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dgb...
Be Careful of All Labels, Concepts, and Theories...
Make sure that they actually 'fit' the 'territory' they are supposedly meant to describe, define, and/or explain...
Concepts are abstractions of real, live events -- a combination of partly changing, partly unchanging structures and processes...
We lose sensory-observational information when we interpret, conceptualize, generalize, associate, abstract...
We lose even more sensory-observational information when we label our interpretations, concepts, generalizations, associations, abstractions...
Don't be fooled by the label...
If need be, come back down the 'abstraction ladder',
Back down to our own sensory observations...
To support or refute the sensory observations of those before us,
And their reports...
And concepts,
Theories,
And labels...
Make sure that the abstractions and the labels that we read or hear,
Fit the territory they are supposed to represents...
Do not be fooled by advertisements, marketing, people with conflicts of interest...
Do not be fooled by stereotypes...
Do not be fooled by the media and the masses...
Do not be fooled by people who say they want to 'help' you...
While they aim to manipulate, extort, exploit you...
Do not be fooled by 'status quo truths' that may not be 'truths' at all...
Do not let a 'label' take on a life of its own...
And let some 'word-victimized' person's life be ruined in the process...
The reality is in the person; not the label.
Don't get tricked or stuck inside the label...
And miss the real life and character of the person who is standing in front of you...
Think and judge for yourself...
And judge what is real...
Trust your own senses,
Don't get lost in someone else's words and abstractions...
That may have no bearing on what they are supposedly describing...
Think for yourself...and accept differences that don't hurt anybody...
-- dgb, Feb. 26th, 2010
-- David Gordon Bain
-- Dialectic Gap-Bridging Negotiations...
-- Are Still in Process...
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Science and Sanity - Alfred Korzybski | ||||||
The fantastic science fiction adventures described in "The World of Null-A" and "The Pawns of Null-A" made me wonder if there really was any such thing as "General semantics". Was this "science" just a product of A. E. van Vogt's vivid imagination. Some of the chapters started with anonymous quotes from purported authorities, such as "B. R", "A. K.", "C. J. K.". Had they all been made up? Could "B. R."be Bertrand Russell? And what about the "Semantic Institute" at "Korzybski Square"?
By the way, a few years earlier during a visit to the local public library, I was indignant to find a Swedish science fiction book written by Vladimir Semitjov: "430 million km in outer space"("43,000,000 mil i världsrymden") on a shelf behind the librarian's desk under the heading of "Crazies" ("Galningar"). As the space age dawned and interplanetary probes became a reality, I often recalled that incident. - Many years later, an aunt of mine, who was a librarian, laughed heartily when I told her the story. She told me that the term "Galningar" was used for books that had been misplaced on the shelves. It had nothing to do with their content. The book turned out to be a heavy read, due to its high level of abstraction and unusual terminology, in addition to my own limitations with regard to the English language. But at the same time I found it quite fascinating, with its abundance of ideas. (Unexpectedly - at least to me - the complete book is now available on the web.) The central themes of the book are the enormous influence that language itself has on our thinking, the dangers that are inherent in the process of abstraction that underlies language, and the need to be fully aware of them: "The map is not the territory." The book makes a distinction between the "Non-Aristotelian" discipline of "General Semantics" and the two-valued logic of Aristotle with its insistence that statements are either true or false. In particular, it warns us from using the little word "is" of identification without realising how it can constrain our view of the world. Many times when we say "is", we should really think "has" (the property of, or the attribute, at this point in time), or "exhibits some of the characteristics of", and add "etc." in order to remind ourselves that the statement is not exhaustive, and may not even be valid tomorrow. The term "General Semantics" is used to widen the scope of semantics so that it does not just deal with the lexical meaning of words and symbols, but also with our reactions to them. - A man unexpectedly brings flowers to his wife, as a symbol of his love. But she may be wondering if instead it is a sign of his bad conscience. Not only her interpretation, but also the emotions it evokes, are seen as legitimate subjects for study under the heading of "General Semantics". "Science and Sanity" has been acclaimed by many intelligent readers, but it has also been denounced as a mish-mash of unoriginal observations presented as science. To my mind, it does not matter very much whether Korzybski's work is based on original research or is just a compilation of previous contributions. I believe that his world view, despite some exaggerations and a tendency to self-aggrandizement, is basically sound, has turned out to be influential, and is largely compatible with modern scientific thought. By all accounts Korzybski had a strong and colorful personality. He was a Polish count, born in 1879. He received an engineering education in Warsaw, fought with the Russian army in WW I, was injured and sent to North America in late 1915 to co-ordinate the shipment of war supplies to Russia. After the war he decided to stay in the United States. He wrote several books. "Science and Sanity" was published in 1933. He founded the Institute of General Semantics in 1938 and directed it until his death in 1950. - See also this biography.
Today the teachings of "Science and Sanity" seem as relevant as when they were written, especially in the light of our present tendency to attach labels to persons, and groups of persons, whom we like or dislike, and to see the world in terms of black and white: "Terrorist", "Unbeliever", etc. The map is not the territory! Further reading
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