The concept of “Ontic Vagueness” caused my ears to prick-up when Adam Weisberg shared a link, asking for review comments on Mastodon a week ago:
Ontic Vagueness – The Argument From Freedom
Adam Weisberg – January 2025
The idea that things are much less well-defined than their accepted definition(s) might imply, is long-standing and oft-repeated here:
Ref: quite separate warnings by Dan Dennett (“hold your definition“) and Anatoly Levenchuk (“definition as a coffin“) about being wary of definitions generally, and my own #GoodFences arguments that all definitions are essentially one or more overlapping binary chops this-not-that, each of which involves arbitrary choice that can be refined or re-purposed once understood
But I’d mostly seen this as essentially human – semantic, epistemological – about current / imperfect knowledge used to make those definitional choices. In terms of orthodox science, this is no problem of course, quite the opposite, definitions evolve as knowledge evolves.
But then again, the closer one’s metaphysics gets to the map being the terrain – that fundamentally information is what everything consists of – however well we humans know it. As I’ve said about myself before, my own ontology is epistemological – about what can be known, whatever our current state of knowledge.
So for me the Ontic vs Semantic case is moot. They’re both epistemic. One about what can be known and the other about what we mean / understand / intend by what we believe we know.
I mentioned this in a bookmarking post a few days ago and AJ Owens had already responded with his own recent post linked there too.
My notes (so far) on “reviewing” Weisberg’s paper:
I really got 2 things out of it:
Identity. Self-Identity – several references to things being “self-identical” represented by the (tautologous?) “X=X” threw me at first. Makes sense if read with the qualifying “for all cases for all time, at all levels of detail from gross to quantum”.
Freedom. Weisberg’s argument against this is “from freedom”, that the universe itself is free to evolve, and not “pre-defined” by any creative hand of god nor by any brute-fact “laws of nature” that happen to be the case from its inception.
So, if you already have a “process” or “interaction” ontology – like Whitehead or Pirsig – then none of this is a surprise. Identity is dynamic and evolves like everything else. Plus:
Unger? – Interestingly Weisberg uses a Peter Unger (1984) “concrete worlds” reference, whereas I’ve used Roberto Unger (2015 with Lee Smolin) “singular universe” for the idea that even laws of nature are evolved in this world (and only inherit any level of pre-definition from boundary conditions in the pre-existing universe in which our big-bang occurred). Unger & Smolin specifically, and Unger more generally.
Identity Generally? Written lots before on identity being defined broadly and narrowly and with purpose (ie politics). Identity without Definitions and Identity Generally.
Owens’ paper (fellow Whiteheadian) and the comments below have a couple of interesting angles for me too:
Dynamical Systems? – can systems be any other kind? (I’m always sceptical of those that qualify their various systems theories and “sciences” for marketing (management consulting?) purposes. All are systems and all systems are dynamic. (Systems all over the blog for 25 years.)
Capra? – I also mentioned Capra very recently and also because some 21st C writers are referencing him in serious systems contexts, even though I’d personally left him behind as unoriginal.
None of which counts as a “review”. All too closely related to what I’m already writing 🙂
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