I don't think you're denying that nothing is going on in the head, only that when it comes to language, it's not dependent on what's going in the head. Is that correct? — Sam26
This however, has to be separated from the mistaken idea that language points to something internal, or that the concepts, words, and statements, are internal. — Sam26
We are also subject to taking some of Wittgenstein's ideas and carrying them too far. — Sam26
...the internal nature of one's mind/brain... — Sam26
If we followed Hanover here and agreed that the meaning of our words is a subjective item of some sort, we would have no basis for claiming that you, I and Hanover meant the same thing, as Hanover says. — Banno
I see a belief as a thing in my head I can reference, yet you see it as a tool that you can use. So, that thing you call a belief you reference is a tool. I presume you acknowledge the belief is in your head. It's not on the table, right? So, this means that you see a belief as a thing in your head that you can reference and you call this thing a tool. I'm not sure what the distinction is you wish to make, except you wish to call beliefs tools.Hanover might see beliefs as things in the head that we can reference. But you and I see them as tools used in producing explanations, and various other activities. — Banno
Of course we'd have a basis for claiming that we were using the words to refer to the same things. I'd see that when I saw a beetle run by, you would say, "hey, there goes a beetle." I would infer that your phenomenal impression was just as mine was based upon your behavior. And you needn't say "hey, there goes a beetle." Maybe you'd scream, flinch, or whatever. I would draw a conclusion as to what your internal mental impression was based upon your behavior, linguistic or otherwise. As to the question of whether my phenomenal impression of the beetle was similar to yours, I could not know that for sure, but that is simply the inherent limitation of a first person account - it can't be placed into the second person. My guess is that you see beetle as I do, simply because we're all humans of similar structure and we seem to similar reactions to the beetle. — Hanover
We both have phenomenal states. I experience mine, you yours. How the beetle looks without reference to how it looks to someone is incoherent. — Hanover
I learn pain behavior by using it correctly within a linguistic setting. I don't learn pain behavior from my own pains, — Sam26
We both have phenomenal states. I experience mine, you yours. — Hanover
Suppose the paint on your house fades over time yet you do not notice? In what sense can the paint be said to be the very same over time?Suppose that your belief changes over time, but that you do not notice.
It what sense can your belief be said to be the very same, over time? It ceases to have any individuality. — Banno
It shouldn't be funny that two genetically similar beings arive at the same phenomenal states in response to the same external stimuli. That is assumed, of course, but I don't know that a bat would see the world as I do.Funny thing is, ofttimes when we both look at the same thing, we agree as to the details.
It's the privacy of your imagined "phenomenal states" that leads you astray here. — Banno
Is the phenomenal state the belief itself? When you see the beetle scuttle under the porch, is your belief that he's there identical to your phenomenal state of imagining the beetle there in the dark? — Srap Tasmaner
This is the question. A belief is truth apt. It's a proposition. What sort of thing is a proposition? We don't know that anymore than we know what matter fundamentally is. It can't be a mental object though.Is the phenomenal state the belief itself? When you see the beetle scuttle under the porch, is your belief that he's there identical to your phenomenal state of imagining the beetle there in the dark? — Srap Tasmaner
My belief is a phenomenal state I suppose — Hanover
That's introspection, surely. Doesn't your belief that you live in the great state of Georgia persist when you happen not to be thinking about it? — Srap Tasmaner
It exists in a different sense when I am thinking about than when I'm not, but to the extent the same data and rationality exists over time that causes me to believe I live in Georgia, I continue to have that same belief in some sense even when I'm not actually presently experiencing that belief. — Hanover
I'm not following this at all. — Srap Tasmaner
I have other things to compare the paint to. You have nothing with which to compare your private mental furniture, except more private mental furniture. — Banno
It drops out of the discussion; and in so doing, drops out of any rational discourse. It is irrelevant. — Banno
because I have the same reasons to believe it when I'm thinking about it even when I'm not — Hanover
Even if you're not thinking about those reasons? And is holding a belief the same as having reasons for holding it? Are you still talking about the belief existing in different senses, some phenomenal some not? — Srap Tasmaner
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