On Monday, July 29, 2019 at 1:58:19 PM UTC-5, Cosmin Visan wrote:
>
> Sometimes, it happens to us a particular kind of grammar errors. There are 
> errors of the type: instead of spelling "light tie" for example, we end up 
> spelling "tight lie". It is something peculiar about these kinds of errors, 
> they are not random. They are trying to tell us something deep about the 
> workings of consciousness. It appears that consciousness is made up of 
> parts of certain kind, and sometimes those parts mix up and are unified 
> back together into other meaningful wholes. And it appears that this mixing 
> up is happening in some kind of temporal non-local manner. In order to 
> swith L for T in "light tie", you somehow need to know in advance the T 
> will be after L, and switch them and put T before L. And this also has to 
> be done such that the new obtained words are also meaningful. This switch 
> doesn't generally happen if the new words that are to be obtained don't 
> exist. So it is really telling us something important about how 
> consciousness works. But I cannot figure it out exactly what. Any ideas ?
>


The dialectics of language and consciousness is of course a huge subject of 
study:

phenomenology of language

cf.
http://voidnetwork.gr/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Phenomenology-or-Deconstruction-by-Christopher-Watkin.pdf
 

@philipthrift

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