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[xmca] Consciousness: Ilyenkov



P. 302 of "The Ideal in Activity," by Ilyenkov:

"Here, then, is the question: take your thought, your consciousness of the world, and the world itself, the complex and intricate world which only appears to be simple, the world which you see around you, in which you live, act and carry out your work - whether you write treatises on philosophy or physics, sculpt statues out of stone, or produce steel in a blast furnace - what is the relationship between them?
"Here there is a parting of the ways, and the difference 
lies in whether you choose the right path or the left, for 
there is no middle here; the middle path contains within 
itself the very same divergences, only they branch out 
within it in ever more minute and discrete proportions. In 
philosophy the 'party of the golden mean' is the 'party of 
the brainless', who try to unite materialism with idealism 
in an eclectic way, by means of smoothing out the basic 
contradictions, and by means of muddling the most general 
(abstract, 'cellule') and clear concepts.
"These concepts are matter and consciousness (psyche, the 
ideal, spirit, soul, will, etc. etc.). 'Consciousness' – let 
us take this term as Lenin did - is the most general concept 
which can only be defined by clearly contrasting it with the 
most general concept of 'matter', moreover as something 
secondary, produced and derived. Dialectics consists in not 
being able to define matter as such; it can only be defined 
through its opposite, and only if one of the opposites is 
fixed as primary, and the other arises from it."


Andy Blunden wrote:
Oh I don't doubt that the various strands of abstract empiricism and so on are full of non-material representational systems and non-material all-sorts-of-things. I think you are just making a point about your not subscribing to Platonism or some dualist philosophical system.
But in the meaning *you* give to "material" aren't you making a 
tautology by saying that representational systems found in history are 
material? Or are there representational system which *you* say are not 
material?
Andy

Martin Packer wrote:
Andy,

Well, the (putative) representational systems studied by cognitive science, which are taken to be mental functions, properties of thought, which are not doubted to have a material substrate (the brain) but which are assumed not to be material themselves but ideal, in Plato's rather than Ilyenkov's sense. Chomsky's generative grammar is a good example. Piaget's theory of the mental actions and operations going on 'inside the head' of child is another.
Martin


On Sep 24, 2009, at 9:09 PM, Andy Blunden wrote:

Martin, tell me a representational system which is *not* material.

a

Martin Packer wrote:
humans have evolved to use an ordered series of "representational systems." The sequence is as follows: the episodic, mimetic, mythic, and theoretic. I won't go into the details, but crucially important, I think, is that these systems are material.
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--
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Andy Blunden http://www.erythrospress.com/
Classics in Activity Theory: Hegel, Leontyev, Meshcheryakov, Ilyenkov $20 ea
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