As I understand it phenomenology aims to reflect on and characterize the general nature of human experience. I have always been skeptical about attempts to make inferences from human experience to metaphysical claims. — Janus
I think the salient question is as to just what is the content of a mystical experience — Janus
The interpretation of mystical experiences seems to me to be a very personal matter. For me interpretation is more of a feeling, a sense of something, more like poetry than anything which can be couched in definite terms. — Janus
It seems that there is a cross-cultural commonality of mystical human experience―but what does that point to? Who can say? — Janus
For an extraordinary claim like, “I had direct communication with God” an atheist is going to need more than someone's personal testimony. — Tom Storm
I wouldn't say 'ruled out' but worthy of robust skepticism certainly. — Tom Storm
Is there a non-naturalistic explanation for anything we can definitely identify? — Tom Storm
Yes, this is the nub of the issue: is the God explanation really of equal weight to alternative explanations - such as psychological phenomena, mental illness, or substance use? — Tom Storm
And perhaps it's not worth debating, these discussions rarely shift anyone’s position and too often descend into unproductive or abusive exchanges. Not from you, I hasten to add. — Tom Storm
Well, atheists I know would not say, as you write, “there isn’t any personal god.” — Tom Storm
such experiences rely on subjective testimony — Tom Storm
experiences that, while meaningful to the individual, could have multiple naturalistic explanations and thus can't meaningfully serve as reliable evidence for the existence of a divine being. — Tom Storm
I can honestly imagine being in your shoes to some extent. If you reject that line of thought, then yes, such talk couldn't reflect the way you actually think. — frank
I can imagine possible worlds where I'm somebody else, or a rock. I'd love being a rock. — frank
the name . . . as a sort of nexus of possibility — frank
All of that is sorted out by a specific statement. For instance, if you say, "If I were Barack Obama, I would have told the Syrian rebels to calm down. — frank
if "a" necessarily designates a, can we conclude that a necessarily has the property of being designated by "a"? — Ludwig V
Can I know everything (or nothing) about X without including the reference-fixing story in my knowledge (or lack thereof)? — J
You don't need to include the reference-fixing story. But you do need to know how to refer to X. If you get that wrong, the rest collapses. — Ludwig V
human experience in general — Janus
So we say that "a" and "b" are like proper names, and since "a" and "b" are rigid designators, we say that proper names are also rigid designators. And so it seems that since no property need be true of "a" in every possible world, no property need be true of a proper name in every possible world — Banno
Could there be strictly empirical evidence available to guide me in answering that question [of how I should live]? — Janus
I am not arguing that there are some sacred descriptions that cannot be overturned. — Ludwig V
. . . provided we can fix the reference of X without appealing to any of the properties of X. But most people would say that "tiger" refers to large striped cats that live in parts of Asia. How would you fix the reference without relying on any of the known properties of tigers? — Ludwig V
If we did find out that everything we knew about tigers were mistaken or in error, that would nevertheless be a discovery about tigers. It follows that "tiger" does not refer to tigers in virtue of some description that sets out their characteristics. — Banno
The idea is that we learn what some thing is, name it, and then discover that everything we knew about it was false. — Banno
There's something very odd about saying that we learn what some thing is, and then discover that what we have learnt about it is false. What is the "it" here? — Ludwig V
if a human successfully "picks out" the fresh water, hydrates themselves, and survives to see another day, don't we want to say he knows how to "pick out" fresh water? If the answer is "yes", in this scenario, what sense can we make that this human could later discover "that everything we knew about it was false"? Seems we are flirting with radical skepticism. — Richard B
What makes it, something I am remembering, and not sensing or imagining? — Fire Ologist
There is something “already” in a memory, that is not there in an imagination-representation.
I am saying there is a similar something “already” in what purports to be a sensation. — Fire Ologist
whatever this is “already” in a memory or a sensation, it is not there when imagining a unicorn flying through space on an orange peel.
This is difficult to talk about, without . . . sounding like an insane person apparently. — Fire Ologist
You are remembering your childhood bedroom to be this or that size, to have this or that location in the house, to be furnished thus and so, etc. All of those mental acts refer to your childhood bedroom (or, better, are acts of you referring to it in imagination) and, maybe, chiefly refer to visual aspects of it. But there is no image that you are contemplating. — Pierre-Normand
I'm not sure what you mean by pallette-style. — Dawnstorm
A memory being (a) true and (b) autobiographical is part of the intentionality of the act of remembering, but not of the actual memory - neither the flash, nor its more substantial substratus. — Dawnstorm
Do you see what I mean? — Dawnstorm
You remember stuff that doesn't manifest as "a memory". If you didn't, no "memory" could manifest. — Dawnstorm
Is any one reading this? — Banno
. . . fundamental philosophical questions, about more than simply 'what we can say'. — Wayfarer
Actualizations of a capacity to know, or to remember, can indeed be construed as acts of representing the known or remembered object (or proposition). — Pierre-Normand
A memory has to have some sort of independent presence/existence/ontological status/process of verification [IPEOSPoV] to it. — Fire Ologist
I tend to construe "the memory that P" not as inspecting an inner representation, but as the persistent ability to know that P — Pierre-Normand
the act of remembering involves an implicit self-awareness that “this is something from my past,” — Number2018
Emotions are thoughts and constructed like all thoughts. — Srap Tasmaner
So I think in a way there is an answer to "Why do I think this particular thought I was just having is a memory?" and the answer is because your mind said it was, or some perhaps much more subtle and noncommittal equivalent — Srap Tasmaner
We all know that memory is pretty much always confabulation — Srap Tasmaner
I think there's a middle way. — Srap Tasmaner
. We feel one way about a thought if we think of it as a memory, and another if we think of it as fancy. Even though those two toys came out of the same bin. — Srap Tasmaner
I doubt there's anything worth chasing that would turn out to be the "genuine experience" of memory rather than imagination, because I doubt there's any such thing. Still, we behave as if there is, and that feeds back into our mental lives quite powerfully. — Srap Tasmaner
Now if what you're doing is "associating" (or something), situations might occur in which it becomes relevant whether the content of the association "really occured, was experienced, etc." or not. And it's going to be hard to figure this out precisely because the psychological functions of imagination and memory are both going to be involved to some degree or other. Embellished memory? Memory-inspired vision? — Dawnstorm
A common example would be a composer composing a piece of music and then finding out it sounds like something else. — Dawnstorm
we don't consciously decide whether the content in our awareness is remembered or imagined; in some sense, yes, there's a decision being made about what it is, very much so, but I think that "decision" is mostly made without your conscious involvement. Obviously there will be exceptions. — Srap Tasmaner
Roughly speaking, I think none of this is any of philosophy's business. In the 18th century, before we could do the sort of research we can do now, it may have been acceptable to speculate about how the mind works and how we distinguish perceptions from memories and so on, but it's rather foolish in the 21st century — Srap Tasmaner
I'm just riffing here, but maybe it links back to Nietzsche too. — Stuart Roberts
Yes, the law of identity (a=a) is a logical principle—a tautology that belongs to the structure of thought and language. It tells us something about the consistency of our terms, but not about the ontological self-sufficiency of particulars. To read it as a statement about the intrinsic metaphysical identity of beings is to conflate logic with ontology. — Wayfarer
The modern statement “A is A” or “x = x” comes from a much later tradition, shaped by formal logic and set theory, not Aristotle’s ontology of substance and form. To read Aristotle as if he were simply asserting the self-contained identity of particulars is to read him through a modern lens that doesn’t fit. — Wayfarer
I think (and thought so even before I heard of aphantasia) that successful communication is better understood in terms of situational compatibility of individual meanings than in terms of similarity of the individual meanings involved — Dawnstorm
This is a pretty dogmatic response, stating that the reason we can write such equations at all is that their effectiveness is dependent on or justified by the logic of identity, that accepting your argument would be tantamount to claiming that identity signs in physics are ambiguous and equivocal. Pretty harsh. My response to ↪J suffered from something like this, and perhaps Tim might say something similar. Are physical equations really that precise? — Banno
we do it on purpose, some of the time, and automatically, almost all the time, and we never stop. That's "remembering", not "becoming aware of a thought and labeling it a memory". If that happens at all, it's probably rare, unusual at least. A thought, if it's a memory, comes to us as a memory, period. — Srap Tasmaner
what reasons could you muster to judge a thought to be a memory? What could you possibly rely upon as you worked out the inference that this indeed is a memory? — Srap Tasmaner
Now, if you want to ask, what's that like, for something to be present to the mind as a memory? Fine, and that's headed back toward phenomenology. — Srap Tasmaner
But what we can't do is go looking for criteria that we consciously use to identify memories or distinguish them from other thoughts. — Srap Tasmaner
Pretty clear that ⟨Ek⟩=2/3kBT is an equivalence. The "=" bit. — Banno
. . . the "Epistemic Stances . . . " thread. I thought those two philosophers did an excellent job making big issues clear within a smaller, manageable discussion. Would you be willing to read them, perhaps guided by some of the comments in the thread?
That makes sense. — Count Timothy von Icarus
truth is primarily in the intellect. — Count Timothy von Icarus
We might ask, what is the "context" you refer to? A "game?" A formal system? — Count Timothy von Icarus
the Borges story, the Library of Babel — Count Timothy von Icarus
a sense of recollection — Outlander
I thought I was just slow. It never occured to me that others might just have visual experience to go along with the narration. — Dawnstorm
What if the problem was your perception in that moment: that is, it's not your memory that's wrong - as it's accurate to what you've experienced - but it's your experience that wasn't accurate to the moment. — Dawnstorm
I wonder if he'll have the massed missile launchers and tanks, like his comrade, Putin. — Wayfarer
the deceptiveness of memory — Wayfarer
here I am, here comes the mental item, here's me identifying it (seemingly instantly) as a purported memory.
— J
Convince me that's either (a) not already a theory about how mental life works, or (b) it's a good theory, a reasonable theory. — Srap Tasmaner
you seem to have the idea that the "mental item" might have causes, and those fall within the purview of psychology, but your identifying the mental item as a memory (or a fancy or a perception) does not, is not itself another sort of mental item, and does not fall within the purview of psychology. I can't imagine why you would think that. Surely identifying a thought as a memory is as much a psychological event as the thought so identified. — Srap Tasmaner
The point is that we assume that there are real things, and that the thing's identity, i.e. what the thing is, inheres within the thing itself, not in our descriptions or interpretations of the thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
Hence the suggestion of moving to temperature, which is less ambiguous. — Banno
Here's my hypothesis: When I'm saving a present event in my neuronal network, the stored event gets a timestamp and a "true event"-mark. — Quk
Maybe there are certain qualia that accompany such marks. — Quk
