conceived in different conditions whereby the set of gametes was different than the ones that comprise you — schopenhauer1
about why I think its good to let those explanations speak for themselves, — Apustimelogist
I think of myself as a kind of instrumentalist about everything which most would say is just anti-realism. — Apustimelogist
Because you haven't seemed to grasp the main point of my argument which is that if a set of parents, even your own, had two gametes that were different than the ones that created you, that is indeed a different person. This isn't even controversial. If 10 seconds later, the there was another sperm, that is no longer you. That was someone else. We'd have to establish we agree here. — schopenhauer1
Well, I have quoted the bit I just quoted again here. You originally said that just after you quoted a long argument from me, trying to explain why I thought you were wrong. But all you give me is a claim that I am misconstruing the idea. There's no explanation of what the misconstruction is. So I have nothing to engage with (apart from the rather surprising remark that you agree with Ryle's argument against fatalism, again without explanation). But apparently you do not accept that what you say is an application of the fatalism argument to this special case, but you do not explain what the relevant difference is.I don't see any other way you can misconstrue this idea that a differently conceived person would not be you. — schopenhauer1
I don't see any other way you can misconstrue this idea that a differently conceived person would not be you. — schopenhauer1
Yes. I was more interested in the differences between the three than the similarities. But I didn't mean to suggest that there were no similarities. I was, I admit, concerned to bring out how little OLP was ever a school or a movement in a conventional sense. So I wouldn't argue with what you say here.So, Ludwig V, I do take the focus on particulars, dichotomies, goals, means of reasoning, criteria of what matters, similarities and differences, case-specific categories, and considerations in each case, to be right up the same alley as Austin and Wittgenstein — Antony Nickles
is a bit misleading. It took me a while to realize what was going on.Ryle does say it is not our logic, but our relationship to others that is the problem. (p.1) — Antony Nickles
This is right. He does say, in the first sentence of the same para. 3 p.1 "… which are not rival solutions of the same problem, but rather solutions or would-be solutions of different problems, and which, none the less, seem to be irreconcilable with one another." But this is only the first version of what he says. Take the three examples he offers:-Perhaps Ryle will say that we see others as rivals because of our pushing an agenda (“goal”) from the start, much as we fixate only on the example that makes our best case (pain, illusion, etc.) — Antony Nickles
In other words, you could NEVER have been anyone but what you are now when discussing your initial conception and birth. — schopenhauer1
Rather, I would want explanations of how science works, how people's cognition works, how brains work, how language works and let those things speak for themselves. — Apustimelogist
So because they are no more than where they fit as part of our experiences, their ontological significance is kind of deflated somewhat — Apustimelogist
the words / concepts we use as part of "explanations" and "knowledge" are effectively just moving parts embedded in the stream of the very thing trying be explained — Apustimelogist
To which I reply that is true. But the question is, who am I? I would ask, in addition, who decides who I am?But I am not even going down that route. I'm simply saying, that there is no way you "could have" been any other person than "you". — schopenhauer1
Our moral judgement is made to judge itself unfavourably. — unenlightened
I think it’s a huge issue and opens a can of worms but, I don’t see how you can defend a claim that if you were born in different “circumstances”, then you would still be “you”; it’s is not even something you can entertain in any real sense beyond imagining after the fact. — schopenhauer1
Knowing is basically about the realm of propositional reasoning and becoming is the realm of cause and effect of objects. — schopenhauer1
I liken Ryle's idea of a "contradiction" of an event that already occurred — schopenhauer1
So we can stipulate a possible world in which the crossroads were not replaced, and yet that does not help us in listing which fatalities were avoided. We can even stipulate a world in which the crossroads were not replaced, and yet the number of accidents was reduced. — Banno
I'm sorry. I don't have the bandwidth to take this on right now. I've already said that I don't think his version of behaviourism is satisfactory.The way I interpret his "Cartesian" rejection, — schopenhauer1
if Ryle is against Cartesian consciousness, that usually implies a sort of rejection understanding of basic sensory things such as "red" and "sound", — schopenhauer1
No, I don't suppose it is, given that he was taught by Ryle. But it doesn't follow that whatever Dennett thought is something Ryle thought.I don't think it's totally disconnected from Ryle — schopenhauer1
Well perhaps so. But this has nothing to do with Ryle - or Wittgenstein, either. Ryle does wish to eliminate Cartesian consciousness, but that's a different story because it's about a conception of consciousness, not consciousness. BTW I have very little time for Dennett's idea that consciousness is an illusion; he should have read Austin before developing that illusory idea.Eliminativism holds that there is no hard problem of consciousness because there is no consciousness to worry about in the first place. (you quote from "Hard Problem of Consciousness).....So I guess, if you can't explain it, eliminate it. — schopenhauer1
Yes, some people do make a terrible meal of it. But they are mostly logicians. 'nuff said.A bald king of France drives them crazy. — schopenhauer1
One might easily get the impression that philosophers waste their time with things that no one in their right mind would have the least concern with. — Fooloso4
Ah, that's different. The infinite meta- debates. Quite so. That's why I very suspicious of the meta-concept.the realism/anti-realism debate might lead to a meta-realism debate. — Apustimelogist
That's a very good characterization, from Ryle's point of view. The key is that Descartes thought in terms of different "substances" which is how people thought about this issue. One problem about this way of thinking is that there was never a satisfactory characterization (definition) of that term. Famously (as I expect you know), Locke was reduced to saying that substance was "something, I know not what". Berkeley leapt on this to deny that any such thing existed. Probably rightly. Effectively physics identified substance in terms of mass and extension (Locke's "primary qualities), which didn't help Cartesian dualism at all. Ryle is simply substituting "categories" in place of "substance", shifting the issue from one of metaphysics to one of language. What is at stake is the idea that the mind is an entity that exists in its own right, independently of physical objects.Ryle's own category mistake is in this way the same as Descartes, thinking in terms of the framework of the categories of his time. — Fooloso4
If that was all that was at stake, I would want to argue that one could not expect Descartes to think in any other way than in terms of the concepts available in his time. But Cartesian Dualism survived, so the issue survives, and Ryle's target is not just a change in ways of thinking.What I am suggesting is that Descartes' mistake was not categorical in the sense of failure to recognize differences between fixed categories, but rather his mistake resulted from the application of the framework of the categories of his time. — Fooloso4
Well, Ryle argues that there are not a fixed number or type of categories, so he's pretty much on your page. (See pp. 8 (last line of page) to 11.)There are not fixed logical types of thinking. — Fooloso4
.This is my first time reading Ryle. I took it as an opportunity to fill in some gaps. To read some things I had intentionally neglected. My comments and questions are intended as a mode of inquiry. — Fooloso4
Yes. In a sense, he's speaking metaphorically - there's a lot of metaphors in his writing. He means that only specialists use the "private" concepts, whereas everybody, including specialists, uses "public" concepts. He's just trying to carve out a field for philosophy, which is still trying to recover from the sciences spinning off as independent disciplines.Perhaps this will become clear as I continue reading, but from the first lecture I do not see where he makes a distinction between public and private or how it comes into play. — Fooloso4
Yes, that's a good way of putting it. But the subject matter of biology differs in important ways from the subject matter of physics, and applying only the methods of physics would ignore what makes living systems different from non-living systems. The methods of physics do not allow that distinction to appear. That's where the category question comes in. But he takes for granted that there is some such distinction to be drawn and that was contested then and still is.It (biophysics) studies living organisms as biological systems, but makes use of the principles and methods of physics. — Fooloso4
Well sure, I'm just saying that I think if that discussion were opened there would be disagreements, — Apustimelogist
Yes, Kuhn mentions this — Apustimelogist
Yes. I do think that this is the weakest point in the book. I much prefer the more complex - and elusive - ideas that emerged from Wittgenstein's private language argument. But the main point, which I think is precisely that qualia are not distinct objects in their own right, stands.The idea that mental activity is somehow behavioral dispositions seems incoherent to me. — schopenhauer1
Yes, I agree that they are not really satisfactory. But once one has seen the light about "qualia" it is hard to see what would satisfy the demand. That's how the hard problem of consciousness is created. Hardly a satisfactory solution itself.Emergentism and “integration” weasily conceits that always try to save the day as a spoon stirring dissolves the powder into the liquid as if magic. — schopenhauer1
But cross-disciplinary studies such as biophysics seems to contradict this. The boundaries are not natural or immutable. Understanding biology at some point requires an understanding of physics. — Fooloso4
More helpful is what Ryle himself says in the section "The Origin of the Category- Mistake" from The Concept of Mind — Fooloso4
What I get from this is the last paragraph in which he looses the path where the ground below that can no longer can be recalled. — Bella fekete
This logical subtly was present ages ago in the the Eastern World, where such distinctions need not require a mechanistic interpretation. — Bella fekete
I will try and find time to listen to some of the materials. — Wayfarer
With so little time on my hands , would like to nail down a remark by Wittgenstein that helps me get into the essential crux of the matter upon which to build subsequent structure , so as to recollect some way of commenting a-posterior . — Bella fekete
I'm sorry, I don't understand this./\ — Bella fekete
There is a seemingly endless set of divisions within and across these distinctions. — Fooloso4
mistake when he attempts to cleanly and neatly divide things along the lines of categories, — Fooloso4
I would reply that the claim needs to be backed up by a demonstration of the difference. Mere assertion won't cut any ice.Aha I think this would create a regress of the same problem as someone else would come along and say that it isn't just different ways of the same thing. — Apustimelogist
Yes, it's a common difficulty when one wants/needs to deny the validity of a distinction.But yes, I have thought about ways of kind of possibly ignoring labels of "real" or "non-real". Ironically, I feel like its very difficult to do this in a way that doesn't just look like normal anti-realism. — Apustimelogist
Yes. One either picks a specific theory, but then has to interpret it correctly. But that's open to "strawman" claims, or devises one's own statement of the issue, which is also open to the same claim. There's no third alternative that I can think of.But I think insofar as Davidson mentions Kuhn as an originator of the idea he is attacking, he has constructed a strawman since Kuhn isn't representative of the idea he attacks — Apustimelogist
You can then match the networks of concepts together. — Apustimelogist
Well, I always thought is was basically just a posh word for "appearances" but perhaps in some contexts it is better to think of them as data. In many common uses, you are quite right that they are related to a subject, but I think they are more like data than appearances. Two points about appearances (in many common uses:- 1) t they are essentially like a relation, "appearance" of something to someone: 2) they are used, not just for the way something looks - the way it appears (seems) to be, - but also for something hidden coming into view - the ship appeared over the horizon or the game of peek-a-boo.Mustn’t be forgotten that phenomena are what appears to a subject. — Wayfarer
As I see it both of those propositions are "not even wrong", just because we have no idea what they could even mean outside of very well-defined contexts. If there is an affectation it is the pretense that we know what we are talking about when we make such claims and counterclaims. — Janus
That is a brilliant account of the debates. It makes it look as if it just a question of different ways of saying the same thing. The catch is that it's hard to see why it matters which way one jumps.A realist may think the different perspectives we have on the world are different ways of viewing the same thing, an anti-realist may say those same perspectives block knowledge of the thing in and of itself. A realist may say theories are approximately true, an anti-realist may say the notion of "approximately true" is arbitrary and just highlights that the theory does not explain all of the data. — Apustimelogist
That may well be true. But that makes his use of "translation" very different from what translation between languages involves. Word-for-word translation is almost always a mistake. Perhaps it would be better to talk about "equivalence"; but then the concepts of a theory are inter-related, not defined one by one. Perhaps we should just stick to "incommensurable".Yes, I think when it comes to Kuhn at least, his mention of translation is not talking about languages generically but about words thats constitute specific scientific theories. — Apustimelogist
If I were to see a small blip on a radar screen showing me an airplane, would that be an airplane or a representation of one? — Hanover
If I see an actual flower, the object I actual see — Joshs
Quite so. Thought it is a bit odd to refer to a concept as an object. Still, it would be picky to object. It is, I submit, a concept of a living think that grows, flowers, sets seeds and so forth - planted, say, in my front garden. Some flowers manage all of that without any help from me at all. Others need a hand and some TLC.More precisely, the concept of flower is an intersubjectively constructed object. — Joshs
I think that you misunderstand what objectivity is. It is something that happens irrespective of any socially constructed idealIts objectivity is thus a socially constituted ideal. — Joshs
William James thought that what an infant sees in the beginning is "a buzzing, blooming, confusion", just because it doesn't have any sense of what has been socially agreed upon. Sadly, they can't tell us, and we can't see it.I would expect that an infant sees what I see when it looks at a flower, — Hanover
Are you looking for the "raw" experience? I'm not sure you'll find it there. Since it will be before any concepts are applied (since they are not yet acquired), it will be indistinguishable from seeing nothing.The example of the infant is helpful because it approximates a baseline. — Leontiskos
That's just a restatement of naive realism. — Hanover
Yes, I would agree with that. But one needs to tease out what counts as access.To be honest, I am not entirely comfortable with the idea of referencing something in the world that one cannot access. — Apustimelogist
Yes. There's an ambiguity about language. Most people seem to equate "language" with "conceptual scheme" or "paradigm". But I can't see that natural languages can be equated to a single conceptual scheme or paradigm, so I prefer to regard them as distinct. But the point applies to conceptual schemes or paradigms as well as languages.I think with different languages, people usually are not only literally in the same world, but living lives in similar ways with similar objects. — Apustimelogist
Yes, that's clearly true. He's a bit like Hume, who demolishes the claim that logic or reason establishes causal powers or causal laws, and then turns to psychology to fill the gap. I'm doubtful about this, because it seems to reduce the issues to causality or subjectivity. Which misrepresents what's going on, I think. One couldn't seriously argue that Newton's theory was not better (more comprehensive, more accurate, more coherent (?), simpler (?)) than Aristotle's.His account of theory change isn't about logic like Popper, but psychological change in people's minds which is not constrained in a determinate, algorithmic way by evidence. — Apustimelogist
Well, yes. The new science (Newton, LaPlace) abandoned the Aristotelian idea of "matter" in favour of a different conception of what physical objects consist of. But it was pretty clear that both concepts were "about" at least some of the same thing(s). Is that what you had in mind?Kuhn's translatability is instead just about if the structure of lexical networks match up and terms in one theory have a direct correspondence or interchangeability to constructs in the other so that they can be thought of the same thing. — Apustimelogist
But I baulk whenever someone says "It's subjective". — Banno
Good question. One way of answering is to consider it's use in . The truism that perception always involves a perceiver, is associated with "beauty in the eye of the beholder", "nothing either good or bad but thinking makes it so" and the conclusion that all perception is subjective looks plausible. How can I say that forgery or not is not in the eye of the beholder, or that thinking does not make forgery so (or not) without appearing to deny the truism?much use for who and for what? — Janus
Well, any true-or-false statement is determined by someone, if that's what you mean. But that doesn't mean it is subjective. Since the definition is specified by law, I would say the question is objective.The point wasn't to determine the liklihood of how a forgery might or might not occur, but it was to point out that a forgery is a purely subjective determination. — Hanover
How about Banno's flower? It has four petals, a definite height and flowers at a particular time of year.Give me a concrete case then of an object that is unimpacted by the perceiver so that you can say object A is described as having the qualities of a, b, and c in all instances. — Hanover
