Harry Hindu
You were the one that used the word, "isolation" and I was simply trying to get at your meaning of your use of it.I don't really know what you had in mind with the word "isolation". But, unless we say we have only one thought per day, spanning the entirety of the time we're awake and thinking, then, whatever it means, we isolate thoughts all the time. I just ate a salad. You don't need, and surely don't want, to hear all the thoughts surrounding it. My wife gave it to me. She got it last night at a late meeting for her job. Her boss had these meeting every month. He always gets food. but my wife only eats one meal a day, and it is keto, so she never eats at these meetings. For some reason, that bothers her boss. He always wants her to eat, and actually you could say he pressures her to eat. don't know why he feels so strongly about it. Anyway, it's usually pizza or something, and she's not gonna eat it under any circumstances. But last night he got her this nice chef salad, and asked her how that was. She said she would eat it today. She gave it to me instead. My father absolutely loves chef salads. He always says, "That was good! It had everything!" it cracks all of us up. we can go to any restaurant, with the most amazing food in it, and he's darned likely to ask if they have a chef salad.:rofl:
I just ate a salad. — Patterner
Harry Hindu
Look a little deeper and you might find that the boundaries of any thought or process are determined by the present goal in the mind. The boundaries are what make some thought relevant and all the rest irrelevant to the goal, but that does not mean that those other thoughts or processes would not be relevant to some other goal if you had it.That wasn't well-phrased by me. If "a thought" causes another "thought" (countable: one thought, two thoughts...) and it's all "thought" an ongoing process, then we need to divvy up the stream of thought into distinct pieces each of which is "a thought".
Since I came into this thread saying that "sentences" aren't clear expressions of thoughts and thus "I wonder how Ann is doing," isn't a 1:1 expression of thought, it's up to me to say what a thought is and how it's related to its sentence. I tried in this thread, but... it's hard. — Dawnstorm
The point is that you have a reason to second-guess yourself, and I'd be willing to bet its the same reason I do the same, that we have been wrong in the past. Don't worry. This is healthy behavior, unlike many others on this forum that think they know everything and that it is their feelings, or some authority, that determines truth rather than logic.Why do I think this? Am I right? How would I tell the difference? (I actually second-guess myself like that all the time.) — Dawnstorm
Then maybe you should lay out how you came to know what the following scribbles mean: "5+7=" Why would you every return the scribble, "12" when there is nothing inherent in the scribbles themselves as to what they mean or why there is even a relationship between 5+7 and 12.You have to already have learned what the relationship is. Your recognition that 5+7 and 12 mean the same thing is an effect of your prior experiences. If you had never seen those scribbles before your thoughts about them would be different.
— Harry Hindu
Obviously. I'm not sure what to make of this whole paragraph. We're talking past each other. — Dawnstorm
Patterner
I lost track. Dawnstar first used it. I just don't see the difficulty. We can break things up however we want. My father ordering a chef salad in a restaurant is obvious a different thought than my wife's boss's desire to get her to eat at their monthly meetings. We can focus on, as you said, whatever interests us.You were the one that used the word, "isolation" and I was simply trying to get at your meaning of your use of it. — Harry Hindu
Harry Hindu
Well, now you're talking about different minds, not thoughts in the same mind. So yes, I would consider thoughts in different heads different thoughts, but this could just be an outcome of my goal to treat each person as an individual. Are we all separate individuals, or are we only individuals and part of a group when it suits some goal?My father ordering a chef salad in a restaurant is obvious a different thought than my wife's boss's desire to get her to eat at their monthly meetings. We can focus on, as you said, whatever interests us. — Patterner
Patterner
Harry Hindu
That is my point - that it is only in some mind that they are identifiable as different thoughts. The world independent of thoughts does not make any distinctions. It is just a wave of probability, according to some interpretations of QM. Think about our minds as stretching all causal relations into what we refer to as the medium of space-time.I'm not following. In whose mind are my father ordering a chef salad in a restaurant and my wife's boss's desire to get her to eat at their monthly meetings not easily identifiable as different thoughts? — Patterner
Patterner
Certainly. It is only in minds that thoughts exist at all. There is no other place they can be differentiated or isolated.That is my point - that it is only in some mind that they are identifiable as different thoughts. — Harry Hindu
Dawnstorm
Patterner
They are thoughts in the same mind. My mind. I was thinking of the chef salad I was eating; which lead to how I acquired the salad; which led to my wife's boss; and all the thoughts of chef salad brought up thoughts of my father's love of them. Those were all my thoughts; my mind.My father ordering a chef salad in a restaurant is obvious a different thought than my wife's boss's desire to get her to eat at their monthly meetings. We can focus on, as you said, whatever interests us.
— Patterner
Well, now you're talking about different minds, not thoughts in the same mind. — Harry Hindu
Harry Hindu
Philosophy tends to do that - leading you to question things you took for granted only to find out the reason you take it for granted is because the issue was already solved long ago and you "taking it for granted" is you having relegated the process to unconscious thinking, and later in life you participate in runaway philosophical skepticism to bring it back to conscious processing - Why do I believe 5+7 = 12?. What proof is there that 5+7 is 12? You end up discovering that these are actually silly questions precisely because you are trying to solve a problem that was already solved in your grade-school years.So what went wrong? Why are you trying to lead me to things I think are basic? Where's the misunderstanding? What's the problem? I don't know how to reply. I'm confused. — Dawnstorm
Harry Hindu
Yes, but still divided up in your mind depending on your present intention (goal in the mind). As I said before, "It’s our focus, intention, or interpretive stance that ‘collapses’ that field into discrete thoughts or objects." So it isn't just our thoughts that we divvy up - it is the entire world including the people within it.They are thoughts in the same mind. My mind. I was thinking of the chef salad I was eating; which lead to how I acquired the salad; which led to my wife's boss; and all the thoughts of chef salad brought up thoughts of my father's love of them. Those were all my thoughts; my mind. — Patterner
Dawnstorm
Philosophy tends to do that - leading you to question things you took for granted only to find out the reason you take it for granted is because the issue was already solved long ago and you "taking it for granted" is you having relegated the process to unconscious thinking, and later in life you participate in runaway philosophical skepticism to bring it back to conscious processing - Why do I believe 5+7 = 12?. What proof is there that 5+7 is 12? You end up discovering that these are actually silly questions precisely because you are trying to solve a problem that was already solved in your grade-school years.
Are there ideas that we hold, or take for granted, that should be questioned? Sure, but not every idea. — Harry Hindu
Patterner
If I'm following you, the reason for that is that we are incapable of perceiving everything that exists all at the same time, and incapable off perceiving events that have not yet taken place. We perceive what we are able to, when we are able to. So we perceive the entire world including the people in it divvied up, our thoughts are generated in that manner, and we can break them up in that same manner.Yes, but still divided up in your mind depending on your present intention (goal in the mind). As I said before, "It’s our focus, intention, or interpretive stance that ‘collapses’ that field into discrete thoughts or objects." So it isn't just our thoughts that we divvy up - it is the entire world including the people within it. — Harry Hindu
Patterner
Harry Hindu
I don't know. It was a question, not a statement.Do you think I was questioning that 5+7 is 12 in this thread? — Dawnstorm
Harry Hindu
We can't perceive the entire world. We only perceive our local environment and infer that the rest of the world/universe follows the same laws.If I'm following you, the reason for that is that we are incapable of perceiving everything that exists all at the same time, and incapable off perceiving events that have not yet taken place. We perceive what we are able to, when we are able to. So we perceive the entire world including the people in it divvied up, our thoughts are generated in that manner, and we can break them up in that same manner. — Patterner
The thought I had upon reading it was, "what is your point"? I don't know if I would say that you put that thought in my mind. I'd rather say that you caused that thought in my mind, but so did I when I chose to read your post. You might say that the Philosophy Forum is also a cause as all these processes are necessary for me to have a thought about your post.Oh! Here's a good one!
There once was a woman named Bree
Who went for a swim in the sea.
But a man in a punt
Stuck an oar in her eye
And now she's blind, you see
I wonder if anyone got a certain thought in their mind. A thought that has nothing to do with that limerick, but which I, nevertheless, intended you to think.
If it worked, was it because certain thoughts I put in your mind caused it? — Patterner
Patterner
I meant I put the thoughts of the woman swimming in the sea, getting hit in the eye by the oar of a guy in a punt in your mind. I did that by posting it where you would read it. In the event that you then found a certain other thought in your head, which is likely, it's not a coincidence. That's the intent of whoever wrote this limerick, and my intent in posting it here. It caused that certain other thought. The words are arranged in such a way that, without saying anything remotely like what many people think after reading it, they directed your thoughts in a specific way.I don't know if I would say that you put that thought in my mind. I'd rather say that you caused that thought in my mind — Harry Hindu
Harry Hindu
Dawnstorm
So in order for you to explain to me how you know that 5 + 7 is equal to 12, you have to go back to grade school in your mind and try to remember the process of learning what the scribbles mean. If you can't then just ask a teacher how they teach students through memorization and repetition. — Harry Hindu
“Can one J-thought cause another, and if so, is this by virtue of a World 2 relationship, a World 3 relationship, or some combination?” And lurking behind this question is another, broader one, which has also been raised repeatedly here: If causation isn’t a very good model of what happens when we think J-thoughts, then can we come up with a better description, something more contentful than merely “association” or “affinity”? — J
Harry Hindu
So you're saying you were born with the knowledge that 5+7=12?Ask a teacher how they teach? What for? — Dawnstorm
Patterner
I think it's interesting that very little of the visual that the limerick is representing is involved with the goal. But it still does the job. The nature of the first line, and the rhythm and rhyme of the first two make you think the fourth line will rhyme with the third. Combined with the only visual that really matters, an oar being stuck into something, and Bob's your uncle.Well, yeah I did have a visual of what the limerick was representing — Harry Hindu
Manuel
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