How does the word "future" refer to something that is necessarily inaccessible? — Michael
We can't, hence skepticism. Knowledge of private matters is impossible. — Michael
you’ve been convinced by something like Wittgenstein’s account — Michael
given that you seem to understand the conceptual difference between a genuine loving relationship and a convincing act, why wouldn’t your “semantic” contemplation lead you to agree with the sensibility of my position? — Michael
I am merely asking what you are referring to when you say ‘X is good’ or ‘Y is bad’. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Moral realists claim that moral facts are objective in the sense that the speed of light and the existence of Mercury are objective. — Michael
The meaning of a word in a language is objective. We don't all have our own personal meanings, we couldn't talk if that were the case. — Isaac
:up:No I wanted to be pulled out of the fiery pit of solipsism, ha! No worries, I respect your arguments. On to other hills to die on! — GLEN willows
No, because I think and feel and see things that I never talk about or “act out”. I dream, I imagine, I lie, and so on. — Michael
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/ryle/#EpiSemComThe ontological commitments of the Official Doctrine lead to the mind-body problem; the epistemological commitments of the Official Doctrine lead to the problem of other minds. According to the traditional view, bodily processes are external and can be witnessed by observers, but mental processes are private, “internal” as it is metaphorically described (since mental processes are not supposed to be locatable anywhere). Mental processes or events are supposed, on the official view, to be played out in a private theatre; such events are known directly by the person who has them either through the faculty of introspection or the “phosphorescence” of consciousness. The subject of the mental states is, on this view, incorrigible—her avowals of her own mental states cannot be corrected by others—and she is infallible—she cannot be wrong about which states she is in.[6] Others can know them only indirectly through “complex and frail inferences” from what the body does.
But if all that is mental is to be understood in this way, it is unclear how we are justified in believing that others have the requisite episodes or mental accompaniments. It would be possible, on this view, for others to act as if they are minded, but for them to have none of the right “conscious experiences” accompanying their actions for them to qualify as such. Perhaps we are in much the same position as Descartes who thought it made sense to wonder whether such creatures are automata instead.
The problem of other minds is compounded by even more serious difficulties given certain assumptions about the way language works. Proponents of the Official Doctrine are committed to the view that mental discourse serves to designate items that carry the metaphysical and epistemological load of that doctrine.
The verbs, nouns and adjectives, with which in ordinary life we describe the wits, characters and higher-grade performances of the people with whom we have do, are required to be construed as signifying special episodes in their secret histories, or else as signifying tendencies for such episodes to occur. (1949a, 16–17)
Ryle’s criticism of the Official Doctrine begins by pointing out an absurdity in its semantic consequences. If mental conduct verbs pick out “occult” causes then we would not be able to apply those verbs as we do; so something must be wrong with a theory of mental phenomena that renders so inadequate our everyday use of these verbs. For, according to the Official Doctrine
when someone is described as knowing, believing or guessing something, as hoping, dreading, intending or shirking something, as designing this or being amused at that, these verbs are supposed to denote the occurrence of specific modifications in his (to us) occult stream of consciousness. (1945, 17)
Ryle’s criticism of the view is that if it were correct, only privileged access to this stream of consciousness could provide authentic testimony that these mental-conduct verbs were correctly or incorrectly applied. “The onlooker, be he teacher, critic, biographer or friend, can never assure himself that his comments have any vestige of truth.” And yet,
it was just because we do in fact all know how to make such comments, make them with general correctness and correct them when they turn out to be confused or mistaken, that philosophers found it necessary to construct their theories of the nature and place of minds. Finding mental-conduct concepts being regularly and effectively used, they properly sought to fix their logical geography. But the account officially recommended would entail that there could be no regular or effective use of these mental-conduct concepts in our descriptions of, and prescriptions for, other people’s minds. (1949a, 17)
And by an exception you mean a coherent example of there being a private mind behind the public expression that cannot be known? Then what left is there to say? The case is proved. — Michael
Obviously your belief is that no solipsistic one-mind existence could ever contain the illusion of a language, communication and conversations. I think we've hit the nub of it. You see I do think it's possible for it ALL to be an illusion, and you haven't proven it impossible. — GLEN willows
Again consider the example of a genuine loving relationship compared to a convincing act. — Michael
Without using, social, you and me, communication which all imply other minds, which you still haven't proven in the first place. — GLEN willows
There is no thinking linguistic part; there is the thinking part, and the linguistic part, from which arises the old adage, “think before you speak”, or, “for that which you don’t know you cannot speak”. — Mww
The use of them is public, as a means to an end. The origin of them cannot be public, iff they are the product of an individual intelligence. — Mww
The implications were obvious to the ancients, merely uncomfortable for the post-moderns, who would prefer to be told this thing is a basketball, rather than think about how it came to be one. — Mww
Yes, they do, otherwise, logical systems, and therefore human knowledge, is impossible. How the concept is represented.....the name assigned to it......may be contingent, but that which is named, is perfectly definite. — Mww
From the understanding that we cannot know what someone's private thoughts and feelings are there can then be the understanding that we cannot know that someone has private thoughts and feelings. They might just be a philosophical zombie, engaging in the same public behaviour and making the same public expressions as a thinking, feeling person. — Michael
Such thoughts and feelings might be expressed, but the private thoughts and feelings nonetheless exist and are prior to the public expression. — Michael
Doesn't matter to what? To the practicalities of everyday life? Sure. But the philosophical questions regarding perception and ethics and epistemology and realism and so on can still be worth discussing, and likely have true and false answers.
At the moment your position amounts to saying that solipsism might be true but doesn't affect how I (or we) live. — Michael
That seems quite psychopathic if I'm being honest. I don't just want my partner to "go through the motions" of a loving relationship. — Michael
So whether or not someone is lying or being honest isn't important? It doesn't matter what they think or feel, only what they say and do? — Michael
I don't know what you mean here. — Michael
I don't object to the ordinary version of privacy. But note that both of us can be explained in terms of unexpressed beliefs attributed to us. Our driving or not to the gym is explained by our beliefs. They are in the same explanatory nexus. (We could also explain beliefs by sense organs being exposed to photons.) Private meanings (metaphysically private meanings, hidden from public concepts) do not make sense for this role...or any role, except as a mystified X marks the not, for there can be nothing to say about them.)Let's say that you and I agree to meet up at the gym. I then have to cancel. We then never realize that we misunderstood which gym we were to meet up at; I thought the one on the east side of town, your on the west.
There's stuff that goes on in our head that is never made public. — Michael
I asked you because the inner workings of your mind are private and I need to you publicly express them. — Michael
Why did you ask me what it means to exist if existence is a public concept? — Michael
There wouldn't be misunderstanding. — Michael
If that were the case then we wouldn't have to ask people what they mean. — Michael
It is the ripping off of this natural view that is truly alien to us and thus strange: an unanimated, dead world, without any meaning, where beds don't have any intention whatsoever, is not our natural way of thinking of it. — Olivier5
Doubting the real world is just escapism. It's like dreaming that your parents adopted you, and your real parents are in fact Tigger and Winnie the Poo. — Olivier5
The human understanding when it has once adopted an opinion (either as being the received opinion or as being agreeable to itself) draws all things else to support and agree with it. And though there be a greater number and weight of instances to be found on the other side, yet these it either neglects and despises, or else by some distinction sets aside and rejects, in order that by this great and pernicious predetermination the authority of its former conclusions may remain inviolate. — Bacon
The notion of "other minds" requires a degree of inference that comes after self-recognition. To understand that other people have minds you must first understand that you have a mind. — Michael
Anyway, all I have been trying to do here is explain that the claim "it is impossible to know that other minds and mind-independent objects exist" is different to the claim "no proposition is truth-apt". The solipsist claims the former, not the latter, contrary to Pie's misrepresentation. — Michael
Yet, it was an “I” from which that notion of primordial is given. — Mww
The solipsist's position appears to be contradictory, saying: I can know that we both understand the meaning of the word "exist", but I cannot know that there is any "we" who both understand this meaning. — Luke
I realize now that I misspoke regarding analytical philosophy causing one to disappear up one's own arse; this is not correct at all; it causes one to disappear up the public arse, a far nastier place to be. — Janus
You don't have to, unless you feel insecure, justify your ideas to anyone. — Janus
That's interesting. What do you understand to be the "phenomenological version of the myth of the given"? And how do you see it relating back to Aristotle? — Janus
http://classics.mit.edu/Aristotle/interpretation.1.1.htmlSpoken words are the symbols of mental experience and written words are the symbols of spoken words. Just as all men have not the same writing, so all men have not the same speech sounds, but the mental experiences, which these directly symbolize, are the same for all, as also are those things of which our experiences are the images. — Ari
The feelings of the mind, expressing things naturally, constitute a sort of universal language which can then efface itself. It is the stage of transparence. Aristotle can sometimes omit it without risk. In every case, the voice is closest to the signified, whether it is determined strictly as sense ( thought or lived ) or more loosely as thing. All signifiers, and first and foremost the written signifier, are derivative with regard to what would wed the voice indissolubly to the mind or to the thought of the signified sense, indeed to the thing itself ( whether it is done in the Aristotelian manner that we have just indicated or in the manner of medieval theology, determining the res as a thing created from its eidos, from its sense thought in the logos or in the infinite understanding of God) . The written signifier is always technical and representative. It has no constitutive meaning. This derivation is the very origin of the notion of the "signifier." The notion of the sign always implies within itself the distinction between signifier and signified, even if, as Saussure argues, they are distinguished simply as the two faces of one and the same leaf. This notion remains therefore within the heritage of that logocentrism which is also a phonocentrism...
...absolute proximity of voice and being, of voice and the meaning of being, of voice and the ideality of meaning.We already have a foreboding that phonocentrism merges with...the meaning of being in general as presence, with all the subdeterminations which depend on this general form and which organize within it their system and their historical sequence (presence of the thing to the sight as eidos, presence as substance/ essence/ existence / ousia, temporal presence as point [stigme] of the now or of the moment [nun], the self-presence of the cogito... — Derrida
Neil deGrasse Tyson (astrophysicist, science educator, author) said something to the effect that the universe isn't in any way obligated to make sense to humans - it (the universe) can, it looks as though, do whatever the hell it wants; to hell with humans and their silly standards! :snicker: — Agent Smith