In terms of schizophrenic voices - I just mean the voices seem more like a drama being played out through (or within) a person than a hallucination appearing (resounding?) to a stable subject. — csalisbury
You originally seemed to suggest that an analysis of an organism does not lend itself to talk of states. — frank
Homeostasis is in fact all about states. The state of blood pressure, the state of glucose and O2 supply, etc. — frank
And how do organisms regulate their blood pressure or glucose levels? In some sense they sense their own state of being. They can make measurements that encode something of significance about how they "are right now" compared to how they imagine they "ought generally to be". — apokrisis
Most were paranoid about them. Some would deal with them through a particular kind of obsequiousness (this is describing stuff on the psychiatrist's terms) others with hostility, others with a kind of blank indifference. — csalisbury
I would think that a mental state would not be a propositional attitude, but a propositional attitude is a mental state. But not all mental states are about propositions, or are even necessarily about anything, so mental states are wider than propositional attitudes. — Moliere
Talk about states implies that a thing changes over time, although there is no reason a thing couldn't be in the same state for its entire existence. It's just that it could be in a different state and still be the same thing. (Nixon could have lost or have been in a state of defeat). — frank
All states of mind are 'determined' by the emotions at the time. This holds good from the rudimentary state of fear to the complex state of righteous indignation. — creativesoul
Sure, they are all the time. They were in those links you linked, for example, weren't they? — csalisbury
This. Yes. The mental state is exhibited, apparent in the doings of the individual.Are you asking whether 'mental states' correspond to some actual thing, a mental-state, in the person to whom they're ascribed? My guess is no, not really, tho, if youre familiar with the terms and the settings in which they crop up, you stand a good chance at making valid inferences about someone given the knowledge they've been ascribed mental state x. — csalisbury
All states of mind are 'determined' by the emotions at the time. This holds good from the rudimentary state of fear to the complex state of righteous indignation.
— creativesoul
Mental states are just feelings? — Banno
And some mental states have no content - I suppose that's like "I'm happy". — Banno
That's another decent point. Cheers. — Banno
This. Yes. The mental state is exhibited, apparent in the doings of the individual. — Banno
Yeah, moods were what I mostly had in mind when saying that the mental state isn't about anything in particular -- since moods are global upon experience. — Moliere
I'm not sure if we're on the same page in this regard? — csalisbury
It's the ambiguity, or perhaps the obscurity, of "mental state" that I want to examine.
I don't think it's a lack of focus - one can't focus on a fog; it might be that an analysis of mental states will not reveal more detail. If it were helpful we could talk of being happy, or sad, or hungry, or indifferent, as emotions. But there appears to be a difference between an emotion and a mental state. Is being convinced, say by a mathematical discourse, an emotion or a state of mind? — Banno
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