
I'm sick again. I have malaise as Z called it. Is that a medical term? It sounds like the name of a paint color. Well I'm all malaisey. So I called my mom. She was sympathetic. I got her sympathy and then I was done with the phone call and told her I had to go. I am not a space alien if I can call my mom.
I've been thinking that "the phone" must be some sort of fixed delusion, which is a term I threw around a bit when I was doing outreach work at Advocates, though I guess I couldn't tell you if that is a technical term or just something I made up. I've been resistant to trying to read up on mental illness in an attempt to diagnosis myself, because that just seems like exactly the sort of thing crazy people do.
And I haven't told anyone about the phone either, because how do I know they are not part of the "fixed delusion." That brings me to the problem that I've been a bit fixated with the past couple of days: the problem raised by Bishop Berkeley. There's a great summary of it on Wikipedia, and I couldn't state it more clearly. Here it is.
As a young man, Berkeley theorized that individuals cannot know if an object is; they can only know if an object is perceived by a mind. He stated that individuals cannot think or talk about an object's being, but rather think or talk about an object's being perceived by someone. That is, individuals cannot know any "real" object or matter "behind" the object as they perceive it, which "causes" their perceptions. He thus concluded that all that individuals know about an object is their perception of it.
To restate this in terms of my "fixed delusion:" If I said to someone, E maybe, "Do you see this phone? Oh, you do? great, me too. Why don't you use it to call Pastor and he can tell you that I'm a space alien." Even if I did all that, I couldn't know that the whole conversation was not part of my delusion: "all that individuals know about an object is their perception of it."
Even so, today I took "the phone" out of the box I stuck it in when I got to Portland. I walked down the street to a 7-11 all sneezy and snotty, coughing all the way. I went inside and eyed a costumer - a nice looking middle-aged lady. I shouted "Here you go!" and I threw the phone at her. She caught it. It would seem that she thought it was real. Then I yanked the phone out or her hand and said, "Oh! sorry!" Then I thought maybe she was a delusion, so I hip checked her into a display of planters nuts. They fell over. I figured the nuts were real. Then I ran out of the store.
Oh Bishop Berekely! this is exactly what a crazy person does. I wish I had gone a little further afield to conduct my expereiment. Somewhere more than a block from my new house.
I got another email from Z today. I miss her a lot.
