We don't need to reify the self as then a thing. It is no more than the complementary part of a single (sign relation/epistemic cut) process. — apokrisis
↪Janus
Then I do not agree with your assumption that there is a something it is like to see. — Banno
I said that our experience seems direct. We cannot be wrong about its seeming direct. — Janus
Heh. The right epistemic algorithm has been discovered. It is the dichotomy or dialectic. The "truth" is approached asymptotically in two directions. Or rather it emerges within the bounds of two complementary limits. — apokrisis
What exactly do you mean to say here? If it only seems direct, then your position appears to be that it is not direct - it justseems so. — apokrisis
So your heightened notion of subjectivity - defined in opposition to a counter notion of objectivity - depends on a learnt stance. — apokrisis
So, in short there is something it is like for me to see, and that is not an assumption, but something experienced. — Janus
You are arguing that the seeing is done by the "me". I am arguing that the "me" is produced by the seeing. — apokrisis
I suspect that truth is too subtle - or too simple - to be trapped in an algorithm. — Banno
You are referred to as apokrisis; it is true that you are referred to as apokrisis. That's not something that is approached asymptotically; it's just true. — Banno
One might be tempted to treat all justifications, beliefs and hence knowledge as approached asymptotically. — Banno
But even here there are things that we do not doubt, That this conversation is in English; that I have two hands with which to type - these are things taken as being undoubted, as certain. — Banno
That we take things as undoubted is merely pragmatism.
On logical grounds, they could be doubted - even if you would be right that doubt would seem strained. To assert A is certain requires that not-A was at least a possibility. And if it was a possibility, then the possibility of doubt remains. — apokrisis
There has to be a "me" to tell the story to in the first place, otherwise no story can be told. — Janus
The seeing of things has the quality of directness; to ask whether it is "really" direct is a malformed question. — Janus
Yes, but doubts should at least be interesting. — Janus
No this me just is immediate awareness, immediate feeling. it is the feeling upon which everything else is constructed.
You are still overthinking it. — Janus
Deception requires intent. We cannot intend to deceive ourselves. There is no such thing as self-deception.
You're chasing a chimera...
— creativesoul
Sure we do. What are delusions if not intended beliefs that are meant to cover up the truth that is so depressing? — Harry Hindu
...it's completely incoherent to 'imagine' the way in which another person exists. A category error. — antinatalautist
Well, for starters we need to realize that the very notion of 'self-deception' is self-contradictory. It doesn't really make any sense when placed under careful scrutiny. I mean think about it differently for a minute. What sense does it make to say that we deliberately set out in order to trick ourselves into believing something that we don't?
— creativesoul
I haven't said we do it deliberately. — Janus
If one sets out with the deliberate intention of figuring out what they're mistaken about, they must consult others.
— creativesoul
Sure I read books and listen to others; and have gained a lot from doing so; I have never denied that. On the other hand I have participated in these forums long enough to know that almost nobody changes their existential beliefs on account of someone else's rational arguments. For sure others may point out things I haven't considered; it happens all the time, but that is something different.
No one has pointed out anything to me, in this thread at least, that I have found convincing enough to seriously question my own intuitions about my own experience. My own experience is the final arbiter. And I think that is how it should be with everyone; they should listen not to authorities or rational arguments, but to their own conscience to try to discover whether they are deceiving themselves in any way. I'm talking here about existential understanding of course, not about science or other academic disciplines. — Janus
Having feelings associated with it is what it means to say that there is something it is like to see. — Janus
So, it is navigating through those self-deceptive tendencies that we all have, while never failing to recognize that we can never be certain of anything, that is what wisdom consists in, for me. Sure it's necessary to listen to others and all, but personal experience must be the ultimate guide in this. And different people's personal experiences differ as much as their viewpoints do. That's why I'm not much concerned at all about inter-subjective corroboration when it comes to philosophy. I actually think it is fatal to descend into that pit of vipers. — Janus
Do you really believe that all intent is utterly conscious? — Janus
I believe that all intent is conscious, and will unless and/or until someone could convince me otherwise. — creativesoul
Your question implies an unconscious intention to deceive oneself...
Unconsciously intending to trick oneself into believing something that they don't...
Nah. That doesn't make any sense either. — creativesoul
When a person A deceives a person B into believing p that means that person A knows or truly believes that p is false while causing B to believe that p is true. So when A deceives A (i.e. himself) into believing that p is true, he knows or truly believes that p is false while causing himself to believe that p is true. Thus, A must simultaneously believe that p is false and believe that p is true. Which is a logical contradiction.
-Magnus AndersonIf I understand you correctly, what you're asking is this: does the act of seeing a tree with your own eyes give you the same kind of experience that the act of, say, visualizing a tree does?
If that's what you're asking, the answer is no. There's a clear difference between the two kinds of experience. Visualization lacks the richness that seeing with your own eyes has.
But suppose that this weren't the case. Suppose that they were equally rich. Suppose that visualizing a tree was just as clear as seeing it with your own eyes. Would that make visualization non-mental? Of course not. This is because whether something is mental or not depends on context. You need to look at how your experience relates to what was in the past. It is this relation, which is never complete, because past is not finite, that determines to what degree what you're looking at is either mental or non-mental.
The raw feelings are socially constructed. — apokrisis
Well, for starters we need to realize that the very notion of 'self-deception' is self-contradictory. It doesn't really make any sense when placed under careful scrutiny. I mean think about it differently for a minute. What sense does it make to say that we deliberately set out in order to trick ourselves into believing something that we don't?
— creativesoul
I haven't said we do it deliberately. — Janus
Then we don't do it at all. That's the point being made here. — creativesoul
It's not as if those feelings were ineffable; whence poetry and art?
Feelings have physiological explanations.
Yes, there is a difference between feeling a feeling and understanding it in physiological terms. Just as there is a difference between orbiting the Sun and understanding the laws of gravity. But we do not say the orbit is inexplicable in the face of the explanation. — Banno
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