sdi: Photograph of a geomantic house chart. (geomancy)
sdi ([personal profile] sdi) wrote2020-11-21 01:46 pm
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Is the concept of objectivity a myth?

I've been meditating on subjectivity and objectivity lately, courtesy of an exchange with [personal profile] barefootwisdom. We're all taught as children that there is such a thing as objective Truth, and that even though we are limited by our subjective senses, the Truth can be discovered through the scientific method. In the last week, though, I've come to think that even a subjective universe can be consistent enough to admit the use of the scientific method; and that if we don't need to resort to the notion of objectivity in order to model the universe, then (by Ockham's Razor) we shouldn't.

(Why, then, is the concept taught? Presumably to propagandize children into an implicit belief in a mechanistic universe in which gods and goddesses have no place.)

That's all good enough for me, but I thought I might be better served by asking someone less bound by a lack of perspective as I am.


I am represented by Cauda Draconis in the the I (a traditional indication that I already know, or think I know, the answer and am shopping for a confirmation), while the concept of objectivity is represented by Amissio (the figure of loss) in the IX (of deep knowledge). The I perfects to the IX by a conjunction through the X (strengthened slightly by company capitular). The I is in planetary company with Rubeus in the II (of things held closely, indicating my prior worldview), while Amissio also occupies the V (of pleasures) and VII (of the being I'm asking my question to). Interestingly, these three figures (Rubeus, Cauda Draconis, and Amissio) also make up the court.

All told, I think this says: "Yes, for whatever it's worth, I agree with you and think that the world is more fun and interesting if you drop the concept altogether. You were misinstructed as a child, but you managed to figure things out for yourself in the end."
emmanuelg: sock puppet (Default)

[personal profile] emmanuelg 2020-11-28 07:46 am (UTC)(link)
Fascinating ideas!
Oddly, I've been thinking along the same lines, that what we think of as objective and subjective may be something else entirely. Suppose we use computers as a model to think about these things. Suppose I open a spreadsheet program. Let's say I have a vague idea of what spreadsheets do, but there is no "Spreadsheets for Dummies" reference available. I have to learn how to use it by experimentation.

While the spreadsheet is open, it has rules that govern what happens within the spreadsheet.. If I don't know the rules, I can discover them, and consult with other spreadsheet users who may have discovered functions that I don't know about. The spreadsheet does not do things on its own. I have to interact with it, and to a limited extent, it interacts with me. I can interact with other spreadsheet users through spreadsheets that I share with them. '

Now I close the spreadsheet and open a graphics program. I can put numbers into the graphics I create, but the rules for how they interact are much different from those that govern numbers in the spreadsheets.

Yet, underlying all of that are the binary gyrations of the Windows 7 Operating System (It's true, I haven't upgraded to Win 10). So Windows 7 is the ultimate objective ground level of reality here--- No wait! I have a dual-booting laptop, and I ALSO run Linux, so the OS is not the objective reality.

Maybe its the hardware that's the objective reality here. Nope, can't be that. My sister runs only Macs and can use a spreadsheet I created on her Mac...

So applying all this to the experience of reality that we share--
Geomancy could be like the spreadsheet program. It is a tool through which we interact with each other and with other being(s) that have a different view of (or perhaps a higher vantage point on) reality than our own. I interact with a Geomantic reading, and it has boundaries and rules, but they are more like a framework for meditation that takes me outside of my usual frame of reference.

Interacting with a spreadsheet is similar, in that I can use the spreadsheet to guide my mathematical meditations and arrive at answers that would not otherwise be available to me.

But its more than that. It is also like playing chess with a partner that wants you to make the best possible next move.

Quantum physics says that the presence of an observer changes the outcome of an interaction between particles. That should tell us something about objectivity!

So, no objectivity. Perhaps that is so, but there are games with rules, constructs in which we can participate. When we do, our presences change the outcome.

Is that at all like your understanding?
emmanuelg: sock puppet (Default)

[personal profile] emmanuelg 2020-12-01 07:11 am (UTC)(link)
Maybe the keyword is 'objective,' since it implies dead objects acted on by impersonal forces. But in a totally subjective universe, the most important thing is the interplay and interaction of beings at many levels, and everything in our experience arises from that, one way or another.