I find that I have some interest in what you are saying, but let me point out a couple of things.
The way that you discount language is just impossible to do and at the same time maintain any coherent philosophy of reality. You say that human reasoning is based on phenomena that are disjoint with nature itself, and therefore is unable to reveal nature's joints to us. This eliminates any beliefs based on human logic from revealing anything about reality to us, if the words in which we think don't purchase us any true beliefs.
But this literally precludes you from making any coherent statements about reality. What you use in your comment are words, and those words demonstrate you have beliefs about reality. Man does not speak in 'motion', he does not think in 'motion', so what reason have you given mankind to think he can know anything about the reality-of-motion, much less talk about it with one another?
Further, the terms 'beginning' and 'end' are indicative of something, particularly this word, 'end'. It implies a final cause, or a meaningful purpose for things. If something brought reality into motion, and all of that motion has an end, then there must be a Logos embedded in that reality, about which you can say something - that is, which ought to be intelligible to human reason.
If all that you can say is things are in motion, they are moving toward an end, and that's it, then you've not said anything meaningful besides to just say what is. Anything else you add to this scaffold will be the result of reasoning or revelation, each of which will entail language as words, ideographs, gesture-signs, etc. I can recall the long comments you've made to us in the past, featuring paragraphs after paragraphs, ultimately just to say: things are in motion. Okay, so what?
Change itself is the master key and the real underlying goal which all philosophy has meant to explain. You are coming to the table by saying there is only motion. It had a beginning, and it will end. But how are you justifying that motion had a beginning and an end - and note that I'm not referring to any particular, contingent motion of a corporeal object (as in this or that particle moved from point A to point B). No, I am asking how you're justifying that all motion had a beginning and that all motion ends. You cannot infer that conclusion by merely arriving in existence to find that everything is in motion. It's logically possible that things have always been in motion and things just always will be, and so all change is contingent on an infinite regress of motion. Of course, most of us reject this because believing that also means that you can't even properly define causes. Once you give that concept away, you can't say anything about reality beyond what you have: hey, things are moving.
Is there any other life-form that utilizes language to proclaim reality for each other, to then argue about truth and false states of those proclamations or do they seem to communicate with each other in adherence to motion (adaptation).
Is there any other animal that has written Inferno, Paradise Lost, or Macbeth? Is there any other animal that has painted a Mona Lisa? Is there any other animal that has composed Mozart's Requiem or Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata?
Question how nature inspired you to perceive impossibility?
Impossibility is a formal concept from modal logic. For example, it is logically impossible for something to be simultaneously both a circle and a square. It is metaphysically impossible for you to be your own parent. It is naturally impossible for a telephone booth to fly. Animals aren't aware of this concept because they lack higher intelligence. You'd have me think that all of this was for naught, a great mistake, and that I ought to live my life like an animal.
Question. You've highlighted the fact that man's intellect and rationality set him apart from nature, but you've not justified by way of any convincing argument that this is not, in fact, a privileged position, or perhaps even an ordained one. You discount human intellect a priori as an aberrant mode of being in the world, when our reasoning (in combination with our imagination and creativity) has produced wonders that the animal world could not dream of. You believe that you have discovered such an obvious fact of nature here, but it flies in the face of common sense.
Within motion (reality) you're perceiving a flow of information as inspiration to your senses.
Yes, I can see the point that you're attempting to make here, but you simply run afoul of not just common sense, but also of history. Start with Thales, Anaximander, Parmenides, Heraclitus, Democritus, Socrates - Plato, Aristotle, so on and so forth, and tell me that man's reasoning is a misguided and inexcusable error. Of course, you'll find error in the philosophy of these thinkers, but follow it down the line and note the changes, the increase in sophistication and methods, the increase in the resolution with which we formulate the questions that need to be asked.
You contradict yourself through and through. First, you assert that the only source of mental contents can be from sense data, which is patently false - and no, not false in an illusory sense, but actually false. The contents of my inspiration are provably not identical to sense data. Then you go on to say that our error is in holding on to the information we receive, which, becoming a 'want' - as opposed to basic action/response - separates us from nature.
How ought we adapt to the inspiration from our senses? You continue to say 'Adapt to motion!' - but do you literally mean to adapt thoughtlessly? To just move when the world moves? I can't emphasize enough how handicapped your notion of being in the world is. If I do not take my mind seriously enough to at least entertain some type of rational choice theory (never mind the particulars), then life would be a series of click-whirr responses (automatic responses) to every phenomenon I perceive. Not even higher animals interact with the world this primitively. There are many examples of animals demonstrating intelligence, wants, problem solving, and other psychological properties.
How does one judge the nature of the motion that they perceive and what they ought to do in order to adapt to it? That requires judgment.
I mean, you make some interesting points here and there about the relationship of the One to the Many. You aren't alone in this, because many of the philosophers you scorn have had a great deal to say on this subject, and it's a shame that you are stopping yourself preemptively from exploring that topic with any greater depth than what you have already reasoned yourself. If you personally have had thoughts about this subject which you think are correct, then to say that no other example from among the many brilliant minds of history has anything to add amounts to solipsism.
I want to take what you're saying seriously, but for whatever your philosophy contains that approaches valid metaphysics, the swamp of bad logic and solipsism that surrounds it is an insuperable obstacle.
No matter how often I repeat that I don't believe
This contains the proposition: "In the past, I have repeated the claim that I don't believe."
You believe that proposition, or you couldn't have made the claim.
This is the kind of thing I'm talking about. I'd highly, highly recommend you go back to the drawing board, and start from the beginning with the classics, and do it first by acknowledging that the human mind is not some negligible error-engine without power to reveal reality to us. There is no possibility to take your philosophy seriously, or any of your mental contents whatsoever, according to the very claims you're currently making.
The very necessity of a Logos includes that it be able to be spoken about; Logos means word at its simplest level of translation.
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