Hello Ashvin,AshvinP wrote: ↑Fri Jun 27, 2025 1:12 pmGüney27 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 26, 2025 11:31 pm Steiner, in *Philosophy of Freedom*, states that the fundamental dichotomy lies between observation (in German, *Beobachtung*, synonymous with perception) and thinking. This dualism, however, is a product of the epistemological tradition, which separates perception and thinking (the pure act of thought) and assigns them different ontological determinations. Meaning must be something connected to perception. When we use the concept of shame, we describe an embodied situation that has a specific meaning, a specific quality (not in isolation, but in the context of our environment and other constitutive situations), which distinctively highlights it, allowing us to produce a concept, a symbolic form, to express this meaningful and qualitative experience. Our corporeality must play a special and decisive role here, as it is the condition of these experiences. Focusing solely on the act of thinking (though this is very important) can lead to neglecting this “dimension.”
Thanks for the synopsis of your current thought, Guney. I also hope we can lead this in a fruitful direction. Let's see if we can first get clear on the nature of PoF, Cleric's essays, and all similar phenomenological presentations (collectively, 'intuitive thinking path'). If we start to subtly transform these into something they are not and were never meant to be, this will become a problem, because it cuts off one of the most important resources for developing and expanding intuition of the pre-conceptual realm (perhaps more appropriately characterized as the post-conceptual realm, since we can only enter into it through the portal of already developed intellectual life). It's like we are driving on a steep and curvy mountain road, and along the way, we start taking down the signs that warn us of tight turns ahead or the potential for falling rocks. The next time we drive on that road, we will lack proper orientation to the obstacles and pitfalls.
What is envisioned by the intuitive thinking path is that we will begin to understand the pre-conceptual realm when our inner cognitive movements become more pre-conceptual (this also gives another perspective on the chaotic aggregate imagination and the cognitive movements of PoF in general, which are not intended as 'ontological determinations'). Cleric pointed out before how the merely conceptual intellect has become excessively dependent on a linear progression of mental pictures to 'explain' experienced reality, i.e., a chain of premises, facts, and reasoning in which the intellect only feels comfortable when each step builds upon the previous, upon familiar experiences and concepts. This is practically what defines the conceptual realm. The fact is that, as long as we continue seeking the answer in the content of various philosophical systems, our inner movements remain insensitive to their pre-conceptual gestures. That is why the intuitive thinking path does not merely present another philosophical system, but a palette of imaginative and introspective exercises that bring the soul into more intimate contact with its organic pre-conceptual gestures.
Here is an interesting passage that I listened to recently, which relates to the question of finding the leap into the pre-conceptual:
"There is a statement that has been taken for granted by official science but that anthroposophists should learn to realize is without meaning: “Nature makes no leaps.” This sounds objective, yet it is senseless, because nature continually makes leaps. If you follow the development of a plant, you find that there is a leap whenever something new appears in the course of its development. A leap takes place from the regular leaf formation to the blossom, from the calyx to the petals, from the petals to the stamen, and so on. After nature has developed gradually for some time, it makes further leaps; indeed, all existence makes leaps. Therein lies the essential nature of evolution, that crises and leaps take place. It is one of those commonplaces resulting from the terrible laziness of human thinking when human beings say that “nature makes no leaps”; in reality it makes many leaps." (GA 118)
Thus, we can see that, by closely investigating the life of our cognitive process, it's characteristic qualities, patterns, and principles, we discover something of the organic leaps which also characterize the wider World flow as it comes to expression in both human culture and the kingdoms of nature. We come to know the leap to higher knowledge by inwardly participating in it, by experiencing how it is continually manifesting in our intuitive life that is normally drowned out by our habituated sensory-intellect movements. So we aim to enter into the living flow of intuitive space, which is the flow that we are always instinctively navigating to paint our finished concepts about reality within our conscious aperture of the World state.
By extending our lucid intuitive consciousness into this flowing pre-conceptual context, we by no means float off as an untethered balloon from the bodily environment. In fact, we become even more intensely conscious of our daily bodily gestures and their sensory feedback. It is obvious that this bodily context takes much of its course from our imaginative life. We plan our days, move from point A to point B, interact and communicate with others, probe the nature of existence via philosophy and science, and so on. Of course, there are many aspects of the bodily context which seem to run their course independently of our imaginative life, such as the weather or illnesses and so on, but even many of these can be traced to previous ways in which the imaginative life was conducted, individually and collectively. So it only makes sense to become more intimately familiar with the dynamics of these imaginative movements through which we often direct our bodily context and discern its meaningful feedback.
Let's use an example from ML's research. Levin and his team have conducted experiments with planaria flatworms in which they ‘rewrite’ the worm’s bioelectric patterns such that the biological machinery manifests the potential of growing two heads instead of one. How did such an experiment originate? It was first an idea in the consciousness of Levin and his team. They ‘extended’ their imagination into this space of potential and intuited certain possibilities for manipulating the bioelectric patterns and actualizing new forms in the worm’s morphological space. There is no suggestion here that their imagination is the source of such lawful possibilities, but it is undeniably the case that the latter could only come to physical expression if the researchers involved first extended their thinking into intuitive space and probed its potential. Thus, it is incumbent that we better understand the cognitive process by which those results were made possible. That doesn’t mean we are floating off into our imagination and forsaking the experimental process, but rather we are trying to refine and better orchestrate the latter by exploring the intuitive process that is always prior to the experiments.
As we have discussed many times before, growing our intuition into this pre-conceptual realm can become quite uncomfortable and inconvenient, because the first patterned movements we need to leap across are intellectual habits (like over-dependence on linear progressions of thoughts) and stubborn character traits that we have identified with. These are living drives that are invested in maintaining their unquestioned existence and grip on the soul. They secretly whisper to us that, by investigating the cognitive process too closely, we are neglecting the bodily context where our attention should be focused. But why do we trust these whispers? Because, as we have seen, the characteristic dynamics of the cognitive process are exactly what elucidate the nature of the bodily context across the scales of existence, from personal to collective. The bodily environment and its lawful metamorphoses begin to be known in their inner nature as the collective and symphonic flow of memory and anticipation/hope, imagination and will.
Could you give me a hint about SS concepts that Cleric implicitly describes in his essays?