So that is the 'mystical' nature of reality, and its vague connection with experience that Wittgenstein tries to avoid discussing! — ernestm
If your wife tells you to bring something in from the car, you reply 'it is raining' because you don't want to go outside. Maybe it is not really raining and just mizzling, but if your wife agrees with you, then the proposition would be considered true for the two of you, accomplishing the goal of the communication. — ernestm
While I actually agree with what you are saying, Wittgenstein has a problem with your idea, because the statement 'it is raining' assumes there is something called 'rain.' — ernestm
The existence of color is mystical. MANY people object to that, but that was his conclusion. — ernestm
Language is only a tool for communication, and epistemologically, from Wittgenstein's perspective, there is nothing else that is fruitful to define as 'the world' besides the language itself. — ernestm
It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists. — Wittgenstein
All that a statement does is postulate a possible proposition, and if another person acts on the proposition in accordance with the speaker's intent, then the communication is successful. — ernestm
Each has rules. As TGW says, professional rigour sometimes tries to partition off ordinary language meanings from meanings in professional practice. — mcdoodle
No, to "mirror" already assumes indirect realism. — Question
think we generally understand what it means for a painting to picture reality, and in many of the same ways we generally understand what it means for a proposition to mirror reality. — Sam26
That is, the correct report of my experience is that I saw a green apple that appeared red due to the lighting. — Andrew M
It was as if after all the digging around I did in philosophy, there was a man who had found the ground from the soil, which in the process made philosophy clean and austere instead of dirty and confusing, — Question
Perhaps an alternative way of framing the issue to the usual subjective/objective framing. — Andrew M
So, the experience is not just a firing of neurons but reaches out to the external objects and state of affairs that set the content of the experience. The internal experience that you have is, in this sense, inseparable from the external object or state of affairs that you experience. — jkop
Bricks? — jkop
Only under the assumption of property dualism: the dubious idea that the colour wouldn't be a physical pigment for instance but some mysterious entity lurking inside your consciousness. Hence the appearance of a "hard problem" of consciousness. — jkop
Only under the assumption of property dualism: the dubious idea that the colour wouldn't be a physical pigment for instance but some mysterious entity lurking inside your consciousness. Hence the appearance of a "hard problem" of consciousness. — jkop
But how on earth could anyone know that every single version of physicalism fails to account for consciousness? He even looks like a christian rock musician O:) — jkop
The reason that we can meaningfully talk about red apples is because our physical sensory systems are, in the relevant sense, the same. But they need not be, as considering how one would communicate the idea of red apples to a blind person demonstrates. — Andrew M
Chalmers is a dualist, recall, and the alleged puzzle arises from taking dualism for granted.
You don't get to talk about a hard problem of consciousness with people who don't take dualism for granted. — jkop
That cannot be right. I wrote "subjective experiences," but that's a tautology - I should have just written "experiences." Experiences are perforce subjective: they occur in a subject and are confined to a subject. — SophistiCat
His beef is technical, having to do with specific philosophical analyses of experience, and to understand his case one must understand the context in which he makes statements such as "qualia do not exist." — SophistiCat
Also, just to be clear, Dennett is not the pope of physicalism. There are many philosophers making arguments on both sides of the issue, or rather, on many sides of the issue, because there isn't even a general agreement as to what qualia are and what kind of account physicalism owes to them. — SophistiCat
Well. let's see: does the world consist of anything "ontologically" that it does not otherwise consist of? — tim wood
Wittgenstein had a lifelong obsession with solipsism that appears never to have left him before his death. There's some speculation that his worries over privacy, the nonexistence of subjects, and the linguistic inefficacy of private experiences were a result of his poor theory of mind, since he was likely somewhere on the autism spectrum. Early on he even tried to dissolve reference to psychological subjects in belief reports. — The Great Whatever
We share the particularity of our different associations and responses to red, but we fail to quite touch the beetle in the box, because the beetle has been defined to be the purified essence of privacy. We have talked of individuality, of subjectivity, in relation to our response to red, but you want to say that this is not the experience of red: the quale always escapes - by definition. But if you strip out every association, every response, is there in fact anything left, some other, unsharable secret? — unenlightened
But strip away all the associations and responses that we clearly can talk about because we just did, and there seems to me at least, to be nothing left that is the quale itself. The box turns out not to have much of a beetle after all. — unenlightened
It seems that your enquiry has more to do with why we experience colour, rather than how we experience colour. That question could be up there with why anything exists. — Luke
If it's not too late, what exactly do you understand "Metaphysical Position" to mean? — tim wood
What is an example of realist or physicalist / materialist literature in which the reality of biological facts would be rejected? — jkop
What ontology would do that? I suspect you are talking about some ideology passed for "physicalism". — jkop
What exactly do you expect them to learn? Would they be seeing a grey toy truck until they learn to use the word 'red'? :-} I don't think so. — jkop
Being complex and of no interest to fundamental physics isn't a failure to be "real" (Hilary Putnam). — jkop
Talk of physical facts tend to leave out things which are not so relevant in physics, such as biological facts. How is that a problem for "physicalism"? — jkop
She can still acquire it indirectly by other means, via our division of linguistic labour, a use of colour meters and so on. That's how we get to know what things are like in places we haven't experienced ourselves, and a lack of direct experience is no good reason to reject the knowledge. — jkop
Therefore, there are no "physicalists," as you construe them, because no one in their right mind denies having experiences. — SophistiCat
So the hammer is real, but my pain when I hit my finger is not? — Cavacava
So physicalism has a monopoly on the meaning of being a realist? I think Subjectivity has just as much a claim to ontological reality as what is mind independent and but subjective reality cannot be fully reduced to objective/physical reality. — Cavacava
hey might say that certain physical facts cannot be learned by reading a book or listening to someone speak; they must be seen. — Michael