That concern [the sense of avoidance of something true] is not irrelevant to the discussion.... — Srap Tasmaner
1. I'm experiencing this particularly unpleasant throbbing sensation in my head, H.
2. H is, from my interaction with others, an ache.
Ergo,
3. I have a headache.
Statement 3 is a proposition, which in this case, is justfiably true. Therefore, I know I have a headache. — TheMadFool
TMF's statement does not need a context--that's been the point (above). Every word has a meaning, so no context is needed — Antony Nickles
Tylenol? Aspirin? Pain medication. They seem to work for everybody as if everybody's pain is the same. — TheMadFool
I said that TMF's comment already had a context: that in which the comment was made. There was no need to try and find another context for it, other than you wanting to avoid dealing with TMF's point, that feeling is knowing. — Olivier5
@StreetlightX "I'm surprised no one commented on your comment ["I know I have a headache! You don't need to remind me!"... the point of the rebuke [is] not an affirmation of my cognitive understanding of my state of being] which is very important in terms of the use of the word know. Moreover, the negation of, "I know I have a headache" - is an important juxtaposition that points to something important about how we go about affirming that we DO know. — Sam26
You can of course say, "I know I have a headache" - but are you saying something about knowing? — StreetlightX
TMF's statement does not need a context--that's been the point (above). Every word has a meaning, so no context is needed
— Antony Nickles
That is not what I wrote. — Olivier5
There was no need to try and find another context for it, other than you wanting to avoid dealing with TMF's point, that feeling is knowing. — Olivier5
Try and pay attention, I hate repeating myself. — Olivier5
Tylenol? Aspirin? Pain medication. They seem to work for everybody as if everybody's pain is the same. The beetle, in this case at least, each of us has in our private box is identical...or not? — TheMadFool
To the extent my pain goes away with the same medication, my pain is the same as your pain (as it were, essentially--a grammatical claim on the sense of "sameness" as it relates to sensations). They are the same pain but in two separate bodies (as color can be the same on two separate objects)--this is the fundamental fact that makes expression and acceptance the grammar of sensations. — Antony Nickles
I guess so but I have a feeling the word "grammar" has a rather unconventional meaning in your post and Wittgenstein's writings if he ever uses it. — TheMadFool
there is no exact definition that will convey every possible use in our language. — Sam26
there is no easy method for determining what looks like a language-game from that which IS a language-game — Sam26
There has to be some criteria by which we judge correctness here. And yet, nothing is definitive. — Sam26
You've missed my whole point. I guess I didn't explain it well enough — Sam26
not just any use conveys meaning — Sam26
Maybe there just isn’t any precision here. It’s just like the command, “Stand here!” There is no X that marks the spot, but this response can’t be satisfying, at least not to me. — Sam26
Well yes — Antony Nickles
Then it's no longer language language is it? — TheMadFool
When I read the word "grammar" in Wittgenteinian philosophy I immediately think language but when I dig deeper it's got a technical meaning that has nothing to do with grammar in the linguistic sense. I fear the so-called linguistic turn, true to Wittgenstein's own pronouncements, is in name only. — TheMadFool
He is not looking at language itself — Antony Nickles
Don't mistake the finger pointing at the moon for the moon. — Some Guy
why does he feel he has to make this statement? — Antony Nickles
at what point is your knowledge not just your expression? — Antony Nickles
I don't think name-calling got us anywhere previously, and I also think condescension is inappropriate. — Antony Nickles
Before we even look at what my pain is, much less how pain is meaningful/how it works, we want to be sure I cannot fail to know myself, that there is something essential in my experience, so we manufacture a picture that can meet those requirements. This is the creation of Plato's forms, Descartes' god, Marx's proletariat, Ayer's statements that are only true or false, and positivism's correspondence picture of the world (in response to which Wittgenstein is trying to find out in the PI why we are driven to think this way). — Antony Nickles
However, language-games are only language-games if they are language-games proper.... But, understanding which language-games are THE language-games, i.e., those language-games that are language-games proper, is what’s most difficult to discern. .. how does one know if a particular language-game is correct or not. — Sam26
It doesn't seem to be easily resolvable. — Sam26
This [that Witt is not looking at language itself], I suspect, is your interpretation. — TheMadFool
From what I read from SEP, no one seems to have a handle on what Wittgenstein really meant to convey. — TheMadFool
why does he feel he has to make this statement?
— Antony Nickles
You were proposing that sensations are felt, but not known, and he thought that it was incorrect, so he told you... — Olivier5
at what point is your knowledge not just your expression?
— Antony Nickles
Before I express it. — Olivier5
What's leading somewhere though, is paying attention to what others are saying — Olivier5
So the biggest error in your para above is ["we want to be sure I cannot fail to know myself"]. We will always fail at understanding ourselves completely. — Olivier5
But just because absolute certainty and truth is beyond grasp does not mean that we cannot approximate truth here or there. — Olivier5
why this is the statement that he feels he needs to make, such as that, say, my categorizing our relationship with pain as expression takes away having something fixed and constant about ourselves. — Antony Nickles
We cling to the aspiration for the ideal but simply accept that we only "approximate" it, are "relativistic" to it. — Antony Nickles
By analogy, if you’re not using your words in accord with the rules of the language-game, then you’re not doing anything with your words – your words lack meaning. — Sam26
let the thing tell us how to grasp it with its ordinary criteria — Antony Nickles
We cling to the aspiration for the ideal — Antony Nickles
If I say: "bad means good", is that in accord with or contrary to the rules of the language game? That depends on the language game is being played. A musician might understand what it means if someone says "that guy's a bad mofo", but someone unfamiliar with the language game might well think it means something very different. — Fooloso4
Statement 3 is a proposition, which in this case, is justfiably true. Therefore, I know I have a headache. — TheMadFool
Words have definitions; — Antony Nickles
The objection here is not that you do not have a pain - that, for you, is certain. It's that "I know I am in pain" is like "I know I have an iPhone". — Banno
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