You don't need a justification in order to conclude that you have a headache. it is not the end product of a process of ratiocination.
As if you could justify to us your claim to have a headache by producing for us your pain - as if the pain were not itself the headache.
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
I wonder if you have closely read any one or more of the following of Witty's writings:
• Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus
• Philosophical Investigations
• On Certainty
• Culture and Value
• Remarks on the Foundations of Mathematics
Many of your questions and criticisms of Witty seem derivative of secondary and tertiary mis/readings of (fragments from) the works listed here. — 180 Proof
I'll give you the clues that gave you away:I've been outed. :blush: — TheMadFool
my hunch is, — TheMadFool
Another Wittgensteinian idea I haven't got a handle — TheMadFool
I've been outed. :blush:
— TheMadFool
I'll give you the clues that gave you away:
my hunch is,
— TheMadFool
Another Wittgensteinian idea I haven't got a handle
— TheMadFool
:ok: — Caldwell
If you think you understand quantum mechanics, you don't understand quantum mechanics. — Richard Feynman
let the thing tell us how to grasp it with its ordinary criteria
— Antony Nickles
The word "its" there is odd, though, isn't it? Why isn't it, "our ordinary criteria"? — Srap Tasmaner
We cling to the aspiration for the ideal
— Antony Nickles
* * *
I think language is inherently idealizing, and when we talk about it, we're idealizing the idealizing already there...." — Srap Tasmaner
When we believe that we must find that order, must find the ideal, in our actual language, we become dissatisfied with what are ordinarily called "propositions", "words", "signs". — Witt, PI #105
when [Witt] describes the language-game in which an Important Word has its 'original home' (was that the phrase?) [yes** -A.N.], is not a use devoid of idealization, but how idealization works, and how it can be used to do work. — Srap Tasmaner
When philosophers use a word a “knowledge”, “being”, “object”, “I”, “proposition/sentence”, “name” a and try to grasp the essence of the thing, one must always ask oneself: is the word ever actually used in this way in the language in which it is at [**] home? What we do is to bring words back from their metaphysical to their everyday use. — Witt, PI #116
I'm not convinced by this "clinging" image, or by pointing the finger at our "desire" for certainty, as if the trouble is some psychological quirk. — Srap Tasmaner
We want to say that there can't be any vagueness in logic. The idea now absorbs us, that the ideal 'must' be found in reality. Meanwhile we do not as yet see how it occurs there, nor do we understand the nature of this "must". We think it must be in reality; for we think we already see it there. — Witt, PI #101
This was our paradox: no course of action could be determined by a rule, because any course of action can be made out to accord with the rule. — Ludwig Wittgenstein
Words have definitions;
— Antony Nickles
You so sure? Perhaps, so long as you don't mistake the definition for the use, or for the meaning. — Banno
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
I suppose it's taking away or not mentioning self-awareness, or more precisely in this specific case of pain, it takes away or does not mention our capacity for introspection (conscious perception of sensations from inside the body) of pain. In short: pain is an MIS for the body, a carrier of information that can be reliably acquired, consciously examined and thus in some measure known and recognised as such by the subject. — Olivier5
We cling to the aspiration for the ideal but simply accept that we only "approximate" it, are "relativistic" to it.
— Antony Nickles
What else can we do than try and approach truth? — Olivier5
Consistency.Grant that it is pointless to say, 'i know I have a headache'; is there also something wrong with saying that? Is it, as some suggest, having read LW, a misuse of the word 'know'? — Srap Tasmaner
If you're right people should be saying things like "I have a headache" or "I have a stomachache" even when they don't. After all, according to you, no reasoning is involved. People complain of pain because they are in pain. — TheMadFool
True I can't demonstrate my pain to another but surely I must to myself. However, we have to be careful to distinguish between going through pain and knowing pain. The former is a direct kind of experience (you just have pain) but the latter which involves finding the right word for the experience requires reasoning (you know you have pain). — TheMadFool
By grammar, my hunch is, Wittgenstein is talking about the rules of a given language game. However none of the articles I read on Wittgenstein's theory gives any information on what that actually looks like? What's your take on this matter? — TheMadFool
It seems weird to refer to language-games without reference to correctness, and it seems self-sealing. I can always say someone else's language-game isn't a language-game, because the word is not doing anything. And, in many cases this can be demonstrated, but in other cases, it's not an easy thing to do. Does this mean that there are cases that will never be resolved? Maybe that's just what it means. Is that just the nature of language. It seems to be. This is the point about my post. — Sam26
There has to be some criteria by which we judge correctness here. And yet, nothing is definitive. — Sam26
The rule is ultimately seen in our following it or going against it, Rather than in saying it. The use, not the rule, is the final arbiter.
We add and subtract from the rules. Consider castling, or en passant. A key aspect of a family resemblance is recognising a new cousin, perhaps with not qualities in common with yourself, as a member of your family. (@TheMadFool)
And our language games come together as a form of life. That is, they interact with each other, and with themselves - recursively. hanaH — Banno
The Rule-Following Paradox — TheMadFool
If meaning is use and use is completely arbitrary there are no rules. There's no essence to ground meaning, a rule for word usage. Hence, if someone claims there is a rule then that rule is basically do whatever the hell you want...with words that is. — TheMadFool
I specifically said that knowledge in this case is its sense as awareness (thus sometimes it can not be "reliably acquired" as we are not aware of it, have repressed our pain). And to say "in some measure known" is to be aware of it (in me) and to express (to you). None of this is the sense of knowledge like that of an object. — Antony Nickles
The point here is there is not an essence of a thing (like an object) which we know in the same way as everything else — Antony Nickles
To, clarify: words can be defined, as in, they have that possibility, unlike sentences. — Antony Nickles
Another Wittgensteinian idea I haven't got a handle on is the so-called rule following paradox. — TheMadFool
By grammar, my hunch is, Wittgenstein is talking about the rules of a given language game. However none of the articles I read on Wittgenstein's theory gives any information on what that actually looks like? What's your take on this matter? — TheMadFool
My propositions serve as elucidations in the following way: anyone who understands me eventually recognizes them as nonsensical, when he has used them—as steps—to climb beyond them. (He must, so to speak, throw away the ladder after he has climbed up it.)
He must transcend these propositions, and then he will see the world aright. — Ludwig Wittgenstein
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.