Bateson left an unresolved ambiguity in his explanation of the relationship of the mind to the world, the map to the territory.
This ambiguity is related to his failure to develop a theory of intentionality, reference, ‘aboutness.’ However, he left us
all the tools necessary to resolve this ambiguity and to lay the groundwork for a theory of intentionality. In using these
tools, a different emphasis is placed on the relationship between change and difference. A proposal is made for an understanding
of the rudiments of abstraction. Finally, the ambiguity is addressed and the groundwork of a theory of intentionality proposed,
through an understanding of the distinction between (a) the indirect access of creatural mental process to the pleromic world
and (b) the direct access of our pleromic hands to the pleromic world. It is through the interplay and alternation of indirect
perception/cognition of the world and direct action on the world in manually operated experiments that Bateson’s problem of
‘maps, of maps, of maps, ad infinitum’ is solved and a theory of mediate realism can be derived from his work, linking to
an understanding of the roots of intentionality.
Keywords Map - territory - abstraction - difference - ambiguity - Ding an sich - epistemic cut - mediate realism