Consciousness: the explanatory gap

April 11th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Some of the papers on psychology and consciousness might be interesting. This from the abstracts:

This paper will build on work done by McGinn (1989) and others since, in identifying the explanatory gap that exists not between any proposed mechanism for consciousness and an adequate method for demonstrating the factual status of this proposal, but the gap between any such claim, however well authenticated, and the extent to which this explanation is experienced as ’satisfactory’. The philosopher of science JBS Haldane, speaking of certain aspects of 20th century physics, famously remarked that ‘The universe may not only be queerer than we think, but queerer than we can think’.In making this remark, Haldane was not indicating that data could not be collected, hypotheses developed, tests carried out, and progress made in these difficult areas.Rather he was referring to the inherent difficulties in understanding the results of such processes in a way which was ’satisfactory’ or which had ‘intuitive appeal’. A significant amount of scientific knowledge that has accumulated in the last 100 years has been exactly of this nature, and it is an accepted fact of life that advanced theories in quantum science, astronomy, etc are likely to be non-visualisable, disembodied, and often counter-intuitive.Such theories and models Given this as a condition of advanced knowledge it seems extremely likely that any description of the mechanisms of consciousness are similarly disembodied.

McGinn, C. (1999). The mysterious flame: conscious minds in a material world. New York, Basic Books.

Haldane, J. B. S. (1927). Possible Worlds: And Other Essays. London, Chatto and Windus.

I was glad I made the effort to hear this one.

Posted in Conference Abstract, Consciousness, Haldane, J.B.S., Knowledge, McGinn, Colin, Philosophy, Physics | No Comments »

Overlapping concepts using the metaphor of light

May 15th, 2006 Fred McVittie

It is proposed that a key metaphor linking consciousness, presence, creativity, and enlightenment is that of light. Metaphorically they concepts all draw upon the image of moving into the light and out of the darkness.

1. The ‘light’ of consciousness is contrasted with the eldritch (and possibly forbidding) darkness of the unconscious.
2. Illumination is the stage of a creative process when a breakthrough or solution emerges into the light of consciousness, often characterised as a ‘light bulb moment’, or a ‘flash’ of inspiration.
3. Presence is the theatrical phenomenon of being entirely there, in the light of the present moment, (and often in the literal spotlight), as opposed to being partially or entirely elsewhere; in the wings, in the dressing room, offstage.
4. Enlightenment is the state of being in which one can see clearly through the shadows of illusion and ego that make up the world and the self.

This overlap of conceptual structure will be discussed, particularly in relation to the well known metaphorical relationship between seeing and knowing.

Posted in Consciousness, Creativity, Enlightenment, Illumination, Knowledge, Light, Metaphor, Presence, Seeing, Theatre | No Comments »

Folk Science and Enlightenment

May 21st, 2006 Fred McVittie

One of the traditional paths to ‘enlightenment’, the gaining of what might be termed spiritual knowledge, is through extreme scepticism. Even though this path has gained bad press through an association with materialism and anti-religious sentiment, it has a long history including such luminaries as Descartes, Kant, and Alastair Crowley. A feature of the techniques employed by this tradition is the cultivation of a viewpoint in which any faith in conceptual knowledge is ceded in favour of a knowledge grounded in the senses. It will be shown that this sensuous knowledge bears striking resemblance to some of the principles of innate and folk science.

Posted in Enlightenment, Knowledge, Naive Physics, Sense | No Comments »

The Human Science Project

May 30th, 2006 Fred McVittie

This presentation marks the launch of an interdisciplinary research project involving institution in the UK, Canada, the USA, and Norway. This research, dubbed The Human Science Project, brings together knowledge production strategies from;

  • studies of the innate knowledge possessed by babies and infants
  • the various branches of ‘naive’ and ‘folk science’ knowledge acquired by humans prior to empirical research
  • subjective and first person accounts
  • phenomenology

These knowledge forms have been developed in many cultures prior to the invention of rational scientific procedures (falsification, double blind trials etc), including in the west up to the time of Newton and Descartes, and the Enlightenment more generally. They also continue to exist in a developed form outside of rational science and empirically grounded knowledge within metaphysical, occult, and religious beliefs and practices.

It can be argued that this ‘Human Science’, failing as it does the test of empiricism and rationalism, is unimportant and childish or backward, and the knowledge it claims is therefore bogus. However, it will be argued that these human centred knowledge systems are not so easily wished away. They have their roots in evolutionary history and that history is engraved in the fabric of our psyche. So whilst we may claim the light of reason as the only illumination for our knowing, the million year old light cast by the dawning of human being also shines on our understanding of the world.

Posted in Knowledge, Phenomenology, Science, Subjective, Universals | No Comments »

Personally Speaking

June 18th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Speaking from the first person and relying predominantly on subjective knowledge and personal experience has a bad reputation in the sciences and in philosophy. These knowledge gathering and validating systems pride themselves on objectivity and the third person position; a way of looking at the world as a collection of objects which can be stood apart from and regarded from this shared, experimental, differentiated distance.

A number of recent, and not so recent, publications suggest however that this objectivity may not be the only game in town, and that there is a renewed interest in subjective, first-person accounts, and the reality that is constituted by these accounts.

This paper will consider some of the pragmatic benefits for knowledge acquisition and for personal well-being that might be accrued from the deliberate adopting of the first person position and temporarily, and strategically, abandoning objectivity.

Posted in Knowledge, Objectivity, Space, Subjective | No Comments »

Flying through the Space of Thought

June 23rd, 2006 Fred McVittie

The kind of processes we refer to when we arrange out thoughts, and the type of psychological gestures we make in order to move through our thoughts, suggests that cognitive organisation makes heavy use of a metaphor of space. The metaphor of the mind as a kind of spatially extended domain is one of the most important and robust mental structures. This space of thought roughly corresponds to Cartesian or Newtonian space, a fact which is evidenced in the language we use to talk about the contents and processes of our minds (streams of consciousness etc) and also in techniques for cognitive enhancement such as mnemonic systems like the method of loci, which uses the construction of elaborate storage spaces, so-called ‘memory palaces’, to enable easy retrieval of facts and ideas.

A significant departure from this schema is our ability to make intuitive leaps, or simply to allow our thoughts to hop from one topic to another without apparently crossing any intervening space. A number of subsidiary metaphors attempt to explain this phenomenon; William James, in addition to referring to the ’stream of consciousness’ also describes consciousness rather as a bird in flight. He says, ‘Our psychic life has rhythm: it is a series of transitions and resting-places, of “flights and perchings”‘ (PP 236). Also, a common feature of Buddhist meditation teaching is an attempt to tame the ‘monkey mind’, the tendency of consciousness to jump uncontrollably from one branch of knowledge to another. Both these metaphors invoke an image of space which, whilst still Cartesian, is not empty and unstructured but is somewhat like a forest. A space in which knowledge forms grow, interpenetrate, and spread, allowing a smooth linear passage from one to the next, but also a space through which it is possible to swing and swoop, catching knowledge on the fly.

Baby swifts leave their nests at a few weeks old, launching themselves on their first flight without any tuition or preparation. They then spend the next two years of their lives on the wing. It may be interesting to speculate on the possibilities of maintaining extended periods of flight in cognitive space. Staying airborne, like the swift, in the spaces between one idea and another.

Posted in Buddhism, James, William, Knowledge, Meditation, Metaphor, Mind, Space | No Comments »

Consciousness - The Gap

July 20th, 2006 Fred McVittie

If our minds were simple enough for us to understand, we would be too simple to understand them.

A system cannot instantiate an entity more complex than itself, (although it might be able to produce one).

Posted in Consciousness, Knowledge, Mind | No Comments »

Virtual Knowledge and Theoretical Entities

August 7th, 2006 Fred McVittie

A body of theoretical knowledge is constructed partly through a process of inference. Ideas and concepts refer to the shape and texture of the knowledge body, and its motion through cultural or psychological space, but do not actually comprise that body at all. The effect of the presumed body of knowledge on the surrounding environment is noted, perturbations in the motion of observable entities is considered and measured, our most reliable instruments and power of feeling is put to the task.

“To my thinking” boomed the Professor, begging the question as usual, “the greatest triumph of the human mind was the calculation of Neptune from the observed vagaries of the orbit of Uranus.”
“And yours,” said the P.B.

(Samuel Beckett (1906-1989), Irish dramatist, novelist. First published in 1934. More Pricks than Kicks, p. 67, Grove Press (1970). “The P.B.” is a character in the novel called The Polar Bear.)

Posted in Beckett, Samuel, Knowledge, Space, Theory | No Comments »

Dissolving Objective/Subjective Dualism

August 25th, 2006 Fred McVittie

When working with an acknowledgment of both rational objective knowledge (as exemplified in the principles of scientific enquiry) and personal subjective knowledge (as exemplified in human universals and human science) the challenge is to maintain an equal regard for both these knowledge systems. There is an ever-present need to prevent one of these terms from collapsing into the other. Prioritising objectivity reduces personal experience and human-centred knowledge to psychology, whilst prioritising subjectivity reduces interpersonal and non-embodied experience (scientific data) to the imaginary and ultimately solipsistic.

Posted in Dualism, Knowledge, Objectivity, Subjective | No Comments »

Subitizing and Knowing

August 30th, 2006 Fred McVittie

When a subject is shown a group of objects where the number of objects is small, between one an four, they are able to report on that number within a very short time, and they may accompany this report with a subjective account that their perception of the number of objects is ‘immediate’. When a subject is asked the number of objects there are in groups beyond four items, on the other hand, their response time typically increases by about 250-350 ms for each item, and this increase corresponds to a report by the subject that they are counting the objects, rather than being immediately aware of the number in the group.

The cognitive processes associated with subitizing, the apparently instant recognition of the number of objects in groups up to four, is clearly different to the forms of knowledge gathering processes employed with larger groups of objects, and whatever processes are being used within subitizing they do not appear to be readily accessible to consciousness.

Posted in Knowledge, Mathematics, Perception | No Comments »

Honouring Naivity

September 5th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The tenets of the various ‘naive’ or ‘folk’ sciences; naive physics, naive biology etc, are considered to have, at best, a parasitic relationship to the developed rational sciences. They are the infant to the adult, the primitive to the civilised, the rule of thumb to the rule of law. In this asymmetric relationship the naive sciences are subjects of condescension, they are the unruly designs of nature rather than the manicured gardens of rationality, and like all things of nature, (as Lauren Bacall put it in ‘The African Queen’ ) are there to be risen above . This asymmetry between the rational and the naive is undoubtedly partly caused (and partly justified) by the resounding success of rational science is explaining the world and proving its worth through its application to practical problem solving. ‘Better Living through Science’ is not just a catchphrase.

But what of the worth of the naive sciences? Can a knowledge of Naive Physics, for example, be shown to be add value to existence which could no be added by a singular rational approach to knowledge?

Posted in Knowledge, Naive Physics, Science | No Comments »

Objective Subjective Enlightenment

September 17th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Kant’s Was ist Aufklarung was a call for an enlightenment in which knowledge is separated from power and superstition. It is knowledge which is democratically available and publically verifiable. This contrasts with the subjective forms of knowledge typically offered by the modern enlightenment industries, as exemplified between the pages of the unintentionally ironic What is Enlightenment magazine. This ‘knowledge’ is often re-united with superstition (and occasionally with power in cultic situations), and in which the techniques for objective validation, exemplified in the scientific method, are ignored or derided. This enlightnment often substitutes the feeling of knowing for knowing itself. Objective and subjective knowing probably feels the same - the extended eureka which accompanies the finding of a new unity in the world, but feelings aren’t facts. Some scientists (seem to) have tried to combine both elements, honouring the feelings of subjective enlightenment whilst also striving for objective scientific validity; David Bohm and David Peat may be examples; but for the most part this attempt at combining Auflarung with New Age Enlightenment is a diminution of the illuminated space of knowledge, not an expansion.

Posted in Enlightenment, Kant, Immanuel, Knowledge | No Comments »

Knowing is Seeing

September 29th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The language that we use to articulate knowledge varies according to the form that knowledge takes, the way of knowing, that we are referring to. When we refer to objective, 3rd person knowledge, that which seems to have a clear existence outside of ourselves accessible to independent observers, we use the language of vision; we say that we can see that the knowledge exists. The vision metaphor for knowing conceptualises knowledge as concrete, discreet objects, and places these ‘objects’ of knowledge outside in the world and in social space. The vision metaphor therefore necessarily entails a particular use of spatial metaphors. Entailments of this ‘knowledge as objects in space’ metaphor include such terms as ‘clear’ and ‘lucid’ when expressing the obviousness of the knowledge; the implication is that the metaphorical space between ourself and the knowledge object is transparent. Also, we tend to use terms associated with light, such as ‘illuminated’, ‘enlightened’ etc. to indicate the acquisition of this sort of knowledge, as if the space around us had suddenly become brightly lit, revealing objects of knowledge that were previously hidden from us in the darkness.

Posted in Knowledge, Language, Light, Seeing, Space, Transparent | No Comments »

Seeing Elephants: Visual Knowledge

October 8th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The language that we use to articulate different ways of knowing, and to talk about different types of knowledge, varies according to those ways and types. Our way of speaking about ‘emotional’ content is very dissimilar to our way of speaking about ideas we consider to be ‘rational’. One of the key ways in which the difference is revealed is in the use of terms which refer to the various sensory modes through which we access the world. When we talk about things ‘objectively’, trying to discuss topics rationally, (or at least when we want to appear as if that is what we are doing), we use the language of sight and vision. We ask ‘Do you see?’ when we mean ‘Do you think?”. This use of visual metaphor to organise our relationship to ideas treats those ideas as if they were solid objects somehow located outside of ourselves. This objectification of ideas and their putative location in the shared space beyond ourselves not only figuratively distances them, but also locates them in an imaginary shared space of intersubjective knowledge and experience. By locating my idea ‘out there’ in the world through the use of visual metaphor I am trying to give it the status of a physical fact, as solid and undeniable as an elephant.

Posted in Elephant, Knowledge, Language, Object, Objectivity, Seeing | No Comments »

I Hear What You Are Saying

October 18th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The sensory modes which we use metaphorically to refer to different types of knowledge also correspond to different proximal relations in metaphorical space. Experience which we regard as producing ‘objective’ knowledge is thought of using visual metaphors which place the object of that knowledge at an imagined distance, separate from ourselves. When speaking of this knowledge we say ‘I see’. Experiences which we regard as producing ’subjective’ knowledge on the other hand is thought of using tactile metaphors which collapse any imagined distance between ourselves and the ‘object’ of that knowledge. These is no separation between the experience and ourselves and when we speak of this experience we say ‘I feel’.

Between these two types of knowledge production strategies these is a third corresponding to the sense of hearing. In this the boundaries of the subject and object are not clearly drawn, as they are in the visual mode, but are also not completely collapsed, as they are in the tactile mode. When we hear something there is a sense that the sound is not located only with the object making the sound, the sense object, but is also occupying the space around us, and possibly even the space inside us. The object emits the sound and that sound permeates space and self. This contrasts with the experience of visual sensing, in which the experience is located not only distant from ourselves but also entirely within the boundaries of the experience itself; we do not see an object as extending into space through the light reflecting off its surfaces (even though that is exactly what is happening; the objects are really ‘holes’ in the light). This ambiguous knowedge reveals itself in language through such expressions as ‘I hear what you are saying’, which we use to indicate that the experience being articulated is understood but not necessarily given objective status. We use this expression to mean that, whilst a fact may appear to be an objective fact to someone else, we experience it as having a significant subjective component.

Posted in Hearing, Knowledge, Metaphor, Sense | No Comments »

The Prehensile Mind

October 19th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Alfred North Whitehead makes extensive use of the construction of knowledge using tactile metaphors in his notion of ‘prehension’;

“Whitehead said that the actualities of which the world is composed are related to each other by means of prehensions—indeed, the actualities are their prehensions. To “prehend” is to “grasp” or to take account of other actualities. Prehending is not limited to human beings: as nonhuman forms of experience exist, so do nonhuman forms of prehension. Every actual entity, including nonhuman ones, is related to the world by means of prehensions. The particular way in which each actual entity prehends the world, the how of its “grasping,” Whitehead called the “subjective form” of the prehension, by which he meant its affective tone. Thus, a prehension is a “feeling of feeling.””
http://www.harvardsquarelibrary.org/Hartshorne/Viney/3.html

As a monkey has a prehensile tail which it uses to grasp distant objects and bring them into contact with its self, so we have a prehensile mind that performs a similar trick with the conceptual experiences of our world.

Posted in Grasp, Knowledge, Touch, Whitehead, Alfred N. | No Comments »

Knowing and Sensing

October 23rd, 2006 Fred McVittie

Our experience of the world is mediated and organised through the senses, and the various sensory modes give us different information about the world, as well as implying different relationships between ourselves and the source of the sensory information. Events which stimulate the visual sense, i.e. things that we see, are obviously outside of our body, possibly even a considerable distance from our body, and therefore may or may not have a direct ‘impact’ on our wellbeing. Visualised objects are also (usually) also visible to other people, existing in interpersonal shared space, which means that objects apprehended visually are likely to have similar significance for all viewers (seeing a tiger is likely to cause anyone in visible range to run away). Objects and events which are apprehended through the sense of touch, on the other hand (sic) do, by definition, have a direct impact on the body doing the touching, they are in extreme proximity to that body, and are likely to have a greater significance for the person touched than for someone else who is not in contact with the object, (touching a flame causes a significantly different response than seeing one). This suggests that there is a structured and organised variation in experience depending upon which sense is primarily used to access that experience.

Given that we draw substantially on embodied experience to organise and structure our knowledge of the world which is abstract (i.e. non-concrete) through the use of conceptual metaphor it is likely that abstract concepts will also be organised according to the various sensory modes. Indeed we do find this distinction, with entities which we regard as ‘objective’ being referred to using visual metaphor, thus placing them in a shared conceptual space where they appear similar to all (metaphorical) viewers, whilst those entities we regard as ’subjective’ are often referred to using tactile metaphors. Such subjective entities are held metaphorically against the body where they are ‘felt’, an individual experience with an acknowledged difference in impact for the ‘feeler’ than for the objective ‘viewer’.

The metaphorical application of the senses of smell and taste appear to be less widespread than that of sight and touch, although there does seem to be a relatively consistent mapping from the sense of taste to an aesthetic response to experience, as when we might say that some idea is ‘distasteful’. There may also be some consistency in the mapping of the sense of smell onto concepts which have moral implications, as for example when we say that an abstract idea ’stinks’. Since there is considerable crossover in the concrete experiences of smell and taste it is likely that this crossover will also appear in their metaphorical use of these senses to describe abstract concepts.

Posted in Knowledge, Metaphor, Objectivity, Seeing, Sense, Smell, Taste, Touch | No Comments »

Felt Knowledge

October 25th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Different forms of knowing correspond to different sensory modes: Objective ‘3rd person’ knowledge is associated with sight, whereas subjective ‘1st person’ knowledge is associated with touch and ‘feelings’. Knowledge that we regard as distinct from our selves and not part of our consciousness or being is metaphorically placed external to our bodies where it can be viewed dispassionately. Other knowledge, which we might regard as more ‘intimate’, is held close to the body where it is felt and embraced. This latter kind of ‘felt knowledge’ is not dissociated from one’s self and is experienced as a part of our being, a part of our ’subjectivity’. This difference in how knowledge is imagined, as distant and distinct or as upclose and personal, has implications for the use of imagery and the imagination in performance optimisation. Exercises which use the imagination to affect change in mental states often work better if the imagery used in not visual, but draws on one of the other senses, particularly the tactile and kinaesthetic. These latter forms of imagery do not objectify one’s experience and suggest a distinction between experience and experiencer, which visual imagery inevitable does.

Posted in Exercises, Feeling, Knowledge, Performance, Proprioception, Sense, Touch | No Comments »

Knowing Enlightenment - Book Launch

November 23rd, 2006 Fred McVittie

From the book jacket:

This book is concerned with knowing enlightenment. Not knowing ‘about’ enlightenment, which suggests a standing apart or outside of the experience, but knowing enlightenment from within. It is not concerned with ‘achieving’ enlightenment, which suggests some goal. Nor does it refer to ‘gaining’, which suggests profit and loss. It is not ‘becoming’, which suggests a wholesale transformation of self. It is simply ‘knowing’, in which that knowing is sensed, felt, and understood.

Posted in Enlightenment, Knowledge, Sense | No Comments »

The concept of knowledge

November 30th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Knowledge is not a concrete concept. Whilst it may be the case that many of the facts which we come to know have a concrete, experiential facticity to them the concept of knowledge itself is deeply abstract. Despite the apparent intangibility of knowledge we nevertheless seem able to discuss it, write about it, and render it somehow cognitively available. Following the logic of the above writing, we might conjecture at this point that, if knowledge is not queerer than we can suppose then we must be using certain strategies to effect this supposition, and the most likely strategy is that of using conceptual metaphor, or more specifically conceptual image schema. Knowledge as an abstract idea is rendered negotiable through the use of largely unconscious embodied metaphorical schema, the entailments of which organize our understanding of knowledge and make it sensible.

Posted in Knowledge, Metaphor, thesis | No Comments »

Proprioceptive Knowing

December 3rd, 2006 Fred McVittie

The various sensory modes which make up the human sensorium; sight, hearing, touch, taste, smell; map onto a set of knowledge types which range from the most ‘objective’ knowledge to the most ’subjective’. So, for example, we use the faculty of sight to refer to knowledge which we regard as objective, placing the knowledge at a remove from our bodies in the (metaphorical ) interpersonal space of shared experience. At the other extreme we use the faculty of touch to refer to knowledge which we do not regard as objective. We talk of the objects of such knowledge in terms of how we ‘feel’ about them, collapsing the metaphorical space and assuming a personal contact in which we might even say we are ‘touched’. In addition to the senses already referred to however, there is also the additional sensory mode of proprioception; the schematic sense of our own bodies in space and the relations between the parts. The type of abstract knowledge which maps from this sense is likely to be different from the objective and subjective types noted above, and is likely to be concerned with such embodied kineaesthetic operations as balance, relation, centre, location, weight, etc.

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Abstract Competency and Chekhov

January 9th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Knowledge transfer and acquisition (learning) consists not only of the gaining of certain facts and physical routines, but also in the creation of a level of abstract competency or schema in the flexible application of these facts and routines.

The specific process of learning discussed in this paper is the training of actors, which entails assisting the actor in the development of such abstract competencies as are appropriate to that activity; maintaining a character, establishing circles of attention, delivery of text, stage ‘presence’, and conveying the illusion of naturalism. Some of these activities are incredibly subtle and detailed, and involve the shaping of multiple simultaneous actions. The successful delivery of such actions is dependent upon the smooth functioning of both the actor’s body and also their body of knowledge. This particular learning activity is interesting because it involves a complex mix of practical and intellectual knowledge which the competent actor needs to integrate into a unified competency.

Approaches to the development of such a body of knowledge can be characterised as favouring one of two possible approaches. Borrowing terminology from Artificial Intelligence research, these approaches might be termed Bottom Up and Top Down. The Bottom Up approach introduces the actor to a wide range, and a large number, of learning experiences, including skills training, workshops, examples, improvisations, rehearsals, etc. Through frequent exposure to these experiences, and extensive feedback including the selective reinforcement of appropriate behaviour in response to these experiences (applause, praise etc), the actor gradually builds up the abstract competencies that are required to perform at a high level. The Top Down approach has the same goal, the creation of the abstract competencies noted above, but instead of relying on the emergence of these competencies out of the (quasi-Darwinian) processes indicated, these schema are created through the application of higher order concepts. These higher order concepts might take the form of beliefs, theories, or intentions which organise the body of knowledge developed by the actor such that the necessary competencies are realised. This paper will discuss these two approaches as they are manifest in some of the established training techniques currently used for the training of actors in the academy, with particular reference being made to the work of Michael Chekhov, the Russian émigré director and coach who worked extensively with actors in the UK and America in the early 20th Century, and whose techniques are still taught today.

Posted in Chekhov, Michael, Knowledge, Schema | No Comments »

Mathematics: The Decline of Certainty.

January 11th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Kline, M. (1980). Mathematics: The Decline of Certainty. New York, Oxford University Press.

This book addresses the history and changing ontological status of mathematics, particularly from the time of Galileo and Newton up to the late 19th century and Poincare. Kline traces a developmental path in which mathematics increasingly becomes the only valid language through which scientific enquiry and the truth of the results of that enquiry might be expressed. This resonates with Galileo’s often quoted comment to the effect that ‘the book of the universe is written in the language of maths’. He traces the twist put on this narrative by recent 20th century developments in maths; godel etc, which undermine the transcendent truth status is has claimed. The implication of this is that a science based on an incomplete and inconsistent maths is itself necessarily incomplete and inconsistent.

Posted in History, Knowledge, Mathematics | No Comments »

The Mind and the Printing Press

May 13th, 2007 Fred McVittie

David Hubel in ‘Mind, Brain and Vision’ remarks that the brain is a machine “that does tasks in a way that is consonant with the laws of physics, an object that we can understand in the same way that we understand a printing press”. This ambition for the understanding of the brain may be hubristic however. It is likely that the brain functions using processes which require forms of understanding which are radically different than those we use to understand the mechanical objects of the material world. A printing press is, as Dawkins might put it, a ‘medium sized object moving at medium speed’, its workings are entirely explicable in terms of Newtonian physics and basic mechanics (those workings which are significant to its major function at any rate). A brain on the other hand utilises electrochemical and biochemical, and possibly quantum mechanical processes which are completely beyond the reach of Newtonian physics and which can only be approached using very different mathematical and scientific models. This distinction is significant because, as medium sized object ourselves, we can think and talk about processes which operate on the Newtonian scale literally and directly, but when we think and talk about processes which lie outside of that scale we enter a world outside direct experience which we can only address metaphorically (including the ultimately metaphorical constructions of mathematics). This means that, whilst we might one day fully ‘understand’ the brain, we will never understand it in the way that we understand the printing press.

Paradoxically, there is also an implication that, since we have the minds of medium sized objects, built out of the need to solve the problems facing medium sized objects, those minds are themselves, in a sense, medium sized objects. Our minds intuitively understand something approximating Newtonian physics. There is therefore a grain of truth in what Hubel says although it is more appropriately aimed at the mind, not the brain. The mind does tasks in a way which is consonant with the laws of (folk) physics”.

Posted in Embodiment, Knowledge, Metaphor, Science | No Comments »

Tacit Knowledge Transfer

May 14th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Polanyi’s distinction between tacit and explicit knowledge presumes that. as he puts it, ‘we know more than we can say’, meaning that there are types of knowledge which we are capable of embodying, that is, of ‘knowing’ in a way that we can think consciously and talk clearly about, and there is another knowledge which is inexpressible in words or rational symbols, and which may be unavailable to consciousness. A key aspect of knowledge however, at least as it figures within debates related to research and training, is that it is transmissible; that it is possible for one person, or a group of people, to somehow transfer that knowledge to another person, or another group of people. This begs the question, how is tacit knowledge communicated from one person to another? It is relatively easy to see how this might be achieved with certain crafts and skills; the familiar cliched image of the apprentice learning by copying the master springs to mind, an image which we can perhaps update with reference to mirror neurons but nevertheless it is a knowledge grounded in the work and the know-how of hands and materials. Other forms of knowledge which do not have the same concrete haptic quality, but instead are more abstract, know-that and conceptual, even if they could be somehow ‘embodied’, clearly cannot be transferred in the same hands-on way.

Posted in Knowledge, Training | No Comments »

Come into the light

May 22nd, 2007 Fred McVittie

The metaphors we use to articulate abstract concepts draw most extensively from those type of concrete experiences which are most common. In terms of the sensory mode in which such experiences present themselves the most prevalent type of experience is visual. With up to 40% of the brain’s processing power being taken up with dealing with visual information it is not surprising that visual metaphors are the most frequently used, (although sensorimotor metaphors are not far behind, for possible explanations of this see Noe, Regan).

Our extensive use of visual metaphor to conceptualise abstract ideas causes an interesting phenomenon when this conceptualisation reflects back upon itself. Given that thought and the making of concepts are themselves deeply abstract activities we can inevitably only comprehend and articulate such concepts through metaphor. In other words, we can only think about thinking metaphorically. When searching for a metaphor which indicates this self-referential thinking, and remembering that most metaphors are visual, we should expect this metaphor (or meta-metaphor) to convey something of the circumstances of visuality. If KNOWING IS SEEING, and we want to talk about the properties of KNOWING, then we should find ourselves talking about the properties of SEEING. When talking about knowledge we should expect people to use terms related to sight and the conditions which make sight possible. Again this is exactly what we find. Knowledge metaphors make much use of visual concepts and terminology: we say ‘I see’ when we mean ‘I know’ etc. Also, a basic condition for the operation of sight is the presence of light and once again there is a close correspondence in language and thought between knowledge and light. In concrete terms light allows us to experience visual space. In metaphorical terms light allows us to comprehend conceptual space.

Interestingly, when we want to refer to extreme forms of knowing, as we might when we are looking for some kind of spiritual or religious knowledge, the metaphor of light is extended, intensified, and sometimes personified such that the all-encompassing knowledge which passes all understanding is conceived of as a divine light.

Posted in Abstract, Knowledge, Liquid, Metaphor, Seeing | No Comments »

God of the Gaps

June 1st, 2007 Fred McVittie

One of the concerns of historical scholars of a religious persuasion was that, as science proceeds, the domain occupied by God would correspondingly diminish. The more that is explained rationally by science, the less mystery there is for God to hide behind. This association of God with the mysterious, unknown, or unknowable, leads to an understanding of spirit sometimes referred to as a ‘God of the gaps’; when God is understood as ‘all that cannot be explained’ then any advancement in knowledge necessarily diminishes God.

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Mappa Mundi

June 24th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Medieval and pre-Medieval approaches to knowledge tended to focus on the revelations provided by canonical and theologically approved texts, rather than observation or what we would now think of as scientific experiment. The writings of Aristotle, for example, were a key source of revealed truth for hundreds of years after his death, even when the ‘facts’ he related were self-evidently incorrect. Knowledge in this period was therefore detached from personal experience and existed in a kind of transcendent realm of pure ideation.

Although much has changed, it could be said that much knowledge that we routinely draw upon today is similarly detached, not because of any reliance on received wisdom, but because the knowledge itself has proceeded beyond the point where it can be accessed directly. Much contemporary knowledge, particularly in the sciences, is only able to be comprehended through conceptual tools such as mathematics and metaphor.

For a brief period between then and now however, say the period marked by the birth of Galileo and the death of Newton, knowledge came into brief contact with lived experience. In the 16th century, the burgeoning fields of science began to open up and their key model was that of the mechanism, of medium sized objects moving at medium speed. This is the model Newton refers to in his Principia, a model in which the movement of planets and apples can be described by the same laws, and before the disembodied oddities of galaxies and atoms began to be realised. This is a time before the mathematisation of science, when proof of a concept or theory was demonstrated not by reference to mathematical axioms but by experimental demonstration.

If history is a voyage of discovery, this brief period marks the crossing of an invisible, but nevertheless real, point on the globe. For that moment scientific knowledge and personal experience stood together on the deck and looked out over the waves. No longer transcendent and not yet abstract, the truth of knowledge is the truth of the body, and whilst the distant horizon may be indistinct, here at the centre of human experience all is clarity and light.

EMBO Rep. 2005 April; 6(4): 306–309. doi: 10.1038/sj.embor.7400389.

Posted in History, Horizon, Knowledge, Mathematics | No Comments »

Horizon of Experience

June 26th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Imagine that all knowledge, both that we can directly experience and that we cannot, as existing on the surface of a globe, a globe as large as the Earth itself. Now imagine yourself standing on a plain on that globe, or on a savannah, or on the beach. Perhaps you are watching a sail diminish into the distance as it catches the wind from the coast. You are standing at the centre of your experience, and at the centre of all that there is, and all that it is possible to experience. A zone of embodied understanding. Close by you on the sand are the objects and events which you have the most intimate experiential knowledge about. You can touch, taste, smell, hear, handle, caress, weigh these objects in your hands and feel their textures. Your knowledge of them is direct and embodied. More distant objects, the lighthouse, the sail, like the tree at the bottom of the garden and like the moon, are still available to you, but less so. You can see the sail and hear the wind flapping the canvas, but cannot touch it or taste it from where you are.

As our thoughts and perceptions strain to see the ship as it approaches the limits or our zone of embodied understanding we find a natural boundary, a horizon beyond which our direct understanding cannot reach. This limit is the horizon of human experience bordering the zone of embodied knowledge. Beyond this horizon lies all the knowledge of this world that is outside of direct experience and that we can only access using indirect means.

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Blueprints of Tacit Knowledge

July 9th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Within the discourse on tacit and explicit knowledge there are various interpretations of what ‘tacit’ knowledge might consist of. One of these interpretations holds that some kinds of knowledge are of such a type that they cannot be captured or communicated in any form other than in the implementation of that knowledge. Typically this interpretation is applied to the embodied knowledge of a physical skill such as riding a bike. Whilst it is theoretically possible to exhaustively describe the physical and cognitive processes involved in this activity it still feels as if some essential component of riding would be missing. Intuitively, we feel that the ‘knowing that’ type of information that such an exhaustive description would involve would not give us the ‘know how’ to actually get on a bike and ride it. If the description were written down, then clearly the learning of this text would not correspond to learning to ride. However, the text might be regarded not as somehow containing the knowledge, but as the basis for an instruction set for the learning of that activity. If this text contained such details as the neural arrangements which allowed for the motor controls corresponding to the skill, then the text becomes a kind of blueprint for the building of a skill, not a description of the skill itself.

Posted in Explicit, Knowledge, Tacit | No Comments »

This is how you remind me, (of what I really am)

August 17th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Descartes’ logic of embodiment and cognition as essentially separate is based on the metaphor KNOWING IS SEEING together with a number of folk theories relating to essences and ideas.

The so-called Cartesian Body/Mind Split is partly a product of the spatialising metaphors employed in articulating the philosophy and the apparently inevitable here/there binary logic of spatial organisation. Harding’s formulation of centrality and viewpoint overlay this Cartesian divide with a subjective/objective layer in which Res Cogitans is associated with directionality of vision from here to there, inside to outside, centre to periphery, while Res Extensa is associated with the complementary trajectory of visuality, from there to here, outside to inside, periphery to centre. When I look at you I see your body and experience myself as the location of mind, but this difference is a functionality of the direction of vision, from in to out, rather than of a particular quality of the fixed point at this end of the perceiving path. This is evidenced when the direction of travel is reversed; when you look at me along the very same line of sight I become a body travelling toward you at the speed of light, whilst your looking out from the place where you are becomes an experience of mind.

Because I have consciousness I am able to report on the state of mind that is the looking from here to there. I can say what I feel(s) like, or what you (all of you) look like. Yet even if I did not choose to use this reportability, this would not deny the presence of mind in the directionality of my looking. I can speculate about a set of circumstances in which such reportability was completely lost to me, and in which my consciousness was made radically different, perhaps through accident, illness, or education, but even in that reduced/enhanced state the directionality of ‘looking’ that is inherent in being somewhere somewhen, exactly here, precisely now, implies the existence of mind in that trajectory. (Of course mind is not ‘in’ that line of sight as a thumb might be in a pie, or a coin in a pocket; the trajectory is the mind, wherever I happen to be).

Without the burden of a responsible, self-reflective consciousness holding down my understanding of mind I can extend my definition of ‘that thing my brain does’ and bring back Descartes. For every view in there must always be a corresponding view out. This is the case even if the trajectory of mind embodies an inanimate object: a rock, a tree, a star, a corpse. The existence of a line of sight from here to there, from this centre to that centre, demands that the polarity of this line is dual, and has a complementary trajectory from there to here, from that centre to this centre. Within the logic of this line I am embodied by my status as view in and the object whose non-consciousness lies at the origin of that line is ‘reminded’ by being the source and centre of the view out. When I look at you, you look at me. as myself, at the centre of my little world, I look out into you and yours, and in doing so I embody you and you in turn remind me of what I really am. From you point of view the favour is returned and I am embodied and you are reminded. Hello friend, wherever you are.

Posted in Centre, Descartes, Rene, Harding, Douglas, Knowledge, Seeing | No Comments »

The Earth is Flat

August 20th, 2007 Fred McVittie

As Primack and Adams not in ‘View from the Centre of the Universe’, the model by which scientific revolutions proceed by large scale ‘paradigm shifts’ is flawed. Kuhn’s model, postulated that occasionally there are major changes in the way that science understands (all or part of) the world. At these times, and the most commonly-cited example is the Copernican revolution from an Earth-centred solar system (or universe) to one centered on the Sun, the old order of theories, models, diagrams, and mechanisms, is dismissed in favour of the new. In Kuhn, it is a necessary consequence of this revolutionary overturning that what went before it becomes wrong and that apostles of the new, (after moving through a brief period of being heretics) become keepers of the new flame and upholders of the new truth. Old is wrong, new is right.

According to Primack and Adams, a more accurate understanding of what happens during these times is not a replacement of one truth by another, but rather the re-interpretation of the data of the world such that it applies to a wider set of circumstances and covers a larger set of phenomena. So, by this understanding, the Ptolomaic model of the Earth-centered universe is not ‘wrong’, it is instead a special limited case of the Copernican model. It is worth noting in passing that the Copernican model tends to promote an understanding of the universe which is as partial in its own way as the Ptolemaic which preceded it. A casual interpretation of the Sun-centered model seems to indicate a stationary star orbited by moving planets, but of course, in relativity, nothing is stationary in absolute terms and by most accounts the Sun itself is hurtling at several thousand miles an hour in the direction of Andromeda, with the planets around it like the loose reins of a horse. Copernicus put his thumb on the Sun and momentarily arrested its wild flight and, in doing so, revealed a pattern in the relationship of the movement of the planets, but the Copernican map is not of the real solar system, any more than a 2-dimensional map of the Earth is an accurate rendition of the real globe. It is more a graph or schematic showing the pattern of relations he discovered.

In many cases it is preferable to work with the assumption that the Earth is stationary and central rather orbital and peripheral. When we make appointments or set or watches we do not consider this as stating the location of the Earth in its orbit around the Sun, or the number of degrees through which it has rotated. We refer to sunrise not Earthfall and we watch the Sun go down over the ocean, not the Earth turning its face away into the darkening night. For most purposes the Ptolemaic model of the universe in which Earth is the centre of attention is sufficient. This is not to say that when we use such Earth-centered concepts we are using a kind of lazy shorthand, or are being inaccurate. When the application of the Ptolemaic paradigm is limited to specific uses such as these it is as accurate, and more efficient, that the Copernican.

On the even more local scale of vernacular or ‘folk’ experience, we can even extend this notion of overlapping or simultaneous paradigms to include the apparently self-evident wrong-headedness of flat Earth theory. The Earth in its entirety is not usefully considered flat, and any depiction of the Earth which too closely resembles a 2-dimensional map is demonstrably inaccurate. However, in day to day life we routinely work with the assumption that it it indeed flat, and are rarely proved wrong. When we measure a room prior to fitting a carpet, or stake out the foundations of a building, we do not take the spherical nature of the Earth into account. It would be perfectly possible to include the curvature of the Earth in our calculations but since this difference would be insignificant (smaller by far than the variations in the landscape itself) it would be foolish to do so. It is at this level that ‘folk knowledge’, or Naive Physics, and the paradigms which make it up, become available as accurate, relevant theory.

Posted in Knowledge, Naive Physics, Paradigm, Primack, J. & Adams, N., Science, Space | No Comments »

The Scaly Eyes of Children

August 20th, 2007 Fred McVittie

It is slightly unfortunate that Douglas Harding uses the word ‘true’ when referring to the self which appears when using the technique of ‘Seeing’. This terminology follows in the footsteps of other mystical traditions which stress the truth of their claimed version of reality, and invokes a claim for authenticity of being based on an apparent transparency to the act of visual perception. The status of truth is underwritten by the assumption that seeing is believing. In Harding this base is reinforced by an appeal to the ‘naturalness’ or naivety of children’s perception which, it is suggested, is unclouded by the kind of conceptualisation which marks adult seeing. To look through the eyes of an adult, it is suggested, is to look in a way which is contaminated with knowledge that blinds us to the way things really are, and so when we look at ourselves this entity too is shrouded with the fog of conceptualisation. When we look through the unsullied eyes of a child however, there is no such contamination and things appear as they really are. Children’s eyes, it is claimed, have no scales of knowledge over them and they access the world directly, as ‘true’. Self-perception, using this putative childlike version of seeing, is considered to be similarly ‘true’.

Posted in Harding, Douglas, Knowledge, Naive, Perception | No Comments »

Knowledge, Substance, Proximity

September 17th, 2007 Fred McVittie

We indicate different types and different status of knowledge using a range of metaphors. One of these is proximity, in which we indicate knowledge which we feel most sure about by conceiving of it as lying close to or in contact with the body, whilst more impersonal, and possibly contested knowledge tends to be conceptualised as remote.

A second gradient of different ways of knowing is that of the different sensory mode through which that knowledge is metaphorically conceived, with ‘felt’ knowledge, drawing on metaphors of touch, having a subjective quality, with the kind of personal certainty which accompanies ‘feelings’. Observed knowledge, using metaphors of sight, lies at the outer end of the spectrum and is seen (sic) as objective and existing apart from the individual body in intersubjective space. The certainties of objectivity are social and interpersonal and may not be ‘felt’ as certainties at all.

These two metaphor sets correlate with one another such that proximal knowledge, lying close to the body, is usually ‘felt’, whereas remote knowledge, separated from the body and located in objective space, is ’seen’. Felt knowing is subjective and seen knowledge is objective.

Posted in Feeling, Knowledge, Metaphor, Seeing, Space | No Comments »

Knowing and the Body

September 22nd, 2007 Fred McVittie

All of our ideas about everything (including Everything) come from the facts of our embodiment. The shape and size of our bodies determine the mechanics of our thoughts, the sensitivity of our eyes give colour and perspective to our viewpoint, the subtlety of our hearing allows our ideas to resonate with those of others with whom we are the same wavelength, and the densely-packed nerve endings in our fingertips give form to our feelings. The most sublime of our experiences passes through the realm of the senses and all knowing speaks the language of the body.

Posted in Embodiment, Knowledge, Sense, thesis | No Comments »

The Blog Ate My Homework

September 27th, 2007 Fred McVittie

The original purpose of this writing was to support my PhD research by acting as a repository for the various wayward ideas, both relevant and irrelevant, that occurred to me during this time. Because of my admiration for the work of the Polish author Stanislaw Lem I chose initially to frame these random thoughts within the conceit of a fictional conference, a space which offers the unusual literary form of the conference abstract.

Abstracts for conferences, from my experience, are often far more engaging than the full papers to which they refer. A well-articulated abstract does not only outline a set of findings or lay out the terms of a new piece of analysis, it also achieves something of the status of an artwork, compressing extensive polyphonal expressions into a single, dense piece of prose. There is something engagingly aleatory about such writing, it shows us the swings and roundabouts of conceptualisation and invites us to play on these for a while, before the more formal fencing off of that area that will take place during the full exposition of the paper. Metaphorical images and performances flow and strut across the paragraphs with an unfettered air of poetic freedom that is often suppressed in the more extensive discursions.

Although I abandoned this conceit quite early on in the process of this writing, the status of the conference abstract is nevertheless relevant to how the rest of this writing is working, for me at least. The conference abstract, like the abstract in art or of some poetry, is poised between two different poles of knowing and being. On the one hand is the apparently transparent revealing of the full paper, representational and photographic in its claim for truth, realism, and authenticity. Here is knowledge in the public domain, fully visible, fully referenced, and solid as a rock or a book. This is the direction in which the abstract leans and toward which it directs our gaze. On the other hand is the performance, the experiment, the experience, and the moment of coming-into-being which precedes the abstract. It is ephemeral, artistic, and phenomenal and is upstream from all writing; we are carried swiftly on, the illumination casts shadows on the page, the video of the performance misses the moment when the dancer’s foot is at just this angle. It is ultimately irrecoverable.

The writings in this blog traverse this odd liminal space of the conference abstract, sometimes reaching forward into the objective space ahead and touching the material of facts and shared knowledge, sometimes falling toward the point of origin and the moment of performance.

Posted in Blog, Knowledge, Lem, Stanislaw, Metaphor | No Comments »

A Finger Pointing at the Moon

September 28th, 2007 Fred McVittie

‘Suppose a lecturer points his finger at an object, and tells the audience: “Look at this!” The audience will follow the pointing finger and look at the object….This directive, or vectorial way of attending to the pointing finger , I shall call our subsidiary awareness of the finger…A meaningful relation of the subsidiary to the focal is formed by the action of a person who integrates one to the other, and the relation persists by the fact that the person keeps up this integration. …[In] general terms, the triad of tacit knowing consists of subsidiary things (B) bearing on a focus (C) by virtue of an integration pereformed by a person (A). …we attend from one or more subsidiaries to a focus on which the subsidiaries are to bear.’(Polanyi, M. 1969 pp. 181/182)

Polanyi M. Sense-giving and sense-reading. In: Grene M, ed. Knowing and Being, Essays by Michael Polanyi. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1969.

Posted in Consciousness, Knowledge, Polanyi, Michael | No Comments »

Now, outside my window

October 9th, 2007 Fred McVittie

The online blog has a passing similarity to a number of other digital knowledge structures, most specifically the hypertext and the wiki, and it is instructive to consider some of these similarities, and also of the significant differences. Also, the much greater paradigmatic difference between all of these digital forms and the analogue form of print material are sufficiently large to warrant special attention.

Apart from obvious material differences, and the equally obvious variations in access afforded by technologies of knowledge which use the screen rather than on the page, there is nothing that can be bound between the pages of a book that cannot be put onto a screen. Conversely however, the technologies of the digital environment offer the possibility of including types of information, (video, sound, animation), which cannot be reproduced in analogue form. More importantly, digital media offers ways of navigating information, and indeed structuring information, which are radically different to the book, essay, monograph, article, or thesis.

The two most significant strategies for the reading of digital material, and which distinguish it from print media, are the browse and the search. Browsing allows the reader to move through the text in a way which is non-linear, and therefore requires that the author of that text take into account this non-linearity in their writing. Typically this may involve the presentation of a number of different ways into and out of a specific piece of information. The familiar links on a web page which invite the browsing reader to follow the logic of their own reading process is a obvious example. This has the effect that most digital knowledge resources have the feeling of a net(work) rather than a story, or argument. The logic of the browse, at least for most online resources, also blurs the edges of the text such that the most casual click on a link takes the reader imperceptibly across the planet to information on another server, another site, another body of text. This trailing into and out of the home text may be formalised in the language of the deli.cio.us tag list, or may appear covertly behind the hexadecimal blue of an unfollowed link word. (Not to by confused with a fake link simulating that blue, and that underlining, but which in reality leads nowhere).

Searching, on the other hand, gives the opportunity to the reader of making a proactive entrance into the body of the text. Search results respond to the desire of the reader, who may disregard the obvious and sanctioned reading order in favour of a specific probing advance. Not only that, but search also organises and edits the entirety of the text into a collation thematically arranged under the heading of the search term. The blog writer may assist such acts of collative creation by the use of suggested search terms or labels.

These systems of knowledge construction and retrieval are common to many digital media products. The specific forms noted above, the blog and the wiki, add specific additional features to this list which increase their distinction from print media.

The defining feature of the wiki is that it is (usually) a collaborative form. Its charm is that large, sometimes very large, groups of people have access and editing rights and can add, subtract, or change the content of the wiki at any time. The blog also has the option of allowing collaborative creation, although this is usually only to the extent of facilitating the attachment of comments to a posting. The other, and perhaps most unique, feature of blogs is that any posting on a blog is time-stamped, which gives a layer of structure that is largely absent from hypetext and wikis. Time stamping means firstly that blogs tend to reflect, and reflect upon, events and issues which are contemporaneous in a way which is impossible in other media. Whilst it is certainly true that a book or article will usually try to be current, and to include an up-to-date set of references and referents, it would be unusual for these references to change from one page to the next. This is exactly what one would expect from a blog however; as event transpire in the wider world, or in the slightly less wide discipline to which the blog refers, then the writing on the blog shifts to include these events. News items of deaths and wars appear alongside discoveries and gallery openings, and these writings are dynamically related to the times in which the blog is written. On a more personal, processual level, as information becomes available to the blogger through the course of their own experience and study, then this too makes a gradual appearance. Rather than the entire document appearing as if it were written at one sitting, in the full light of acquired knowledge, as is often the case with the book, there is the gradual accumulation of the light, and the progressive journey through different knowledge sources.

The blog, then, has a temporal structure which is absent from other digital media forms, and which is absent from print. Firstly it is located across a swathe of historical time rather than a cross-section, which gives it an internal structure containing growth, progress, and change. Secondly it is embedded and interconnected to the moving moment of contemporaneity at multiple points and many different levels; the health of one’s children, the death of a prince, the newest operating system from Microsoft, an uprising in Burma, a song that right now seems to be everybody’s ringtone, the time now is 16:18 and outside my window are two young men smoking cigarettes. One of them has seen me and waves. His name is Matt.

Posted in Blog, Knowledge, Time, Writing | No Comments »

Three Types of Knowledge

October 10th, 2007 Fred McVittie

In ‘Beyond Understanding’, a keynote speech at the symposium on Threshold Concepts at Strathclyde University in 2006, David Perkins lays out a taxonomy of knowledge and its application to teaching and learning. He describes knowledge as located as in three ontologically distinct forms. Video here. Symposium programme here.

The first he describes as ‘possessive’ knowledge, in which the object of knowledge is felt to be owned by the individual and can be produced on request. So, for example, we might be asked in what year Columbus landed in the New World and we might retrieve the date 1492 and display this known fact, rather as one might take a rock out of one’s pocket and hold it up for inspection. Similarly, the question ‘Who who wrote the novel on which the film “Solaris” is based?’ might solicit the response ‘Stanislaw Lem”. In each of these instances the item of knowledge is considered as possessed by the individual and this possession is, in turn, conceived of as a kind of object, a rock, a book, that can be produced on demand. This metaphorical mapping of the concept of knowledge as object has the effect of awarding other object-like properties to the knowledge item. Objects tend to be relatively solid, clearly bounded, and consistent over time. Similarly, knowledge which has this character of a possessed object is also intuitively experienced as solid, bounded, stationary, and permanent. So, for example, the date of Columbus’ arrival on the shores of New Found Land is felt to be a ‘hard fact’; there is no sense in which we feel that fact to be ’slippery’ or ‘fluid’. Also, that experienced fact is clearly delineated; we do not feel that the edges of it blur into other facts, in fact it is difficult to imagine what this ‘blurring’ might mean. It is also experienced as still and intransient, that this article of knowledge is not wavering or changing its place in the index of human information, and it will continue to occupy this place, in history, in geography, in cartography, forever. This fact, as object-like, and as objective, as a rock, is something we feel we can hold, unchanging and fully graspable. We can take ownership of it and consider ourselves in possession of this fact. We can put this fact in our pocket and produce it on demand. Similar object status might be awarded to the authorship of the book on which the film ‘Solaris’ is based and the response to any question on any TV game show.

The second form of knowledge that Perkins introduces is that which he considers ‘performative’. This type of knowing goes beyond the rote recitation of solid items of data and begins to use this data, these facts, not as objects of thought but as tools to think with. Knowledge, in this formulation, becomes less like a set of solid, separate, inert entities and more like living dynamic structures, capable of breeding, hybridising, fissioning, fusing, and blending. Performative knowledge responds to situations in a way which is not hard and resistant, but which is flexible and yielding, and the clearest examples of this knowledge is its ability to respond to creative or problem-solving situations. Possessed object-like knowledge is speechless when faced with a question such as ‘In what way is the film “Solaris” a commentary on the exploration and conquest of the New World? The individual isolated facts which characterise a possessed knowledge approach do not allow the kind of analysis and creative thinking which the question demands. Performative knowing, on the other hand, is well equipped to make a response to this situation. This may be through, for example, allowing the live information structures which make up the knowledge of Stanislaw Lem’s book, and the film of that book, to mingle with those of Columbus and his first footfall in the Americas. One can imagine a text that brings out the mutability of culture and the act of projective imagination that allows us to conceive of such things as ‘nations’ and ’states’ being born from this miscegenation. This ability of what Perkins calls performative knowledge to dynamically construct novel solutions to problems and creative responses to situations is referred to frequently in literature on creativity and innovation. Koestler calls it ‘bisociation’, elsewhere it is formalised into knowledge generation systems and training routines such as Triz, Synectics, Scamper, etc. Performative knowledge is very good at responding to set briefs, solving problems, fulfulling creative criteria, and producing novel answers to well-framed questions.

The third type of knowledge which Perkins introduces, and the one which adds the most to current understanding of knowledge, is what he terms ‘proactive’. This form of knowing, as the name implies, is neither inert nor reactive or responsive, but rather is actively engaged in the processes of its own implementation. Individuals who are able to mobilise proactive knowledge resources are not ‘problem solvers’ they are ‘problem finders’, that is, the knowledge that they embody (possess is too passive a term) seems to constantly engage with the world around them looking for opportunities to perform. Proactive knowledge does not simply appear on demand when a question is posed or a problem is set, but is out there in the world looking for opportunities. This type of knowledge seems largely to be dispositional; certain attitudes or habits of behaviour need to be in place in order for proactivity to emerge, and whilst such disposition can be learned or cultivated it is likely that some individuals would find this easier than others. Proactive knowledge users, whether by accident of nature or design of education, are constantly asking questions of the world, noticing small irregularities in the fabric of society, finding new uses for old objects, coining new words and phrases because they like the taste of language. They make extensive and joyful use of metaphor and analogy, and are incontinent inventors. Give a proactive knower a new word or a new idea, and watch them scurry around looking for some way to use it.

This continuum of knowledge, from the possessive at one extreme to the most proactive at the other, is complementary to the continuum of objectivity and subjectivity. Possessive knowledge, constitutive of object-like facts, appears, unsurprisingly, at the objective end of the spectrum. It is experienced as distant, removed, existing in interpersonal space. Proactive knowledge, conversely, is felt against the surface of the body, or even inside the body, and is inseparable from the experience of being. It is part of the subjective phenomenological experience of one’s self concept.

Posted in Creativity, Knowledge, Lem, Stanislaw, Psychology, Self, Sense, Training | No Comments »

The Substance of Knowledge

October 12th, 2007 Fred McVittie

One of the ways in which we conceptualise different types (or strengths) of knowing is through mapping apparent differences in forms of knowledge onto our embodied experience with different types (or strengths) of substance. In this, knowledge which is felt and which we conceive as proximal to the body is also conceptualised as solid. When we are describing this knowledge we may use terms like ‘hard’, ‘concrete’, ‘firm’, etc. words which indicate that it is close enough to us that we can touch and hold it, and assess its strength using the sense of touch. As knowledge becomes less closely held, and as it moves through other sensory modes, it loses this felt solidity and becomes, initially, more malleable or fluid, then it acquires something of the properties of a gas, or even of light, such that we might feel that we have only the most remote and barely tangible evidence of its existence, like the shadows cast by knowledge that we find in experimental data for example.

As this knowledge is disappearing from the radar of the senses, losing its ability to be described metaphorically by touch, then by smell, taste, sound, and finally by sight, its substantive quality becomes less and less available to sense until it slips away entirely, and even our most potent metaphors are incapable of containing it or bringing it home. At this point, when the object (sic) of our knowing is infinitely remote from us and is outside the range of all sensation, then we cannot conceive it as solid, liquid, or gas. If we give it substantial existence at all, which metaphorically we almost invariably do, we must conceive it as a substance which lies outside this material trinity in some fourth state of imaginary matter, a kind of ‘quadressence’: a possibly volatile ’spirit’.

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Threshold Concepts in Performer Training

October 12th, 2007 Fred McVittie

The acquisition of the skills and information needed to produce competent or optimal performance can be exceedingly difficult. The difficulties presented can further be articulated by considering these skills and information sets as ‘knowledge’, and that the gaining of this knowledge might meet with varying degrees of ‘troublesomeness’. The concept of ‘troublesome knowledge’ has been discussed by David Perkins and breaks down into a number of sub-categories. This taxonomic approach may suggest strategies for the reduction of this troublesomeness and thereby the more successful gaining of the knowledge, with a corresponding optimisation of the performance ability.

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Knowing One, Feeling Two

November 1st, 2007 Fred McVittie

It is a fact of almost mundane obviousness that our bodies, including our brains, are made of the same basic materials as everything else in the universe. It is also routinely evident that our bodies are subject to the same forces and play of energy as the rest of creation. Lastly, it is no surprise that everthing we are and do is part of numerous chains of causality and parts of larger structures of material being. In short, no man is an island; we are all intimately connected to the overall fabric of the material world. As Fritjof Capra put it,
‘there is only one thing happening and we are all seamlessly welded into it.’

The incontrovertable truth of this statement does not necessarily reflect our phenomenological experience of the relationship between self and world however. On the contrary, we typically experience ourselves as somehow apart from the material world, as slightly removed or placed in the position of onlooker. We look out into the world from a consciousness which feels radically different to the phenomena we are looking at. There is a strong sense of separation and difference and this dualism seems to deny the unity and connectivity that is undoubtedly present. We may know that we are seamlessly welded into the world but our felt sense insists on breaking the weld and splitting the seam.

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Belief and Embodiment

November 2nd, 2007 Fred McVittie

Realist interpretations of physical experience and the material world entail the assigning of what appear to be direct sensory data to the category of the real and all else to some other category, that of the imaginary for example. This ‘real’ experience is so intuitively obvious that to claim not to believe in it would seem perverse, even nonsensical. How could we claim not to believe in the hardness of a rock as evidenced by our hands as we hold it, or disbelieve the opaque solidity of an object in front of our eyes. It would be a brave and stupid man who did not believe in the pull of gravity, even as it carried him toward the ground. In these embodied experiences grounds for doubt are not only insufficient but totally absent, and since doubt is a necessary corollary to belief it seems absurd to use the term believe to refer to such material certainties.

This self-evident obviousness of embodied experience provides the template for our relationship with other concepts which are not quite so evident, in which cases the term ‘belief’ seems more appropriate. We have a tendency to express our confidence in entities, concepts, and theories which are unavailable to the senses by normal perceptual means as if they had the same status as the incontrovertible verities of sensate being. By indicating that we believe in, for example, the invisible hand of the free market, the spectre of communism that haunts Europe, the one true god, or the invisible pink unicorn, we are staking a claim for the manifest existence of such entities which is equivalent to those embodied experiences which we cannot fail to have faith in. In other words, we are employing a metaphor which encourages us to understand one form of knowing (speculation, theory, confabulation) in which the object of that knowing is inevitably abstract, in terms of another form of knowing, direct sensory experience, in which the knowledge is concrete and part of the embodiment of our being, and indeed the embedding of that being within a wider material world.

Posted in Belief, Embodiment, Imagination, Knowledge, Rock, Sense | No Comments »

Knowledge, Proximity, Imagination

November 6th, 2007 Fred McVittie

‘Imagination is our capacity to organise mental representations (especially percepts, images, and image schemata) into meaningful coherent unities.’ (Johnson. 1987: p.140)

In ‘The Body in the Mind’ Johnson reminds us of the Platonic categorisation of modes of cognition, in which the validity of knowledge is seen to vary according to how one approaches its collection. Most valued is knowledge acquired by intellection (noesis), in which the unchanging ‘essence’ of the knowledge is grasped. At the bottom of the scale of knowing is imagination (eikasia) in which only ‘images, shadows, reflections’ (p.142) are apprehended, not the essential knowledge itself.

This structure of distinction, it can be noted, also arranges knowledge across the spectra of proximity and the senses, locating the essence of knowing close to the body where it can be ‘grasped’, and the less secure knowing offered by the Platonic imagination placed at some remove where only its surface appearance, or even only traces of that appearance such as a shadow, can be apprehended. Interestingly, there is no suggestion within this scheme of the later association of closeness/’feltness’ with subjectivity, or of distance/visibility with objectivity. In our current understanding,as revealed through the metaphors we use, we give a great deal of credence to objective knowledge described in visual terms and located figuratively at a distance in interpersonal space. We correspondingly give less credence to subjective knowledge described in tactile terms and located up close and personal (even though we may intuitively ‘feel’ this subjective knowledge as more ‘real’ than the objective knowledge of intersubjectively validated visual knowing). This modern value distinction between the subjective and the objective does not appear in Plato’s categorisation.

Posted in Essence, History, Imagination, Knowledge, Metaphor, Plato, Proximity, Space, thesis | No Comments »

Soul of an Atheist - Grasping the Big Picture

November 14th, 2007 Fred McVittie

If I was to sum up the aim of this writing in one sentence, I would say that it was about grasping the big picture. The picture we want, or I would say need, to grasp is very large indeed, and can only be seen from some elevated position high above the plane of usual human grasping, and we should recognise the ambition of our aim at the outset. Imagine a picture of everything. Got that? If you have then you can close the book now and join your friends on Mount Olympus, or Heaven, or wherever it is you Gods hang out. For the rest of us who are still mortal any attempt to grasp the big picture seems like a hopelessly hubristic endeavor. We are the barely conscious products of chemical reactions taking place in a film of moisture on a ball of rock. How in God’s names could we hope to understand things we can’t even see, or touch, or even think about properly? How could we hope to grasp the big picture if can’t even put a sentence together accurately, for goodness sake? Grasp the big picture? Surely we don’t ‘grasp’ a picture, we ’see’ it. When we ’see’ something we look at it from a safe distance and let the light of our objective knowledge bounce off it into our brains. ‘Grasping’, on the other hand, suggests taking hold of something, pulling it close to us, maybe pressing is against our bodies and feeling its contours merging with our own. There is something of love in this grasp, and of understanding, and compassion, and the intimate sharing of a single sense of being. Grasping the Big Picture? Surely this is nonsense? But this is exactly how it should be. No one sense is what we must use to contemplate the immensity and the complexity of Everything. The big picture is too big to hold with our eyes alone, and if we are to take it in then we must become synaesthetes and allow the familiar segregated play of our senses to spill over into each other, to cross the lines on the playground that usually keep them apart, allowing us to feel with our eyes and see with our hands.

We may say that this is impossible, and only those with some bizarre quirk of neurology are capable of such grasping. But if only we could remember back, and maybe we can, we would remember when this was first nature to us, before the second nature of common sense turned us into an I, and a You, and a He or She, or into an It.

Posted in Cosmology, Grasp, Knowledge, Love, Sense, Synaesthesia, Up | No Comments »

Before and After Physics

November 21st, 2007 Fred McVittie

Some of the ideas behind (and in front of, and to the side of, and pervading the space between and inside) this work concern consciousness, evolution, and the interplay of feeling and knowing and being. These are big ideas, and are worthy of the attention of brains bigger than the ones possessed by we humans; we ‘medium sized mammals moving at medium speed’, to paraphrase Richard Dawkins. Since these stone-age hunter-gatherer brains are all we have, and since we are bound by the Cognitive Imperative hard-coded into our DNA to restlessly pursue the thought fox, however elusive and imaginary it might be, so the lure of the big idea draws us impossibly beyond the physics of our embodiment. There before us is the light of the moon, and our studies points like a finger in its direction, and if we must mix metaphors to approach that light, then so be it. Here are some shadows; a tree, a rock, words fading on a wall. Some are almost realisable as objects and can be easily seen and touched, some seem objective but are really only collections of words. Other collections of words make no pretense of objectivity but flow between the fingers uncontained, and all around is the white space, glowing and vibrant and eyeless.

Posted in Art, Consciousness, Evolution, Knowledge, Rock, Sense | No Comments »

Darkness at Noon - Objectivity and Undeniability

November 23rd, 2007 Fred McVittie

A common metaphor for the acquisition of knowledge is that of ’seeing’. When we want to refer to such gaining of knowledge we might explicitly say ‘I see’, meaning that we have such an understanding. As noted elsewhere, this visual metaphor for knowing also confers object-like status on the knowledge itself and we intuitively begin to treat it as if it were some kind of object that can be ‘grasped’, ‘acquired’, and ‘transferred’, or might be ‘hard’, ‘robust’, or less positively ’slippery’.

The visual metaphor for knowing also has a number of significant entailments which figure within the structure of the metaphor but which may be less obvious. Firstly there is the requirement that these ‘objects’ of knowledge exist in some kind of conceptual ’space’, usually external to the body (obviously, or we would not be able to ’see’ them), and secondly that this space be illuminated. This latter point is evidenced in our references to being ‘in the dark’; we use this and similar phrases when we want to indicate that we know that certain facts (knowledge objects) are ‘out there’ but we cannot see them.

Some types of knowing are conceptualised without the use of the visual metaphor, and in these cases some other sensory mode is usually referred to. So for example, when we want to indicate that we understand what a person is saying but do not want to simply agree with their viewpoint (sic) we might say ‘I hear what you’re saying’. By using an auditory rather than a visual metaphor we have acknowledged the existence of the facts the other person is claiming sight of but have not awarded those facts the full objective status that would be implied by saying that we also ’saw’ what they meant. We are acknowledging the existence of their words, but holding back on accepting the truth claims that those words make. To this extent we might say that (metaphorical) seeing is believing, whilst (metaphorical) hearing has something of the status of rumour; a good indication of what the other person thinks they know, but no guarantee of authority.

Other metaphorical senses used as labels for knowing have similar partial status; ‘felt’ knowledge is usual personal and tacit, and the defining feature of that form of knowing we call ‘taste’ is that it is not ‘out there’ in interpersonal space at all but is inside the body, inside the mouth. Strangely, these up close and personal (or even internal, interoceptive) forms of knowing, whilst they may not have the interpersonal and social authority of ’seen’ facts often have a feeling of personal authority which exceeds the objective. Whilst we may rationally understand that ‘feelings aren’t facts’ as the AA mantra goes, at the same time there is an undeniability of this type of felt knowledge which is often lacking in the objective. Many of us will have had the sense that, whilst all the (objective) facts about a certain phenomenon say one thing, our guts say something else, and that ‘gut feeling’ has a authoritative quality which is hard to overcome.

Obviously these acts of knowing that draw on non-visual metaphors have different, and usually lower social status than the objective knowledge of the seen. In any official context, or in any claim for the authority mentioned above, it is visual, ‘objective’ knowledge which holds sway. For this reason it is not surprising that when we wish to imply that our ideas should be treated as authoritative we tend to use visual metaphors to frame those ideas. Any politician who argued that his opponents ideas were invalid because they were ‘not to his taste’ would get short shrift from those who argued that the truth of such ideas ‘could easily be seen’.

Occasionally the visual metaphor is used to articulate a belief about the status of knowledge which is not easily shared, or which has ambiguous status, and this is most clearly revealed in the language around enlightenment and spiritual experiences. Typically, a person experiencing some kind of epiphany or divine revelation would claim that this experience constitutes the gaining of knowledge or insight, usually a particularly significant or transformative insight which seems to have something to say about the external world. To this extent it requires an objective explanation. Also, such experiences tend to have a quality of undeniability about them; it is rare for a person having such an experience to doubt the reality of it, in the way one might doubt the reality of a contestable fact. To this extent such experiences also demand an explanatory form which indicates the felt certainty of that knowledge. For these reasons, any desire to communicate this experience and share the knowledge thus gained would require that this communication use sensory metaphors which convey the most authority, which as already noted tend to be visual metaphors with all the entailments of space and light that go along with them. (This paragraph has already mobilised some of these metaphors as exemplified in words like ‘enlightenment’ and ‘insight’). They would also require the use of metaphors which convey the ‘felt’ sense of the experience, with all of the self-evident undeniability of the closely-held belief, (again the idea of a belief being ‘closely held’ indicates the mobilisation of an appropriate metaphor, and the unavoidability of using such metaphors in writing and thinking about these concepts). The requirements of a form of expression and conceptualisation appropriate to these experiences inevitably lead to paradox; one must find a way of thinking and speaking which simultaneously evokes the metaphorically exterior space in which objects of knowledge gain their interpersonal authority, a space which is illuminated and translucent, but one must also suggest the darkness and contact of the internal space which give an undeniably sense of phenomenological truth. This necessary paradox may help to explain why some authors, when trying to articulate the enlightenment state (or cognate conditions) use apparently oxymoronic terms such as ‘the dazzling dark’, or possibly in the case of alien abduction, a strange set of (probably confabulated) experiences in which similar symptoms to enlightenment are featured, the light emitted by the aliens or the ships has been described as ‘white, but dark white’.

Posted in Belief, Darkness, Feeling, Grasp, Hearing, Knowledge, Light, Metaphor, Objectivity, Seeing, Sense, Space, Taste | No Comments »

How Philosophy Captures the Mind

December 7th, 2007 Fred McVittie

It is said that a good question in science is one that is posed in such a way that the answer is easily found, whereas a good question in philosophy is one for which the answer is never found. Scientific questions, formalised in the conventions of the hypothesis, ideally constrain the field of inquiry to within clearly determined limits well-defined terms. The location of the answer to such a question, even if such answer be unexpected or disappointing, is tightly identified and focused upon. Philosophical questions on the other hand tend to focus less on the location or even the identification of possible answers than on the conceptual space opened up by the question. Good philosophical questions are ones which do not point to a specific answer/location but that extend the field of possible questions. This ability of questions in philosophy to capture the imagination and hold it in contemplation of the (possibly) unanswerable is one of the pleasures, if not consolations, of philosophy.

It seems likely that this feature of the ‘big questions’ to provoke extended contemplation, often by hundred of scholars over many centuries, is related to the ‘cognitive imperative’ identified by Newberg and D’Aquili and others, in which the human mind/brain irresistibly seeks out problems and ambiguous stimuli. Further, there may be a relationship with the tendency in babies and small children to give preferential attention to events which are unusual or which contravene their innate understandings of how the world works.

Posted in Attention, Cognition, Knowledge, Philosophy, Problem | No Comments »

Complex Brain (and why is there more than one?)

December 13th, 2007 Fred McVittie

It has been noted that the human brain is the most complex entity in the known universe, and is certainly more complex than either the parts from which it is composed (atoms, molecules, neurons, networks) and the greater whole of which it is a part (society, material world, galaxy, universe in totality). The complexity of the brain, which complexity surely gives rise to the strange phenomenon of mind, is not isolated from those greater and lesser entities. Rather there is a necessary dependency of brain on the processes which operate at a smaller scale that it contains and those large-scale cosmic processes in which it is contained. It also seems quite likely, if not inevitable, that the complexity of the brain greatly outstrips that of the mind supervenient on that brain. My brain seems to embody processes which my mind can scarcely conceive of, and then only through metaphor and symbol; quantum theory, complexity, etc.

One of the odd things about the mind is that there appears to be more than one of them.

Posted in Brain, Knowledge, Mind | No Comments »

The Weight of Stuff

December 30th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Items of knowing are often awarded the metaphorical status of ‘objects’ and have a schematic ontology mapped from the concrete ontology of objects in the real world of embodied experience. One aspect of real world objects which may feature as an entailment within an understanding of knowledge objects is that different objects are made of different ’stuff’. These differences, and the ways these differences in materiality affect the functioning of the object, are metaphorically mapped as structure.

The first of these properties of stuff is the weight that objects seem to have. Weight is experienced as a resistance to being lifted, or alternatively (niavely) as a ‘desire’ or tendency for the object to move downwards. Whilst we know (after Galileo) that all objects of whatever weight all have this tendency in equal amounts, this is not the intuitive impression one has when holding objects of different weights; it is usually felt that the heavier object ‘wants’ to get to the ground first. Whilst this impression is demonstrably wrong, it is still a compelling illusion and feeds into our intuitive understanding of objects. The apparent correspondence between weight and the tendency to move to a low point in the vertical dimension suggests that there will be a similar correspondence in the use of weight and height metaphors. When we look at the use of these metaphors in action we find that this relationship is indeed suggested. As noted elsewhere, high points in the vertical dimension are associated with knowledge, omniscience, enlightenment, ‘raised’ consciousness etc. and these phenomena are usually also associated with condition of lightness in weight. Chesterton is attributed with saying that ‘angels can fly because they take themselves lightly’. Conversely, low points are associated with heaviness, immovability, and the inertia that comes with weight.

The second property of objects that may serve as a structuring entailment of the use of objects as metaphors for knowing is the substance quality of different object; to what extent an object is solid, hard, soft, liquid, or gaseous. These different substantive qualities allow different affordance relationships to be established; hard objects can be grasped, held, built upon, stacked, used as foundations, treated as permanent etc. whereas softer objects are malleable, change their shape with contact, and can be smushed together. Liquid objects can be felt but not held, adopt the shape of the container in which they are placed, and disappear when they are not contained. Gaseous objects, clouds for example, barely exist as ‘objects’ at all, they disappear on close scrutiny, make no impact on the body, are often co-terminous with the space in which they appear, and may move inside the body unseen at every breath. These differences in substance that objects have are available as entailments of the knowledge object metaphor. Like real substances, knowledge might be hard or soft, it may be regarded as foundational and permanent or more socially malleable, it may only appear solid and bounded when placed at a distance (like a cloud) but disappear into evanescence when approached, it may seep into the body and become part of the chemistry of being.

Posted in Knowledge, Metaphor, Object, Substance | No Comments »

Light and Space

January 17th, 2008 Fred McVittie

The key role that light plays in our metaphorical conceptualisation of knowing is linked to other elements or entailments of the overall schema KNOWING IS SEEING. Seeing is dependent upon the medium of light for its functioning, and closely related to this is the space which the light occupies and which allows for both the separation and the containment of the object of vision. In order to see something that thing must exist in a brightly lit shared space with ourselves, it must be separated from us within a prescribed distance, and it must not be obscured or occluded by other things. Only when all these conditions are met can the act of seeing take place. The relationship between the components of this schema, light and space, is such that they are inextricably linked; we cannot divorce the space from its illumination. A space which is totally dark, in visual terms ends at the surface of our eyeballs. A visually extended space, on the other hand, is defined by the extent to which it is flooded with light. The conscionable space ends at the limits of the light, and while we might suspect the space continuing into the shadows there is a distinctly different ontology to such a space; it is ambiguous, impenetrable, filled with the absence of lightness.

The conceptual metaphor KNOWING IS SEEING which derives from the phenomenology of sight similarly echoes this tangled relation between light and space. To know something is to recognise its existence out there in the illuminated space beyond our eyes, and we invoke the metaphor whenever we say ‘I see’ when we really mean ‘I know’. Also, the limits and entailments of the metaphor transfer to our conceptualisation of what knowing is. If the object of our knowing is too close to our self the elision of the spatial separation also banishes the light and we can no longer claim to have this kind of visual knowledge. An object held against the heart ceases to be visible, and similarly with objects of knowing, when we are too personally involved the object ceases to have the objectivity which light and distance conferred upon it. It is barely an object at all and seems to be part of our selves, part of our subjectivity.

Alternatively, if the object is too metaphorically distant from us we may have great difficulty seeing it at all. We may sense that it is partly hidden in shadow and it may even inherit an eldritch strangeness from the darkness toward which it leans. At such a remove the object of knowing becomes part of occult knowledge, secretive, hidden and the property of the gnostic.

Posted in Darkness, Knowledge, Light, Metaphor, Proximity, Space | No Comments »

Modes of Sensory Knowing

January 28th, 2008 Fred McVittie

Knowledge (or knowing) is not a singular type of entity with clearly-defined parameters, rather the objects or entities of knowledge are conceptualised as existing along a continuum from ‘objective’ at one end to ’subjective’ at the other. This paper will propose that this distinction, and the continuum which it articulates, is derived from a single metaphorical schema through which the abstract notion of ‘knowing’ is grounded in the sensory experiences of the body.

The guiding metaphor for human knowing is derived from the experience of human sensing. The structure and details of our sensory embodiment provides the schema with which the abstractions of cognitive meaning-making is rendered comprehensible and conscious. The overall schema has particular entailments which carry over into our organisation of knowledge such that different types of knowing are associated with differences in the organisation of human sensory awareness. The visual sense has characteristics which distinguish it from the sense of touch, and both these sensory modes have differences from the sense of taste, and the differences in these characteristics provide a metaphorical template for differences in knowledge. Some of the differences in these modes, and which carry over into their metaphorical application to the structure of our concept of knowledge, include:

  • Distance/Proximity - The different senses are able to operate at different distances from the body. (Allied to this is the feature of Salience, in which proximity to the body indicates increasing salience; it is a necessary feature of human cognition that objects or events which occur close to, or at the surface of the body should have a high level of relevance)..
  • Intersubjectivity - Some sensory modes operate in shared public space (seeing being the paradigmatic public form), whilst others operate purely in relation to a single individual (as exemplified by taste).
  • Substantiality - Some sensory modes provide information which appears clearly bounded (as with a visualised object) whilst that provided by other modes is blended, suffuse, or indistinct (sounds or smells for example).
  • Vectoriality - The information provided by some sense seems to offer a direction from which it arises (or a vector for the intentionality which locates it) whereas that provided by other senses seems not to offer this extension.
  • Spatial Orientation - Related to Vectoriality, some senses suggest a particular alignment or spatialisation in which some information is more available than others. This is particularly evident with vision which only operates in a forward direction. (The detailed particularities of visual awareness suggests a number of other particularities which we do not have space to discuss here).

These characteristics, which mark the differences between the different sensory modes, can be shown to map onto the metaphorical schema that we use to understand and structure our concept of ‘knowledge’.

Posted in Abstract, Embodiment, Knowledge, Metaphor, Perception, Sense, Space, thesis | No Comments »

The Visible Structure of Knowledge Space

February 24th, 2008 Fred McVittie

When we talk about ‘knowledge space’ we are almost invariably talking about ‘objective’ knowledge. That is, knowledge which has something of the quality of an object, that can be seen clearly, approached, and possessed. The metaphor used to conceptualise this kind of space and the knowledge objects it contains, are usually visual metaphors, (as already used in the preceding sentence). Put another way, we conceive of space, particularly shared interpersonal space, as primarily determined visually, with discreet objects placed within that space and globally available for anyone with eyes to ’see’. As a metaphor for knowledge this space requires that knowledge appears globally visible as equally discreet knowledge objects. This understanding of knowledge space predetermines the structure of any knowledge which can ‘appear’ within it.

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Knowledge and Knowing

March 16th, 2008 Fred McVittie

When we want to introduce or discuss some item of knowledge; a perception, theory, or some expression of personal experience or belief, we use either this word ‘knowledge’, or we use the verb form ‘knowing’. This difference is significant and draws attention to different aspect of the overall metaphorical schema that structures our understanding.

As noted elsewhere, the organisational logic for our understanding of different forms of knowledge is drawn from our embodied experience as spatially-located entities, and the differences in knowledge types is mapped from the differences in spatial and sensory awareness produced by that embodiment. The use of these terms ‘knowledge’ and ‘knowing’ can be identified with reference to this organisational schema.

When we use the word ‘knowledge’ we are implicitly conferring upon the ‘object’ of knowledge some of the properties associated with objects in the physical world of our embodiment. Objects tend to be clearly bounded, be (visually) available to more than one individual at once, to persist over time and, crucially, to continue to exist in our absence. This last property is particularly interesting as the notion that objects exist even when we are not looking at them, an apparently trivial observation, is problematic when applied metaphorically to knowledge. It is clear that the tree that I look at (and photograph) each day when I walk my dogs does not disappear when I walk past it, (at least to the extent that it continues to be visible from the satellites accessed by Google Earth), however my active knowledge of the tree, as present in my visual perception of it, undoubtedly does. As the physicist Percy Bridgman, put it:

Since an object never occurs naked but always in conjunction with an instrument of measurement or the means whereby we obtain knowledge of it, the concept of ‘object’ as something in and of itself, is an illegitimate one.

This is also a question which exercised Albert Einstein, particularly in relation to status of the moon as ontological/epistemological object of realist knowledge. For a good discussion of this see http://www.eequalsmcsquared.auckland.ac.nz/sites/emc2/tl/philosophy/moon.cfm

This use of the term ‘knowledge’ places our attention on the apparently naked object, and distracts us from the presence of the instument of our own processes of knowledge production. The body is rendered absent and ecstatic in this flight away from the source of such ‘measurement’ toward its destination in the perceived/conceived, and theoretically ‘possessed’ object.

The term ‘knowing’ has a very different function within the overall schema, and it is revealing that certain writers, Mark Johnson for example, make explicit and insistant use of ‘knowing’ as a preferential term. Knowing, as a verb, demands the acknowledgement of a subject engaged in the act indicated; there is no escape or flight from the body of the knower as seems to be implied by ‘knowledge’. In using the term ‘knowing’ the focus is shifted away from the destination of the knowledge production process and widened to include something of the source and the path. There is also a sense, in this use of the verb, that the object of such knowing is not complete and permanent, existing like a rock on the riverbed, but rather is open to the pressings of engagement. There is something of the disposition of the knower present in this knowing, what Perkins might refer to as the dispositional quality of ‘pro-active’ knowledge, and also, critically, the hands-on immediacy of the performative.

Posted in Cognition, Embodiment, Knowledge, Language, Metaphor, Objectivity, Performance, Subjective | No Comments »

What is ‘Knowledge’?

March 20th, 2008 Fred McVittie

The concept of ‘knowledge’ covers a wide variety of different expressions, with a correspondingly wide range of applications, values, and inclusions. A small sample of these might include: objective, subjective, tacit, explicit, declarative, propositional, carnal, occult, procedural, possessive, performative, proactive, and situated. Whilst some of these terms come in pairs, the tacit/explicit binary for example, most of them appear unconnected one to another and their coexistence within an overall category that one might call ‘knowledge’ seems a matter of convenience rather than structure. The diversity in these terms appears to offer no overall epistemological picture which we might use to relate the different terms, and likewise the objects and events to which these terms are applied, the contents of all these different types of knowing, can also appear unconnected. And to the extent that such contents of knowing are related, in dewey decimal system of libraries, encyclopedia, school and university prospectuses, and in the various ‘trees’ of knowledge that have been produced, such relationship smacks of the arbitrary. A good example of such trees include that centerpiece of Enlightenment thought, the Encyclopédie, ou dictionnaire raisonné des sciences, des arts et des métiers of Diderot and D’Alembert, with its exhaustive arboreal analysis of not only rational knowledge but also poetics, metaphysics, and Black Magic. Whilst such a mapping may give the appearance of connectedness and ultimately of coherence, this is ultimately an exercise in taxonomy rather than structure, of categorization rather than consilience.

We might be tempted to say that knowledge organization has moved on considerably since the 18th century when the Encyclopédie was written, and it is certainly true that few modern encyclopedias would give the same page space to divination as to the dressing of chamois leather which one finds in Diderot and D’Alembert. However, in terms of the development of a coherent image of how the different forms of knowing operate little has changed, and improvements have largely consisted of the cultivation of those branches of the tree which support the weight of scientific progress, and the vigorous pruning of those limbs which do not.

Taxonomic strategies of knowledge organization do not reveal the inner working of the great body of knowledge, rather they place the bones here, the viscera there, substituting the living pattern that connects with the geometrical placing of body parts in neatly labeled amphora.

What I will be arguing here is that knowledge in all of its forms does have coherence, and that this coherence comes from the way our minds and our bodies work in relation to that knowledge.

Posted in Embodiment, Knowledge, Metaphor, thesis | No Comments »

Knowing is Seeing: The ‘Height’ Entailment

March 21st, 2008 Fred McVittie

Applied to the general schema of knowledge and more specifically to the well-established metaphor KNOWING IS SEEING, the dimension of height has a very clear application, and to explore this it might be useful to remind ourselves of the benefits that seeing from a height brings to the primate in the treetop and the lookout in the crow’s nest. Height, in the physical world, allows one to see further and to see more. It offers the ability to see over obstructions to what lies beyond and extends one’s gaze further into the distance, effectively pushing back the horizon and opening up new vistas. Looking from a high place also lets one take in more of the landscape at a glance, uniting the fragments of this piece of land, this lake, these trees, into a singular vision. Height shows patterns that would be invisible close to; the river deltas and the regularity of the coastline. From a position that is sufficiently elevated one can see all the way to the edge of the world in all directions, taking in the entire disc of the world and finding oneself at the centre of that disc.

It can easily be demonstrated that this height dimension is brought into the overall knowledge metaphor as a useful entailment by recognizing its usage within language. It is no accident that Isaac Newton famously remarked that ‘If I have seen further than other men it is because I have stood on the shoulders of giants’; there is an intuitively self-evident recognition implicit in this remark that the kind of sweeping breadth of vision which Newton brought to science was only possible through his being elevated to a height from which such vision becomes possible. Here the KNOWING IS SEEING metaphor is transparently employed such that seeing more, and seeing further, infers greater access to knowledge and ownership of larger swathes of that knowledge. There is a strong sense here of recognizing patterns and seeing beyond obstacles, glancing over the horizon of 15th century natural philosophy into the newly revealed regions of early science. The coherence of this metaphor, and the ease with which we accept its terms, is partly produced by the familiarity we have of the part played by height in the overall act of seeing, and the deployment of this play as an important entailment in the KNOWING IS SEEING metaphor.

Posted in Dimension, Knowledge, Metaphor, Seeing, Up | No Comments »

The Concept of Knowledge

March 21st, 2008 Fred McVittie

Knowledge is not a concrete concept. Whilst it may be the case that many of the facts which we come to know have a concrete, experiential facticity to them the concept of knowledge itself is deeply abstract. Despite the apparent intangibility of knowledge we nevertheless seem able to discuss it, write about it, and render it somehow cognitively available. Following the logic of this writing, we might conjecture at this point that, if knowledge is not queerer than we can suppose then we must be using certain strategies to effect this supposition, and the most likely strategy is that of using conceptual metaphor, or more specifically conceptual image schema. Knowledge as an abstract idea is rendered negotiable through the use of largely unconscious embodied metaphorical schema, the entailments of which organize our understanding of knowledge and make it sensible.

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Here is One Hand: Knowledge 2.0

March 22nd, 2008 Fred McVittie

“If you do know that ‘here is one hand’ we’ll grant you all the rest.”

One of the most common way in which artefacts of knowledge are organised and are distinguished one from another is through their designation as either Objective or Subjective. This distinction is accompanied by a range of value judgments and use-specific assumptions which serve to reinforce these categories as distinct and, for the most part, unproblematic. Whilst there is no overt or obvious difference in the intrinsic value of one or other of these types of knowing, it is fundamental within the empirical sciences that only Objective knowledge is permissible, largely because of the inherent difficulties of finding effective ways to mobilise knowledge located only in the Subject. This systematic tendency to acknowledge Objectivity and ignore Subjectivity is also found outside of the hard sciences and, despite some understandable but misguided resistance, forms the foundations for procedures of knowledge authentication in the arts and humanities.

One way of comprehending this distinction is through an analysis of the language games which are used in the explication of these two, apparently distinct, knowledge forms. Within the discourses of each form different metaphors, metonyms, and image schema structure the relevant concepts and there is a coherent and consistent pattern is which metaphors and schema are used. Objective knowledge makes extensive use of metaphors related to the act of seeing, including the entailments of visual awareness such as the presence of light, the placement of the object of knowledge in an external space etc. Subjective knowledge, on the other hand, is much more likely to make use of metaphors related to taste or smell. Again, the entailments associated with this latter metaphorical understanding support the conceptualisation associated with subjectivity; interiority, unilateral experiencing, ‘closeness’ to the core self of the experiencer.

It can be argued that between these two extremes of seeing and tasting, and the binary division in knowledge which they suggest, is a zone of possible metaphorical engagement based on the haptic sense; the reaching, touching, stroking, and caressing of the human hand. Knowledge constructed around the metaphor of the hand allows the object of such knowledge to be either grasped or rebuffed. Haptic knowing allows for both the claiming and possession of information (forsaking all others) that subjects require, but also the open-handedness and baton-passing that marks the public-spirited scientist. It might further be suggested that the technological circumstances for such tactile empiricism is already with us in the form of Web 2.0, the collection of database-driven, interactive, user-generated web environments characterised by MySpace, Facebook, Blogger, Amazon, and Wikipedia. The knowledge present on such sites is always in flux and ranges from personal reflection and comment to the most rigorously researched outcomes of the scientific method. The key feature of this network of knowledge, though, is the open access means of its creation and management. Whilst the ‘official’ status of a site such as Wikipedia in conventional academic circles may be questionable, there is no arguing that the information available is proudly and sensuously ‘hands-on’, crafted and moulded by the combined efforts of the end-users. Such sites are paradigmatic examples of haptic knowledge, and will provide instantiations of how we might come to know in ways which bypass both the eye and the tongue.

Posted in Blog, Grasp, Knowledge, Sense, thesis | No Comments »

Clean Language and Purple Prose

April 9th, 2008 Fred McVittie

It is here that lucidity is at stake. Lucidity is precisely that which sets itself against this fixing of reality, this materialisation of truth, no matter what form it takes. In itself, it is nothing, and the only way of speaking of it would be that of negative theology, in the sense that it is not. It is neither a contract with reality nor with knowledge. It is a pact and, if it has anything to do with light, literally speaking, it is not with Enlightenment reason and objective knowledge. It would lie, to evoke a very beautiful image, at the intersection of the light issuing from the object and the light coming from the gaze. Or rather it would consist, as Musil says, in looking at the world with the eyes of the world – and not, as he says, in having the world at the distant end of the gaze [au fond du regard], because it would then crumble into absurd details, as sadly separated from each other as the stars at night… (Baudrillard, J. 2007)

It seems quite possible that there is a relationship between certain communication styles and our intentions with regard to the information we are trying to communicate. When we are striving for the creation of knowledge which we would like be considered as objective, that is, knowledge which, in metaphorical terms, has some of the features of an object, then we use a particular set of techniques, and these differ from the techniques we use when we are not seeking to create such a knowledge object. Furthermore, the kind of metalanguage we use when we talk about such styles is itself a contributor to the overall schema of knowledge within which the sense of our communication is formed.

In order to explicate this it is perhaps useful to remind ourselves what might be thought of as the prototypical, and possibly paradigmatic example of objectivity. As I have noted elsewhere in this writing, one of the key metaphors through which knowing is understood is through the association of KNOWING with SEEING. This metaphorical relationship is part of a larger set of body-based metaphors which map different types of knowing with different modes of sensory access; touch, smell, hearing, taste, etc. The KNOWING IS SEEING metaphor is particular relevant because it is through the entailments of this metaphor that many aspects of the structure of knowledge are articulated. As we will see, some of these entailments support the concept of ‘objective’ or ‘object-like’ knowledge, and allied to this, other entailments narrate the relationship between the subject (the receiver of the communication) and this knowledge object. It is these latter entailments which shape the metalanguage in which we talk about different communication styles.

To bring out the various entailments mentioned above we might remind ourselves of what the circumstances and conditions are in which SEEING takes place, for it is these circumstances and conditions which are carried over into the metaphor and which give structure to the otherwise abstract concept of KNOWING. For the sake of this example I am here listing the ideal conditions for seeing; the conditions under which, in the embodied physical world, we would best observe the objects around us in their most sovereign state.

Obviously, for seeing to take place there must be a space for the ’seer’ and the ’seen’ to occupy. Also, this space in which both seer and seen are present must be brightly lit. The space between the seer and the seen must be empty and without obstruction, and should also be neither so great that the object disappears into the distance (or over the horizon), nor so near that it cannot be focused upon, or presses against the body in an uncomfortable way. There should be no disturbance in the air between seer and seen, and that air should be free from vapours, fogs, shadows, distracting aerial effects, or in fact anything which might draw the attention of the eye away from the seen object. The air should be colourless, still, and to all intents and purposes, absent; it should approximate the condition of pure space, a perfect conduit for the gaze. These are the conditions one would wish to find at the summit of a mountain, and which might cause one to say “I can see our house from here”. This is the state of interstellar space, where the blackness of the sky is testament to its ability to allow the unimpeded transmission of the light. Crystaline moons with unambiguous, razor-sharp edges. Under such conditions objects achieve their greatest clarity and the features which define them as objects become most available.

If these are the conditions under which our sense of sight produces the most perfect representation of distant objects, clearly outlined and uniquely visible, then it should be the case that these same conditions are taken over as entailments when we wish to produce similarly perfect representations of metaphorical objects. When we want to convey the impression that our knowledge is objective we should find ourselves aspiring to such conditions within our language. We should also find ourselves making overt reference to these conditions when we describe our linguistic aspirations. So, for example, we might try to make our communication ‘clear’ or ‘lucid’, and also be able to say that that is what we are attempting. We might want to make our points (the directions in which we are pointing) as obvious and direct as possible. We would certainly avoid filling the vacuum of this space with conceptual fogs, or put up any obstacles to understanding. We like the space of objectivity to be colourless, so we would avoid purple prose, or the occluding shadows of the occult. Again, it is likely that we would be completely overt in our stating of these aspirations and take pride in our desire to avoid obscurantism through such ‘plain speaking’. These are the kinds of criteria for objective communication that we would cite in any metalinguistic discourse about how we talk about knowledge. The reason for this is clear (sic); in order to simulate in language the conditions in which objects optimally appear, we have to reproduce these conditions in the form of conceptual metaphors, effectively creating the conditions through which our knowledge can appear lucidly as object. When we say ’speak clearly’ we really mean ’simulate with your speech the emptiness of the space around the moon on a cloudless night in Winter, when the frost has taken all of the moisture from the air.’

Which raises the obvious next question of how such an airless space of language might be produced; what are the mechanisms by which this evacuation of atmosphere and blowing away of conceptual fog might be effected? Although a full retelling of this story of banishment and cleansing is beyond the range of this writing we might look to the recent history of how the word ‘metaphor’ has extended its reach for clues.

As noted elsewhere, until two decades ago the most usual understanding of the relationships between language and the world was one of an unproblematic division between the literal and the metaphorical. (For a good overview of this see Ortony, 1993). Developments in embodied cognition, grounded in evolutionary psychology, have demonstrated that our ability to conceptualise abstract concepts, including the concept of knowledge, is an adaptation of existing cognitive mechanism originally designed for to allow the body to sense and negotiate its environment. As linguistist and cognitive scientist Steven Pinker describes it, the structures of cognition which in early humans, as in other animals, originally evolved to deal with the problems of moving through a physical spatial environment; sensing objects and movements, experiencing force and resistance, at some point were copied into other parts of the brain such that they became “scaffolding whose slots are filled with symbols for more abstract concerns like states, possessions, ideas, and desires.” (Pinker 1997, 355). The conclusion of these developments is a new understanding of the key role that metaphor plays in language and cognition. This is summed up by Lakoff and Johnson as follows:

Metaphor is for most people a device of the poetic imagination and the rhetorical flourish–a matter of extraordinary rather than ordinary language. Moreover, metaphor is typically viewed as characteristic of language alone, a matter of words rather than thought or action. For this reason, most people think they can get along perfectly well without metaphor. We have found, on the contrary, that metaphor is pervasive in everyday life, not just in language but in thought and action. Our ordinary conceptual system, in terms of which we both think and act is fundamentally metaphorical in nature…. But our conceptual system is not something we are normally aware of (1981.3).

So is there a mode of communication devoid of such epistemological constructions? Only if we limit ourselves to talking of trees, and rocks, and rivers, which might be a relief; to match our minds one to one with the Newtonian and empirical world in which our bodies are most at home, to follow Thoreau who claimed that “As you simplify your life, the laws of the universe will be simpler”. However, as inheritors of the cognitive imperative, the restless desire to think not only out of the box but also in ways which are beyond the queerness of any suppositions, this is not really an option. What we are undoubtedly capable of is making extensive use of metaphors, imaginatively constructing elaborate structures of abstract thought without at any point being consciously aware that we are doing so. As Lakoff and Johnson put it:

Our conventional ways of talking about arguments presuppose a metaphor we are hardly ever conscious of. The metaphor is not merely in the words we use–it is in our very concept (1981.6)

One implementation of these ideas can be found in the so-called ‘Symbolic Modelling’ techniques developed by Lawley and Tompkins (2000) which are based on the ‘Clean Language’ work of therapist David Grove, and ultimately originating in the couselling/training practice of Neurolinguistic Programming. An underpinning assumption within this technique, and within NLP more generally, is that non-conscious cognition consists largely of conceptual metaphors, which together make up the internal ‘landscape’ of the client’s mind. Within this model, it is believed that personal development or the alleviation of personal problems, can be affected by more optimal organisation of this landscape, such reorganisation taking the form of a kind of internal imaginary psychogeography. The client is assisted in bringing to consciousness the metaphors they habitually use to frame and structure their experiences, with the assumption that such self knowledge can lead to a more effective inhabiting and management of this interior terrain. The usual communications that take place between client and therapist, as in other forms are communication, are rife with metaphors that both individuals contribute, but in this particular form of therapy such mutual metaphorical exchange would prevent the client from gaining effective knowledge of their own cognitive modelling processes. The desired aim is to surface only those metaphors which arise from the psyche of the client. To ensure that the therapist or counsellor does not ‘contaminate’ the communication by accidentally inserting their own metaphors into the communication Clean Language uses a deliberately restricted syntax which minimises the possibility of this contamination taking place. This syntax consists of a small number of questions and statements that the therapist uses to elicit responses and move the conversation forward. These are:

* And is there anything else about ……?
* And what kind of …… is that ……?
* And where is ……?
* And whereabouts?
* And what happens next?
* And then what happens?
* And what happens just before ……?
* And where does/could …… come from?
* And that’s …… like what?
(Lawley and Tompkins. 2000. 54)

The blanks in the sentences are filled in by playing back parts of the utterances made by the client, such that the original metaphors are largely kept intact. The sentences act as prompts by the therapist which allow the client to carry out further exploration of the internal landscape, moving the cursor backwards and forwards across the map whilst making minimum impact upon that environment themselves.

This interrogative and facilitative style of speech is the only example I have discovered of a linguistic strategy which approximates the literal, and even this assumes the existence of a spatially extended field of thought. Given also that it’s aim is the facilitation of knowledge, it is of no use whatsoever in generating, defining, articulating, constructing, or otherwise imparting knowledge itself. Any communication which has as its aim the transmission of ideas or concepts must inevitably set the terms of that communication through unconscious and covert metaphors. This includes the visual metaphors of clarity, directness, and lucidity which create the cognitive simulation of objectivity.

There are two possible implication for this analysis of the way language supports the construction of knowledge through conceptual metaphor. Firstly, there is the slightly vertiginous loss of certainty which inevitably accompanies the realisation that things were not as they seemed and that the prized goal of objectivity is sometimes made rather than found. This is particularly salient in this case since, not only has everything that was solid melted into air but the air itself has been sucked out along with the space which contained it. (Which irresistably reminds me of the scene in ‘Yellow Submarine’ when the Beatles are sailing through the Sea of Holes and Ringo reaches out and grabs one of these holes, a black circle of empty space, plucking it from its setting and putting it in his pocket. What was left behind after the removal of the hole doesn’t bear thinking about.) Within the overall context of conceptual metaphor theory and embodied cognition however, nothing has really changed. This is not the landscape of endlessly deferred meaning one finds within poststructuralism, nor the ‘nothing to scrute’ of Quine for example (1969, p. 5; cf. p. 27 and 1960, p. 58 and p. 77) who wrote that “The thesis of the inscrutability of reference tells us that it makes no sense to say absolutely, i.e., in any language or framework-independent sense, what objects a speaker is talking about. (According to the Stanford Encyclodpedia of Philosophy at least:an objective text if ever such a thing existed.) Within the terms of embodied cognition, the observation that most language, and indeed most thought, is metaphorical does not banish the world, but rather casts the body and the sense-making processes inherent in the body as the interface between thought and world. Objects remain objects and metaphorical objectivity becomes one of a number of imaginative poetic devices for the comprehension of the otherwise incomprehensible.

The second implication for this embodied view of the relationship between language and knowledge, and how cognition relates to both, is that there may be occasions when the knowledge figuring in the communication is not considered to be an object. If this were the case then setting up linguistic conditions, and by implication cognitive conceptual conditions, which simulate the condition of objectivity may be counter-productive, reminiscent of Polanyi’s example: “Suppose a lecturer points his finger at an object, and tells the audience: ‘Look at this!’ The audience will follow the pointing finger and look at the object” (Polanyi, M. 1969 pp. 181/182). This is all very well if the lecturer wanted the audience to look at the object, (the moon, say), but if the point was not where he was pointing or the aim where it was aimed, this constitutes a misdirection. It may be that a better strategy is to accept the inevitable power of language and the embodied cognition it evidences to constitute not only ontology but also epistemology, (it’s not a bug, it’s a feature). Which is all a roundabout way of saying that the writing I am doing here, and which you are reading, and the conceptual spaces that we share and which which we don’t share, and which for me rotate around the axis of my ‘I’ as for you they rotate around yours, is rarely engaged in the production of objects. Hold a rock in your hand, see a tree on the horizon. And all around is the white space, glowing and vibrant and eyeless.

Baudrillard, J. Hetero de Fe. International Journal of Baudrillard Studies. Volume 4, Number 2 (July, 2007). Translated by Rex Butler and Michael Wallace. ISSN: 1705-6411 http://www.ubishops.ca/BaudrillardStudies/vol4_2/v4-2-baudrillard-hetero-da-fe

Lakoff, G. and M. Johnson (1981). Metaphors we live by. Chicago, University of Chicago Press.

Lawley, J. and P. Tompkins (2000). Metaphors in mind : transformation through symbolic modelling. London, Developing Company Press.

Ortony, Andrew. (1993) Metaphor and Thought. Cambridge University Press

Pinker, S. (1997). How the mind works. New York, Norton.

Polanyi M. Sense-giving and sense-reading. In: Grene M, ed. Knowing and Being, Essays by Michael Polanyi. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1969.

Quine, W.V.O. (1969) Ontological Relativity and Other Essays. NY: Columbia University Press.

Posted in Cognition, Knowledge, Language, Sense | 1 Comment »

Perkins’ Disappearing Object

April 9th, 2008 Fred McVittie

When David Perkins identifies three different types of knowing; what he refers to as ‘possessive, ‘performative’, and ‘pro-active’, what he is effectively doing is mapping different types of knowledge across an expanse of metaphorical, phenomenal space. His ‘possessive’ knowledge is that which appears to have something of the quality of a object, placed at some distance but clearly within the line of sight. Like other ‘visual’ objects it can be ’seen’ simultaneously by a number of different observers and has something of the permanence, fixity, and unchanging nature of prototypical objects in lived experience. In this schema the ideal object of possessive knowledge may be the empirical fact, established through deduction, built on firm foundations of scientific research, and unwavering in its resistance to the attacks of falsification. It is a noun in the sentences of meaningful discourse.

Performative knowledge does not have this object status but, as the term implies, rather adopts the position of an action, and that position is always changing. Here is knowledge, or perhaps ‘knowing’, which engages as physical action, which has a changing profile over the course of time, and which moves nomadically through space. Performative knowledge functions as a verb, or as many verbs, and its role is to pick, to pack, to grasp, to fold, to tear, to chop, to walk, to talk, to write, to run, and to never set itself into stone and never to stand still. Its space of operation is not out in the open where it can be skewered in the triangulating gaze of multiple I’s, but at the limin between body and world. It lives in the interstices between the muscles of the arm and the bark of the tree, and it is also in the swing of the axe. It is motile, ductile, flowing, flowering, and possibly shimmering but it is never caught motionless between the pages of a book.

Proactive knowledge is closer yet. As Perkins says, it is ultimately dispositional, and has none of the qualities of an object or of an action. This is the knowledge or the knowing which is inseperable from ‘being’ and therefore is the subject of the sentence. Proactive knowledge swings the axe.

Posted in Grasp, Knowledge, Object, Objectivity | No Comments »

Cross-modal sensory mapping.

April 13th, 2008 Fred McVittie

The analysis of texts which use sensory mode based metaphors, i.e. that refer to ‘touch’, ‘taste’, ’see’, in a non-literal way, shows that there are a number of consistent patterns within this usage, including patterns of relations between the sensory modes. For example, Shen & Cohen (1989) demonstrate that within poetic texts there is a predictable and coherent use of what they refer to as ’synaesthetic’ metaphors, in which the properties of one sensory modality is mapped onto the other. They give the example of phrases such as ’sweet silence’, and point out that in phrases such as this the modality which they refer to as ‘lower’, i.e. closer to the body, in these cases the sense of taste or touch, is mapped onto the ‘higher’ or less proximal sense. Also, the ‘higher’ sense which forms the target of this metaphor is usually less accessible, less easy to ‘grasp’. So, in the case of ’sweet silence’, the higher and more ethereal auditory quality of silence is referred to using the more delineated, accessible, and proximal sense of taste. Although it is not stated in this article, it is hard to miss the metaphor of elevation which is also being deployed in order to give form to our understanding. Not only are the metaphorical senses ordered across the dimension of proximity and distance, (with the access that such proximity entails), and not only are they distinguished in terms of substantiality, with some being easy to grasp whilst others are harder to get a handle on, but they are also arrayed vertically, with some metaphorical sensory modes appearing more elevated than others. Tasting and touching happen locally and at ground level, sight gives us a wider, but less tangible view, and audition (including listening to the sound of silence) extends that view backward and forward and into the future and the past. Shen and Cohen do not make mention of the part played by olfaction in this schema, but it is likely that given the ubiquity of phrases such as ’strong smell’, or ’sharp odor’ demonstrate that it also figures within the overall structure. In these two possible examples the olfactory experience, which has the characteristics of ephemerality and extension which make access difficult, is understood in terms of the tactile, base-level, and proximal senses of strength and sharpness.

Shen, Y. and M. Cohen (1998). “How come silence is sweet but sweetness is not silent: a cognitive account of directionality in poetic synaesthesia.” Language and Literature 7(2): 123-140.

Posted in Cognition, Grasp, Hearing, Knowledge, Metaphor, Proximity, Seeing, Sense, Silence, Smell, Space, Synaesthesia, Taste | 2 Comments »

The Object of Knowledge

April 13th, 2008 Fred McVittie

Given that we routinely assign certain structures of perception and cognition to a category we refer to as ‘objective knowledge’ is may be worthwhile considering what processes are at work in this assignation. As we have already claimed, since the concept of ‘knowledge’, the subject of epistemology, is inherently abstract then according to the theories of embodied cognition, and specifically conceptual metaphor, we can only make sense of it through the application of metaphorical mapping processes. Samuel Beckett once stated that ‘We can only talk about nothing as if it were something, in the same way we can only talk about God as if he was a man’. He might have added that we can only talk, or indeed think, about the abstract as if it was concrete. What kind of concrete experience we tend to use to provide analogical structure to the concept of knowledge is revealing. The various metaphors for knowledge used within Knowledge Management have shown that the dominant images are based upon the mapping that suggests that KNOWLEDGE IS STUFF. This stuff includes assets, resources, capital, substances and constructed entities (machines, ships, etc.), but by far the most common subdivision of the overall metaphor is that KNOWLEDGE IS OBJECTS. (Andriessen, 2008).

If we concede that the concept of ‘knowledge’ refers to a category of experience and cognition (and possibly imagination) that is distinguishable from categories such as ‘belief’, ‘phantasy’, ‘hallucination’, etc., which intuition seems to demand that it does, then it is worth considering what kind of a category this might be, and what metaphorical ‘objects’ are confined within the limits of that category or are excluded from it.

Knowledge Management Research & Practice (2008) 6, 5–12. doi:10.1057/palgrave.kmrp.8500169
Stuff or love? How metaphors direct our efforts to manage knowledge in organisations

Daniel G Andriessen

Posted in Knowledge, Object, Objectivity, Substance | 3 Comments »

Before and After the Book

April 29th, 2008 Fred McVittie

There is a book on the table in front of me right now (The Craft of Thought by Mary Carruthers) and it seems to be a solid object. I know it is mostly composed of space, but that isn’t really important since it doesn’t change my experience of it. The knowledge that the book ‘contains’ is something different though.

There must have been a time when knowledge didn’t live inside books, but inside the fragile containers of human bodies. If you wanted to know something you would travel to the point in space where that human body was located and if you were lucky they would convey the knowledge that they contained to you somehow. It would be important, needless to say, to travel to that point in space during the short window of time that the person was alive, awake, conscious, and compos mentis.

Sometime after that time someone must have got the idea of recording the knowledge that they had in some way; maybe by carving it on a stone or writing in on a scroll of some sort. If you wanted access to the knowledge then you would still have to travel to the point in space where the scroll was but the window of time would be potentially larger. In some ways though, the scroll would have to be given the same special treatment as a human possessor of knowledge; it would have to be protected from harm, safeguarded against fire and the ravages of time etc. It would be a pretty special kind of object.

Maybe then someone got the idea of making copies of the scroll so that the knowledge could exist in more than one place at the same time. That would be quite a leap forward. The same knowledge would now exist in more than one point in space, and the destruction of one of these instantiations would not mean the total loss of knowledge from the world.

Print publication would extend this process even further, such that every time knowledge is put into book form it would, to all intents and purposes, become immortal. All publications (with ISBN numbers) are archived in the British Library, with the security which that implies, as well as appearing in book shops and the shelves of readers. The immortality of the knowledge is ensured partly by the treatment accorded to individual copies of the book but more significantly by its distribution. When knowledge is repeated across thousands of instantiations across the world it is extremely difficult to destroy.

It has been said (although I don’t know by whom, or whether it is true), that if you are in a city you are probably no further than eight feet away from a rat at all times. In a book culture it is likely that you are similarly no further than, say, thirty feet away from some books. Not all books obviously, but I would be surprised if there was not a bible within that kind of radius most of the time, and possibly a dictionary or other reference book of some kind. Some knowledge, even though it appears in books, seems to exist almost as a field, distributed across populated space, with the individual books that instantiate it being simply temporary devices which allow it to appear. When one book, or a thousand books, fall apart or are destroyed, the knowledge is still instantly accessible through the medium of all the other books which contain it.

Thanks to Project Gutenberg and similar endeavours it is now possible to access almost the entire history of the world’s writing through screens. Knowledge that lived in books, and across the field of books, now exists across the field of space and ubiquity is almost total. As I sit here typing I am within inches of all the knowledge that has been inscribed and digitised and can access it instantly. Truly ubiquitous, this knowledge is everywhere available. In fact, I am not even inches away from that knowledge; the wireless network that links this laptop to the access point on the wall is radiating that knowledge through space and through me as I type these words. When I summon up a page of the Gutenberg Bible, that information is in the room and is inside my body and the walls of the room and in my coffee cup and everywhere within the 20feet radius covered by my local network.

Changes in technology, social organisation, and epistemology itself mean that knowledge has changed its spots. Whereas once it was uniquely located at a particularly point in space for a very limited period of time, now it is everywhere and forever. From being identifiable as a distinct and temporal object is has transformed into a distributed and atemporal field. Nothing is lost, nothing is forgotten, nothing is burnt, silenced, made mute by dementia or death. The evolution of publication is almost complete and the pages of the book spread holographically across the space between atoms and stars. This blog is more permanent and more ubiquitous than any work of print.

This does not mean that the book itself ceases to be important as an idea; it still carries the symbolic significance it inherited from its history in the individual scroll, and ultimately the individual body of fragile human beings. This symbolic significance is evidenced by the continued popularity of book-burning; no knowledge has ever been lost by the burning of a book, but since as an action it represents the destruction of a speaking position and a human speaker, the symbolic value of the action is maintained.

Posted in Blog, Carruthers, Mary, History, Knowledge, Object, Space, Time, Writing | No Comments »

Barthes Multi-dimensional Space

April 30th, 2008 Fred McVittie

In ‘Death of the Author’ Roland Barthes refers to a text not as ‘a line of words releasing a single ‘theological’ meaning (the ‘message’ of the Author-God) but a multi-dimensional space in which a variety of writings, none of them original, blend and clash.’ The dimensionality that Barthes is referring to here is, presumably, the tissue or fabric of language (and quotations) which make up the text. In making mention of the concept of ‘dimension’ he invokes the idea of a space, in this case a space of connection, deferral, and difference. Within the terms of the metaphor of this blog however, it might be more useful to talk about the ‘three-dimensional space of writing’. In this imaginary space there is horizontal extension away from the body and there is vertical extension. The objects of knowledge which are created by some of the writing are positioned at some distance in the horizontal plane, whilst some are positioned closer. Distant objects are most clearly delineated and bounded, separate from contamination by the body of the subject. Closer objects of knowledge fall within the reach and grasp of the hand, and are given affordance and malleability by their proximity. Objects inside the body cease to be objects at all, and acquire the properties of subjecthood.

The vertical dimension offers a vantage point from which a greater span of space might be panoptically available, and this elevated position offers the possibility of overview unavailable from ground level. The higher ground also suggests a more rarified, convergent, ’spiritual’ view, from which the irrelevant details disappear in favour of the grand plan.

Posted in Barthes, Roland, Dimension, Knowledge, Space, Up | 1 Comment »