Crimson Publishers
Review Article
Wings to the Research
The Actions of the Body
Paul C Mocombe*
West Virginia State University, The Mocombeian Foundation, USA
Abstract
ISSN: 2694-4391
In Mocombeian structuration theory, phenomenological structuralism, the understanding is that human
action in the material world is a product of their mental stance arising from conflict, or not, between four
structuring structures: 1) praxis associated with the phenomenal properties, i.e., qualia, of subatomic
particles; 2) the anatomy and physiology of the body; 3) structural reproduction and differentiation; 4)
actions driven by the deferment of meaning in ego-centered communicative discourse. It is the mental
stance of human beings in relation to these four structuring structures, which determine their actions in
the material world. This article highlights this process.
Keywords: Structurationism; Praxis; Panpsychism; Social class language game; Phenomenological
structuralism; ORCH-OR theory; Univon multiverse hypothesis; Free-will; Determinism; Haitian
epistemology; Consciousness field theory; Conscious Electromagnetic Information Theory (CEMI)
Introduction
*Corresponding
author:
Paul
C
Mocombe, West Virginia State University,
The Mocombeian Foundation Inc,
USA
Submission: November 08, 2022
Published: November 29, 2022
Volume 3 - Issue 2
How to cite this article: Paul C Mocombe. The Actions of the Body. Int J Conf
Proc. 3(2). ICP. 000559. 2022.
DOI: 10.31031/ICP.2022.03.000559
Copyright@ Paul C Mocombe, This article is
distributed under the terms of the Creative
Commons Attribution 4.0 International
License, which permits unrestricted use
and redistribution provided that the
original author and source are credited.
The linguistic turn in meaning and identity constitution, which supplanted biological
determinism in the early twentieth century, whether in linguistics or the social sciences,
presupposes that meaning and the nature of human identity or consciousness is nothing
more than the relationships which pertain within a given linguistic system, structure, culture,
or social structure. Thus, such questions as those pertaining to matters of human agency,
individual or shared interests, community, etc., have generally been ignored by so-called
“structuralists” [1]. This in turn makes most structural approaches synchronic; that is, most
structuralists approach a phenomenon at a single moment in history, or as something existing
outside history, which is unchanging.
It is well known that Ferdinand de Saussure [2] in linguistics, Claude Lévi-Strauss [3] in
anthropology, Talcott Parsons [4] and Louis Althusser [5] in sociology postulate this synchronic
world ordered into an interconnected semiotic system. In Saussure and structuralism, which
serves as the model for the social sciences, language “is viewed as a purely arbitrary system of
signs in which parole or speech is subsidiary to language, the formal dimension of language.
Parole is the world’s messiness that the semiotic order [or formal dimension] shuns” [6],
subjecting social actors to its binary rules that gives them their conceptual framework, rather
than the other way around [2,3,7].
In anthropology, Lévi Strauss [3] extends this idea to culture, and culture too becomes a
system of external signs, which reflect the structure or categories of the mind, exercised in
social relations to order experience [3]. Just the same, in sociology Talcott Parsons, and many
others, employs the notion of structure or system to refer to modern capitalist society as an
“organic” whole or totality consisting of interrelated parts (i.e., structurally differentiated)
that perform specific functions in relation to each other and contribute to the maintenance
of the whole, i.e., structural functionalism [4]. The structural Marxism of Louis Althusser, and
many others, replaces both Parsons’s conservative holism and Levi-Strauss’s mental (cultural)
categories by positions in modes of production and relations to the means of production
for the structure or system that governs meaning and gives social actors their conceptual
framework [5].
Integrative Journal of Conference Proceedings
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ICP.MS.ID.000559. 3(2).2022
The logical consequence of the adoption of the Saussure [2]
a position by Lévi Strauss [3], Parsons [4] and Althusser [5] in
philosophy and the social sciences, however, is the implication
that human action, or consciousness, lies in the reproduction of
the relational (binary rules for inclusion and exclusion) objective
models of society as either structured by our minds, or the
external interrelated structures of signification as internalized by
social actors. Therefore, to understand human social agency, one
only needs to understand either how the mind structures reality
(transcendental idealism), or the differentiating (relational) rules
of a culture, social structure, or social system. Both positions,
however, are problematic. In the psychologist of the former case,
social structure reflecting the structure of the mind, social practice
or action and its variability are inconceivable in that there is no
analytical means to explain how the internal “binary” processes of
the mind give rise to the external empirical phenomena of social
structures, practices, and their variabilities. In the latter case,
structure or social structure as a reflection of the internalization
of external functional structures of signification, i.e., part/whole
relationship, the possibility for, and the origins of, the variability
of practices, which have ontological status in the world, amongst
irreducibly situated subjects are inconceivable, as human subjects
or social actors are only reproducing in their actions the relational
meaning and representation of the external objective social
world (society), without any alternative practices, deviations, or
improvisations outside of the structural differentiation of the social
structure.
Moreover, since the 1960’s with the advent of postmodern and
post-structural theories, which emphasized Parole over langue
for understanding human agential initiatives, into the theoretical
discourses of social science academics a new struggle regarding
the origins and nature of identity and consciousness vis-à-vis the
aforementioned structural problematics has dominated social
science and philosophical theories. The issue centers on several
factors raised by postmodern and post-structural thinkers in the
likes of Michel Foucault, Jacques Derrida, and Jacques Lacan against
the structuralism of the sciences,
A.
They question the validity regarding the Cartesian
rational individual, which Foucault and Derrida deny in favor of
their attempt to dissolve the subject altogether.
B.
They question the interdependency of the constitution of
a stable structure and a distinct subject with agency, in denying
the latter they undermine the former.
C.
They question the status of science.
D. Finally, they question the possibility of the objectivity of
any language of description or analysis.
Although these factors raised in the writings of Jacques Lacan,
Jacques Derrida, and Michel Foucault are theoretically legitimate and
have posed tremendous problems for the social sciences and their
constitution as a science based on the notion of a stable structure
constituted by stable subjects with agency. These problems have not
Int J Conf Proc
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adequately been addressed by Marxist social theorists in the likes
of Louis Althusser, Pierre Bourdieu, Jürgen Habermas, Anthony
Giddens, and Marshall Sahlins working to resolve these issues in
the social sciences, under the structure/agency problematic, by
attempting to synthesize the rationality of the individual with the
phenomenological discourses of the former theorists, and Marxist
and structural Marxist philosophy and sociology.
The structure/agency debate in the social sciences, for these
theorists, contrary to postmodern and post-structural thinkers
whose overemphasis on parole is out rightly rejected given the
impossibility of a decentered subject with a position from nowhere,
emphasize the rational origins of the reproduced and transformed
social actions of social actors that constitute a social structure: are
social actors determined and driven by internal invariable structures
of the mind [3,8], or are social actors automatons determined and
driven by external relational structures of signification and their
practical rationality [4,5] [1971]? Thus, in the social scientific form
of the debate, biological determinism, i.e., innate senses of anything,
as well as the Lévi Strauss [3] a sense, i.e., innate structure of the
mind, were out rightly rejected. Also, the idea that social actors are
irreducibly situated subjects who act and react based on rational
calculations as they respond to particular external social processes
(social structure) or stimuli, as introduced via the concept of parole
by postmodernists and post-structuralists, was for the most part
dismissed. Total rationality was viewed as an impossibility given
the inability of social actors to either know all the choices available
to them in the present or know the complete future outcomes
of those choices. This made rationality necessarily relative to a
frame of reference or structure of signification, which rejects the
indeterminacy of meaning and decentered subject of postmodern/
post-structural theorizing.
Background of the problem
Hence, the focus in the study of action and interaction in the
social sciences was thus not a matter of denying or minimizing the
rational potential of social actors but expressed rather an urgent
need to understand where ‘the system’ or structure that limits their
knowledge and stabilizes society “comes from-how it is produced
and reproduced, and how it may have changed in the past or be
changed in the future” [9]. In other words, thinkers plagued by this
debate, sought “to explain the relationship(s) that obtain between
human action, on the one hand, and some global entity which we
may call the system, [or social structure, structure, or culture] on
the other” [9], when the latter (i.e., the system) is not a necessary
reflection of neither biology, nor the structure of the mind, but an
external force of rules of conduct, i.e., categorical boundaries, that
stabilizes society and thereby constitute the identity of social actors
as argued by Talcott Parsons and Louis Althusser.
From roughly 1975 to the present, an enormous strand of
critical writings, expounding a great many strands of theoretical
schools of thought, combined to challenge this post-World War II
structuralist matrix which denied alternative agencies, outside the
relational logic of a structure, system, or culture to social actors.
Copyright © Paul C Mocombe
ICP.MS.ID.000559. 3(2).2022
Some were advanced by rationalist thinkers seeking to preserve
the idea of individuals as solitary thinkers who act in a purposive
rational way, while others were offered by theorists dedicated to
preserving the tenets of structural-functionalism and structuralMarxism while explicating the functional role of difference or
the variability of practices amongst social actors within social
structure not as an invariable by-product of the mind but as an
external unified structure of signification or system. Considering
this action-oriented response to account for the different provinces
of meaning within systems or structures of signification, the term
praxis or structuration’s theorists, coined by Anthony Giddens,
will serve as the dominant label for the arguments expounded in
opposition to Parsonian structural-functionalism and variants of
structural Marxism by prominent theorists such as Pierre Bourdieu,
Marshall Sahlins, Anthony Giddens, and Jürgen Habermas in
the social sciences [9,10]. These arguments are complex, and to
examine them together is necessarily to do violence to the purity
of notions advanced separately by various authors. The exercise is
nevertheless useful at least for revealing their main and common
objective, i.e., to resolve the structure/agency debate of the social
sciences by collapsing structure with agency via the concept of
duality.
In other words, for structure’s action is a result of the
internalization of social structural rules, which are internalized
and recursively organized and reproduced as the practical
consciousness of social actors. This duality of structure is also
problematic as it introduces the structure/agency problematic in
a new form, how does duality, which is structural reproduction
and differentiation, account for alternative practices outside of the
structuring structure of a society, which is tied to the mode and
means of production?
Theory and Method
Mocombe [11] phenomenological structuralism, which is a
structuration’s theory that views the constitution of society, human
identity, and social agency as a duality and dualism, fixes traditional
structuration’s to account for alternative practices outside of
structural reproduction and differentiation by accounting for three
other (structuring structural) sources of action in the material
world on top of structural reproduction and differentiation.
Mocombe [11] an phenomenological structuralism posits that
societal and agential constitution are a result of power relations,
interpellation, and socialization or embourgeoisement via five
systems, i.e., mode of production, language, ideology, ideological
apparatuses, and communicative discourse, which are reified as a
social structure or what Mocombe [11] calls a “social class language
game” by persons, power elites, who control the means and modes
of production in a material resource framework. Once interpellated
and bourgeoise by these five systems, which are reified as a social
structure and society (social class language game), social actors, for
their ontological securities, recursively organize, reproduce, and are
differentiated by the rules of conduct of the social structure, which
are sanctioned by the power elites who control the means and
modes of production, language, ideology, ideological apparatuses,
Int J Conf Proc
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and communicative discourse in a material resource framework.
Hence, societal and agential constitution are both a duality and
dualism: a dualism given the reification of the social structure or
social class language game via the five systems; and a duality given
the internalization of the rules of the five systems, which become
the agential initiatives or praxes of social actors differentiated by
the rules of conduct that are sanctioned based on the economic
mode of production. Difference, or alternative social praxis, in
Mocombe’s structuration theory, phenomenological structuralism,
is not structural differentiation as articulated by traditional
structuration’s such as Bourdieu, Sahlins, Habermas, and Giddens;
instead, it is a result of actions arising from the deferment of
meaning in ego-centered communication given the interaction of
two other structuring structures (physiological drives of the body
and brain; and phenomenal properties of subatomic particles that
constitute the human subject) vis-à-vis the mental stance of the egounready-to-hand, ready-to-hand, or present-at-hand-, which arises
out of conflict, or not, during the interpellation and socialization
or embourgeoisement of social actors throughout their life span
or cycle, which produces alternative praxis that is exercised at the
expense of the threat these practices may pose to the ontological
security of social actors in the social structure or society. Hence,
for Mocombe [11], structuration’s account for only one aspect of
social action, which is structural reproduction and differentiation.
They overlook three other structuring structures in relation to the
mental stance of the individual.
Discussion and Conclusion
According to Mocombe [11], the Heideggerian (mental)
stances/analytics, “ready-to-hand,” “unready-to-hand,” and
“present-at-hand,” which emerge as a result of conflict/tension (or
lack thereof) between the embodied transcendental ego (psych
ions and their qualia) vis-à-vis its different (structuring) systems,
a) The sensibilities and (chemical,
physiological) drives of the body and brain,
biological,
and
b) Drives/impulses/frequencies of embodied residual
memories or phenomenal properties of past/present/future
recycled/entangled/superimposed
subatomic/chemical
particles.
c)
The actions produced via the body in relation to the
indeterminacy/deferment of meaning of linguistic and symbolic
signifiers as they appear to individuate consciousnesses in egocentered communicative discourse.
d) The dialectical and differentiating effects, i.e., structural
reproduction and differentiation, of the structures of
signification, social class language game, of those who
control the economic materials (and their distribution, i.e.,
mode of production) of a world are the origins of practical
consciousnesses. All four types of actions, the drives and
sensibilities of the body and brain, drives or phenomenal
properties of embodied recycled/replicated/entangled/
superimposed
past/
present/future
consciousnesses,
Copyright © Paul C Mocombe
ICP.MS.ID.000559. 3(2).2022
structural reproduction/differentiation stemming from the
mode of production (which are variations of two ideal types),
and deferential actions arising from the deferment of meaning
in ego-centered communicative discourse via the presentat-hand stance/ analytic, exist in the material world with the
social class language game, i.e., the physical, mental, emotional,
ideological, etc.
e) Powers of those who control the material resource
framework as the causative agent for individual behaviors. In
other words, our (mental) stances in consciousness vis-à-vis
the conflict (or lack thereof) between the (chemical, biological,
and physiological) drives and sensibilities of the body and
brain, (societal) structural reproduction and differentiation,
drives of embodied past/ present /future consciousnesses
of recycled/entangled/superimposed subatomic/chemical
particles and deferential actions arising as a result of the
deferment of meaning in ego-centered communicative
discourse determines the practical consciousness we want to
recursively reorganize and reproduce in the material world.
The power, power positions and power relations of those
who control (via the mode of production, language, ideology,
ideological apparatuses, and communicative discourse) the
resources (and their distribution, i.e., mode of production) of
a material resource framework, and the threat it poses to the
ontological security of an actor, in the end determines what
actions and identities are allowed to organize and reproduce
in the material world without the individual actor/agent facing
marginalization or death. They (those in power, i.e., the power
elites) encounter and choose, dialectically, anti-dialectically,
and negative dialectically, amidst the class division of the
social relations of production (which are of two ideal types,
the Protestant Ethic and the spirit of capitalism or the Vodou
Ethic and the spirit of communism), what other meaning
constitutions and practices manifest themselves in the material
world without facing alienation, marginalization, domination,
or death.
Martin Heidegger in Being in Time is accurate in suggesting
that three stances or modes of encounter (Analytic of Dasein),
“presence-at-hand,” “readiness-to-hand,” and “un-readiness-tohand,” characterizes our views of the things of consciousness,
which for Mocombe is of four structuring structures:
A.
The phenomenal properties of recycled and entangled
subatomic particles.
B.
The anatomy and physiology of the body and brain.
C.
Structural reproduction and differentiation.
D. The deferment of meaning in ego-centered communicative
discourse.
These four structuring structures are in constant conflict, or not,
contingent on the mental stance of the ego as the individual actor
becomes in the world. In “ready-to-hand,” which is the proctological
mode of human existence thrown in the world, we accept and use
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the things in consciousness with no conscious experience of them,
i.e., without thinking about them or giving them any meaning or
signification outside of their intended usage. Heidegger’s example
is that of using a hammer in hammering. We use a hammer without
thinking about it or giving it any other condition of possibility
outside of its intended usage as defined by those whose historicity
presupposes our own. In “present-at-hand,” which, according
to Heidegger, is the stance of science, we objectify the things of
consciousness and attempt to determine and reify their meanings,
usage, and conditions of possibilities as the nature of reality as
such. Hence the hammer is intended for hammering by those who
created it as a thing solely meant as such. The “unready-to-hand”
outlook is assumed when something goes wrong in our usage of
a thing of consciousness as defined and determined by those who
adopt a “present-at-hand” view. As in the case of the hammer, the
unready-to-hand view is assumed when the hammer breaks and we
must objectify it, by then assuming a present-at-hand position and
think about it in order to either reconstitute it as a hammer or give
it another condition of possibility. Any other condition of possibility
that we give the hammer outside of its initial condition of possibility
which presupposed our historicity becomes relational, defined in
relation to any of its other conditions of possibilities it may have
been given by others we exist in the world with who either readyto-hand, unready-to-hand, or present-at-hand attempts to maintain
the social class language game of power. In the ready-to-hand
stance the latter unconsciously practices and attempts to reproduce
the social class language game of power by discriminating against
and marginalizing any other conditions of possibilities of their
social class language as determined by those in ideological power
positions.
They may move to the unready-to-hand stance in response
to those who they encounter that attempts, present-at-hand, to
alter the nature of the dominant social class language game they
recursively reorganize and reproduce as outlined by those in
power positions who are present-at-hand of the dominant social
class language game. In either case, not all beings achieve the
present-at-hand stance. The latter is the stance of science and
ideologies, which are tautologies when they profess that their
stances represent the nature of reality as such, and those in power
positions, who encounter (historically) and choose, dialectically,
anti-dialectically, and negative dialectically, among a plethora of
alternative present-at-hand social class language games, what
alternative practical consciousnesses outside of their social class
language game, which are allowed to manifest in the material world.
They can dialectically attempt to resolve the contradictions of their
social class language games against alternatives; anti dialectically
reject them (alternatives) outright for the veracity of their language
games despite its contradictions; or negative dialectically think
against the praxis and contradictions of their language games to
exercise it more universally.
The individual being is initially constituted as superimposed,
entangled, recycled, and embodied subatomic particles, psych
ion, of multiple worlds of the multiverse, which have their own
Copyright © Paul C Mocombe
ICP.MS.ID.000559. 3(2).2022
predetermined form of understanding and cognition, phenomenal
properties, qualia, based on previous or simultaneous experiences
as aggregated matter (this is akin to what the Greek philosopher
Plato refers to when he posits knowledge as recollection of
the Soul; and Nietzsche’s idea of eternal recurrence). Again,
the individual’s actions are not necessarily determined by the
embodiment and drives (resonance) of these recycled (replicated)/
entangled/superimposed subatomic particles, which are psyched
on once embodied. It is conflict/tension and an individual’s stance,
ready-to-hand, unready-to-hand, and present-at-hand, when the
subatomic particles become aggregated matter or embodied,
which determines whether or not they become aware, present-athand, of the subatomic particle drives and choose to recursively
reorganize and reproduce the content of the drives as their practical
consciousness [12-55].
This desire to reproduce the cognition and understanding of
the drives of the recycled/ replicated/ entangled/superimposed
subatomic particles, however, may be limited by the structuring
structure of the aggregated body and brain (chemical, biological,
and physiological) of the individual subject. That is to say,
the second origins and basis of an individual’s actions are the
structuring chemical and biological drives and desires, for food,
clothing, shelter, social interaction, entertainment, and sex, of
the aggregated body and brain, which the subatomic particles
constitute and embody. In other words, the aggregated body and
brain is preprogrammed with its own (biological, chemical, and
physiological) forms of sensibility, understanding, and cognition,
structuring structure, by which it experiences being-in-the-world
as aggregated embodied subatomic particles. These bodily forms
of sensibility, understanding, and cognition, such as the drive
and desire for food, clothing, shelter, social interaction, linguistic
communication, and sex, are tied to the material embodiment and
survival of the embodied individual actor, and may or may not
supersede or conflict with the desire and drive of an individual to
recursively (re) organize and reproduce the structuring structure
of the superimposed, entangled, and recycled (phenomenal
properties of) subatomic particles. If these two initial structuring
structures are in conflict, the individual moves from the ready-tohand to the unready-to-hand stance or analytics where they may
begin to reflect upon and question their being-in-the-world prior
to acting. Hence just as in the case of the structuring structure of
the subatomic particles it is an individual being’s analytics vis-à-vis
the drives of its body and brain in relation to the impulses of the
subatomic particles, which determines whether or not they become
driven by the desire to solely fulfill the material needs of their body
and brain at the expense of the drives/desires of the subatomic
particles or the social class language game of the material resource
framework they find their existence unfolding in. The latter is the
third structuring structure of the individual being.
The social class language game, i.e., social structure, and its
differentiating effects, an individual find their existence unfolding in
is the third structuring structure, which attempts to determine the
actions of individual beings as they experience being-in-the-world
Int J Conf Proc
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as embodied subatomic particles. The aggregated individual finds
themselves objectified and unfolding within a material resource
framework controlled by the actions of other bodies, which
presuppose their existence, via the actions of their bodies (practical
consciousness), language, communicative discourse, ideology and
ideological apparatuses stemming from how they satisfy the desires
of their bodies and subatomic particle drives (means and mode of
production). What is aggregated as a social class language game
by those in power positions via and within its mode of production,
language, ideology, ideological apparatuses and communicative
discourse attempts to interpellated and subjectify other beings to
its interpretive frame of satisfying their bodily needs, fulfilling the
impulses of their subatomic particles, and organizing a material
resource framework at the expense of all others, and becomes a
third form of structuring individual action based on the mode of
production and how it differentiates individual actors. The latter
is of two ideal types based either on promoting individualism (as
presently constituted via the Protestant Ethic and the spirit of
capitalism), or communalism (as highlighted by what Mocombe
calls the Vodou Ethic and the spirit of communism) and emerges
from the material conditions the first group of individuals sought to
find balance and harmony in in order to satisfy their needs.
That is to say, an individual’s interpellation, subjectification,
and differentiation within the social class language game that
presupposes their being-in-a-world attempts to determine their
actions or practical consciousness via the reified language, ideology,
etc., of the social class language game, the meaning of which can be
deferred, via the communicative discourse of the individual actors,
vis-à-vis the other two structuring structures, allowing them to
form (alternative) social groups or heterogeneous communities
(based on these deferred meanings) tied to the dominant social
order because of their control over some aspects of the materials
of the material resource framework. Hence, the deferment of
meaning in ego-centered communicative discourse of the language
and ideology of a social class language game is the final means
of determining an individual’s action or practical consciousness
outside of, and in relation to, its stance, i.e., analytics, vis-à-vis the
drives of subatomic particles, drives and desires (anatomy and
physiology) of the body and brain, and structural reproduction
and differentiation. The (mental) stance of the transcendental ego
and the ability to defer meaning in ego-centered communicative
discourse within a social class language game are what accounts
for the feeling or illusion of free-will.
In other words, whereas the practical consciousness of
the transcendental ego stemming from the impulses/drives/
frequency of embodied subatomic particles are indeterminant
as with its neuronal processes involved with the constitution of
meaning in ego-centered communicative discourse. The form of
the understandings and sensibilities of the body and brain (neural
correlates of consciousness) are determinant as with structural
reproduction and differentiation of the mode of production,
and therefore can be mapped out by neuroscientists, biologists,
and sociologists to determine the nature, origins, and directions
Copyright © Paul C Mocombe
ICP.MS.ID.000559. 3(2).2022
of societal constitution and an individual actor’s practical
consciousness unfolding.
The interaction of all four elements or structuring processes
in relation to the (mental) stance of the transcendental ego of the
individual actor is the basis for human action, praxis/practical
consciousness, and cognition/mind in a world. However, in the
end, consequently, the majority of practical consciousness will be
a product of an individual actor’s embodiment and the structural
reproduction and differentiation of a social class language game/
social structure given 1) the determinant nature of embodiment,
(anatomical and physiological) form of understanding and sensibility
of the body and brain amidst, paradoxically, the indeterminacy
of impulses of embodied subatomic particles and the neuronal
processes involved in ego-centered communicative discourse; and
2) the consolidation of power of those who control the material
resource framework wherein a society, the social class language
game, is ensconced and the threat that power (consolidated and
constituted via the actions of bodies, mode of production, language,
ideology, ideological apparatuses, and communicative discourse)
poses to the ontological security of an aggregated individual actor
who chooses (or not) either ready-to-hand or present-at-hand
to recursively reorganize and reproduce the ideals of the society
as their practical consciousness. It should be mentioned that in
response to this latter process, those in power positions who
internalize the ideals of the social structure and recursively (re)
organize and reproduce them as their practical consciousness are
in the unready-to-hand stance when they encounter alternative
forms of being-in-the-world within their social class language
game. They dialectically, anti-dialectically, or negative dialectically,
attempt to reconcile the practical consciousness of their social class
language game with the reified practical consciousness of those
who have deferred their meanings for alternative forms of being-inthe-world within their social class language. They can either accept,
marginalize, or seek to eradicate the deferred or decentered subject
or their practices.
Future research must 1) continue to search for evidence
of multiverses and other forms of existence tied to our present
world, which will be similarly constituted as our own universe,
and 2) proofs for the existence of the field of consciousness or
consciousness field and its force, psych ion, in order to falsify
or verify Mocombe’s overall theories of phenomenological
structuralism and consciousness fields.
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