hypothesis-one
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| - | **Hypothesis One: Consciousness Based on Language** | + | ==== HYPOTHESIS ONE: CONSCIOUSNESS IS BASED ON LANGUAGE ==== |
| - | Consciousness, | + | **Theoretical Claim** |
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| + | Consciousness, | ||
| We speak of our minds as being “quick, | We speak of our minds as being “quick, | ||
| - | **Metaphrands, | + | **Supporting Evidence** |
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| + | //Metaphrands, | ||
| For Jaynes metaphor’s persuasive power comes from its four components working together: The unknown thing to be described (metaphrand) and the known thing doing the describing (metaphier). For example, in the expression “time flies like an arrow” time is the more abstract, difficult-to-conceive metaphrand while arrow is the more concrete, easier-to-grasp metaphier. Note, however, that it is not really the arrow itself that provides the descriptive impact, but something about the arrow—its unstoppable speed, linear preciseness, | For Jaynes metaphor’s persuasive power comes from its four components working together: The unknown thing to be described (metaphrand) and the known thing doing the describing (metaphier). For example, in the expression “time flies like an arrow” time is the more abstract, difficult-to-conceive metaphrand while arrow is the more concrete, easier-to-grasp metaphier. Note, however, that it is not really the arrow itself that provides the descriptive impact, but something about the arrow—its unstoppable speed, linear preciseness, | ||
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| It is the network of meanings in which a concept is embedded that grants expressive power to figures of speech (though not all metaphors are particularly generative). Consciousness is the metaphrand when generated by the paraphrands of verbal expressions, | It is the network of meanings in which a concept is embedded that grants expressive power to figures of speech (though not all metaphors are particularly generative). Consciousness is the metaphrand when generated by the paraphrands of verbal expressions, | ||
| - | **Preconscious Hypostases: The Precursors of Mental Language** | + | // |
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| - | Jaynes submitted that we need a “paleontology of consciousness” in which we can discover stratum by stratum how this metaphorically-built introcosmos we call subjective introspectable self-awareness was built up over the centuries. | + | |
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| - | Jaynes refers to mind‒words that would later come to mean something like consciousness “preconscious hypostases” (what is caused to stand under something). These are the assumed causes of action when other causes are no longer apparent. | + | |
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| - | When the gods began to fade into the mists of mythology individuals had not yet attributed their behavior directly to themselves the way a subjectively self-aware person would. Instead preconscious hypostases, or what we would call internal body sensations, were believed to cause people to act. The individual became a container possessed of nonperson but agentive entities. These eventually developed into the unified mental space in which an analog “I” dwelled and moved about. | + | |
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| - | Preconscious hypostases are “seats of reaction and responsibility” that emerged during the transition | + | |
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| - | Phase 1: Objective. In the bicameral age terms referred to simple external observations. | + | |
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| - | Phase 2: Internal. Terms come to mean things inside the body, especially certain internal sensations. The transition from Phase 1 to Phase 2 occurred at the beginning of bicameral mentality’s breakdown. | + | |
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| - | Phase 3: Subjective. Terms refer to processes that we would call mental; they have changed from internal stimuli believed to cause behavior to interiorized spaces where metaphorized actions occur. | + | |
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| - | Phase 4: Synthetic. The various hypostases unite into one conscious self that can introspect and self-reflect. | + | |
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| - | In pre-Socratic times physicality and concreteness characterized what we would call psychological activity (metaphrands) which was located in bodily organs (metaphiers). As an example of hypostases, consider ancient Greek. | + | |
| - | Besides breath, blood, and the brain, cognition and emotion were identified with the spatial cavity of the chest: Phrenes may have originally meant “lungs” or “breathing” (localized in the midriff); thumos perhaps meant “internal sensations” (sometimes localized in the chest); etor designated heart; and kradie is from the beating “heart.” The metaphor of visibility is clear in the term nous (apparently from a verb meaning “to see”). A key term for intellectual activity was nous. It was not necessarily linked to psyche, but was a bodily entity located in the chest. | + | |
hypothesis-one.1712272632.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/04/04 18:17 by brian.m
