things are infinitely divisible, or reach some 'atomic' state at some point. Atom, of course, was coined to be used in this manner by Democritos himself, in the early 5th century BC, where most of those philosophers lived -Parmenides, Zeno, Democritos and his followers Anaxagoras and Protagoras, and also young Socrates).
So now, after my excellent text, here is the question in this thread:
The glorious question of the thread
If one supposes that there is some quality or state in the whole of our cosmos which allows the view that there can exist a "reality" (regardless of whether we can pick it up or not, due to our finite manner of thinking, and our bounded sensory input), what would be the least prerequisite for such a "reality" existing? In other words: would it be enough for that to have some next level/order of being where "truth" is also a property? So that our own, lesser level, is in the lie, but a next level is a true one?
Or would more complicated things have to be in place so as to argue there can be something real at all?
In general the question is tied to whether or not 'reality' can be idealised as meaning 'the view forming by there being no point of view at all' or 'by there being at the same time conscious infinite different points of view'. The former is often a basis of Idealism. The latter is tied to hybrids of philosophy with theology (eg horrible Cartesian booklets
