findingblanks wrote: ↑Thu Oct 03, 2024 4:52 am Because of time constraints and the large sequential amount of worthy ideas you packed into the above, I'll just have to go in bits and pieces over the next several days:
"Then, if we want to express these images more precisely to ourselves or others, we ‘condense’ them into verbal forms that are constrained by our acquired languages, our speech skills, the particular organization of our throat and larynx, etc."
I would only want to add that, for me, the original images are already shaped by the way language implicitly functioned both in its original formation (Federer learning to hit his backhand and then doing so 'unconsciously' thousands of times, some of which he may at one point remember) and it any rememberance of it. I certainly agree that in shifting from the felt-meaning to any form of explication (words, sign language, dance), it again crosses new meshes of constraints, all allowing for novelty and new insights each step of the way. Often, in modern science, constraints are only seen as de-purifying something that is pure. Whereas, I think that phenomenology shows us that 'constraints' are the essential ingredient to evolving any living process into it's (possible) next more intricate and developed form. But: the next form should NOT be taken as only it's content. There is never a division between the form and how it is in the process of being reformed, a process which is not perceptible but is deeply cognizable.
I say this to show that I'm fully agreeing with the above, but if we disagree about the implicit role language plays in even the forming of the orginal experience, we should at least mark that spot for the future. I imagine you will agree, but I know many people in our hills who talk about a kind of human experience which is yet untouched by even the implicit functioning of already had universals.
Nobody would be surprised if it after 40 years of remembering a reflexive backhand winner, Federer was able to grasp a phrase one of his mentors used when correcting a bad habit he had at one point earlier in his career. The spontaneous and seemingly only behavioral backhand has countless linguistic aspects functioning in it implicitly every time it happens. And, not that I need to keep repeating this, but implicit functioning is something we are directly always experiencing even if our current science claims that everything experienced (and real) is a finished form. I only repeat this because, sometimes, my use of this language is taken to point to merely intellectual models/concepts and not something we can notice acting in each moment of the forming of this ongoing experience.
Good point, the linguistic constraint does seem to run deep into the life of 'wordless' mental picturing as well. In our dream sequences, for ex., it's not like we can suddenly speak and understand new languages, even though our sense of 'me' is much less distinct from the imagistic environment.
I also agree that the constraints shouldn't be judged as something negative or arbitrarily limiting our spiritual activity. The more we inwardly investigate them, the more we appreciate their critical functions in various Earthly streams of development. The negative consequences arise when we remain entirely merged with the constraints, subtly identifying with them and flowing along their etched channels as they are given to us, without trying to resist that flow and thereby becoming more intuitively conscious of their implicit functions. In that sense, evolution (above and beyond imitation/replication/repetition of forms) only occurs when creative agents become inwardly conscious of the inner constraints and start to participate in their functions.
The evolution of language is a good example that was recently mentioned on the forum. To begin with, we have to admit that are born and raised into a native language that structures how we think-speak and therefore how we perceive, understand, and act within the one World flow. Yet we know that languages evolve and the way human souls conduct their thinking-speaking activity contributes to this evolution. A prime example within the English language, apart from the Biblical translation of KJ, is how Shakespeare's plays contributed so many new words and phrases. So we can intuit from these facts that the way human souls conduct their linguistic activity, how they make use of the archetypal linguistic constraints, also feeds back into those constraints. It is the same principle when we are willing our physical modulations, for ex. when driving a car and dreamily veering off to the side, and this feeds back as vibratory sensations from the highway bumps so we modulate our activity back in the other direction.
Yet a human soul that simply flows passively with the linguistic constraint as it is inherited/given won't have the capacity for this creative modulation. It is precisely our awakeness to the archetypal modulation, our intuitive sensitivity to that curvature in which our picturing-thoughts-speech unfold, that gives us ever-greater potency to work back into the curvature and influence it in a creative direction. Shakespeare, for whatever reason (as an aside, there is some interesting evidence that he was influenced by an initiate), became highly sensitive to the archetypal soul curvature of the English language. He developed a loving interest in that soul curvature and the inner lives of fellow humans who participated in and through it. Fundamentally, that is what our phenomenology should also aim toward - all the technical-sounding symbols are an artistic means of heightening our interest and sensitivity to the inner lives that comprise the intuitive curvatures (constraints) in which our existence unfolds. The only constraints we aim to 'override' are those that positively prevent us from seeking the first aim, i.e.narrow prejudices, assumptions, opinions, thinking habits, selfish desires, etc.