My belief is that consciousness develops alongside improving language. — Tim3003
Daniel Stern in his book The Interpersonal World of the Infant proposed a theory of emerging Self and related states of developing consciousness -Is a new-born baby conscious? — Tim3003
There are different states of consciousness, where individuals are able to do well withoutwithout language that is the limit of our capabilities. — Tim3003
This is correct. Self-awareness is a linguistic habit that evolves culturally. We are socially constructed as individual beings. Check out Vygotskian psychology or symbolic interactionism for the arguments.
So this is something that is not widely believed or appreciated. Yet within social psychology, it just pretty obvious. — apokrisis
understand what that means for the relationship between consciousness and language. — Harry Hindu
If self-awareness is a linguistic habit, people that speak the same language would have the same sense of self, but that isn't the case. — Harry Hindu
If self-awareness is a linguistic habit, then at what point in our learning a language do we become self-aware? What words or grammar rules trigger this self-awareness? — Harry Hindu
It seems to me that we use language to point to what is already there. "Consciousness" and "awareness" are just scribbles that refer to these things that exist prior to our labeling them for communicating. — Harry Hindu
Babies are discovering their bodies and how to control them after just a couple of months - well before any linguistic abilities arise. — Harry Hindu
Dogs don't run from their own bark, or jump at feeling themselves bite their itch. They can distinguish between their own bodies and actions and others. — Harry Hindu
There are just different levels, or degrees, of self-awareness that result from differences in brain structure, not from differences in language. — Harry Hindu
As a child gains language skills and begins to master the application of word labels to everyday concepts, the technique of conceptualisation in the mind grows and develops. It is only when a child knows what ‘I’ means, plus what ‘you’ means, and what ‘am’ means that Descartes’ words: ‘I think, therefore I am’ become meaningful. Or: ‘I think, therefore I realise I am’ in this context. With this realisation consciousness is born, and the self can start to be constructed around the kernel. The improving ability to reason and communicate using the constructs of language is what allows its birth and growth. — Tim3003
If I was the only person to exist, I would still have self-awareness because I can make the distinction between environment and my body, just like every other animal.Not so. The claim would be that it is sharing the same culture which results in sharing the same style of selfhood. Language in a general fashion allows culture to even exist. But simply speaking English doesn't mean there aren't then many national and regional styles of selfhood and self-regulation.
So the point is that language enables that leap - the one to a cultural level of semiotic organisation. Individuals can now learn to take the collective social view of the psychological fact of their own existence as "conscious beings". Awareness of self is awareness of self as an individual actor within a collective social setting.
But every language serves that purpose. And every culture can then write its own version of the script. A Japanese sense of self can be quite different from an American one - or at least to the degree that American culture hasn't overtaken the traditional Japanese mindset. — apokrisis
There is plenty of research on the development of self-regulation in children if you are interested in the characteristic stages. But you are pushing for a simplistic reading of the argument. If a self-aware style of cognition is something learnt, then there is no fixed moment when it clicks into place. It is always something that is developing.
Words and grammar just give access to this new world of possibility.
And long before infants have any mastery of speech, they are already embedded in a world where they are being treated as psychological individuals - especially if they are middle-class and Western. A social demand is being placed on them. So the learning of the way to think is already begun. — apokrisis
And they react to their image in the mirror as if it were another dog or cat. This is because their sense of vision is not as keen as their sense of smell or hearing. Could you be aware of yourself by smell alone? Could you be aware of yourself without any sensations at all except for having a language? Are computers self-aware as they know languages?Well when it comes to dogs and cats, their tails often seem to have a mind of their own. And also get chased and attacked like a foreign object. :) — apokrisis
There are vast differences between chimp and human brains, however chimps communicate in their own way. They still have a sense of self without a language. It just isn't on the level of human self-awareness because of brain structure, not because of their vocal tract.If that were so, you would be able to point to the vast differences between chimp and human brains. — apokrisis
Still no reaction to this, eh? Idefonso wasn't surprised that he had a self when he learned a language. He was surprised that there are shared symbols that he can use to communicate his self's ideas, wants and needs.https://vimeo.com/72072873
I have used The Man Without Words as evidence that people are conscious without language many times on these forums and it is ignored. People just want to believe what they want and ignore all evidence to the contrary. It is nice to see that at least someone else has seen the same thing and understand what that means for the relationship between consciousness and language. — Harry Hindu
My dog is awake, sentient and able to respond to environmental stimuli, plus her own urges, however she is not conscious as I mean it here. — Tim3003
It looks like you try to represent one particular moment in human history as the universal one. In the vast majority of known cultures “awareness of self as an individual actor” never existed. It is a relatively new Western invention.Individuals can now learn to take the collective social view of the psychological fact of their own existence as "conscious beings". Awareness of self is awareness of self as an individual actor within a collective social setting.
But every language serves that purpose. — apokrisis
Even in our individualistic culture, acquiring language and saying I do not necessarily mean that self automatically begin possessing mirroring – spectating qualities. No doubt, that “I” is socially generated and effectuated, but the equation “I am the other” should never be taken for granted.We say, there "I" go, experiencing certain qualia, having certain thoughts, feeling certain things.
Our mentality shifts up to a sociocultural level where everything is happening to a spectating self - a self that is understood as a contrast to the collective. We now see ourselves living in a world of the like-minded, and so see ourselves as "one of that kind of thing". — apokrisis
Language doesn't make us self aware. It allows us to express what is already there. It allows us to express ourselves in greater detail and with better efficiency than simply using hand signals and noises. — Harry Hindu
Definitely, babies have kind of selfhood before learning a language. Psychologists even differentiate few different selves, acquired by a preverbal child. Accordingly, we can propose the existence of various kinds of self-awareness. Yet, it would be a mistake to underestimatewe have selfhood prior to learning a language. Words and grammar simply allow us to use shared symbols to refer to what is already there. — Harry Hindu
It looks like you try to represent one particular moment in human history as the universal one. In the vast majority of known cultures “awareness of self as an individual actor” never existed. It is a relatively new Western invention. — Number2018
I have had some remarkably aware pets, dogs and cats - and a friend has a parrot. I'm persuaded that any statement as to the reduced capacity of any animal is suspect on the face of it. Perhaps animals have specialized concepts and understandings, like Eskimos with snow, that most of us have no inking of, and they think we're stupid. Granted I can read a book. But I cannot read a forest through my nose.My dog is awake... is not conscious as I mean it here. — Tim3003
Still no reaction to this, eh? — Harry Hindu
Schaller found herself in a class for ‘Reading skills’ that was little more than a warehouse for all the deaf students...
"I went to the door to walk out and was actually turning the handle to leave, when I see this man who looked so frightened. He was holding himself as if he were wearing a straightjacket. He was backed up in a corner, protecting himself. I saw that he was studying mouths, he was studying people. Even though he was frightened, he was still watching: what is happening, what is happening?"
...One problem for Schaller’s efforts was that Ildefonso’s survival strategy, imitation, actually got in the way of him learning how to sign because it short-circuited the possibility of conversation. As she puts it, Ildefonso acted as if he had a kind of visual echolalia (we sometimes call it ‘echopraxia’), simply copying the actions he saw:
"He’d just try to form signs and copy what I was doing. But his facial expression was always, is this what I’m supposed to do?"
All of a sudden, this twenty-seven-year-old man-who, of course, had seen a wall and a door and a window before-started pointing to everything. He pointed to the table. He wanted me to sign table. He wanted the symbol. He wanted the name for table. And he wanted the symbol, the sign, for window.
The amazing thing is that the look on his face was as if he had never seen a window before. The window became a different thing with a symbol attached to it. [emphasis added, GD] But it’s not just a symbol. It’s a shared symbol. He can say “window” to someone else tomorrow who he hasn’t even met yet! And they will know what a window is. There’s something magical that happens between humans and symbols and the sharing of symbols.
That was his first “Aha!” He just went crazy for a few seconds, pointing to everything in the room and signing whatever I signed. Then he collapsed and started crying, and I don’t mean just a few tears. He cradled his head in his arms on the table and the table was shaking loudly from his sobbing.
"It’s another frustration that Ildefonso doesn’t want to talk about it. For him, that was the dark time. Whenever I ask him, and I’ve asked him many, many times over the years, he always starts out with the visual representation of an imbecile: his mouth drops, his lower lip drops, and he looks stupid. He does something nonsensical with his hands like, “I don’t know what’s going on.” He always goes back to “I was stupid.”
It doesn’t matter how many times I tell him, no, you weren’t exposed to language and… The closest I’ve ever gotten is he’ll say, “Why does anyone want to know about this? This is the bad time.” What he wants to talk about is learning language."
Hmm. Telling, hey? — apokrisis
Would a person from the 19 century be able to orient and perform in our digital society? This has nothing to do with self awareness. It is more to do with adapting to, or responding to, the environment you find your self in.Your main argument is that Idefonso was able to fulfill essential human social functions. But what about more complicated ones? Could he successfully orient and perform in our digital society? — Number2018
Hmm. Telling, hey? — apokrisis
All he is describing is a change in himself, not that the change was that he discovered himself. — Harry Hindu
He says that "I" changed and "I" was stupid. Which shows that he had an "I" before language that was different. — Harry Hindu
It would be a mistake to represent acquiring language by babies as the result of fulfilling a recognized need. (Does a child grows up because she wants to become an adult?) And, in the first stages, the acquired language is too weak to serve as a simple mean of communication. So, your point is just a simplifying presentation of the real process of acquiring language as well as the use of language by adults. Yet, you are right that the existence of preverbal self is an absolutely necessary condition. The preverbal self possesses self-awareness and means of communicating with others. A non-verbal child or adult can be aware of her inner states and differentiate them from other minds, as well as inform them through gestures, facial expressions, etc. So, what is the main difference between a non-verbal awareness and mediated by language consciousness? Verbalized thinking, or so-called inner speech does not necessary have explicated grammatical and syntactic structure.You can only find a language useful if you already are aware of your self as seperate from others and that others have seperate minds need to be informed of something that you know but they don't. When we realize that other people have minds too, we find language useful. — Harry Hindu
My aim for this discussion was the genesis of consciousness: And clearly one of the problems with discussing consciousness is in defining what exactly it is. We all have our own slightly different shade of grey here. I am going to state my definition: it is the understanding and acceptance of the concept 'I think, therefore I am'. — Tim3003
Wrong. That isn't what I said. Every time I used the string of symbols, "what is already there" in this thread, I was saying that we use language to refer to what is already there - the self. I never said that the self doesn't ever change. That would be absurd.However, you've been consistently arguing that the acquisition of linguistic abilities doesn't change "what is already there" regarding the structure and nature of the self but rather merely enables the subject to communicate it or express herself with words. — Pierre-Normand
Again, if you go back and re-read my previous post, you will see that I made the argument that learning a language is just another experience we have that changes us. Every time we acquire knowledge of some sort it changes us (our selves), and if we have a complex system of communication then we can create new words to refer to those new things, just like how languages have evolved to reflect our new knowledge. Think about the change humanity went through in how it viewed itself when we realized the Earth wasn't the center of the universe and that we weren't separate from animals.The acquisition of language changed what was already there, in a fairly radical way, and went far beyond the mere enabling of the communication of it. It changed what was there to be communicated. — Pierre-Normand
Language is a tool. Tools are only useful to you when you are aware of the problem the tool is used for. The problem for Iledefonso wasn't that he couldn't communicate. It's just that he couldn't use language to communicate. Language makes more complex ideas communicable.He can say that now .... retrospectively. Equipped with a language that is suitably tensed. — apokrisis
And the surprising thing about his reply was how indescribable that language-less and unnarrated past state was to him.
But then that is not so surprising. Our own autobiographical memories only start to form about the time we really begin to master the habit of self-narrative talk and self-regulatory thought. So before the age of about three, we don't have a narrative style of memory. We weren't able to organise our experience so it was telling a running story about our "self". — apokrisis
If he can use facial expressions and hand gestures to communicate "I was stupid.", then obviously one can communicate this state of affairs without language. Language is just agreed-upon visual scribbles and sounds (and braille for the blind). We could use any assortment of visuals, sounds, or tactile sensations to represent some thing or state of affairs. We can create a narrative with any kind of symbol system, not just language."It’s another frustration that Ildefonso doesn’t want to talk about it. For him, that was the dark time. Whenever I ask him, and I’ve asked him many, many times over the years, he always starts out with the visual representation of an imbecile: his mouth drops, his lower lip drops, and he looks stupid. He does something nonsensical with his hands like, “I don’t know what’s going on.” He always goes back to “I was stupid.”
A child does grow up because she wants to become an adult. You're separating the will of the body from the will of the mind. They are one and the same.It would be a mistake to represent acquiring language by babies as the result of fulfilling a recognized need. (Does a child grows up because she wants to become an adult?) And, in the first stages, the acquired language is too weak to serve as a simple mean of communication. — Number2018
Language is a tool. — Harry Hindu
Language makes more complex ideas communicable. — Harry Hindu
I dont see how that follows.Language is a tool.
— Harry Hindu
I can see you are emotionally attached to your dismissive position. — apokrisis
The rest of your post doesn't reject anything I've said — Harry Hindu
If you go back and look at the video between about 14:00 and 18:00, you'll see that had ideas about himself and even goes about describing his gardening at a hospital and his relationship with his boss. — Harry Hindu
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