Essay Abstract
This article explains how perception of the concreteness of the phenomenon occurs in general and in the human being in particular, itself a living concrete phenomenon. How does the perception of a phenomenon impress its existence on us, and ratify it for us as unique, continuous and concrete? Physicists such as Newton, Einstein, Bohr and others attributed the source of movement to physical forces (gravity and so on). These forces indeed act and have an effect, but they are not sufficient to explain the attributes of movement and how it comes about. Philosophers Synofzik Matthis, Vosgerau Gottfried and Newen Albert claim in Consciousness and Cognition: "I move, therefore I am". I will show in a phenomenological approach that "movement", though it is the common denominator of all phenomena in space, does not itself suffice to explain the ratification of concreteness. Today, physics defines "movement" with four attributes--momentum, vector, mass-energy, and "time"--but to my mind each movement has up to twenty different attributes such as: behavior, character, matter, form, communication-language, memory and aims (purposes). I will show that already before a "movement" is chosen, the relation between two ontological existences "knows" and ratifies the two existents. The qualities of the attributes of the "movement" differ from one phenomenon (self-organization) to another, enabling each phenomenon to be unique in its existence. I will show how "movements" ratify for each other their concrete existence through their relations with one another, no less with two single movements than with the self-organization of the human being. Terms: Causality, duality, duration of reality, concreteness, principle of finitude, uniqueness, unity, multiplicity, meaning, relation, possibilities of action, movement, freedom of choice, attributes of movement, quality of movement, generator, generic platform, infogeneric knowledge, thought and self-organization.
Author Bio
Degree in database analysis and statistics (University of Maryland, 1972) Operations research and systems analysis ( George Washington University, 1973) Doctorate in cybernetics and international finance (George Washington University, 1976) An assistant professor at Georgetown University, Washington, D.C, Pioneers in the field of broadband, development of multi-directional fast routing on modern wide transmission bandwidths. Publisher, an academic exegesis of the entire Hebrew Bible. A member of the Hebrew Writers' Association Atai's activity is focused on four main areas: philosophy (three published books to date), poetry (eight published books), publishing, and political and social/civil activism.