Icarus Fallen wrote:
...is the present moment (independent of temporal un/sub or conscious experience) a fleeting or constant phenomenon, itself?
Hum. That is a good question. Have not sorted it out completely enough for a good answer. But I do think it an excellent question, and a central one, in understanding what consciousness is. Where I have gotten so far is that in the objective sense, even life on Earth, from the primordial ooze til now, is a fleeting accomplishment in the expanse of space and time. But a human consciousness, we will use mine, since that is the one I am most familiar with, is conscious, BECAUSE it is aware of only the current situation. Given the neurological structures I have, I am however capable of "remembering" past sensations, and highly capable of modeling and making analogies. These facilities in a sense though are due to the current arrangement of brain cell connections, the current situation going on inside my skull, along with the present sensations my brain is receiving from its connections to the rest of my body and sense organs, (skin, eyes, nose, tongue, and ears). So although I can imagine being in past situations, and future situations and even in other people's shoes, the only situation I am ever really in, really conscious of, is the current one. However, I constantly (at least for the last 57 years) seem to be in this state of being conscious of the present situation.
Icarus Fallen wrote:
Without writing a book here, I personally take a sort of representational approach to the matter of 'time', positing the 'present moment' as an a-temporal phenomenon that is represented temporally by conscious experience. In accordance with this, the 'past' and 'future' are perspectival by-products that have no 'reality' outside of the minds that tend to perceive (and conceive of time) in purely linear terms.
Well I think we might be talking about the same thing. Perhaps we have had some similar insights.
Icarus Fallen wrote:
Yes, for linear perceivers (like you and I), the manner in which we experience the portions of the ever-present totality that lie within our respective fields of perception ...forces our hands (so to speak), both in terms of what we perceive and how we make sense of it.
I do believe we are traveling the same path, here. I am looking for something to take issue with, but see more common insight, than places to quibble.
Icarus Fallen wrote:
What "you" are (in all of your human glory) is merely descriptive of a larger whole. You're an adjective; not a noun. So, instead of thinking of yourself in line with the phrase, "Here and now is Tar2", it may be more accurate to think and state that, "Here and now the Universe is Tar2ish.". The aspect brought into existence (or formulated) by your mother and father has thus far lived an apparently autonomous life ...and will continue to do so 'til the day of your death; BUT the bodily autonomy has always been illusory, by which I mean any believed disconnect between you and the totality of existence is imagined ...not perceived.
Except in this aspect. Tar2 is a noun. From a godlike perspective, all the universe being one and so on, I can go along with the Tar2ish idea, but that is a construct, an imaginary model, built from a perspective Tar2 can't really have. The real Tar2, the child of mother and father, the human organism built generation by generation by evolution, the inhabitant of planet Earth, the conscious being sitting at his computer typing, is a noun, a different noun than the organism Icarus Fallen.
We are each 100% universe material, but you are 100% Icarus Fallen and I am 100% Tar2.
Icarus Fallen wrote:
In my view, the appearance of autonomy is as much the product of what remains unperceived as it is the assumed fruition of our perceptions.
I think you may have had some insights I have not yet had, because I can't understand that. Or perhaps what we deem real, and what we deem model, differs.
Regards, TAR