ISSS Integrated Systemic Inquiry Primer Project (ISIPP)
Edited by Tom Mandel
Editor's note: If we are serious about Systemic Inquiry, there is a part or aspect of systemics, a "systemic aspect" that interpenetrates all interrelationships, and that is our language. How we think, how we talk, how we comunicate, we all do this with language. There are problems with language, mis-identification of abstractionals, confusion of abstractional levels, reversal of abstractional processes, and more. But the one aspect that affects us all to the depths of our being and the heights of our joy, is the "misplaced concreteness" of words. As Korzybski points out, and in typical science writing fashion, at the end of this piece, "The map is not the territory." See also Zen's "Do not mistake the pointing finger for the moon." the anonymous "The word is not the Thing." and the latest variation, "The menu is not the dinner."
But having an intellectual grasp of this knowledge "does not yet mean one has a systems view." The words have to be turned into action, and the action has to applied over a period of time, and exist as a process such that evolutionary growth emerges and learning occurs. Only then can we continue our journey as masters of our fate. Otherwise we remain stuck in the mud of our thoughts where all we can manage to do is call everything names...Where making war is the way, and making love is obscene....Well, if you HAVE TO have a name, call it "Taking eyes off ball."
What we have here is a working table of contents (the g-s slice of our index) , authored by Bob Pula, recongnized as general-semantics greatest teacher. Submitted by Homer Moore. Direct link to G-S Homepage.
GENERAL-SEMANTICS FORMULATIONS RELATED TO HUMAN
COMMUNICATIONS PROCESSES, HUMAN EVALUATING, etc.
- process of abstracting
- structurally-determined (i.e., pre-attitudinal, selecting/filtering)
transducing
integrating (pre-conscious)
projecting (pre-conscious; potentially conscious)
languaging (multi-ordinal; self-reflexive)
spiral character of abstracting
Attitudes, preferences, etc., through neuro-linguistic mechanisms,
complicate but do not fundamentally change the process; all human
evaluating derives from and constitutes abstracting.
- Structural Differential
- as map (model) of the abstracting process,
accumulation of and transmission of knowledge (information), etc.
- semantic reaction
- total, emotional,
intellectual, i.e., psychological response of a (human)
organism-as-a-whole to a stimulus; broader than what is traditionally called
meaning
symbol: human, delayed, conditional
signal: animal, immediate, unconditional, animal-human
continuum
- multi-use of terms
- lexical (same term, different definition)
contextual (same term, different situation)
neurological (same term, different brain)
- multiordinality of terms
- same term, different evaluations
related to different orders of abstracting; meaning = f(order of
abstracting)
- orders (levels) of abstractingacts
- orders (levels) of abstraction
results in time T
(artificially fixed for analysis) which affects further analysis
- structure
- order, relations, function as mutually defining terms
- structure
- (relationships, pattern, order, arrangement, observe-observed
continuum in time) as only content of knowledge -- breakaway
from the search for essences, things in themselves,
etc. General-semantics as a non-essentialist discipline.
- Sapir-Whorf-Korzybski Hypothesis
- ... a language, any language, has at its bottom certain
metaphysics, which ascribe, consciously or unconsciously, some structure to the
world. (Science and Sanity, p.89) We do not realize what
tremendous power the structure of an habitual language has.
It is not an exaggeration to say that it enslaves us through the mechanism of
s.r. (semantic reaction) and that the structure which a language exhibits, and
imposes upon us unconsciously, is automatically projected upon the world
around us. This semantic power is indeed so unbelievable that I do not know any
one, even among well-trained scientists, who, after admitting some argument as
correct, does not the next minute deny or disregard (usually unconsciously)
practically every word he had admitted, being carried away again by the
structural implications of the old language and his s.r. (Science and
Sanity, pp.90-91)
- intensional orientation
- over-dependence on definitions, verbalizations, etc.
- extensional orientation
- while maintaining linguistic formulational
capabilities, priority assigned to non-verbal (silent) orders of
abstracting
- extensional devices
- as neurolinguistic prophylactic (see above)
- non-elementalism
- general-semantics
- as a meta-communicational (meta-linguistic,
meta-system) system
- g.s. as method of evaluation
- relatively neutral; no
fixed content; an open system; a propositional calculus;
modern, open, applied epistemology
- neurolinguistic feedback
- feedback borrowed from Norbert
Wiener but anticipated by Korzybski in his formulation of the circular-spiral
character of abstracting and neurological emphasis. (See Structural
Differential, Science and Sanity, pp.386-411)
- neuro-semantic environments
- as environments
- non-Aristotelian
- not anti-Aristotelian, but broader and corrective
- non-identity
- of level (orders) of abstraction(ing) necessary for fully (fullest) functioning humans
- science as method
- (not to be confused with scientific
knowledge at a date, technology, behavior of scientific societies,
etc.) recommended as method for sanity
- life as an asymmetric relation
- irreversible process-at-a-date: you cant (1991) unboil an egg.
- uncertainty
- (restricted Heisenbergian and general Korzybskian) accepted as at heart of human evaluating
- time-binding
- as characteristic human activity, leading to:
-- formation of cultures
-- formation of culture-studying cultures
-- rejection of space-binding (excessively competitive) ethics
- language
- as tool of time-binding
language-referent relationships
- verbal/non-verbal (silent) levels
- verbal-non-verbal isomorphy
- (while maintaining awareness of non-identity)
- logical fate
- (premise-conclusion relationship)
- fact/inference distinction
- (levels of abstraction)
- multi-valued vs. two-valued
- (either-or) orientations
- types of questions
- operational
speculative
fun
pathology-inducing (lack of consciousness of abstracting)
- I.F.D. disease
- H = ME + MM
- Abstracting:
- A technical term in general-semantics; a dictionary wont help.
A personal process (an activity with recognizable phases), somewhat different
for each person; involving:
- Structurally-determined selecting/filtering (sensory and neural
abstracting); including transducing (e.g., for the eye, from electromagnetic
vibrations at 186,000 m.p.s. to electrochemical at 225 m.p.h. in the large
neural fibers.)
- Functional selecting depending on past experiences, moods, needs,
interests, etc.
- Integrating -- summarizing, gestalting
- Projecting -- the tendency of brains to allocate their own experience
elsewhere. Robert Pula
- Self-reflexiveness -- including reactions to reactions, etc.
- Talking (symbolizing) to self and others, which involves:
Multiordinality -- many possible orders of abstraction;
Self-reflexiveness -- talking about talk, statements about statements, etc.
The entire process is potentially self-corrective and produces results that
can be communicated.
This process makes it clear that
Our maps, non-verbal or verbal, are not the territory. Our maps cannot
represent all of the territory. Any map represents a territory-map maker
synthesis; this must be taken into account in evaluation the map.
Since the map is not the territory, what we seek is a map similar in
structure to the territory.
© Robert P. Pula, 1991
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