Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Hegel, Metaphysics and Spiritual Realization

We can trace much of Hegel back to Spinoza, Leibniz and Kant. But what if Spinoza and Leibniz themselves represented but an adaptation or even simplification of little known medieval esoteric texts? And that such texts gave a firm foundation for the synthesis of Hegel with Schopenhauer? What if the unfolding of Hegel's Logic or Phenomenology of Spirit can be interpreted as representing the process of spiritual liberation and totalization  and harmonization of all states of being?

Essence becoming actuality in the Science of Logic: beyond different models for a theory, different frames of reference for physics, representations for an algebraic structure, etc. Do we not here have the phenomenological reflection which neither attempts to have empty thought grasp directly its own structure nor is thought loosing itself in the objectified engagement in its action, but rather is the self-reflected awareness of thought in its thinking, a shift of perspective which knows itself in its process?  This goes beyond causality, computation and formal logic to inner and infinite spiritual knowledge. Spiritual knowledge is knowledge that what is in consciousness is taken and proceed from its inmost center, a revelation, veiling-unveiling, which must pass to reveal the process: the revelation is re-velation.

The first part of Schopenhauer's World as Will and Representation is divided into four books. It would be interesting to establish a correspondence with the Science of Logic.  Clearly books 1 and 2 correspond to Being and Essence while books 3 and 4 correspond to Concept. However books 1 and 2 are written from the perspective 'for us', from the point of view of transcendental reflection. From this perspective books 1 and 2 belong to Essence and their philosophical knowledge expresses with great rigor and detail Hegel's theory of appearance, existence, substance, necessity, causality and actuality.  Or maybe Hegelian substance is much like the spontaneous production and manifestation of the will in Schopenhauer. It goes beyond phenomena and appearance because the will is immanent in its manifestation, totally in each one and beyond any particular one. The will has to manifest. Transcendental reflection, artistic contemplation and spiritual development represent the will's progressive self-knowledge, return to self, the Hegelian Spirit in the form of the concept.

Category Theory: a category expresses essence. Each object is a different mode whose determination is inseparable from its relations (morphisms) to the whole (all possible determinations). An object is an expression of the category and yet not the category (for there are other objects). At the same time this circumstance of the object not being the category is itself internalized and expressed as the object being itself the sum-total of its relations (morphisms) with all other objects (i.e. with the totality of the category). This expressed also that the object is the category. 

The original theory and spiritual practice of Buddhism was lost or substantially distorted (though recovered to a certain extent by the Mahayana and specially in the Yogacara school). Thus the Pali canon does not represent the full and pure doctrine or practice of the Buddha. For instance the brahma-viharas must have originally occupied a central place in practice. The ayatanas and kandhas must have been organized differently in a manner (for instance how can one speak of clinging to the khandas and yet clinging itself not be a khanda ?) closer to the Upanishads, Yoga and Samkhya. The theory of the self was different:  identical to that of Advaita Vedanta. Thus what is important is knowing the energies and structures that produce the limited posited ego and how these energies and structures depend on other ones.  Thus ahamcara (pride, self-assertion, principium individuationis), manas (vitakka, vicara) and samkhara(will) form a tightly connected energetic feed-back loop. Ahamcara (and the goal of transcending and involuting it) was erroneously removed from the list of khandas, from the fundamental aspects, structures and energies of consciousness (though this is still implicit in the suttas in the form of sakayaditi and mana). The core vital doctrine was the mutual reinforcement between sankhara, ahamcara and vitakka-vicara (this is partially recoved in Yogacara). Viraga, detachment had to be accompanied simultaneously with brahma viharas, with the involution and conversion of sankhara (as the Lankavatara sutra states), the involution and nullification of ahamcara. These are the inverted supramundane versions of fundamental energies and structures. The role of sadda and spiritual power and the overcoming of vitakka-vicara (as in the Yoga-sutras) was more of less lost. 

A spiritual topography,  the structure of consciousness. At one level a network, a labyrinth, of interconnected, mutually powering and directing energy centers (creative factories).  At a deeper level the entire factory flows out from more fundamental energies, forces and structures.   Creative factors work in various modes, one being 'identification', another being 'unfolding expansion' another 'inhibition'. Ancient wisdom consists in finding the key substrate energies and structures and their polarization and supply to the total network of consciousness,  and to invert and counter these energies, to repolarize and create a global involution of the entire scheme and at the same time find the hidden but infinite 'heart' of all possible consciousness and spiritual substance.

Summary constitution of the external energies and structures of the soul:  five sense spheres and organs,  the self-impression-structure, discursive thought,  memory,  feeling, will (note we are well aware of how this could be rewritten in a slightly different form with reference to  contemporary neuroscience; we plan to explore the deeper significance of the cranial nerves).  The tools: detachment, insight, watchfulness, inversion, conversion (turning inwards), involution, concentration. These allow access to the incomparably vaster  'inner' layers and domains.

Friday, January 2, 2026

Logic, Computability and Grammar

Given a natural language, we can ask what the logical and computational prerequisites for generating and checking and analyzing valid expressions of that language ? And can we define the minimal, optimal way in which expressions are generated and checked and analyzed ? We are looking here at meta-grammar,  the formal language of grammar itself.  How rich are formal languages in themselves compared to standard algebraic systems ! How much remains to be said about the relationship between (specially imperative) programing languages and logic, between logic and recursion theory, between recursion theory and combinatorics and formal languages. These are all topics of our Analyticity and the A Priori.

We view a descriptive grammar as a function which takes a series of choices, semantic categories, and generates the corresponding expression. We should formalize grammar using functional programming. 

Take the rules of Sandhi in Sanskrit. To express them we need the same logical framework as in Aristotle's Topics, in particular as Galen's Relational Syllogism. 

But we can also think of an abstract mathematical framework for Sandhi.  Suppose we have for instance finite sets $A,B,...,G$ and let $P \subset A \times B \times...\times G$.  Then we can define an operation $\otimes: P \times P \rightarrow P \times P$ such that for instance a certain component is right-dominant:

if for $p \in P$ we have $p_C = c_1$ then $q\otimes p = (q', p)$ with $q'_C = c_1$ and $q'_X = q_X$ for $X \neq C$.

For binary sets $A = \{a,b\}$ we can define transposition $p^A$ as $(p^A)_A = a$ if $p_A = b$ and $(p^A)_A = b$ if $p_A = a$.  Then the above example becomes $q \otimes p = (q,p)$ if $q_C = p_C$ and $q \otimes p = (q^C, p)$ otherwise.

In order to represent Sanskrit sounds more precisely we can include in each finite set a 'null' element $0$ expressing that the classification of this set does not apply. For instance $p_N \neq 0$ means $p$ is a nasal and then $p_A = 0$ means for instance that the aspiration  Boolean does not apply.

The algebraic aspect of Sandhi can be illustrated by the existence of left and right (quasi-) absorbing elements or identity elements. $\dot{n}$ is a left identity element. 

While external Sandhi can be given relatively simple well-defined rules, even Max Müller shies away from giving a complete list of rules and exceptions for internal Sandhi.

We will also give  representation of external Sandhi using permutation groups (inspired by the Rubik cube). 

Sunday, December 28, 2025

A new approch to the Ashtâdhyâyî

The goal of this approach is to be able to study rigorously the computational and logical power of Pâninian formal grammar.  A guiding principle is that prakriyâs are proofs.

The basis $\Phi$ (representing phonetic atoms) is generated as follows.

Let   $T = \{1,2,3,4,5 \}$ represent the place of articulation (5 is for labials, etc.).  Let $S = \{v^-a^-, v^+a^+ ,v^-a^+, v^-a^-, n, sv, sp, v, vv,  g, vr\}$ (constants, tags).

Then $\Phi = T \times S$ (with some exceptions which we will not discuss here).

This is similar to some aspects of the mathematical formulation of field theory or particle physics.

We can define (partial) operations on $\Phi$ such as aspiration $\alpha(t, \star a^-) = (t,\star a^+)$ or translation according to $T$.

We identify $W = \Phi^\star$ with general expressions (which include padas in particular, actually grammatically correct words). Dhatus will be a subset $D \subset W$. 

We also note as a distinct topic of investigation the peculiar interest of the Fanqie method in ancient Chinese (a kind of self-referential phonetic description); Li Chen's work clearly can be interpreted in terms of formal languages, substitution rules and equivalence classes. 

Pânini defines a recursive subset of $P \subset W$ which are not actual words or suffixes but technical expressions (pratyayas) used to define and carry out the rules of his generative grammar. Due to the particularities of Sanskrit and the combinatory capacities of $\Phi$ this is possible in an elegant way (for instance he makes use of nasalized vowels).

We will work with  one-sided sequents which are elements of $W^*$. Later on we will work with two-sided and more complex sequents which take into account the history of a derivation.

Some rules (vidhis) can be formulated for instance as:

$\Gamma, wa, bw', \Gamma' \longrightarrow \Gamma, wc, dw', \Gamma' $

$\Gamma, w, w', \Gamma' \longrightarrow \Gamma, v, w', \Gamma'$ 

and in the phonetic part of the proviso we use instead of pratyahara,  a conjunction of conditions involving or instance projections.  There will also be more provisos depending on the class of wa, bw'  for instance.

The rule above contains in particular the case in which $b = d$ or some of the $a,b,c,d$ are empty ($\epsilon$, zero, adarshanam). 

Another type of rule would be:

$\Gamma, w, \Gamma' \longrightarrow \Gamma, w, s, \Gamma'$ for $w \in D$ and $s$ some concrete suffix (like lat or tip),

$\Gamma, w, w', \Gamma' \longrightarrow \Gamma, w, s, w' ,\Gamma'$

$\Gamma, w, w', w'',  \Gamma' \longrightarrow \Gamma, vw'w'' ,\Gamma'$

Also: 

 $\Gamma, w, \Gamma' \longrightarrow \Gamma, w', \Gamma'$ for $w$ belonging to a particular set in $W$ and $w'$ resulting from $w$ by deletion of certain well-defined elements in $\Phi$ (the tasya lopah rule).

The problem here is defining the various recursive classes of $W$ and studying the logic of the conditions involving them in the provisos of the rules.

It is possible that most rules are context sensitive with strict control on $\Gamma$ and $\Gamma'$ which are often empty. 

Here is our working hypothesis: that there are significant structural differences between Pânini's system and modern formal grammars and axiomatic-deductive systems. Rather Pânini's system is best understood as a well-defined formal programming language operating in a similar context as formal grammars and proof systems and the Ashtâdyâyî itself as a program with 8 major functions executed successively (while asking for user input). In this sense is resembles rather more recent approaches to proof searching involving control structures, focusing, etc.

Wednesday, December 24, 2025

Pâninian Linguistics

https://web.stanford.edu/class/linguist289/encyclopaedia001.pdf

Is Pânini's formal system (which appears to be in the form of a term-rewriting system and is the true source of generative grammar) Turing complete ?  That is to say, could the same formal mechanism Pânini used to specify the structure of Sanskrit be used to generate the expressions of any recursive set of strings ?

Here is a paper addressing this question:

https://aclanthology.org/C12-2092.pdf

This would make Pânini of supreme logical and philosophical interest. There might be a connection to Vedic rituals: the development of a formal language (a programing language) to codify rituals.

https://ijirt.org/publishedpaper/IJIRT187010_PAPER.pdf

We note that the syntactic transformation of our natural term logic can be expressed more easily as a term-rewriting system than standard quantifier logics.

In fact Pânini is of immense interest to our positions expounded in our paper on Analyticity and the A Priori (and also our paper on Ancient Quantifier Logic).   One view is that true logic (let us say in the form of second-order logic) comprises only universal quantification and implication and their natural deduction rules (cf. Prawitz, Natural Deduction, p.67, Dover edition). This is the logic which can be transcendentally examined to be the pre-condition to understand, check and apply rules, formal term-rewriting systems (or similar systems), such as that of Pânini. We must also examine Pânini as a logic of relations.

But derivations in formal languages are like proofs and are instantiations of rules (a derivation is called a prakriyâ in Pânini's system).  So even the introduction of the universal quantifier is itself the application of the rule of the elimination of the universal quantifier. Pânini's system is a sophisticated system of formal rule-based proofs which is close to the sequent calculus in that memory of past rule applications carries conditions the application of rules later on in the derivation (as in control structures or focusing).

The close connection of the grammatical structure of Old Church Slavonic to Sanskrit (and Indo-European in general) is fascinating. The Glagolithic alphabet is curious and more interesting are pre-Christian Slavic scripts such as the Alekanovo inscription.  There is nothing 'crude' or non-sophisticated about having a writing system of the Ogham type (Hrabar's чръты и рѣзы, črŭty i rězy).  On the the contrary, it indicates a high level of arithmetical symbolic (or cryptograhic) thinking, which Hrabar probably was not even able to understand.  Take a really good look at the 'Sun ship' from Bronze-age Poland.

 The  Byzantine historical attestation of the Bandura (Ukrainian: бандура)  points to a survival of an ancient musical tradition.

We entertain the idea that certain peoples among the ancient Slavs may have possessed a form of Buddhism (we see, as attested in the Pali suttas themselves,  Gotama's doctrine and practice as a restoration of something even more ancient) or a similar system of yoga or spiritual cultivation. A common view would be that ancient Scythians and Sarmatians may have played a role (also with later manichean connections: consider the Bogomils and the story of Barlam and Josaphat, this last name being an adaptation of a middle Persian rendition of Bodhisattva). However we obviouly reject arbitrary occultist fantasies (without any serious scientific basis) about Slavic prehistory - which are often unfortunately aligned to questionable political ideologies. But we note also that much of 'mainstream' theories of history and prehistory are equally tainted by ideological agendas and prejudice (just as the account of the pre-Christian Slavs by early Christian writers is not reliable).  Can we find a correlation between the elegance and sophistication of a language (its closeness to Sanskrit or some other measure) and the cultural and spiritual level of its speakers ? And by cultural and spiritual level, we mean consciousness and implementation of universal ethical principles regarding human beings and animals, philosophical consciousness (that is to say, TPC and TPC) and spiritual cultivation based on it, the development of formal logic and analysis, the template of the scientific method, the refined development of the arts, etc. 

From an historical and archaeological perspective we argue strongly against and completely reject the opposition between so-called 'polytheism' and 'monotheism' and all the ideologies and connotation such an opposition or distinction implies. The theological doctrines (cf. kathenotheism, henotheism, etc.)  of Proclus' Elements of Theology are the same as that of the Vedas and the Avesta. Christianity in most of its historical manifestations was never  quite 'monotheistic' in the crude sense and the same goes for the esoteric teachings and practices in Iran.  For indeed the absolute (the good) is that which is beyond all gods which are in the highest sense are its emanations (angels) and mediators (henads). And the absolute as well as the highest gods are essentially to be sought within.

Historically we find high levels of idolatry, anthropomorphism, materialism, violence and barbarism among so-called 'monotheistic' cultures. This so-called monotheism is just a cultural expression of political supremacist ambitions of certain peoples wherein a tribal deity is given traditional attributes of a military conqueror and emperor.

What is far more important is how the concept of divinity is essentially united to that of universal moral principles and philosophically to that of TPC and TPP. 

Returning to the Slavs (the so-called Slavic deities alignment to the natural cycle of the seasons and to the experience of love and beauty  may have been a sign of an elevated philosophical spirituality akin to the Vedic one),  we note that the ancient Slavic woodcraft was quite sophisticated and must have made use of considerable knowledge of geometry and physical engineering. The archaeological site at Biskupin in Poland (c. 8th century BCE) could be proposed as an example, but of course we cannot know how precise and sophisticated this structure originally was. The artifacts related to this site are of exquisite beauty. 

Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Claire Ortiz Hill (1951-2025)

https://www.riverafamilyfuneralhome.com/obituaries/claire-ortizhill

Claire Ortiz Hill was an American philosopher (who spent the later part of her life in France) who in the last quarter of the 20th-century authored some lucid and meticulously written books on Frege, Husserl and intensionality as well as offering a cogent critique of some central trends of 20th-century analytic philosophy. In recent years she dedicated herself to Cantor and little known aspects of Hilbert's role in philosophy. Her magnificent article Hilbert's Fight for Philosophy (2021) has many important connections to our paper on Analyticity and the A Priori.

Monday, December 22, 2025

The unknown Dharma of the West

Can we trace a continuous tradition from original Buddhism to Socrates to Plato and the Megarian school to Pyrrho to Sextus to Plotinus to Damascius to Pseudo-Dionysius ? As strange as this may seem to some, there are some striking arguments that can be made to support many links in this chain. In fact we are pleased to note that Sara Ahbel-Rappe in her edition of Damascius' Problems and Solutions concerning First Principles, makes a direct reference to Sextus. The Buddhism-Pyrrho link has been studied for instance by C.I. Beckwith's Greek Buddha (2015). It has also been argued (by C.M. Mazzucchi)  that the author of Pseudo-Dionysius was in fact Damascius who managed to inject core doctrines into the heart of the 'mystical'  tradition of Christianity (which has nothing to do with the literal sense of dogmas): and here we mean its better (predominantly medieval) manifestations such as Hadewijch, Porete, Eckhart, the author of the Cloud of Unknowing, the Viae Sion of Hugh of Balma (which we dedicated a small note to).  It is in this light that we would reinterpret Plato and the close connection to Socrates, Pyrrho and the Megarians.

'Spiritual realization' (we use this term temporarily) is not the same thing as psychotherapy (etymology aside). Psychotherapy aims at helping people adjust and balance personality traits so as to be at peace with themselves and the world around them.  It is about the constitution of an individual 'personality' and 'ego', often seen as the result of an integration of different tendencies or the product of past development and adaptation strategies.  Spiritual realization such as we outlined in our previous account of TPC and TPP more or less presupposes physical and mental health as a condition and its aim involves shining a light through self-hood and overcoming its underlying impulse, motives, determinations and limitations. But this does not rule out that it can also be highly beneficial in a psychotherapeutic context.

We are conscious of the present and the past in the form of recollected or anticipated mental content in the present. Past and future are mediated by the present and are indeed in the present. TPC involves awareness of the presentness of past and future directed or colored mental content. The theory of the 'present moment' and 'letting go of the past and future' and finding 'the timeless present moment' taught in many approaches to Buddhist meditation conceals something of huge psychological and philosophical depth and importance. Temporality is linked to the conditioning of the mind by thought, the constitution of the world by thought, and the falling away from TPC. Time is the magical stage of thought, the impermanence which is made permanent mixing perception and forgetfulness. We might say that this proper philosophical consciousness of psychological (inner) temporality is at the heart of TPC and TPP.  The same goes for self-identification, self-projection,  craving, repulsion.  But the aforementioned practices require the good fortune of being able to retreat to a secluded, quiet, safe and solitary place, the best option  being the countryside.

If we leave this world to attain another state of being we can at least control what we bring along to the next plane.  Let us not bring with us the least trace of anger, hatred, resentment, desire, attachment, clinging - or ignorance and delusion, specially delusion regarding identity and identification or the magic show of our own consciousness.

It is important to note that by 'buddhism' we mean the philosophy, psychology, ethics and spiritual practices that we interpret to be arguably and quite patently present in old Pali and Sanskrit texts (independently of the presence of elements of a different nature, textual history and corruption, etc.). Our meaning of this term does not depend in any way on any particular historical or cultural embodiment of buddhism and as such is not open to the common criticism that we are ignoring its cultural roots or merely picking certain elements which fit a pre-conceived agenda (we are not claiming to represent or interpret any concrete cultural buddhist tradition).  Also we are well aware that modern distorted abstractions and (mis)applications of buddhism can from a psychiatric point of view have harmful effects (cf. negative experiences with so-called 'mindfulness', vipassana and Goenka retreats, experiences which according to our interpretation have nothing to do with the buddhist spiritual path).

We would be quite happy to debate anyone on this topic. Also the focus on buddhism does not imply that we attach less value to the parallel traditions of the Upanishads, Yoga, Samkhya, Vedanta and so forth. 

It is quite possible that the philosophy of Schopenhauer (the philosophy of the principium rationis, the principium individuationis, the central role of voluntas, the theory of representatio, the theory of  supra-individual timeless, ubiquitous cognition,  etc.) offers some of the deepest and most important components of TPC and TPP. Schopenhauer claimed as ultimate source the Upanishads. In Schopenhauer all the sphere of manifest consciousness, individuality, identity, spatial and temporal limitation, conditioned by the Kantian intuitive and conceptual categories, is the product of a primordial impulse and energy.  The only way out of this prison is through a total reversal and repolarization of this fundamental impulse and energy which results in the 'involution' of all the modes, conditions and determinations of individualized consciousness and the consciousness-immanent world.

Also Schopenhauer might help us understand better what we wrote about the inner, first-person, experience of the body. 

One might entertain the idea that there is a far greater unity and affinity between Kant, Hegel and Schopenhauer than is generally believed.  Shapshay has argued this with regards to the ethics of Kant and Schopenhauer. And beyond the personal animosity between Hegel and Schopenhauer it is quite possible that Hegel might furnish some valuable structural and interpretative enrichment of Schopenhauer and that Schopenhauer could provide the essential clarification, correction, deeper meaning and completion so lacking in Hegel.

Friday, December 5, 2025

Philosophy of Awakening

 We mentioned before that the is a difference between a true spiritual path (leading beyond anguish and suffering) and a false spiritual path. A true spiritual path involves essentially a habit and state of mind which  we call philosophical awareness or consciousness. The false spiritual path completely lacks it. This state of mind we could attempt to describe as transcendental philosophical consciousness (i.e. awareness, analysis, inquiry)  of the totality of consciousness itself (the immanent world). We use the abbreviation TPC.  One of its oldest and most magnificent attestations is found in the Pali nikayas (with the Socratic dialogues and Pyrrho) and more recently to a certain degree in Hume and Kant (and there was an influence of the late Academy and Pyrrhonism via Augustine and Descartes). This is what Schopenhauer said concerning Kant's Critique of Pure Reason (the analogies of experience): never has the world been looked at from a greater distance. At the present we have a scholar, by name of Dennis Schulting, who has written several books dedicated to defending and expounding the true meaning and spirit of first edition of Kant's Critique, that is, to bringing out the centrality of a form of TPC in the entire deductive and argumentative scheme of the aforesaid work.   Our project is not only to say something about what TPC involves but also to discuss its epistemic and logical aspects, a subject of uttermost difficulty. And of central concern is of course its close relationship to introspective psychology and so-called psychologism (as well as the ambiguous hydra of the term 'idealism'). And discussing the often subtle yet ultimately radical difference with Hegel and Husserl.  There is always a danger that TPC may lapse back into the modes of non-TPC consciousness. That is, a false objectification of TPC insight and knowledge. Such an objectification involves forgetfulness (of constitution, condition and presupposition) and loss of insight and transcendental progress.   TPC crucially involves a way of seeing and questioning (bracketing, suspending) the totality of (conceptual, intuitive, affective, volitional, egological, spatial-temporal, somatic, etc) experience. The total awareness of the total sphere and process of thought and what is beyond all thought and what thought is actually behind and the fact that it is behind it. TPC is a gradual affair,  an ideal which is worked towards by practice and training. TPC traces back and unveils the unified common source of all branches of philosophy. Poetical language achieves its highest function in the expression of TPC. All this we have written about in our compiled Philosophical Monologues collection.

There are no mathematical models of consciousness, and a fortiori for the boundless sphere of TPC,  and no formal axiomatic-deductive systems either. Rather these all proceed from the knowledge and insight offered by TPC. But there could by mini-models, projections, symbols and for every false philosophy or false scientific theory  a certain and valid formal refutation. TPC itself cannot be part of academia (but more concrete, specialized subjects, guided by TPC, can) and it is something that one must find for oneself. TPC can be compared to the state in which when dreaming one knows one is dreaming, or at least, seriously questioning if the totality of one's experience be not in this situation a mere dream. And also importantly, asking: what is a dream?

It is TPC that is about 'saving the phenomena' and involves noticing how there is a vast domain of phenomena, of 'realities' as real as anything else, which includes all forms of sensation, perception, feeling, volition, thought, cognition, meta-cognition, memory, imagination, learning, habit, attachment, sense of self, sense of identity  and so forth which is a central and important part of  the 'world', as important if not much more than anything other alleged aspects (specially those pertaining to so-called 'natural' science). This truth is powerfully present in the Pali suttas which predate Socrates and, as argued by Mikel Burley (2007), in the ancient system of Samkhya.  The terms 'consciousness' and 'the psychological sphere'  are often used in a deflated, trivialized, distorted and illegitimate way. Understanding, such as it is and presents itself, the vast and central role of consciousness and meta-consciousness in all that is, in all the 'world',  is a first step from waking up from  the dream, and it follows the shining wake of Socrates and Pyrrho and there is much to be said about certain aspects of Democritus (atomism is in itself a formal template of logical analysis, as in the abhidharma, and not an hypothesis in natural science or positing of a reductionism between different ontological domains), Carneades, Sextus and Augustine's Contra Academicos: 'I call whatever appears to me the world'. Another powerful force leading to this direction is the theory of knowledge (the earliest known text being the Theaetetus), the questioning of how we come to know things, of how we know that we know (the criterion of truth),  of what knowledge is. The theory of knowledge draws us inevitably back towards the great forgotten pristinely primordial sphere of consciousness. Becoming aware of consciousness as consciousness (and experience as essentially consciousness) and its true position in the scheme of things is truly waking up from a dream and drawing close to TPC.

How does TPC relate to our other distinct considerations on the computable axiomatic-deductive condition and ideal of knowledge (which evidently does not involve any claim to exclusivity or to exhaust valid cognition) which we expounded in our paper on analyticity and the a priori ? The conclusions of that paper can be seen as flowing directly from TPC. Our formal verification principle is epistemically modest. To come to this conclusion relative to formal axiomatic-deductive systems,  TPC must be presupposed. Hence formal axiomatic-deductive systems cannot in themselves be sufficient to unveil their own transcendental determinations and conditions. And formalized transcendental deduction itself cannot subsume TPC but again presupposes it. TPC must be self-deducing, self-illuminating, self-sufficient, self-founding, self-justifying (somewhat like for Kant the 'I think' is the condition and source of the categories and hence of logic itself). And yet does it make sense to speak of a 'deduction' here without circularity ? TPC cannot depend on logic anymore than anything in a dream can in itself awaken one from the dream. And yet this does not decrease the value and importance of the formal verification principle. If a philosopher or anyone else engages in linguistic activity, linguistic expression, then it is legitimate to subject the output to the formal verification principle, to the ideal of a formal game. All logos is bound to logic, including philosophy and any discourse about logic and reason. Philosophical logic is like two mirrors reflecting each other. Yet via TPC one plays the game knowing it is a game (dreams the dream knowing it is a dream) but without trivializing it for being a game. The game is much like a children's game with the purpose of teaching.  Logic is a crutch to help us learn to see (i.e. to develop TPC). But TPC is not deduced or justified from logic anymore than swimming is justified or deduced from water wings. But there is another aspect beyond the simile of a helping crutch. Logic is the laws of thought but not the justification of thought itself. We think, or rather, we are thought, but we seldom see thought itself as it is, from a distance. The ability to see through the game, not only to see the game as a game, but to see immediately non-discursively the game, the playing of the game, the player of the game,  as something that is not necessary and yet at the same time the direct cause of many unpleasant things. Exactly like Alice's final attitude to a 'pack of cards' or Schopenhauer's metaphor about the chessboard after the game is over.  This is related to transcendental philosophical praxis (TPP). TPP involves the coming to awareness that the things that bother us are not really things in themselves and but only images in our own minds. And that we have actually the capacity to exert an enormous power over the entire content of our own mind, conditioned by habit and practice. And the most importance practice and habit is that of viraganirodha and patinissagga. Thus TPP (the sister of TPC) gives the true philosophical meaning to the often abused or trivialized assertion: we create our own reality. 

Thursday, December 4, 2025

Notes

The embedding matrices used for instance in ChatGPT-3 are a vector space representation of co-occurrence frequency matrices for a given context-window size. This matrix can also be seen as a complete graph with edges labelled by probability values (we can assign values also to polyhedra).  It is important to study the properties of these matrices.

Locally integrable functions (fundamental to distributions and weak solutions to PDEs) are a kind of sheaf-theoretic completion of the $L^p$ spaces. On the other hand from a finitist point of view simple functions are the basic kind of function and these are 'dense' in many fundamental spaces in an appropriate sense. What is the meaning of a PDE in a scientific context ? A positing of certain recursive numerical algorithms and approximation ideals.  How curious that numerical conditions for stability involve the pairing of space and time.  And fascinating is that smooth initial conditions for PDEs as simple as $u_t - g(u)u_x = 0$ may generate shock waves. And what is, from a computational finitist point of view, a weak solution ? A good philosophical goal: to gain a deeper understanding of distributions (cf. Sato's hyperfunctions). Distributions arise from the practical situation of measurement. We do not measure a field at a point but only an integral average weighted with the peculiarity of the instrument employed.

Some of the most interesting concepts in mathematics and applied mathematics: absolutely continuous functions and functions of bounded variation. What does a finitist and computationalist perspective say ? Both the Weierstrass and Cantor step functions are constructed step-by-step. There must be a property expressable in terms of re-scaling.

How could we prove that a physical system is computing beyond the Turing limit ? We could of course produce experimental evidence to the contrary, producing a certain algorithm that agrees with know observations. There are irrational numbers whose sequence of digits are not computable. How are we to view scientific theories about such numbers (which could represent measurements of some fundamental physical constant), calculations and approximations of such numbers, and confrontation with experimental evidence ? Obviously such a question is only interesting from a non-finitist perspective.

The interest in solving the P=NP problem hinges on the complexity of the algorithm for transforming a NP-machine into a P-machine. 

Uncountable infinities (must check Bolzano regarding this subject) are highly questionable (they express a false objectivism). They imply indiscernibles which should be rejected in the light of subjectivism (in terms of computationalism or more generally definability). There is also the problem of the identity and determination of mathematical objects (Benacerraf, etc.).  A foundation for calculus like Lawvere is called for (in which intervals are primitive). The standard definition is that a set A has cardinality greater than a set B if there is no injective function from A to B. But once we restrict the possible functions on philosophical grounds to being recursive or some more general type, then this situation can happen without increase in 'Cantorian' cardinality. Indeed 'infinity' is always present in the concept of recursively enumerable but not recursive and the same goes for the rest of the arithmetical hierarchy (the true hierarchy of 'infinities') ? This makes perfect sense also for ordering. What is the point of ordering something if it is not in a computable way ? In sheaf models (a partial improvement and clarification of the forcing techniques) there is an acknowledgment of the essential relativity of the whole Cantorian framework of monos and cardinalities (already patent in the Löwenheim-Skolem theorems).

A problem, given an inconsistent set of sentence in some language L  is there a canonical disambiguifying language L' (which associates to certain symbols s of L a set of possible clarifications s1,s2,...) such that with a choice of assignment for occurrences of symbols of L to symbols of L' the set becomes consistent ?

Non-classical logic vs. classical logic. What is important is the question: what is the logic required to be able to understand, carry out and check any system of rules ? Kant's rule-based philosophy is a precursor of our computational a priorism. 

Completed papers

Quantifier Reasoning and Multiple Generality in Aristotle and Ancient Logic

Aristotle's Topics and Extended Second-Order Logic

On Analyticity and the A Priori 

Natural Term Logic (in preparation) 

Friday, November 21, 2025

Heirs of Poincaré

It is difficult to evaluate the quality of mathematical work or the particular destiny of mathematics in the 20th century. We have already given some criteria: logical, conceptual and didactic clarity and rigor, clarity of intuition (which, contrary to common myths, is not incompatible with logical rigor),  an orientation towards synthesis and simplification, an orientation towards applications to the sciences embodying novel unifying ideas,  awareness of the deep problems regarding  mathematical models of reality,  awareness and interest in fundamental philosophical problems.

Logicism is irrefutable. Mathematics is in its purest essence is the deployment of computability (and hence logic), but this game cognitively involves intuition (just as chess strategies) as its develops towards perfection. It is a 'game' in the noblest sense: not 'to calculate' in the sense of mere application, but 'to calculate' as in 'be able to calculate' through finding a strategy and sequence of right moves in a formal game. The very conventionalism is not conventionalist in its a priori logical and computational cognitive presuppositions (see our paper On Analyticity and the A Priori). Moreover, beyond the genius of Frege, Turing and Church (and Brouwer's intuitionism is just computationalism), there is a presupposition in mathematics of a certain objective-intuitive correspondence and specially a claim to enter into the objective truth of the world in the form of science. Kant saw the tip of this iceberg: "Thoughts without intuitions are empty, intuitions without concepts are blind" .  The problem of the intuitive correlation of mathematics is similar to that of the efficacy of mathematical models of nature.

We can ask if ancient philosophy was not simply ancient science and mathematics (and its politics and ethics but applied mathematics)  or if there is any real difference between the ideals of philosophy, mathematics and science ?  Experiment and observations influence the setting up or modification of axiomatic-deductive systems but their computability and logic is ideally the same as that of mathematics and allegedly rigorous philosophy (the appeal to intuition is part of what renders certain arguments plausible).

Mathematics, the science of sciences, occupies a special central elevated region in the geography of the sciences (and the arts and humanities).  It could be argued that only mathematics surveys and illumines and contributes to and interprets all the other sciences. And that the other sciences reach their perfection only insofar as they adopt and conform to the language and concepts of mathematics. But mathematics' claim to the throne can be challenged by (philosophical) logic and computation theory, (philosophical) linguistics, (philosophical) psychology and even some other disciplines (recall how we completely lack a formal logic or mathematics of consciousness).

The universalist point of view, the state of mind, corresponding to differential equations and dynamical systems and the direct intuitive awareness of their omnipresence and all permeating nature, is an elevated state of consciousness indeed. 

In the 20th century (if the number of mathematical publications increased exponentially)  we saw a drastic decrease in logical-conceptual synthesis and clarity and a great lack of philosophical intelligence and awareness, specially regarding the relationship between mathematics and science, regarding the essence and scope of mathematical models themselves (cf. my paper Differential Models, Computability and Beyond).

We saw a proliferation of a kind of junk philosophy and junk science allegedly based on mathematics, specially in the consciousness of the general public, something which can be traced to the reigning ideology of the times (reflected in popular media personalities) and to  questionable core elements of 'general systems theory' and 'game theory'.  We can name a few of these fads: 'chaos', 'fractals', philosophies of vagueness, randomness and uncertainty, 'bifurcations', certain usages of the terms 'emergent', 'self-organization',  'self-referential' (later we shall discuss the  agenda implicit in Smullyan and Martin Gardner as well as Hofstadter's appropriation and distortion of the legacy of Gödel, Escher and Bach - the same concepts the book focused on are deployed with far greater sophistication and artistry in Gaarder's Sophie's World) , 'neural',  'non-linear',  'evolutionary' or 'quantum' beyond its narrow legitimate technical sense and at the same time offering no clear and cogent logical and philosophical account of them.

There are not that many people who could be considered the genuine heirs of Poincaré (in differential geometry, topology and differential equations). These stand out as philosophical-scientific-mathematical giants, towering above others. We have already discussed the problems with the history of algebraic topology and its loss of its geometric and combinatorial essence elsewhere. We name first of all philosopher-mathematician René Thom (and his collaborators and followers) and Stephen Smale (and the Brazilian school of dynamical systems). For Celestial Mechanics Siegel stands out. Jack Hale has written  some excellent textbooks. For geometers we have people like Élie Cartan,  Georges de Rham, Teichmüller, Leray (father of sheaf theory), Whitney, Morse, Shing-tung Yau, Milnor, Thurston, Roger Penrose, Pierre Deligne,  Stanisław Łojasiewicz, Coxeter and John Horton Conway.  Ergodic theory (which embodies Lebesgue's measure theory in the mathematical modelling of nature) , originated by Birkhoff,  is also important (as is Boltzmann and Shannon). And we attach great importance of fluid dynamics (cf. David Ruelle's theory of turbulence - a distant heir to da Vinci). And also Lyapunov, Pontryagin,  A.N. Kolmogorov, A. Fomenko. It may be well that the pioneering contribution of Polish mathematicians  like Kuratowski and Sierpiński to topology has been downplayed or ignored (for instance Zorn's lemma was actually proven by Kuratowski and the Hausdorff property was already formulated by him in the 1920s; so-called 'fractals' were already studied by Sierpiński. The Cantor set was discovered previously by Henry Smith in 1874. Indeed the Weierstrass function is a perfect example of a fractal curve. Gauss certainly knew the p-adic numbers and called them congruentia infinita). This list is obviously tentative and incomplete. We also have to show that if Thom does engage in slightly vague discourse at times, at a fundamental level Catastrophe Theory is both mathematical rigorous and philosophically cogent and more generally represents the correct approach to using the methods of differential topology and singularity theory in differential equations and differential mathematical models of nature and linguistics. For profound work in the mathematical philosophy of continuous and smooth structures and their application to physics, Lawvere stands out.

Wednesday, November 19, 2025

From Wagner's Religion and Art (1880) - W. A. Ellis tr.

ONE might say that where Religion becomes artificial, it is reserved for Art to save the spirit of religion by recognising the figurative value of the mythic symbols which the former would have us believe in their literal sense, and revealing their deep and hidden truth through an ideal presentation. Whilst the priest stakes everything on the religious allegories being accepted as matters of fact, the artist has no concern at all with such a thing, since he freely and openly gives out his work as his own invention. But Religion has sunk into an artificial life, when she finds herself compelled to keep on adding to the edifice of her dogmatic symbols, and thus conceals the one divinely True in her beneath an ever growing heap of incredibilities commended to belief. Feeling this, she has always sought the aid of Art; who on her side has remained incapable of higher evolution so long as she must present that alleged reality of the symbol to the senses of the worshipper in form of fetishes and idols,— whereas she could only fulfil her true vocation when, by an ideal presentment of the allegoric figure, she led to apprehension of its inner kernel, the truth ineffably divine.

Sunday, November 16, 2025

Poetry and states and structures of consciousness

How can we make clear and rigorous the idea that consciousness is characterize by being in certain 'states' or having a certain structure and dynamics ? And very importantly what is means for consciousness to change state and structure, either voluntarily or involuntarily. 

How does or can the state and structure of consciousness change with ageing and education and habit ?  

Parallel to this question of how differences in state and structure determine how consciousnesses interact with each other and their environment. 

Can certain states and structures of consciousness be more cognitively competent or possess a greater and more powerful array of cognitive faculties than other states and structures of the same consciousness ?

How does the perception of time and place and identity change ? 

What does intimacy and union means for consciousness (specially the experience of beauty and love) ? To what extent can consciousnesses communicate and merge ? 

And how are we to understand the relationship between consciousness and the individual body and how is identity determined or defined ? And can there be a consciousness which is not limited by its association to a single living body but rather to a plurality of living bodies or other entities or perhaps even existing in a state independent from any physical body (non-locality) ?  

And how are different states and structures of consciousness related to language, to the use of language and its correlative cognition and experience ?

This brings us to poetry.  We propose the following. In its highest and truest form and potential poetry (and its mode of linguistic-cognitive deployment)  is simply the spontaneous expression of the possession of a higher state and structure of consciousness which at the same time has the virtue of assisting such a transformation in other consciousnesses and most specially leading other consciousnesses to dedicating themselves to composing poetry as a form of cultivation leading to higher states and structures of consciousness, or in particular, regaining such states and structures of consciousness which may have been possessed long ago but have subsequently been lost.

As Hans Sachs sings in Wagner's Meistersinger:

Mein Freund, in holder Jugendzeit,
wenn uns von mächt'gen Trieben
zum sel'gen ersten Lieben
die Brust sich schwellet hoch und weit,
ein schönes Lied zu singen
mocht vielen da gelingen:
der Lenz, der sang für sie.
Kam Sommer, Herbst und Winterszeit
viel Not und Sorg im Leben,
manch ehlich Glück daneben:
Kindtauf, Geschäfte, Zwist und Streit: -
denen's dann noch will gelingen
ein schönes Lied zu singen,
seht: Meister nennt man die!

Now there is great and harmful error involving such higher states and structures of consciousness. This involves its erroneous association with 'religion' (a extremely vague, ambiguous and context-dependent term, to be sure) or more vaguely with 'spirituality' and 'the sacred'.  In itself the attaining of higher states and structures of consciousness not only has absolutely nothing to do with religion but is in most cases radically antagonistic and opposed to it.  We will only point out two aspects here. First of all higher states and structures of consciousness have nothing to do with collectivism or integration into a group - the latter may well lead to an inferior state and structure of consciousness which has nothing to do with super-individuality and non-locality.  Secondly the term 'god' (Greek theos) can only be meaningful as referring to a consciousness in a higher state and structure (local or non-local, associated to a body or not). Communion with a god (either in waking life, in dreams or in other modes) means essentially a profound experience of love, intimacy and beauty (which transfigures the whole of experience and perception of the world) - and this is the only true 'divine revelation', 'sacrament' or 'mystical prayer'. Lucid dreams are particularly important and have a special relationship to poetical creativity. 

Love is a secret seed that only germinates, grows and blossoms in garden of innermost peace and silence. 

However the above considerations need to be reconciled and integrated with the theory and practice of the nimittas and jhanas.  Indeed, not everything out of the ordinary in consciousness is necessarily good or beneficial. Great discernment is needed.

Poetry shows forth the correct relationship of humanity with nature, one based on kindness, compassion, openness to artistic vision and inspiration, theoretical and philosophical contemplation - and we can include also an obviously practical aspect, but one that does not involve harming animals (as in the ancient tradition of Pythagoras, Plutarch and Porphyry, and those of Buddhism, Jainism and the ancient Epics).  This purest most marvelous relationship with nature - one in which nature is transfigured and united to a higher state of consciousness (and this is the original significance of 'gods' being involved in nature - manifestations of truth, more like the concept of 'angel', sp. in ancient Iranian traditions) - has again nothing to do with 'religion' : with fear, priestcraft, collectivism, immoral and false doctrines about gender and eros,  blind obedience, self-torment,  submission to authority, exclusivity, supremacy, pseudo-historical dogma,  rites, propitiation, or with the heinous doctrine and practice of blood sacrifice (i.e. sacrificing the innocent).

The above considerations have immense consequences for the philosophy of language and philosophy of mind. Poetry is to be seen as the queen of linguistic competence and language is to be seen as belonging to a feedback loop for the transformation and elevation of consciousness. Furthermore poetry must reveal its profoundly scientific and philosophical dimension, for instance semantic categories and associations, the theories of irony and metaphor which figures so prominently in Shakespeare and profound psychological aspects. Finally we must address the question of developing a correct theory surrounding the terms 'subconscious' and 'unconscious'.  Poetry is a higher form of logic and deduction and analysis just as much as a form of unfolding intuition and creativity.

In the transfiguration of the state and structure of consciousness the shift of perspective regarding nature and the entire spatial-temporal-historical framework as well as regarding personal identity is so drastic and far-reaching that it is all but impossible to reconcile the two in any simplistic scheme. A fatal flaw of religion is that it cannot admit this and hence betrays its incompatibility both with authentic philosophy and with the  gnosis. Also the deep psychological and spiritual aspects of love and eros is a  complex matter: but we can say from the point of view of 'depth psychology', of the deeper states and structures of consciousness.

The original higher meaning of 'virtue' has been lost. Originally a virtue was a certain fundamental practice, habit, orientation, dynamic quality of consciousness - whose effects operate at radically deep levels - which had its essence and goal precisely in  the achieving of higher states and structures of consciousness (inseparable with its moral consequences relating to how other people and animals are treated).  The common metaphor is that consciousness is entangled, chained and corrupted and that virtues correspond to cutting the chains and fetters, to cleansing and purifying corruptions - also the fetters can be seen as certain forces and intentions which need to be radically inverted. So in this sense the practice of poetry is also one of the greatest virtue which nourishes consciousness and opened its eye to its lost higher primordial state, helps develop the 'wings' of Plato's Phaedrus.  Virtues are a series of secret keys which unlock secret gates.  Virtues that are commonly associated to Christianity,  like faith, hope,  humility, forgiveness, charity, compassion, surrender, spiritual poverty, etc. have in fact an original very deep esoteric meaning and value.

If we take the text of the New Testament, despite all its inconsistencies, serious errors,  interpolations and corruptions, then it is quite possible to read it as a purely neoplatonic (or even Mâhayana buddhist) text (curiously enough Augustine makes a similar claim) in which the theory and practice of anagogic virtues is expounded not through the elaboration of a philosophical system but through the fables and myths of the Gospels and the more poetical utterances attributed to Paul and other epistolary writers:  we are in presence of a kind of prosopopoeia of sophia or divine wisdom (a very important part, for instance, of ancient Hellenic, Egyptian and Iranian traditions, but also found in middle eastern traditions and in several passages of the Old Testament). In the myths and fables of the Christian gnostics we often find more developed and varied feminine embodiments of divine wisdom.

Another aspect of love and eros is that it can be seen (let us say we are taking a semi-non-local view here) as involving 'channels' which link different consciousness together so that one consciousness can be tethered to another or be in a kind of 'circuit' or feed-back loop (thus participating of the same divine energies and illuminations). Thinking of this in topological terms or even in terms of physics can be illuminating. And so-called 'sacred art' might be interpreted as having as its principal goal the creation of a kind of 'portal' or 'channel' whereby one is brought into communion with beings from a higher world.

The attainment of higher states and structures of consciousness has the following paradoxical aspect. There is a part which involves active striving, it is the part that is done 'manually' or 'on foot'. But the real process only starts once the right 'vehicle' has been 'caught' or 'boarded' (discernment is required for this). One has to be 'embraced' and 'carried upwards'.  And what is the Latin root of the word 'rapture'  ?  Then it is proper to say that 'spiritual attainment is realized in me' or 'I am being realized' rather than 'I am attaining' or 'I am realizing'. 

However it needs to be said that contemporary society is in general ill suited for certain ideals relating to spiritual practices (those involving spiritual communion with living persons). It is better to concentrate and focus on persons from other places, times and states of being.

Or better, understand that  there is a fundamental distinction regarding spiritual paths. There are pure solitary paths (full of philosophical insight, dedicated to overcoming the fundamental illusions and energies of consciousness) and those paths which depend crucially on the communion with others (we might call these paths of  mystical 'eros' and divine union).  On another occasion we will show that it is this last type can be perverted and used as a instrument of power and harm (such as for what happens with the 'mystics' of organized religions).

Friday, November 14, 2025

Attention is all you need

Around 2017 I was thinking about the problem of automatic translation and how ambiguity and idioms could be dealt with. One idea was to tag every word $w$ with one of Roget's 1000 categories (represented by a set $C$). Thus we have map $\kappa: W \rightarrow P(C)$.  Roughly speaking an ambiguous word $w$ will have $\kappa(w)$ with cardinality at least 2. Given a context $T$ and a word $w$ occurring in $T$  my idea was to devise an algorithm which functioned a little bit like a Sudoku puzzle using a concept of 'semantic distance'.  We find a word $w$ such that based on the current words $v$ in the context with singleton $\kappa$ we can determine which $c \in \kappa(w)$ is 'closest' to the set of $c$'s inhabiting the singletons of such words. We then make the choice and this should lead to finding further words that can be resolved and so forth. Of course the problem is how to define such semantic distance as well as to guarantee that the process achieves its goal and does not get stuck (but we could introduce random choices). If we view Roget's 1000 categories as organized as leaves (or even nodes) of a binary tree then there is an obvious definition. For instance 'rotation' is semantically closed to 'motion' than it is to 'feeling'.

There is a problem with compositionality for idioms like 'raining cats and dogs' or for a term like 'white rhinocerous'. Thus composition of meanings is in general multi-valued. We have uploaded a small text about this on researchgate and other platforms.

The vector representations used in LLMs suggest the following speculation. Could it be that meaning can be coherently constructed out of complex entities which themselves have no intrinsic (or easily assignable) meaning ? Or like in quantum mechanics the wave function (proto-meaning) is essentially a superimposition of eigenstates corresponding to actual observables (meanings). 

See our paper on academia.edu about Text and Meaning for a more detailed discussion of these subjects. 

Wednesday, November 12, 2025

Dialectic of the combination of systems

Given two axiomatic-deductive systems S1 and S2, each is an island unto itself, each exists in the world of its own rules, the symbols of which are meaningful only relative to these rules and to the system as a whole. Thus S1 and S2 are neither mutually consistent nor non-consistent - and we can combine them into a new system in a free way.  To speak of consistency we must first identify symbols of both systems, we must somehow postulate a common language.  And we need a notion of contradiction. But all this only makes sense relative to a third system S3 which acts as an arbiter.  If S1 and S2 deduce contradictory things regarding a symbol A, how can we formalize this in S3 ? 

By introducing a symbol for S1 and S2 inside the combined system S1+S2, qualifying symbols representing 'from the perspective of S1' and 'from the perspective of S2'.  The introduction of subscripts or symbols for indexing by S1 and S2 is a projection of the system inside itself, a reflection-into-self.

But then S1 and S2 must be qualified by the arbiter system S3. Why is the perspective of S1 relating to A what it is ? (And the same for S2).  S1 and S2 share context S3 and the quality of S1 depends on that of S2 and vice-versa.  S1 and S2 have become parts of a whole, for-themselves so far as they are for-another. Communication is the outcome of contradiction. 

Monday, November 10, 2025

Hegel as symbolist poet of metaphysics

Hegel has three styles. Aphoristic (harking back to his school-teacher days), esoteric and exoteric (auto-hermeneutic).  The auto-hermeneutic texts (such as the Lessons on the History of Philosophy) are a kind of solution and key to the riddle of his aphorisms and esoteric texts.  

Another way to look at Hegel is to consider him to have been much like both a symbolist poet (where things are referred to never plainly and directly but by traces, associations, symbols and small details - as in Mallarmé) and a master craftsman of word puzzles (in the style of the charades of his day and even more in the manner of the later crossword). 

What Hegel (who had a pedantic and encylopedic knowledge of contemporary culture) did was take common places (topoi), ordinary 'platitudes', quite hum-drum  down-to-earth facts concerning philosophy, science, art, history, law,  and political science, and dress them up as enticing tantalizing riddles and puzzles with an oracular, abstract, convoluted but polished, idiosyncratic baroque literary style (already prevalent in Kant, Fichte and Schelling), at once suggestively illuminating and opaque.

There is something of a magician and showman in Hegel, in how he pulls one concept out of the hat of another seemingly unrelated concept. The secret to Hegel is the invariable platitude and down-to-earthness in his loftiest abstractions,  the familiarity and homeliness of the solution of his most daunting riddles.

Hegel has a lot to say about language and is relevant to the philosophy of language. He illustrates how the mind copes with reality by elaborating a kind of 'poem of the world', a mathesis universalis, a characteristica, but not based on mathematical logic. Hegel is about the shift of perspective of linguistic engagement, a perpetually self-conscious transcendence which refutes its own act of transcending. 

There is also irony (a Shakespearean one) in Hegel and a constant Alice-through-the-looking glass gibe at transcendence. Transcendence is (according to Hegel) the ignorant's maze, by attempting to escape you end up at the doorstep of what you meant to escape: the Heraclitean flux, the river of change persists by changing, that is by changing away from change. casting foam, a symbol, an illusion, a reflection (cf. the doctrine of Schein).  Hegel is scepticism laughing at itself (Nephelokokkugia). The absolute idea is just consciousness become at home with its own flux having laid the pretension of transcendence to rest (and the dualism between the theoretical and the practical).

Hegel is an encylopaedic parody of all human knowledge (cf. Jarry's pataphysics or even Hamann whom Hegel wrote about...).

The lesson Hegel's philosophy teaches us is that we do not possess a language adequate for a philosophy or science of consciousness and an attempt to use ordinary language cannot amount to much beyond  'language games' - and these can be fun, harmless,  even therapeutical or eye-opening,  but in other instances harmful. Another merit of Hegel is giving far more weighty and valid illustration of what a language game can amount to as compared to the Wittgensteinian account. Behaviorism and frenology both merit derision and scorn.

 

Preach away Hegel from thy wooden pulpit,
Let it squeak like the planks of a ship !
Preach away, catching the winds of Spirit,
Conveying meaning and motion
To an undulating adulating crowd.


Outside the armies march on,
Canons explode and laws are decreed.
What will be must be:
Minerva's cerebrations celebrate indifference
From an Olympian dais of unthought-of thoughts.

Saturday, November 8, 2025

Philosophemes on Consciousness

Can there be consciousness without knowledge or knowledge without consciousness ? Does not all knowledge involve self-knowledge and the positing and definition of a self-subject ? All knowing involves a knowing of the knowing process itself. What can be known ? What should be known ? What is the highest knowledge and what is the highest knowledge about ?

What is ignorance ? An ambiguous term. It can mean erroneous thought or lack of the right cognition regarding something. But it can also mean simply non-knowing, that is, a consciousness which is not in the act of knowing. The ordinary conscious act of knowing is a relation, a flowing out, an entanglement, a diremption, limitation or even corruption of consciousness - accompanied by a positing of a subject-self and the awareness of the knowing process itself (the reflection into self via negation of the positing).

In another sense knowing is simply the state of any state of consciousness, a pure self-relatedness. Thus we have an absolute knowing which involves a non-knowing in the common sense, which is the fullness of the liberated mind that does not flow out relationally but has its self-positing in self-abrogation and self-reflection on its own freedom.

The highest knowledge is the effect of a self-referential, self-illuminating, self-enfolding (or self-unfolding) process of consciousness itself.

Know the structure and dynamics of the world to know the structure and dynamics of the mind : time, transience, impermanence, constant self-negation and self-production, self-implication, returning to immediacy and beholding its compositeness. Immediacy is actually result, relativity (reflection), mutual reference and dependence: past and future, memory and expectation.

Note the possibility of direct action of consciousness on consciousness, of expunging, and not being a passive spectator only - it cannot obtain detachment and freedom without breaking the cage.

The subtle body (or first-person experience of the body known from the inside) is an oasis were we can find a different mode of consciousness.

True philosophy cannot be academic philosophy, because it imposes and assumes an exterior a priori standard and reification - a certain enculturation, historization and socialization. This is what is so lacking in western philosophy, in Hume, the lack of orientation and insight capable of leading to personal transformation. Western philosophy is often just a shell.

Afferent vs. efferent nerves. The mind an internal feedback, a watermill, thoughts function both as input and as output (an internal loop driven by the main current - reflected in neural anatomy). A little like Barendregt's diagram. Thus we can have afferents we do not want or want afferents we don't have. We can be force to do efferents we do not want to do or want to do efferents we can't. The watermill feedback structure is built through this continuous current, an eddy. The prison of the mind.

Watchfulness must be centered on a turning inwards, not only looking on exterior spheres of common experience, but encroaching on and discovering and centering itself on previously hidden, inwards domains, the abode of forces that act behind the scenes, which wield power if unseen, but weaken under the sunlight of clearly conscious watchfulness, turned inward, casting a steady light wherein they are caught, found out. Ordinary consciousness is a kind of exteriorization and out-flow of itself, a self-nescience, self-passivity and self-marginalization.

Parallel to watchfulness progressively consolidating itself inwards we must also develop the practice of considering the total sphere of experience, of consciousness, as a whole, considered in its entirety, in a balanced way radiating, as it were, out from the innermost center, so that there is attained a balance of the inner and the outer and the exterior sphere is re-integrated into the unity of the center.

Thought is a product, a proliferation, the leaves, the buds, the result of inner forces, energies, organizations and productions - all stemming from a central source. Watchfulness and its sphere must regain the usurped throne, wherein sits the original producer, controller of all thought. 

If the self is an illusion, a fuzzy concept, a false concept - how can there be a theory of self ? Can there be a theory of illusions or of false, vague, fuzzy, ill-defined inconsistent, mutable concepts ? How does Hume explain - according to his theory - a fake impression which cannot be traced genetically to a complex of sense impressions or feelings ? Few modern western philosophers (for the ancients it is a different matter) have attempted a theory of illusion. Schopenhauer's theory of the negation of the will is noteworthy, a real attempt at a theory of the illusion of self (and finite individuality).

Logic is an attempt at the psychoanalysis of language. Language acts in different ways and at different levels on the mind, ways and levels beyond the most immediate abstract level.

There is so much more to be said about 'meaning' (beyond both surface representation and mere social dynamics). Wittgenstein took a wrong a theory of meaning and replaced it with an even worse one. The deeper levels of meaning and action are related to a kind of rhythm and music in language (both metaphorically and non-metaphorically). Hence the importance and irreplaceability of direct reading, hearing, recitation of certain kinds of texts.

There is a lot to be said about the heart and how it relates to spiritual development and in particular to consciousness, to the breath, to impression and illusion of 'self' , to Schopenhauer's negation of the will, to the irradiant contemplations, the little known significance of 'poverty', 'simplicity' and a certain spiritual act related to unification and anagogic intent, certainly found in Plotinus and of course in the Yoga and Vedanta.

It is not a question of replacing the false sophistry with a single true philosophy. Rather true philosophy must mean a collection of possible perspectives (darshanas) with an anagogic dimension - as well as powerful rebuttals of false philosophies. Thus different vectors can point at the same center, but there are also vectors which categorically do not point at this center. While there are false philosophies such as Wittgenstein, Ryle, Dennett, Parfit, Rorty and Brandom there are a plurality of truth-pointing perspectives.

Truth is relational: one formal system representing another divides sentences into provably true, provable false, neither provable or not provable but anagogic and self-referential (true in a higher plane) and neither provable nor not provable but not anagogic or self-referential. Two systems can be mutually inconsistent and yet metaconsistent in the sense of there being a canonical higher-level encompassing system which integrates them both at a higher level.

Know the texture, the symptoms of the mind, if the defilements are there. To inspect objectively, in an unfiltered way, the totality of one's consciousness, but to inspect diagnostically, reviewing the symptoms. Thus we must look, inspect, distantly, objectively, in a neutral way, but in order to interpret, diagnose, reveal symptoms.

Introspection must be total, all-encompassing, neutral, balanced and include the body-sensation (pressure, temperature), proprio-perception, the breath, feeling just as much as thought, the fields of sense-perception, inner speach, imagination etc. Find the center, progressively deeper layers, turn inwards. But also act, transfigure, integrate, calm, expunge the mind.

There are models of consciousness inspired by physics: consciousness a self-subsisting field spread out across space-time as well as beyond space-time. The body represents a kind of fragmentation and limitation of this field (a Faraday cage). Like a receiver and transmitter. The limited and trapped consciousness must energize and expand and regain its unity with the total field of consciousness. These kinds of models that objectify consciousness are problematic. Also not all merging of ordinary consciousness into another enveloping 'larger' consciousness is necessarily good (i.e. consider collectivism and cults) or represents a higher state of enlightenment and freedom. The contrary could well be the case. What is of interest is consciousness in and for itself, the consciousness of consciousness which is absolute and free. Consciousness by folding in on itself finds the secret to unfolding itself and thus attains freedom.

There can be no science or philosophy of consciousness yet (only that of the products or reflections that pass through consciousness, logical and linguistic and other artistic-semiotic artifacts) - because we to do not possess immediately any proper means or language to analyze it or to express things about it. The only thing that can be given is a practical guide to gradually develop the sight required to see and know what should be seen and known. Regarding consciousness, language is practical, methodological, never purely scientific or philosophical. That must come much later. Consciousness must transform itself first in order to become an object unto itself and to be able to talk about itself. Consciousness is not so much a given as that which may and should come to be.

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

What is our philosophy ?

The following account needs to be greatly expanded, revised and clarified in the light of transcendental philosophical consciousness. 

A theory of truth that argues that although we can say categorically that certain philosophical systems or propositions are false, we cannot say that any philosophical system is absolutely true or definite.  Only that a plurality of philosophical systems - satisfying certain conditions -  are legitimate in the sense of being anagogic to truth.  Though manifesting incompleteness they have yet an intrinsic virtue of pointing beyond themselves to truth.  The anagogic theory of truth must not be confused with relativism nor in particular Pyrrhonism in its most superficial reading. 

A theory of meaning which depends upon a philosophy of mind.  We argue that all meaning-bearing objects possess multiple layers of meaning which are apprehended by or act upon the mind simultaneously at many different layers.  That modern western philosophy largely focused only on the mere shell of the meaning process and the most exterior aspect of meaning as a mental phenomenon.  This tendency went into an even worse extreme with meaning-as-use theories, though paradoxically this tendency also presents a kind of distorted echo of hitherto deeper neglected aspects of meaning.

A theory of mind and and theory of knowledge which integrates fundamental insights of such thinkers as Aristotle, Plotinus, Locke, Hume, Kant, Schopenhauer, Brentano, James and Wundt. It is a theory based on a multi-tiered, multi-leveled concept of the mind known progressively through a special methodology of insight and introspection which itself evolves and becomes more refined during this process. The core idea is that the ordinary mind is something folded in on itself and solidified by a self-reinforcing illusion. 

We can say that the problem with cartesian dualism is not that it was not physicalist but that it was not non-physicalist enough. On the other hand the history of science and the analysis of the concept of matter reveals it to be a fundamentally unclear and flawed concept.  We freely acknowledge that great advances in physics may lead to a radical new view of the physical and chemical aspects of living beings.

A theory of analyticity and the a priori based on computability and Turing-completeness which categorically refutes mainstream philosophical logic while acknowledging the central role of a plurality of perspectives,  incompleteness, mutual interpretation between formal systems and formal metatheory.

A philosophical logic based on an alternative graph-theoretic and combinatoric-computational abstraction of the logical mechanisms of natural language.

A philosophy of science which offers new perspectives on determinism, computability and the role of continuity and differentiability in science. We also point out the relevance of Hegel's Science of Logic to the recent history of mathematics and theoretical physics as well as to general systems theory.

In ethics a moral sense realism akin to Shapshay's interpretation of Schopenhauer: that Schopenhauer's ethics can be seen to be based directly on the facts of consciousness and is not incompatible with Kantian ethics, free will and the hope for social progress. We would also add that Hume offers many valuable insights as well as well as various ancient authors who defended animal rights.  We also criticize current misreadings of Stoicism and strive to show the affinity between the self-cultivation promoted in the Pali canon and that of several schools of ancient philosophy.

In cultural and political theory we offer a critique of supremacy and superiority concepts and beliefs - the mismeasure of man -  and take particular aim at faulty concepts of  'intelligence', 'race', values and institutions based on the accumulation wealth,  and all ideological justifications of violence.  

Tuesday, October 28, 2025

Philosophical Monologues Oct.2023 - Dec.2025

This text (not yet available) is a collection disparate notes, arranged in chronological order, that  I wrote from October 2023 to December 2025.  These notes are by and large material that has not been incorporated yet into my published papers and preprints available online.
This text (dealing largely  but not exclusively with the philosophy of logic and language) can be read as a kind of philosophical diary (a ta eis heauton) with the caveat that it does not include published material or texts available elsewhere.

Hegel, Metaphysics and Spiritual Realization

We can trace much of Hegel back to Spinoza, Leibniz and Kant. But what if Spinoza and Leibniz themselves represented but an adaptation or ...