12th Series of the Paradox
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 4 ก.พ. 2025
- This chapter looks at the problem of paradoxes and the territory they cover. Paradoxes are opposed to good sense and common sense. Good sense is a unique sense bound by a demand of order to go in a particular direction. Discusses the attributes of good sense and common sense. Common sense is what allows identity and recognition. Examples from the paradoxical world of Wonderland and Alice show when she doesn't have good sense or common sense.
The sense from paradox goes in two directions simultaneously comparable to the two directions of Time in the Aion with the present moment splitting and be simultaneously subdivided into the past and the future. This sense goes "in tandem." More examples from "Alice" and "Through the Looking Glass."
An obscure Stoic example of going "in tandem" from Cicero's "Academia" section 29. "one can always manage in tandem, slowing the horses when the slope becomes steeper, or decreasing with one hand while increasing with the other." This is Deleuze's paraphrase from "The Logic of Sense." Cicero can be found here:
oz-mix.blogspo...
The word "sōrites" in the text represents paradox.
Paradox has as its object a donation of sense but the gift of sense happens with signification. Sense hovers over the surface. It inheres in the expression of propositions and subsists in states of affairs and attributes of states of affairs