Here we have a problem in the way you've laid this out. If expressing a pain is a physical reaction, then that requires it have a physical initiate (otherwise Newtons laws of thermodynamics have been broken). Yet with an intrinsically private experience (ie one that is not accessible even to suitably advanced neuroscience) I can't see how it could cause such an initiation. — Isaac
It seems that you could then turn around your claim above to say "people can experience your tokens of pain, via your expressions of pain" — Isaac
Well, if you think a token is an experience, one of us is wrong. — Banno
SO here's another example of tokens:
"Rose is a rose is a rose"
The first "Rose" is one of three tokens.
— Banno
You agree?
Suppose you and I are both looking at that sentence.
We both see it. I hope you will agree that there are 2 people, but one token - the first instance of "Rose".
So here we have two experiences of the very same token - the first instance of "Rose". This is a counterexample to your: If there are two of them, then they are not the same token. — Banno
If there are two of them... — Banno
I hope you will agree that there are 2 people, but one token - the first instance of "Rose". — Banno
So here we have two experiences of the very same token - the first instance of "Rose". — Banno
The (instance of Banno's typing the) word is one token, but our individual experiences of (seeing) the word are two tokens. — Luke
"Rose is a rose is a rose"
The first "Rose" is one of three tokens.
We both see it. Are you saying there are two of them? — Banno
"Rose is a rose is a rose"
The first "Rose" is one of three tokens.
We both see it. Are you saying there are two of them? — Banno
2 people, one token. — Banno
What can happen is for 2 people to have identical experiences. You can define it so that that is the same experience token or not. — khaled
Perhaps Salinas felt the pain just as his patient did. — Banno
No two things are exactly alike, ever. Pain's not unique in this respect. No two phones are exactly alike either, but we still refer to them as 'the same' phone - "Oh look, you've got the same phone as me". We seem to be constructing this arbitrary wall around feelings when their intrinsic differences between people are no more than the particular scratches on your phone that are not on mine. If we share the same make and model we happily say we have 'the same' phone. — Isaac
The type–token distinction is the difference between naming a class (type) of objects and naming the individual instances (tokens) of that class...
The sentence "they drive the same car" is ambiguous. Do they drive the same type of car (the same model) or the same instance of a car type (a single vehicle)? Clarity requires us to distinguish words that represent abstract types from words that represent objects that embody or exemplify types. The type–token distinction separates types (abstract descriptive concepts) from tokens (objects that instantiate concepts).
For example: "bicycle" represents a type: the concept of a bicycle; whereas "my bicycle" represents a token of that type: an object that instantiates that type. — Wikipedia
I get the sense you would prefer to reject subjective experience from your explanations entirely.
— Luke
What other kinds of experience are there? — unenlightened
Feelings are intrinsically private and unshareable only in the sense that I can't have yours and you can't have mine.
— Luke
But as I said earlier. That's not a property of the feelings.
— Isaac
Then what is it a property of?
— Luke
You. The things you possess are a property fo you (and the law of the country you live in, when it comes to stuff not part of your body). The feeling 'pain' doesn't have the property {belongs to Luke}. How could it? — Isaac
There's a feeling 'pain' in your body when you stub your toe, there's one in my body when I stub mine. The feeling 'pain' hasn't been changed in any way by whose body it's in, it's just a conceptual collection of worldly events (nociceptor activity, yelling, cringing, defence reflex etc...). When those events are centred on your body, it's your pain, when they're centred on my body it's my pain, but the collection of events that constitute 'pain' is a cultural, linguistic fact, it's not yours or mine. What 'pain' is is determined by the loose collection of events we're collectively prepared to accept to qualify for a use of the term. The props. They belong the the language community, not any individual. — Isaac
Perhaps it should be clarified that what is private is having the feeling and what is shareable is expressing the feeling, and that these are not the same thing.
— Luke
Right. Same with noses. Having a nose is not the same as talking about a nose. But noses are not private as a consequence. Your nose is not the same as my nose. But noses are still not private as a consequence. — Isaac
That's not a property of the feelings. — Isaac
Say I have a feeling X. I show you, using body-language, speech etc. You now know I have feeling X, you may even have feeling X too by the action of your mirror neurons. We've shared feeling X. So is feeling X inter-subjective now? That seems to leave the distinction between subjective and inter-subjective one of arbitrary historical record. — Isaac
EDIT:
I experience something, I call it the world; I don't call it having an experience.
Is that any clearer? — unenlightened
Thus I am wearing a red fleece today, "The fleece is red", not "my experience is red". — unenlightened
Your experience is the world, or is of the world?
— Luke
I don't understand the distinction. I don't imagine I experience the whole world all at once, if that's what you mean. — unenlightened
I experience, I call it the world; I don't call it having an experience. — unenlightened
Maybe intersubjectivity also requires an element of understanding rather than mere expression (or sharing).
— Luke
Then wouldn't that be problematic for the idea that such feelings are intrinsically private? — Isaac
I experience, I call it the world; I don't call it having an experience. — unenlightened
I still wouldn't be talking about "my experience of red" as if it were something similar or different to "your experience of red"...
What is the experience of red of someone who is colourblind but does not know it? — unenlightened
So you seem back to intrinsically private again. If subjectivity is not the cause of a thing being intrinsically private, then what is? — Isaac
Odd. So there could be something publicly shared yet which is entirely subjective? I'm not following you. — Isaac
Like phones. My phone is 'my' phone entirely by virtue of whose legal possession it is in, no property of the actual phone. Your pain is 'your' pain entirely by virtue of whose mind it is in, not any property of the actual pain. — Isaac
So what on earth would 'intersubjective' mean? Something which takes place in multiple minds at once? Not sure where that model leaves intersubjectivity. — Isaac
have you ever seen red by itself?
What would that be like? Just the one colour over your entire visual field? — Banno
no one has "an experience of red", they merely experience things as red — unenlightened
How can you say what is normal or abnormal without comparing subjectivities? — unenlightened
You cannot have normal and abnormal private worlds — unenlightened
Always a good argument> if you disagree with me you must be mad! — unenlightened
Yep. That's the bit I saw as circular; because your definition of individual persons contained their ability to feel pain as one of the defining factors. So you end up with "pains are subjective because they're in the list of things which are subjective". — Isaac
Why are persons defined by their ability to feel pain, but not by their having noses? — Isaac
I see. Doesn't that open you up a little to Banno's complaints that
you cannot therefore use the privacy of pain as evidence for subjectivism - at least, not without a vicious circularity.
— Banno — Isaac
You've defined 'subjectivity' in terms that assume the existence of subjective properties (conscious awareness, rational thought, sensory perception, and the ability to feel pain), so we can't then prove something like pain is subjective. It's just in the list there, the list of things you associate with subjectivity. It would be tantamount to saying "pain is subjective because it's in the list of things which are subjective". — Isaac
I can only have my phone and you can only have your phone. That's there in the definition of 'my' and 'yours'. But we don't say phones are subjective. — Isaac
If I have a pain and you have a pain, they're unlikely to be the same whole experience, granted. — Isaac
I don't see where you end with with subjective meanings. — Isaac
I cannot experience anybody else's pain and nobody else can experience my pain.
— Luke
The expression “I feel your pain” can only be figurative. In empathy one can only feel one’s own pain, even if it is expressed or felt for others.
— Luke
Imagine we agree about this. You me and Banno. How is that not intersubjective? — unenlightened
Imagine I don't think I have my own pain, and Banno thinks he has your pain. Are these our private subjectivities, about which no disagreement is possible? — unenlightened
... and there's the expected ad hoc hypothesis.
Ok, that renders your view irrefutable; you've just defined pain as a private sensation.
The twist is, you cannot therefore use the privacy of pain as evidence for subjectivism - at least, not without a vicious circularity. — Banno
Unless we were one and the same person in this scenario, then we would each be feeling our own individual pains, even if they both occurred at the same time, both occurred in the same locations in each of our bodies, and felt qualitatively the same to each of us. — Luke
