10/2/19

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.3 ZG

Summary of text [comment] page 88

[The interscope works when ‘my attention’ seamlessly selects a particular item that specular scatters light. In other words, my situational attention3b directs my neurophysiological potential1a towards a content level something2a. This is the only way for a thing to emerge from and situate my neurological potentials.

I, seat of sight3b, virtually emerges from and situates the origin and the nature of the illumination3a. Under typical conditions, I do not even notice the ‘I see’ nested formb. I unhesitatingly attend to something2a.]

10/1/19

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.3 ZF

[I, seat of sight3, brings my attention2 into relation with the possibilities inherent in ‘light specular scattering from the surface of something stimulating my neurophysiological potential’1.

A light source3 brings some thing that actually specular scatters photons2 into relation to my visual neurophysiological potential1.

These two nested forms may interscope or intersect.]

09/24/19

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.3 ZA

[One may dispute these nested formulations. Perhaps, one can claim that the thought experiment should be left out of the picture. However, to me, that runs against a key observation: Choice and the something that can be chosen are two independent actualities.

So, the thought experiment where ‘I choose something’ became a model.

This is not the only way to approach Schoonenberg’s difficult and condensed text. It is the route that I explored.]

09/23/19

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.3 YZ

Summary of text [comment] page 88

[Here are the two nested forms:

‘I, seat of choice3’ brings ‘my choice2’ into relation to the ‘possibilities inherent in something1’.

‘The thought experiment3’ brings ‘something2’ into relation to ‘the possibilities inherent in me1.]