| | John Locke writes: >" ... and the Power to produce any Idea in our mind, I call Quality of the Subject wherein that power is. Thus a Snow-ball having the power to produce in us the Ideas of White, Cold, and Round, the Powers to produce those Ideas in us, as they are in the Snow-ball, I call Qualities."
Ed writes: >Brendan, notice how Locke's explication of the process by which abstract ideas (white, cold, round) get into our heads tends to put the mind into quite a passive role?
Of course it seems passive! "Blank slates" are passive, sitting around just waiting to be written on. Locke was a "blank-slater", just like Rand; an crude idea Popper drolly referred to as the "bucket" theory of the mind.
Ed, ask yourself this: can a "tabula rasa" have *intent*? I - don't - think - so! You can't have your cake and eat it too on this one, I'm afraid. So if you want to have "intent" in your system, you're going to have to give up Rand's theory of mind. (Fortunately, that's no great loss)
Rand, like most philosophers, just doesn't bother taking science into account. They just study themselves studying reality, usually in a passive state (like sitting thinking!), and that's about it. (Is it any wonder solipsism and verbalism abound in philosphy?)
When you look at the biological story, what appears to happen fits best with an evolutionary "interactionist" model. By *actively* interacting with its environment over time, a particular type of organism evolves to its sensory needs to its best survival in its particular environment, an uneven process that nonetheless has no definite stop point. This is true of dogs, monkeys, molluscs, fish, amoeba, you name it, who all see the world differently. Why should man be any exception? Can we hear the sounds a dog does? No. Does that mean those sounds don't exist? No. Does that mean our senses only give us an edited version of reality? Yes. Simple as that.
An "interactionist" approach of course does not mean that "reality does not exist". In fact, it means that it has to! Attacking the extreme subjectivist argument ( eg "the world is my dream")is attacking a complete strawman (which of course, never stops anyone doing it ad tedium and thinking this extremely clever). If their sensory needs were completely mismatched to their environment, the organism would be *evolved out* almost instantly! Further, if the "bucket" theory was true, *perceptual evolution itself* would be pretty much unnecessary! You'd just have bigger or smaller buckets (or "blank slates" or whatever).
Evolutionary economy therefore forces us, and all organisms of the earth, to be *subjective creatures*, and much of the way we view the world comes pre-loaded into our mental systems, as it does for a bat, or a dog.. The amazing ability we have evolved that sets us apart from the subjective world of dogs and bats is "objective knowledge" - knowledge that we create, that nonetheless exists outside of ourselves, like a spider's web. The number system is an excellent example. For while man invented the numerical system, there exist numbers no man has ever thought of. Further, its rules are entirely *non-subjective*, and very probably has rules that no man has yet discovered as well. It goes without saying that "objective knowledge like has been a huge evolutionary advantage, for it means we can create ideas and test them - and, if they are wrong, *they*can die in our stead!
It seems to me that "intentional conceptualism" is a ultimately lengthy way of avoiding the subjectivity of consciousness - "subjectivity" being a term that Objectivists treat like a swear word, but one that simply acknowledges the existence of individual internal mental states - moods, emotions, imagination, intuition. I admire your attempt to overcome the passive fallacy, but I am afraid I find it hard to conceive of an intentional blank.
- Daniel
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