July 18, 2007

  • Lottery Phenomenology:

    Burning Bright

    Yesterday in
    the Keystone State:

    PA Lottery July 17, 2007: Mid-day 853, Evening 856

    This suggests-- via a search on "853-856" + "universals"-- that we consult pages 853-856 in The Library of America's William James: Writings 1902-1910.

    Beginning on page 853 in this book, and ending on page 856, is an excerpt from a James address that the editor has titled...

    The Tigers in India

    "There are two ways of knowing things, knowing them immediately or
    intuitively, and knowing them conceptually or representatively. 
    Altho such things as the white paper before our eyes can be known
    intuitively, most of the things we know, the tigers now in India, for
    example, or the scholastic system of philosophy, are known only
    representatively or symbolically.

    Suppose, to fix our ideas, that we take first a case of conceptual
    knowledge, and let it be our knowledge of the tigers in India, as we
    sit here.  Exactly what do we mean by saying that we here know the tigers? ....

    Most men would answer that what we mean by knowing the tigers is having
    them, however absent in body, become in some way present to our
    thought.... At the very least, people would say that what we mean by
    knowing the tigers is mentally pointing towards them as we sit here....

    ... The pointing of our thought to the tigers is known simply and
    solely as a procession of mental associates and motor consequences that
    follow on the thought, and that would lead harmoniously, if followed
    out, into some ideal or real context, or even into the immediate
    presence, of the tigers....

    ... In all this there is no self-transcendency in our mental images taken by themselves.
    They are one phenomenal fact; the tigers are another; and their
    pointing to the tigers is a perfectly commonplace intra-experiential
    relation, if you once grant a connecting world to be there
    In short, the ideas and the tigers are in themselves as loose and
    separate, to use Hume's language, as any two things can be, and
    pointing means here an operation as external and adventitious as any
    that nature yields.

    I hope you may agree with me now that in representative knowledge there
    is no special inner mystery, but only an outer chain of physical or
    mental intermediaries connecting thought and thing. To know an object is here to lead to it through a context which the world supplies....

    Let us next pass on to the case of immediate or intuitive acquaintance
    with an object, and let the object be the white paper before our
    eyes.... What now do we mean by 'knowing' such a sort of object as
    this?  For this is also the way in which we should know the tiger
    if our conceptual idea of him were to terminate by having led us to his
    lair?

    ... the paper seen and the seeing of it are only two names for one indivisible fact which, properly named, is the datum, the phenomenon, or the experience.
    The paper is in the mind and the mind is around the paper, because
    paper and mind are only two names that are given later to the one
    experience, when, taken in a larger world of which it forms a part, its
    connections are traced in different directions.1"

    James, Writings 1902-1910, page 856

    The same volume also contains
    James's The Varieties of
    Religious Experience.

    "The Tigers in India" is
    only a part of a 20-page
    James address originally titled
    "The Knowing of Things Together"
    (my emphasis).