I agree. It doesn't follow though that the concept comes from experience itself.But experience predicates it all. — charleton
What does this have to do with the concept of an "individual"? I don't mean just and "individual" as in a person, but ANY individual whatsoever - the impression of red is an individual, the impression of blue is an individual, etc.Why are you asking that?
Proprioception, is an innate sense with which we experience our own bodies. — charleton
Well that's not what I said. I said we cannot have any experience without individuating things - into red, blue, sweet, sour, etc. That individuation cannot come from the senses. I still maintain exactly the same thing.You started by saying we could have no experience without the concept of self as individual. Are you now rejecting that position?
yes/no? — charleton
That's not true. Let me illustrate. Abstraction is something that happens after experience. For experience to occur, I must be able to distinguish between things - that means to see red, and blue, and feel hard and soft, etc. Red, blue, hard, soft, etc. are sense impressions. But all these sense impressions presuppose individuation, since they are all individuals, distinguished from each other. Red is not blue and is not hard, etc. So where does this individuation come from, if it is already required before I can perceive sense impressions?There is no "IT". It is just an abstraction you are conceptualizing. — charleton
Can you please answer the question:That's what I have been saying all along, obviously.
Go back and read your first post. — charleton
I know that the concept of individuation will only enter awareness AFTER experience, that doesn't mean that it doesn't exist prior to experience as an activity.So where does this individuation come from, if it is already required before I can perceive sense impressions? — Agustino
For example - individuation. Individuation - that we see experiences as individual, and separate from one another, that we can even make such distinctions as red, blue, etc. - we don't get this concept from any one experience, or any multitude of experiences. Instead, in order to have more than one experience in the first place, individuation already must be possible.
You're already stuck in a theoretical understanding here, where you assume that you are a child, with a physical body, etc. That's not interesting. I'm interested in how you arrived at this framework.I think individuation is tied to the individual's body, that the entire body forms the basis for our interactions with the world. I don't think that a child understands the implications of its individualization without language, and it does not understand itself as a responsible agent until they are 4/7 yrs of age. — Cavacava
This doesn't make sense. How can the boy track the ball if he cannot individuate it?No, I think individuation is a developmental achievement. We can watch a baby track a ball as it rolls by her in the first few months, when the ball rolls out of view the infants stops looking and puts its attention elsewhere, then a couple of months latter, the baby stretches its neck or crawls to see what happened to the ball, where it went. Object permanence is learned and probably a necessary step prior to individuation, language learning and the rest. — Cavacava
You're already stuck in a theoretical understanding here, where you assume that you are a child, with a physical body, etc. That's not interesting. I'm interested in how you arrived at this framework.
This doesn't make sense. How can the boy track the ball if he cannot individuate it?
That makes no sense to me philosophically (at least for the purposes of this thread). It only makes sense within a limited scientific discourse. That scientific discourse is arrived at how? By means of experience. So what is arrived at by means of experience is used to tell me what happens prior to experience? :sIn the same way that the body is prior to the experience of seeing. — Cavacava
The notion of a body is arrived at within experience, and hence makes no sense out of it.
How do you know this? Is it because you've developed certain concepts based on experience, such as bodies, etc. and then applied them out of experience? How do you know what a physical structure is? You had experience I presume - and you started differentiating things like thoughts, and things like trees. You called the latter physical and the former mental. And yet, they are all within your experience. How can there be a non-experienced physical thing?! What would that even be?We are born with certain physical structures which enable us to experience the world, and how we see it depends on the adequate functioning of our physical senses. — Cavacava
That's not clear at all to me. How are there future things in the mind? — Agustino
How is it driven by anticipation? He's imagining possible combinations, has nothing to do with the future as such. — Agustino
His position is in the right-hand bottom corner. But I would push it even further, and argue that even the physical/non-physical distinction makes no sense.
So there is no internal agent at all carrying out the actions. The actions themselves are the agent. Why do we need an agent who is different from the actions themselves? — Agustino
Yes, I can imagine rearranging, juggling, and learning happening by themselves, without an agent. — Agustino
No, my claim is that there is no projection towards the future, just old ideas coming to mind when new impressions are encountered through old associations. — Agustino
So red is represented by what physical things? — Banno
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