Yes, ideas are particular brain states. — Terrapin Station
But surely most don't mean the same thing by 'ideas' and 'particular brain states.' — macrosoft
It might seem like a bold assertion to you, but to me it seems incredibly obvious. — Terrapin Station
It's what the properties are like when you are those properties. That's different than what brains are like from a third-person perspective. — Terrapin Station
. I replace "objective" by "shared" and everything makes more sense — DiegoT
Yeah, that's all I'm saying, really. Subjectivity then is all of those brain states from the first-person perspective. Objectivity is the complement. — Terrapin Station
I use "subjective" simply as a label for "anything mental." I don't think it's a good idea to attach any normatives to it*, to talk about it as more or less "rich" or anything like that. — Terrapin Station
My point is that subjectivity contains far more than modelling of the non-mental — macrosoft
That we clarify 'true' in a sentence by mostly imperfectly categorizing that relation? — macrosoft
are you sure? What is objective then in philosophy? This is my understanding of the word: Objective seems to refer to objects of our mind, — DiegoT
When two or more people talk about these objects, they need to develop a common language based on experiences that are available to all parties, just to make sure their respective mental objects are similar enough to disregard the differences in each individual mind. — DiegoT
I don´t see why you use "subjective" as synonym with "mental". — DiegoT
Mental contents have a degree of objectivity,
Objective seems to refer to objects of our mind, images we focus on to manage our behaviour in the world by bearing in mind certain patterns and becoming oblivious to the rest. — DiegoT
I wouldn't say that "perfectly"/"imperfectly" makes much sense here. It's rather a matter of how individuals think about it, however they're applying meanings, assessing the relation between a proposition and whatever else they're using in a given instance as the truthmaker, etc. — Terrapin Station
is there anyone here who does not believe in the subconscious limen? — Ranger
Like when you drive home with no memory of doing so, or when the solution to a problem suddenly emerges in your mind, with no awareness of how it got there. We describe these things as "subconscious" — Pattern-chaser
believing in the subconscious is something powerful but remember the subconscious does not pick up information because it is not fully aware of anything — WhiteNightScales
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