It is not incorrigible, because we are often wrong about what we're thinking. — Marty
I'm not sure why I could not be wrong in principle. No logical contradiction there. It is at least not logically necessarily. — Marty
Well, let's say you find yourself having a red experience via. introspection. It's right there in front of you, you can point to it and refer to it as you are having it. Is it possible for you to not actually have a red experience when you are in this state of mind? — Mr Bee
Indirect, because we only have mediated access to our own mind. Much like our access about the world. — Marty
because we are often wrong about what we're thinking. — Marty
Knowledge by acquaintance might be indubitable, and I put an emphasis on might, because I see no reason not to reduce it to a trick of language masquarading as knowledge, but even if it is so, it is also completely useless. — Akanthinos
The second is that, given a leeway on the language, one could very well say that reports of experiences of red absent of an object that could possibly give a red qualia are cases of false reports of experiences of red. — Akanthinos
The positive criterion you listed are taken out of Descartes or Brentano. Good food for thought, I have an immense respect for Brentano despite disagreing with nearly everything he ever said about, well, everything. Husserl was better when he was closer to Brentano. But anyhow, you shouldn't limit youserlf to this limited selection of authors on philosophy of mind. They were, after all, wrong on about 98% of what they wrote about. — Akanthinos
Not sure what you mean by "trick of language" here, — Mr Bee
I don't think our knowledge of our experience is useless at all. Pretty much everything we know about the world grounds out in facts about our experience. We are able to infer the existence of an external world from the sensations that we have that suggest it is there. Science is based upon empirical observation, which derives knowledge from the things we perceive. IMO, it is because facts about what is directly in front of us (subjectively speaking) are so certain that we use it as the foundation for understanding the world. — Mr Bee
Is it possible for one to have a red experience without a "red" object in front of them? If a neuroscientist were to stimulate the parts of my brain that represent a red experience resulting in me feeling like there is a red experience in part of my vision, does that mean that my report about a red experience in that part of my visual field is false? — Mr Bee
I certainly agree with that sentiment that the vast majority of what these authors write is hogwash (at least for Descartes mainly, though I can't really blame him given the time he lived in), but I think the cogito is one of the few exceptions to the rule. — Mr Bee
Acquaintance of an object can never tell you anything about the external world, because those statements about the world are not propositions about knowledge by acquaintance, but propositions about knowledge by description. It doesn't put you in contact with the objectivity, or the objectuality, or materiality, it puts you in contact with something and you know that you have a direct cognitive relation with that something. — Akanthinos
The other reason can be expressed through a thought experiment used to challenge Russell's position on knowledge by acquaintance ; the spotted chicken scenario. Say you are looking at a spotted chicken. It has 47 spots on the side that you can see. Does your knowledge by acquaintance of the chicken and its spots justify the belief that you are looking at the 47-spotted chicken? More than likely not, since almost anyone will readily admit that it's likely there's at least a few spots that could be hidden from my view. — Akanthinos
Well, what's the epistemological use of the Cogito, really? — Akanthinos
Considering that one does not have immediate access to all their memories at once, in virute of what is there this distance between our memories and awareness (self-consciousness)? But such a distance seems to require mediation. So we obviously don't have direct access to all of our minds.
As well: what would "immediate" realization even look like? Do we mean intuitions without concepts, or with concepts? If the prior, what are intuitions without conceptions? If the later, it seems as though this require mediation. But this seems to evoke distance. — Marty
You mean the problem of the speckled hen? — Mr Bee
I think that scenario describes something different from what you're saying. It says that even though we are directly acquainted with certain visual experiences such as an image of a hen with 47 speckles, we are either not aware of or even justified in our belief that we are having that sort of experience. It's a problem for the idea of knowledge by acquaintance in that it seems to suggest that there are limitations to what we can know from experience. — Mr Bee
Apart from that, if what you want to say is that such an experience in itself is not sufficient to conclude that there is a chicken with only 47 spots in front of us, then I can agree with that. — Mr Bee
The cogito itself? I suppose not very much, but I think the thinking behind the cogito is useful when applied to experience in general (and not just facts about the self). — Mr Bee
Memory is jyst there and it's basically being filtered for the task at hand by the mind. There is no separation. It is all one.
Immediate is what we feel as the passage of time. — Rich
I disagree on this. The Cogito is interesting from an epistemologist point-of-view. I see very little general purpose to it. In fact, pretty much none. — Akanthinos
Except there is very obviously a seperation between memory states and conscious states.
I also dispute the idea that saying "immediate is what we feel as the passage of time" is in any meaningful. My feeling of time is anything but immediate in many situations : when I sleep, when I day dream, when my time is related too strictly to a task...
12 minutes ago ReplyShareFlag — Akanthinos
Yes, but what I meant was that the cogito is based upon our certain knowledge of our direct experience. Knowing that "I think" is the same as knowing that I am having a red experience where both are being directly had by us. — Mr Bee
When you sleep or in other states time changes because memory changes. Science had no explanation at all for how ir why the feeling of time changes. The mind is clearing experiencing a change in the type of memory it is pulling from. — Rich
I'm sorry I don't follow. What changes in memory? — Akanthinos
Perception of actions both internal (imagination) and external (will). — Rich
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.