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+\chapter{Introduction}
+
+
+This essay is the third in a series on the rationale of my career. It
+summarizes the results of my activities, the consistent outlook on a whole
+range of questions which I have developed. The first essay,
+\essaytitle{On Social Recognition}, noted that the official social philosophy of practically every
+regime in the world says that the individual has a duty to serve society to the
+best of his abilities. Social recognition is supposed to be the reward which
+indicates that the individual is indeed serving society. Now it happens that
+the most important tasks the individual can undertake are tasks (intellectual,
+political, and otherwise) posed by society. However, when the individual
+undertakes such tasks, society's actual response is almost always persecution
+(Galileo) or indifference (Mendel). Thus, the doctrine that the'individual has
+a duty to serve society is a hypocritical fraud. I reject every social
+philosophy which contains this doctrine. The rational individual will obtain
+the means of subsistence by the most efficient swindle he can find. Beyond
+this, he will undertake the most important tasks posed by society for his
+own private gratification. He will not attempt to benefit society, or to gain
+the recognition which would necessarily result if society were to utilize his
+achievements.
+
+The second essay, \essaytitle{Creep}, discussed the practices of isolating oneself;
+carefully controlling one's intake of ideas and influences from outside; and
+playing as a child does. I originally saw these practices as the effects of
+certain personality problems. However, it now seems that they are actually
+needed for the intellectual approach which I have developed. They may be
+desirable in themselves, rather than being mere effects of personality
+problems.
+
+I chose fundamental philosophy as my primary subject of investigation.
+Society presses me to accept all sorts of beliefs. At one time it would have
+pressed me to believe that the earth was flat; then it reversed itself and
+demanded that I believe the earth is round. The majority of Americans still
+consider it "necessary" to believe in God; but the Soviet government has
+managed to function for decades with an atheistic philosophy. Thus, which
+beliefs should I accept? My analysis is presented in writings entitled
+\essaytitle{Philosophy Proper}, \essaytitle{The Flaws Underlying Beliefs}, and
+\essaytitle{Philosophical Aspects of Walking Through Walls}.
+The question of whether a given belief is valid
+depends on the issue of whether there is a realm beyond my "immediate
+experience." Does the Empire State Building continue to exist even when I
+am not looking at it? If such a question can be asked, there must indeed be
+a realm beyond my experience, because otherwise the phrase 'a realm
+beyond my experience' could not have any meaning. (Russell's theory of
+descriptions does not apply in this case.) But if the assertion that there is a
+realm beyond my experience is true merely because it is meaningful, it
+cannot be substantive; it must be a definitional trick. In general, beliefs
+depend on the assertion of the existence of a realm beyond my experience,
+an assertion which is nonsubstantive. Thus, beliefs are nonsubstantive or
+meaningless; they are definitional tricks. Psychologically, when I believe that
+the Empire State Building exists even though I am not looking at it, I
+imagine the Empire State Building, and I have the attitude toward this
+mental picture that it is a perception rather than a mental picture. The
+attitude involved is a self-deceiving psychological trick which corresponds to
+the definitional trick in the belief assertion. The conclusion is that all beliefs
+are inconsistent or self-deceiving. It would be beside the point to doubt
+beliefs, because whatever their connotations may be, logically beliefs are
+nonsense, and their negations are nonsense also.
+
+The important consequence of my philosophy is the rejection of truth
+as an intellectual modality. I conclude that an intellectual activity's claim to
+have objective value should not depend on whether it is true; and also that
+an activity may perfectly weil employ false statements and still have
+objective value. I have developed activities which use mental capabilities that
+are excluded by a truth-oriented approach: descriptions of imaginary
+phenomena, the deliberate adoption of false expectations, the thinking of
+contradictions, and meanings which are reversed by the reader's mental
+reactions; as well as illusions, the deliberate suspension of normal beliefs, and
+phrases whose meaning is stipulated to be the associations they evoke. It
+must be clear that these activities are not in any way whatever a return to
+pre-scientific trrationalism. My philosophy demolishes astrology even more
+than it does astronomy. The irrationalist is out to deceive you; he wants you
+to believe that his superstitions are truths. My activities, on the other hand,
+explicitly state that they are using non-true material. My intent is not to get
+you to believe that superstitions are truths, but to exploit non-true material
+for rational purposes.
+
+The other initial subject of investigation I chose was art. The art which
+claims to have cognitive value is already demolished by my philosophical
+results. However, art at its most distinctive does not need to claim cognitive
+value; its value is claimed to be entertainmental or amusemental. What about
+art whose justification is simply that people like it? Consider things which
+are just liked, or whose value is purely subjective. I point out that each
+individual already has experiences, prior to art, whose value is purely
+subjective. (Call these experiences "brend.") The difference between brend
+and art is that in art, the thing valued is separated from the valuing of it and
+turned into an object which is urged on other people. Individuals tend to
+overlook their brend, and they do so because of the same factors which
+perpetuate art. These factors include the relation between the socialization
+of the individual and the need for an escape from work. The conditioning
+which causes one to venerate "great art" is also a conditioning to dismiss
+one's own brend. If one can become aware of one's brend without the
+distortion produced by this conditioning, one finds that one's brend is
+superior to any art, because it has a level of personalization and originality
+which completely transcends art.
+
+Thus, I reject art as an intellectual or cultural modality. In rejecting
+truth, I advocated in its place intellectual activities which have an objective
+value independent of truth. In rejecting art, I do not propose that it be
+replaced with any objective activity at all. Rather, I advocate that the
+individual become aware of his just-likings for what they are, and allow them
+to come out. If I succeed in getting the individual to recognize his own
+just-likings, then I will have given him infinitely more than any artist ever
+can.
+
+We are not finished with art, however. Ever since art began to
+disintegrate as an institution, modern art has become more and more of a
+repository for activities which represent pure waste, but which counterfeit
+innovation and objective value. A two-way process is involved here. On the
+one hand, the modern artist, faced with the increasing gratuitousness of his
+profession, desperately incorporates superficial references to science in his
+products in the hope of intimidating his audience. On the other hand, art
+itself has become an institution which invests waste with legitimacy and even
+prestige; and it offers instant rewards to people who wish to play the game.
+What is innovation in modern art? You take a poem by Shelly, cut it up into
+little pieces, shake the pieces up in a box, then draw them out and write
+down whatever is on them in the order in which they are drawn. If you call
+the result a "modern poem," people will suddenly be awed by it, whereas
+they would not have been awed otherwise. This sort of innovation is utterly
+mechanical and superficial. When artists incorporate scientific references in
+their products, the process is similarly a mechanical, superficial
+amalgamation of routine artistic material with current gadgets.
+
+Now there may be some confusion as to what the difference is between
+the products which result from this attempt to "save" art, and activities in
+the intellectual modality which I favor. There may be a tendency to confuse
+activities which are neither science nor art, but have objective value, with art
+products which are claimed to be "scientific" and therefore objectively
+valuable. To dispel this confusion, the following questions may be asked
+about art products.
+\begin{enumerate}
+\item If the product were not called art, would it immediately be seen to be
+worthless? Does the product rely on artistic institutions to "carry" it?
+
+\item Suppose that the artist claims that his product embodies major scientific
+discoveries, as in the case of a ballet dancer who claims to be working in the
+field of antigravity ballet. If the dancer really has an antigravity device,
+why can it only work in a ballet theater? Why can it
+only be used to make dancers jump higher? Why do you have to be able to
+perform "Swan Lake" in order to do antigravity experiments?
+\end{enumerate}
+To use a phrase from medical research, I contend that a real scientist would seek to
+isolate the active principle---not to obscure it with non-functional mumbo-jumbo.
+
+Both of these sets of questions make the same point, from somewhat
+different perspectives. Given an individual with a product to offer, does he
+actively seek out the lady art reporters, the public relations contracts, the
+museum officials, or does he actively dissociate himself from them? Does he
+seek artistic legitimation of his product, or does he reject it? The objective
+activities which I have developed stand on their own feet. They are not art,
+and to construe them as art would make it impossible to comprehend them.
+
+A definition of the intellectual modality which I favor is now in order.
+Until now, this modality has involved the construction of ideas such that the
+very possibility of thinking these ideas is a significant phenomenon. In other
+words, the modality has consisted of the invention of mental abilities. The
+ideas involve physical language, that is, language which occurs in beliefs
+about the physical world. Such language is philosophically meaningless, but
+it has connotations provided by the psychological trick involved in believing.
+The connotations are what are utilized; factual truth is irrelevant. Then, the
+ideas cannot be reduced to the mechanical manipulation of marks or
+counters---unlike ordinary mathematics. Also, logical truth, which happens to
+be discredited by my philosophical results, is irrelevant to the ideas.
+
+But the defining requirement of the modality is that each activity in it
+must have objective value. The activity must provide one with something
+which is useful irrespective of whether one likes it; that is, which is useful
+independently of whether it produces emotional gratification.
+
+We can now consider the following principle. "spontaneously and
+without any prompting to sweep human culture aside and to carry out
+elaborate, completely self-justifying activities." Relative to the social context
+of the individual's activities, this principle is absurd. We have no reason to
+respect the eccentric hobbyist, or the person who engages in arbitrary
+antisocial acts. If an action is to have more than merely personal significance,
+it must have a social justification, as is explained in On Social Recognition.
+In the light of The Flaws Underlying Beliefs and the brend theory, however,
+the principle mentioned above does become valid when it is interpreted
+correctly, because it becomes necessary to invent ends as well as means. The
+activity must provide an objective value, but this value will no longer be
+standardized.
+
+The modality I favor is best exemplified by \essaytitle{Energy Cube Organism},
+\essaytitle{Concept Art}, and the \essaytitle{Perception-Dissociator Model}.
+\essaytitle{Energy Cube Organism} is a perfect example of ideas such that the very
+possibility of thinking them is a significant phenomenon. It is also a perfect example of an
+activity which is useful irrespective of whether it provides emotional
+gratification. It combines the description of imaginary physical phenomena
+with the thinking of contradictions. It led to \essaytitle{Studies in Constructed
+Memories}, which in turn led to \essaytitle{The Logic of Admissible Contradictions}.
+With this last writing, it becomes obvious that the activity has applications
+outside itself.
+
+\essaytitle{Concept Art}\footnote{published in An Anthology ed. LaMonte Young, 1963}
+uses linguistic expressions which are changed by the reader's mental
+reactions. It led to \essaytitle{Post-Formalism in Constructed Memories}, and this led
+in turn to \essaytitle{Subjective Propositional Vibration}.
+
+The \essaytitle{Perception-Dissociator Model}\footnote{published in I-KON, Vol. 1, No. 5}
+was intended to exploit the realization that humans are the most
+advanced machines (or technology) that we have. I wanted to build a model
+of a machine out of humans, using a minimum of non-human props. Further,
+the machine modelled was to have capabilities which are physically
+impossible according to present-day science. I still think that the task as I
+have defined it is an excellent one; but the model does not yet completely
+accomplish the objective. The present model uses the deliberate suspension
+of normal beliefs to produce its effects.
+
+\essaytitle{Post-Formalism in Constructed Memories} and \essaytitle{Studies in
+Constructed Memories} together make up \booktitle{Mathematical Studies} (1966). In
+this monograph, the emphasis was on extending the idea of mathematics as
+formalistic games to games involving subjectivity and contradiction. In two
+subsequent monographs, the material was developed so as to bring out its
+potential applications in conjunction with science.
+\essaytitle{Subjective Propositional Vibration} investigates the logical
+possibilities of expressions which are changed by the reader's mental responses.
+\essaytitle{The Logic of Admissible Contradictions} starts with the experiences
+of the logically impossible which
+we have when we suffer certain perceptual illusions. These illusions enable us
+to imagine certain logical impossibilities just as clearly as we imagine the
+logically possible. The monograph models the content of these illusions to
+obtain a system of logic in which some (but not all) contradictions are
+"admissible." The theory investigates the implications of admitting some
+contradictions for the admissibility of other contradictions. A theory of
+many-valued numbers is also presented.
+
+The \essaytitle{Perception-Dissociator Model} led to
+\essaytitle{The Perception-Dissociation of Physics.} Again, here is an essay whose
+significance lies in the very possibility of thinking the ideas at all. The essay
+defines a change in the pattern of experience which would make it
+impossibie for physicists to "construct the object from experience." Finally,
+\essaytitle{Mock Risk Games} is the activity which involves the deliberate adoption of
+false expectations. It is on the borderline of the intellectual modality which I
+favor, because it seems to me to have objective value, and yet has not
+generated a series of applications as the other activities have.
+
+To summarize my general outlook, truth and art are discredited. They
+are replaced by an intellectual modality consisting of non-true activities
+having objective value, together with cach individual's brend. Consider the
+individual who wishes to go into my intellectual modality. What is the
+significance to him of the academic world, professional occupations, and the
+business of scholarships, fellowships, and grants? From the perspective of
+the most socially important tasks, these institutions have always rewarded
+the wrong things, as I argued in \essaytitle{On Social Recognition}. But in addition, the
+institutions as now organized are obstacles specifically to my intellectual
+modality. In fact, society in general has the effect of a vast conspiracy to
+prevent one from achieving the kind of consequential intellectual play which
+I advocate. The categories of thought which are obligatory in the official
+intellectual world and the media are categories in which my outlook cannot
+be conceived. And here is where the creep practices mentioned at the
+beginning of this essay become important. Isolation from society is
+presumably not inherent in my intelectual modality; but under present
+social conditions isolation is a prerequisite for its existence.
+