Dak
mentat
This is not an intellectual contribution to this discussion at all. Your arms won't allow you to fly; and so this inspires new technological modes of doing so. We cannot see radio waves, so we develop other means of doing so. We intuit and create in order to account for things that we cannot know in an immediate sensory way.
You are trying to simply write off the possibility of making any technological headway when trying to understand certain phenomena that perhaps elude us. You're being exactly the opposite of an engaged and eager intellectual, as I understand it. Philosophy informs technology, and vice versa. Just simply dismissing the unknown as contitutively unknowable affords us nothing.
I thought I was pretty clear in supporting technological innovation to overcome any particular biological lack we might have (e.g. the Wright Brothers and Aviation). But that doesn't make innate flight ability knowable in the sense that a bird knows it, and doesn't mean there won't always be some unknown left, no matter how many things move from unknown to known. It is that, or in that, permanently inaccessible unknown (even deepening unknown) that you have appeared to place horror - which will forever elude the light of knowledge and innovation, as The Unknown can by definition never be known or revealed.
Of course, but necessity applies to the "should" category. "Can" is contingent upon material circumstances; there's nothing necessary or inherent about it. "Should" entails something necessary about the object in question.
We disagree on the importance of those things we don't know. You would rather dismiss things we "can't" know as things we eternally cannot know. This seems to be your position. I understand your conservative appeal to some sense of normality in order to function at all in the real world, but this is a poor philosophical position if we're seriously considering the consequences and/or possibilities of something.
I am distinguishing between the unknown and The Unknown, and investigating The Unknown seems like something that needs to be left until all else is exhausted. Of course, the limits and boundaries of The Unknown are possibly unknowable or Unknowable. But that is the sort of problem that works itself out as we push back the unknown.
The terroristic, or emotional, aspect of horror derives from the notion of the unknown and the Outside. Without these material notions, there is no horror. I'm tracing horror back to this very foundational concept.
Well I understand where terror can come from, but I don't the difference between The Unknown and horror (hopefully a distinguishing between TU and tu will help explain my position).