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 »

Still Centre - Subjective/Objective Overlap

June 26th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Although the realm of rational objectivity is often at a distinct remove from the subjective realm of the senses, there are some useful correspondences between subjective experience and scientifically determined objective knowledge. One of these areas of overlap is that of relativity. In relativity the understanding of all motion, and the forces which go along with that motion, is dependant upon the frame of reference. In Einstein’s famous example, the experience of being in an elevator in interstellar space and being accelerated at 9.8 ft per sec per sec is equivalent to being in that same elevator, stationary, on a planet with Earth-type gravity. If the frame of reference in each case is taken to be the elevator, then these different situations are identical in every way. There is no absolute measurement of the forces or motions, these measurements are relative to the frame of reference.

Relating this to subjectivity, I can apply this logic to support a claim that at all times, whilst I may appear to be in motion, I am actually motionless. I may appear (to an outsider, working with their own frame of reference) to be moving through a stationary landscape, but actually (the actuality of my frame of reference) I am centered and grounded, whilst the landscape moves around me and through me. It may be difficult for me to realise this understanding as I am so used to adopting the position of the outsider, so used to seeing myself and my relation to the world from an objective position, but if I make the effort to see through my own eyes, with the necessary naivity of human science, I can be the still centre of the turning world.

Posted in Centre, Naive, Objectivity, Subjective | No Comments »

Two Kinds of Nothing

July 2nd, 2006 Fred McVittie

Objectively, (in the realm of material objects),’nothing’ is that which is left when ’something’ is removed. In other words, ’something’ precedes ‘nothing’.
Subjectively, (in the realm of thought), ’something’ is that which is left when ‘nothing’ is removed. In other words, ‘nothing’ precedes ’something’.

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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.

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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.

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Zero Person Singular

October 10th, 2006 Fred McVittie

First and third person accounts are the dominant positions of phenomenological and physical enquiry; phenomenology uses the 1st person ‘I’, objective science uses the 3rd person ‘he’, ’she’, or ‘it’. Science usually uses the passive mode, such as when we say that ‘this measurement was made’, or ‘this experiment was carried out’, the 3rd person making the measurement or carrying out the experiment is implied rather than overtly stated or named.

An ongoing problem in areas of study which draw on the techniques of both phenomenological and physical enquiry, consciousness research for example, is resolving these 1st and 3rd person accounts into one single coherent account, taken from a single viewpoint. To rational science the 1st person is invalid, to phenomenology the 3rd person is irrelevant.

A possible means for establishing a hiatus in this problem is by developing a mode of discourse which is neither 1st nor 3rd person, and one possible candidate for such a discourse would be an enhanced version of the way of speaking known as e-prime, which draws on Korzybski’s General Semantics. In standard e-prime the verb ‘to be’ is suppressed, such that any statement which claims an objective physical fact by saying that some object is some property (such as ‘that elephant is grey), is disallowed, and must be re-articulated to include the viewing position (so that the sentence above becomes ‘that elephant appears grey to me’, or more pedantically ‘the side of the elephant facing me appears grey to me’). Clearly, standard e-prime favours a 1st person account, countering the implied 3rd person objectivity of the is statement. An enhanced version of e-prime would also eliminate this 1st person in favour of a zero person singular account, in which no reference is made, overtly or covertly, to any viewer whatever.

Posted in Elephant, Korzybski, Alfred, Language, Objectivity, Phenomenology, Science | No Comments »

Feelings aren’t Facts

October 21st, 2006 Fred McVittie

We come to know and understand abstract concepts through the metaphorical application of non-abstract embodied concepts. These concepts, which are entirely familiar and concrete, and include such things as physical objects, journeys, containers, etc., are organised ‘naturally’ into different sensory modes; those which are apprehended visually, aurally, kinaesthetically, gustatory, olfactorily, and as tactile experience. Therefore our understanding of abstract concepts is likely to be similarly organised into different metaphorical sensory modes. There is certainly an apparent order to the way we use language to articulate different types of abstract concepts; those which we regard as objective (e.g. justice, truth, etc) tend to be described using visual metaphors, whereas those which are thought of as subjective (love, hate, etc) are often spoken of using metaphors of touch. Abstract concepts which are objectified through the use of visual metaphor are awarded the status usually attributed to objects; permanence, boundedness, etc, whereas those which are not objectified in this way but are understood using tactile metaphors are regarded as ‘feelings’, and as everyone knows, feelings aren’t facts.

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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.

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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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Visual Duality

December 7th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The visual sense (and the visual imagination) has an inbuilt tendency to objectify experience by locating concepts at a remove from the body, thus transforming them into objects, and simultaneously creating a viewing position separate from those objects; the subject which is ourself. Inevitably, our eyesight gives us the impression that our ’self’ is located here, behind the eyes, while the world is ‘out there’, beyond the surface of the skin. The faculty of sight is not therefore conducive to the development of non-duality. Wherever we look we cannot see ourselves and, from this perspective (sic), whilst we may visualise the rest of the world as a unity; a single big picture, we ourselves are not in that picture. Visually, we are not in the world. Mirrors do, of course, provide a visual image of our selves, evidence for our worldly existence, but this evidence is circumstantial, not experiential. We usually do not identify ourselves literally with the reflection, or feel our consciousness to be located behind the mirror.

Posted in Imagination, Mirror, Non-duality, Objectivity, Seeing | No Comments »

Suppression of the Imagination

July 6th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Despite the fact that much of the discourse of scientific rationalism is inherently metaphorical, there is still a sense that a vast gulf exists between this discourse and that of myth, fantasy, dream, art, etc. As Ira Chernus (1985) points out in Imagining the Unimaginable this perceived difference is not simply due to an ontological distinction in the kind of knowledge represented in the discourse, but is a difference which is actively constructed and maintained to serve the interests of particular individuals and organisations. Chernus uses the the example of Nuclear war and how this possible event is described. He indicates that it is not the unimaginability of such an event that is the problem, but rather how the kind of imaginative engagement we might have with it is constrained to the apparent ‘objectivity’ of scientific and military strategic discourse. Other forms of engagement: fantasy, narrative, mythic etc. are effectively suppressed and claimed to be invalid, despite the fact that the apparently objective allowed discourses are equally grounded in imaginative metaphor.

Chernus, Ira. (1985). “Imagining the ‘Unimaginable’.” Bulletin of Peace Proposals, no 1, pp. 79-85.

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Objectivity (Buber and Polanyi)

November 3rd, 2007 Fred McVittie

The traditions of objectivity place the material of that objectivity in a shared interpersonal space in front of each and all possible viewers. The (arte)facts of such objectivity are rendered as knowledge objects in this imaginal conceptual space. There is a fact that both you and I can agree upon, and if put in the right light is self-evident to everyone else also, (the Earth is round, parallel lines never meet, all things must pass). The fact is an objective fact and has the same status as any other object.

The question then becomes, what is an appropriate relationship for me to have with that object? What is your relationship? Is yours the same as mine? A number of options are possible; if we are fresh from reading Martin Buber we might have a choice of striking up a relation of I-it, in which we preserve the object’s inanimate sovereignty, but at the cost of rendering ourselves similarly lifeless and regally removed from the situation. Or we might try to establish an I-Thou relationship in which both the object and ourselves are mutually potentiated by contact.

Alternatively, we may have come to the question after reading Polanyi, and recognise in our apprehension of the object a certain direction, a kind of vectorial aspect to our relationship. We may feel that the object over these in shared conceptual space lies at the end of a line of intentionality that begins at the source of our own self. We may sense the ‘from-to’ nature of this intentionality; here I am and there is the object, and what I know of it is the result of the pouring of perception from here to there, an outpouring which oddly leaves my own body in its wake so that I feel myself not located entirely at the source but eccentrically and ecstatically projected forward toward the object. In the from-to relationship this projection is welcomed and a sense of rapport, compassion, empathy, and fellow-feeling may be invoked. The from-to light does not simply stop at the surface of the object but penetrates, connects, warms, and co-illuminates. It has a place to go to and it feels like home. Or, to stay with Polanyi, our relationship of projected intention may be less ‘from-to’ and more ‘from-at’, in which the object is given no power to receive our transmissions, and while the gaze may originate here, with the self, there is no end to the journey of our perception. The view into the shared space does not resolve onto an object of (comm)union but is interrupted by an object of the imperial empirical state.

Posted in Buber, Martin, Dualism, Object, Objectivity, Perception, Polanyi, Michael | 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 »

Existential Self and Evolutionary Individuation

November 26th, 2007 Fred McVittie

The modern human self has (at least) four different layers of being. Three of these are identified as:

The Symbolic Self
The Objective Self
The Subjective Self(1)

To these may be appended the additional, more ‘basic’ layer of the existential self. This layer of self-identification acknowledges the self as occupying a state of ‘being’, which might be simply the physical and material substrate of the body, inextricably connected to the equally material substrate of the wider environment.

It seems that the evolutionary narrative, as far as it relates to human beings, is one of increased distinction and individuation. The postulated ‘Existential self’ is clearly undivided from the physical environment of which it is a part. The Subjective Self has autopoeitic functions which construct fluctuating boundaries and resistances corresponding with the body of the organism, but there is no sense that this distinction is any more than, say, the distinction between a whirlpool and the water in which is turns. The Objective Self is further distinguished such that it becomes possible for the organism to recognise itself, thereby creating something of a closed loop of being and knowing. The whirlpool has an image of itself as a whirlpool, separate from that water. The ape recognising its own face in a mirror establishes a distinction in which it sees itself ‘out there’ in the world yet separate from that world. The subjective feeling of being is embodied in a permanent object from which all else is excluded.

1. Sedikides, C. and J. J. Skowronski (1997). “The Symbolic Self in Evolutionary Context.” Personality and Social Psychology Review 1(1): 80-102.

Posted in Evolution, Objectivity, Sedikides, C. and J. J. Skowronski, Self, Subjective, Symbol | No Comments »

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 »

Baudrillard on Lucidity

March 23rd, 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…”

http://www.ubishops.ca/BaudrillardStudies/vol4_2/v4-2-baudrillard-hetero-da-fe.html

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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 »

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 »