it takes a critical-reflexion to become objective. — Pantagruel
undertakings for philosophy to (re)engage or come to grips with today — Statilius
It seems to me, that when communicating, how we observe the rules of the language we are using must not be subjective or else we'd be talking past each other or never understand each other. Your experiences with a particular word beyond how you learned how to use it grammatically, or what it refers to, is irrelevant to the situation, which is talking about some state-of-affairs that is the case for everyone whether they agree with it or not (informing). And that if the state-of-affairs you are talking about is your own pondering without any conviction in the statement, you'd use phrases like, "It seems to me", "I believe", "In my opinion", etc. to inform others that you are referring to your mental state and not some state-of-affairs other than a mental state.Perhaps I should clarify: objective form of transmission refers to the general kind of transmission it is, whether written, spoken, signed....stone cairns....whatever. The content of the transmission, whether words, sounds, motions.....whatever, will have its particular form in my faculty of intuition, depending on my experience with them. But yes, in any case, I access that content in whatever the form....kind.... of its transmission, subjectively, as I do with any perception. — Mww
Not only that, but what kind of object is perceiving it, and we are both similar objects, so it stands to reason that there would be similar perceptions of the same object. What the scribbles mean has to do with the rule of the language, and if we both have the same rules, then we are both interpreting the scribbles the same way. I certainly don't claim to know everything about the English language and it is my native language, and I think you would agree the same for you, and that we both may know something that the other doesn't about the English language, so there are bound to be instances where miscommunication occurs.This is correct, hence my clarification. The form the transmission takes has to do with what the transmission becomes (phenomenon, in my mind), the form the transmission has, has to do with what kind of object it is (words, sounds, etc., in the world). — Mww
I agree with everything up to the last sentence. It is a causal process, and that is how I have explained it, but doesn't that mean that similar causes have similar effects? Our similar backgrounds (we're both human beings with similar sensory organs, developed in the same culture, learned the same language, looking at the same object) should lead to similar outcomes in perception and interpretation or else we wouldn't be able to communicate as successfully as we have so far. I mean look at all the scribbles on this screen. What would you say the success rate is in both of us interpreting them the same way so far?Don’t neglect time here. Even a strict physicalist must acknowledge a time delay between the stimulus of sensual contact and the operation of the brain in relation to it. Just because there are pre-existent neural pathways for some particular experience doesn’t negate operational necessity. Philosophically as well, each and every object of perception runs exactly the same gamut of theoretical cognitive procedure, whether there is extant knowledge of it or not. The brain, the hardware, is predicated on the laws of Nature; pure reason, the software, is predicated on the laws of logic, each legislative in their own domain. — Mww
Are you sure that you know immediately that they are words? That was something you had to learn, and the fact that you and I both interpret the scribbles as words says something about how similar our cognizing is. Now, that extra step of then interpreting the word means that now that you have interpreted the scribbles as words rather than some random marks, your cognitive faculties go about referencing the rules for the language, which are the same rules I learned. Like I said, there are going to be some differences in our knowledge of the rules, hence there will be some misunderstandings, but those are a rarity in most everyday uses of the language and only seems to be exacerbated when discussing things like religion, politics and philosophy, where logic is often disregarded and word salad is always on the menu.I bring this up in order to prevent the assumption that as soon as I see your words I know what you mean by them. In fact, all I know immediately, is that there are words, which in and of themselves, for they are merely objects of perception, tell me absolutely nothing about your intentions in the employment of them. — Mww
If the same knowledge wasn't obtained, the the same rules weren't followed. We would both be following different rules. Like I said, any rules you learned other than what a word refers to is irrelevant to the process of communicating, which is what words are for. If you learned that a particular word, or heard a particular word frequently during a stressful time in your life, you may associate a negative connotation with hearing or seeing that word, but that has nothing to do with what that word refers to. That would be an instance where you are confusing two different sets of rules - what the word means (how your reason interprets it) and how you feel about the word (how your emotions interpret it).You’re not cognizing the rules of the language; you’re cognizing the content of language according to rules. This is why theories of knowledge are so complex, because even though all thought is considered to be according to rules, doesn’t mean each instance of it will obtain the same knowledge. It should, but that isn’t the same as it will. Ought is not the same as shall. All thought according to rules can do, is justify its ends, but it cannot attain to absolute truth for them.
The boundaries can be blurred, for sure, but context helps with clarity. They are both qualities, but sometimes what they are qualities of, gets blurry. Subjectivity is pretty cut-and-dried, I think, but objectivity isn’t just about objects. — Mww
[my emphasis] I certainly build from assumptions that might not be correct. I don't want to just lie on the floor and question everything (and certainly not all the time). We build, we do our best.From my point of view, the only thing one can be absolutely sure of is that the present exists. — Cidat
In order to analyse truth you have to start somewhere. That starting point is inherently uncertain. — Cidat
It seems to me that your are starting from a place in certainty when asserting that all starting points are inherently uncertain. — Harry Hindu
How do you know what constitutes certainty? — Cidat
In order to analyse truth you have to start somewhere. That starting point is inherently uncertain. — Cidat
Were you certain when you stated that the starting point is uncertain? — Harry Hindu
Your idea that your starting point is unquestionable is, in itself, an assumption. — Cidat
This is a great example of the misuse of language being used as philosophy.The truth is what we make it. We cannot verify if truth exists or not, what we perceive as truth is just our strong opinion. — Cidat
“Being objective is being truthful, making right judgments is a moral activity, all thinking is a function of morality, it's done by humans, it's touched by values right into its centre . . .” — Statilius
all thinking is a function of morality — Statilius
thinking itself can be pure, without values, like genuine science, like maths — Statilius
there is no such thing as a pure 'is' — Statilius
“all thinking is a function of morality, it's done by humans, it's touched by values right into it's centre, empirical science is no exception” — Statilius
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