Re: Identity Boundary

Brian D Williams (duening@oss1.cba.uh.edu)
Wed, 4 Mar 1998 09:35:19 CDT


Ian Goddard writes that the mystical notion of "holism" is more
likely the "Truth" because it doesn't impose the boundaries that the
mind uses to make its way in the world.

I find this whole line of thinking to be unconvincing. Centuries of
thought have tried to convince people that one or another point of
view is "Truth" and everything else is mere illusion. The notion
that there is some "Super" truth behind mere, everyday truth is a
religious notion that serves no purpose whatever.

Why should we think that holism is more real than boundaryism? Maybe
holism is an artificial construct of the mind. It may, in fact, be
impossible to think of anything at all without thinking of at least
two things that are some somehow related and interacting. Try, I
mean, really try, to think of just one thing without it being related
to anything else at all. What could you possibly be thinking of?

This discussion of mine is inadequate, to be sure. My sense is that
extropians and transhumanists shouldn't try to re-capture a religious
sense in mystical notions of holism vs. boundaryism. Let's just use
the theories for what they're worth and forget about which one is
more "true" than the other.

BTW, I have found Lee Smolin's "Life of the Cosmos" to be a most
compelling discussion of these types issues.

Ciao,

think of