A pigeon can make the same perceptual discrimination. Human perception is of course linguistically scaffolded... — apokrisis
Perception is our way of talking about... — apokrisis
Perception is what we call the generation of sensory experience. — apokrisis
Perception is... ...the mediation. — apokrisis
...perception is the primary mediating step... — apokrisis
Then secondary linguistic habits can mediate... experience. — apokrisis
Because perception mediates, whatever mediation is existentially contingent upon, so too is perception. Mediating requires metacognition. Thus, perception requires metacognition. Metacognition requires written language. Thus, perception requires written language. So, we arrive at the following conclusion:No creature without written language has perception. — creativesoul
Metacognition requires written language
— creativesoul
Citation? Explanation? — apokrisis
↪creativesoul Yeah, I’m just not following your line of argument. — apokrisis
It just means that our physiological sensory perception has limitations and as such doesn't perceive everything. — creativesoul
Not all perception requires language. — creativesoul
However, I find no clear and meaningful distinction on your view with regard to what exactly counts as perception in animals without language... — creativesoul
Animal perception is direct in the sense that they have no choice but to be plugged into the here and now. Their minds are run by their immediate environment and the circumstance it presents. The capacity to detach from that is very limited - even if chimps, dolphins and ravens can do some planning, some abstracting, some deeper level of analysis.
Then humans can completely detach from the world to have a socially-constructed inner world due to the semiotic mechanism of symbolising language. Language creates an epistemic cut. Mentality gets divided into linguistically scaffolded notions of self and world. Consciousness becomes a self-consciously regulated thing. Introspection adds a further internal dimension where a “self” resides.
So it is the epistemic cut, the semiotic machinery of a symbolic code, that makes human mentality and perception indirect compared to the “trapped in the moment” directness of the biological animal mind. — apokrisis
Metacognition is thinking about thought/belief. Prior to thinking about thought/belief there must be something to think about. Thought/belief is prior to metacognition. Prior to thinking about thought/belief there must be a means for doing so. Written language facilitates our ability to isolate our thought/belief and then talk about it by virtue of using the terms "thought" and "belief". The same is true of all mental ongoings and the terms and notions used to take account of those. — creativesoul
Written language allows us to think about our own thought/belief in a way that spoken language alone cannot. Metacognition requires written language. Written language is the means by which we isolate, set aside, and pay attention to our own thought/belief. — creativesoul
...athropologists study hunter-gatherer tribes that rely on oral memory to transmit metacognitive thought habits. There is simple proof your assertions are fallacious. — apokrisis
Unless humans have always been linguistic creatures, it seems to me that there is a progression of complexity at work. — creativesoul
Metacognition is thinking about thought/belief. Prior to thinking about thought/belief there must be something to think about. Thought/belief is prior to metacognition. Prior to thinking about thought/belief there must be a means for doing so. Written language facilitates our ability to isolate our thought/belief and then talk about it by virtue of using the terms "thought" and "belief". The same is true of all mental ongoings and the terms and notions used to take account of those. — creativesoul
, anthropologists study hunter-gatherer tribes that rely on oral memory to transmit metacognitive thought habits. There is simple proof your assertions are fallacious. — apokrisis
But if you want to argue that preliterate hunter gatherers aren’t skilled at transmitting cultural metacognitive thinking via their oral skills, then you show me any such evidence. — apokrisis
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