So, I do some thinking from time to time. Here's a little formula I derived that I think addresses the paradoxical nature of identity-vs.-continuous change. It's a bit philosophical, so pardon me if I bore you. Also, I'm not a mathematician, so if anyone can tell me if I screwed up my notation, you get a gold star.
First, a little background...
For some time, I've been interested in the concept of 'identity,' particularly because I am now in a graduate social work program and they beat the importance of culture and race over my head with a stick repeatedly. I wondered why it was so important for people to be 'proud' of their heritage, culture, etc. It didn't make sense to me that someone should be proud of something over which they seemingly have no control. I began to ask questions like, "If I say I am a student today, and a son the next day, and a friend the day after that, what makes me the same person?" Or, "If everything always changes, then doesn't the process of change never change?" After all, our thoughts constantly change, so do our bodies, so do the dynamics of our relationships...so how can we still be the same person from one moment to the next? I eventually came up with a simple equation that I think models the relationship between stability and change. And now, the equation:
Θ(x) + Θ(Σxlim->∞ - x) = Θ(Σxlim->∞)
where:
Θ = distributive property of being ('identity principle'). an identity remains constant over time and does not change.
x = conditional event. conditional events are subject to change.
Σxlim->∞ = sum of all conditional events
The equation can be read as follows: "The sum of an identifiable conditional event, x, and the sum of all identifiable conditional events minus an identifiable conditioned event, x, equals the sum of all identifiable conditional events."
For more explanation...
If I say "It is an apple," then "it is" is the identity principle and "an apple" is 'x.'
If I say "It is all possible events" then "it is" is the identity principle and "all possible events" is 'Σxlim->∞.'
I could take the original equation an say "An apple plus the sum of all conditional events minus an apple equals all conditional events."
So...back to the equation.
Θ(x) + Θ(Σxlim->∞ - x) = Θ(Σxlim->∞)
The interesting thing that I find about this equation is that because the identity principle distributes to each variable, it can be removed from the equation entirely such that:
x + Σxlim->∞ - x = Σxlim->∞
The implications of this are very weird to me. It seems to imply that there is a principle of being -- a property that allows things to "be" -- that is entirely separate from the things themselves. In one sense, you might almost say that the things you see such as a tree in your yard or a person walking down the street don't exist because they, being conditional, continuously change and thus are not subject to true identification -- their identity changes at every identifiable moment. But, at the same time, we say they do exist because there is some property (the identity property) linking all of these changes in an identifiable way.
I've grown fond of this equation because it offers a lighthearted view of reality in contrast to the hardened view I believe most of us are used to. This equation helps me think to myself, "Hey, bad things aren't so bad after all. They can't be this way forever!"
Meh, hope this wasn't too much rambling.
First, a little background...
For some time, I've been interested in the concept of 'identity,' particularly because I am now in a graduate social work program and they beat the importance of culture and race over my head with a stick repeatedly. I wondered why it was so important for people to be 'proud' of their heritage, culture, etc. It didn't make sense to me that someone should be proud of something over which they seemingly have no control. I began to ask questions like, "If I say I am a student today, and a son the next day, and a friend the day after that, what makes me the same person?" Or, "If everything always changes, then doesn't the process of change never change?" After all, our thoughts constantly change, so do our bodies, so do the dynamics of our relationships...so how can we still be the same person from one moment to the next? I eventually came up with a simple equation that I think models the relationship between stability and change. And now, the equation:
Θ(x) + Θ(Σxlim->∞ - x) = Θ(Σxlim->∞)
where:
Θ = distributive property of being ('identity principle'). an identity remains constant over time and does not change.
x = conditional event. conditional events are subject to change.
Σxlim->∞ = sum of all conditional events
The equation can be read as follows: "The sum of an identifiable conditional event, x, and the sum of all identifiable conditional events minus an identifiable conditioned event, x, equals the sum of all identifiable conditional events."
For more explanation...
If I say "It is an apple," then "it is" is the identity principle and "an apple" is 'x.'
If I say "It is all possible events" then "it is" is the identity principle and "all possible events" is 'Σxlim->∞.'
I could take the original equation an say "An apple plus the sum of all conditional events minus an apple equals all conditional events."
So...back to the equation.
Θ(x) + Θ(Σxlim->∞ - x) = Θ(Σxlim->∞)
The interesting thing that I find about this equation is that because the identity principle distributes to each variable, it can be removed from the equation entirely such that:
x + Σxlim->∞ - x = Σxlim->∞
The implications of this are very weird to me. It seems to imply that there is a principle of being -- a property that allows things to "be" -- that is entirely separate from the things themselves. In one sense, you might almost say that the things you see such as a tree in your yard or a person walking down the street don't exist because they, being conditional, continuously change and thus are not subject to true identification -- their identity changes at every identifiable moment. But, at the same time, we say they do exist because there is some property (the identity property) linking all of these changes in an identifiable way.
I've grown fond of this equation because it offers a lighthearted view of reality in contrast to the hardened view I believe most of us are used to. This equation helps me think to myself, "Hey, bad things aren't so bad after all. They can't be this way forever!"
Meh, hope this wasn't too much rambling.



