Close Readings Reflections & Connections

Tagcoincidence

The Death of Damocles: facts & events (contd.)

If we were to stick rigidly to Davidson’s views in all respects, we’d be even worse off, for then we’d be lacking even a way to formulate this. That’s because Davidson insists that there is no such thing as metaphor in semantics at all: what is communicated in language are only literal meanings. (What counts as metaphor in imagistic or poetic language is, according to Davidson, entirely an aspect...

The Death of Damocles: facts & events

I’m still concerned with my ongoing analysis of interesting coincidences, along the guiding example of the death of Damocles; but I interrupt the main flow once more for a little piece of reflection. This time, however, it’s less of a metaphysical Fingerübung than rather some ontological handwringing. I’m just going to outline a complication, not having found what looks the best approach to it...

The Death of Damocles: configurations and the roles of metaphorical interrelations in psychological uptake

I’m still in the process of deepening the analysis of the death of Damocles episode. I’ve just introduced new bits of terminology, distinguishing figurations from configurations, and clarified some of the more technical metaphysical details; now I’ve started exploring how they work together. 11. The metaphorical in “metaphorical interrelations” is more on the conceptual than on the...

The Death of Damocles: metaphorical interrelations

I’m still in the process of deepening the analysis of the death of Damocles episode. I’ve just introduced new bits of terminology, distinguishing figurations from configurations, and clarified some of the more technical metaphysical details; it’s time to explore how they work together. 10. A central feature of figurations is the metaphorical connection which holds between some of the events in...

Configurations: some reflections & refinements

As a quick little metaphysical Fingerübung, we might have a look at some characteristics of figurations and configurations, and their components. Configurations are particulars: they are bound to an individual subject (a person, albeit potentially a fictional one) and in part made up of that subject’s psychological processes. They’re not individual mental states, however, in the sense a mental...

The Death of Damocles: configurations

At this point I shall introduce more terminology, some of which I’ll borrow from mediaeval notions. A set of events like that of the death of Damocles and his clock stopping, where some can be understood as a metaphorical expression of others in the set, I’ll call a figuration (from the Latin figuratio). In the middle ages, there was a sense (in theology and philosophy) that things and events in...

The Death of Damocles: yet more on explanations

Even with more clarity now about the type of explanation (one that involves an underlying nomic constraint), which likely is what the felt need for an explanation points to when it comes to interesting coincidences, it still very much looks as if an essential ingredient is missing. In our guiding example, the story of the death of Damocles, this came into play via two interconnected features:...

The Death of Damocles: more on explanations

There’s still a lot more interesting things to say about my recent topic, the situation I presented as variations over the death of Damocles. So far, I’ve begun looking into our felt need for “explanations”, and then stepped back for a moment for a brief terminological catch-up. Now we’re taking up the thread again where we left it. 7. Does it need explanation that Damocles died at the same time...

The Death of Damocles: terms of interest

I’ve started investigating the subtleties of a certain well-known phenomenon, using variations of the hypothetical case of the death of Damocles: the phenomenon of somehow “interesting” coincidences.  For the time being, I shall keep that wording: various terms are widely in use for our phenomenon, but I’d like to avoid these, since they carry strong and distorting connotations. I’ll call our...

The Death of Damocles: explanations

There’s a lot more interesting things to say about my recent topic, the situation I presented as variations over the death of Damocles. 5. When reading (or hearing about) such a story, one cannot help to feel that something “needs explaining” here. But what exactly is it one wants an explanation for? Is it one of the events that should be explained? (And which one: the death of Damocles, or the...

Close Readings Reflections & Connections

Leif Frenzel is a writer and independent researcher. He has a background in philosophy, literature, music, and information technology.

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