A philosophical question. In my view there is an issue with the following:
1) Humans grasp things either notionally or through the senses, yet both means are internal (of the specific human)
2) We have a notion of 'external', which refers to things (other people, objects, etc) which aren't part of us.
This seems to lead one to conclude that also the idea, or (alternatively) the sense, of something 'external', is itself an internal object. Ie while i view another person as not part of myself, the ability to view them as such does not seem to be based on some actual external reach of my faculties (sense or notional). Thus it would seem that the 'external' object is in reality identified as an internal object, but one with the specific meaning of 'external'.
This seems to me to be creating an infinite loop of sorts, but more importantly it would appear that there is in essence only the internal thing, yet a variation of notions which are about an internal thing can produce the effect of a notion seemingly about an external one.
Now, in reality, one logically - let alone automatically - identifies a huge number of external objects; indeed most of the objects most people deal with are identified readily as external. But my question is whether this category of external objects is merely another subset of internal objects -- and not in reference to a reality of external objects, but as a simple effect of the human mind. Ie the external is external in reality, but is internal as a notion of the thinker, and the human thinker has no access to the external itself anyway.
There is a more philosophical interest in this, for me at least: if all parts of the notion of the external are actually still internal and variations of notions of the internal, then it would seem that at some point and in some way in the human thinking you would get X becoming identified as the actual antithesis of X, and such a state would also be fundamental for the entire thinking system to sustain itself. Now at which point, and how, this happens, is an interesting issue in my view. But one has to suspect that it was caused at least partly due to a need to survive -- assuming that animism was as common in prehistory as some thinkers like to believe, at some point prehistoric humanoids would need to actually separate more drastically the realm of their own imagination with that of the dangerous beasts about to devour them.
1) Humans grasp things either notionally or through the senses, yet both means are internal (of the specific human)
2) We have a notion of 'external', which refers to things (other people, objects, etc) which aren't part of us.
This seems to lead one to conclude that also the idea, or (alternatively) the sense, of something 'external', is itself an internal object. Ie while i view another person as not part of myself, the ability to view them as such does not seem to be based on some actual external reach of my faculties (sense or notional). Thus it would seem that the 'external' object is in reality identified as an internal object, but one with the specific meaning of 'external'.
This seems to me to be creating an infinite loop of sorts, but more importantly it would appear that there is in essence only the internal thing, yet a variation of notions which are about an internal thing can produce the effect of a notion seemingly about an external one.
Now, in reality, one logically - let alone automatically - identifies a huge number of external objects; indeed most of the objects most people deal with are identified readily as external. But my question is whether this category of external objects is merely another subset of internal objects -- and not in reference to a reality of external objects, but as a simple effect of the human mind. Ie the external is external in reality, but is internal as a notion of the thinker, and the human thinker has no access to the external itself anyway.
There is a more philosophical interest in this, for me at least: if all parts of the notion of the external are actually still internal and variations of notions of the internal, then it would seem that at some point and in some way in the human thinking you would get X becoming identified as the actual antithesis of X, and such a state would also be fundamental for the entire thinking system to sustain itself. Now at which point, and how, this happens, is an interesting issue in my view. But one has to suspect that it was caused at least partly due to a need to survive -- assuming that animism was as common in prehistory as some thinkers like to believe, at some point prehistoric humanoids would need to actually separate more drastically the realm of their own imagination with that of the dangerous beasts about to devour them.