Should I stop posting? I thought the point of this discussion was in the title. — Luke
Not at all, why would you think that? — Isaac
So yes, I do get a bit frustrated at what I see as a long discussion about how thermometers work (to return to my metaphor) when I don't see anything there that any rational person could disagree with. 72, where we're currently at, is a classic example. Luke has just accurately laid out what Wittgenstein means by this example, but what is there to disagree with about it? I mean what possible other way could any intelligent person think about such cases? — Isaac
The first two examples have the very same colour called "yellow ochre". The last example has different colours, with the same name "blue". So what he is demonstrating is that this is not the way that we learn colours, because we learn to apply the same names, "blue" for example, to distinctly different shades of colour. It is not a case of learning what the things have in common, that's the point here. — Metaphysician Undercover
But who thought we did learn colours like that. Did you? — Isaac
It's not a puzzle in the least... — Isaac
unless you are looking for a general rule, which is exactly the sort of philosophical muddle Wittgenstein is trying to resolve. — Isaac
We have no trouble with this, nor would anyone describing our actions literally in this case describe them otherwise. — Isaac
74 ... Of course, there is such a thing as seeing in this way or that; and there are also cases where whoever sees a sample like this will in general use it in this way, and whoever sees it otherwise in another way.
It's clearly a puzzle, if you want to know how people learn colours, — Metaphysician Undercover
How are you going to know how people learn colours, unless you know it as a general rule? — Metaphysician Undercover
What do you mean "we have no trouble with this"? — Metaphysician Undercover
you want to know how people learn colours then you'd be well advised to simply observe people learning colours. It's an empirical investigation, it can't be carried out from the armchair. — Isaac
I mean we deal with the situation quite comfortably all the time. It serves no purpose to say "there's something queer going on here" when doing it is the simplest thing, all we're having trouble with is saying what it is that we're doing, and that is a pseudo problem, it may just not be sayable. — Isaac
I'm not denying that's my opinion. I'm questioning why that would make you feel obliged to stop posting (or that I should start another thread for that matter). — Isaac
Because what I and several others have happily been doing on this thread for the past 28 pages is what you want to change. — Luke
Not agreeing with it and wanting it to change are two entirely different things. — Isaac
I only made a couple of posts because Sam and StreetlightX made a couple of comments I found interesting. If they go nowhere, I'll duck out again and you can get back to your work of saying what Wittgenstein said but in slightly different words. — Isaac
What do you mean by "properly determined"? — Luke
If I add "roughly", to say "stand roughly there", it does not change the meaning of "stand there" such that I am now telling you to stand at an area rather than at a spot, it just means that I am not fussy about the particular spot where you stand, and therefore I have not bothered to properly determine the precise spot where I want you to stand. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is similar to the person who gives the order to Wittgenstein to teach the children a game - they do not "properly determine" or draw a boundary around what type of game to teach the children at first (i.e. they do not tell him to exclude gambilng games), but this does not change the meaning of "game". In your words, it just means they are "not fussy about the particular" game. The further instruction not to teach them a gambling game acts as a rigid boundary, or a more specific definition, for this special purpose. — Luke
I think I see your point, but isn't it kind of an inverted version. In the one case, "teach the children a game" is wide open, unbounded, referring to anything which could be construed as a game, until it's restricted by "anything except gambling". — Metaphysician Undercover
There are relevant factors, innate within the human mind, things we're born with, instinctual, which cannot be observed. — Metaphysician Undercover
Allowing any faulty assumptions will throw the whole investigation askew — Metaphysician Undercover
Let's assume that we naturally, instinctually, distinguish different shades of colour. — Metaphysician Undercover
However, then we would have the problem which Sam26 referred to, some shades one group of people would call blue, while another group might call green, because the boundary is arbitrary, and there's really no way to say that one group is right and the other wrong. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm also interested in finding points of disagreement, and discovering other's views on things that I might not have thought about myself. — Luke
It seems like this thread is just an argument with MU. — Sam26
If they cannot be observed (nor their consequences) then how can you know this? You're begging the question by presuming we're born with some instinctual understanding and so not being satisfied until you have found it. — Isaac
And how do you know they are faulty. What test are you applying here? — Isaac
Why on earth is this a problem? What aspects of human life has been so manifestly spoiled by the fact that not everyone agrees where blue ends and green starts? — Isaac
I mean, there's only four basic ways to interpret the PI — Isaac
I mean, there's only four basic ways to interpret the PI — Isaac
I should not like my writing to spare other people the trouble of thinking. — PI
If one reads the text based on some theory of how it is to be interpreted then what one will see is not the PI but another text: “The PI According to X”. — Fooloso4
As far as I am concerned there is only one way to interpret a text, any text, and that is by a careful and persistent effort to understand what the author is saying. — Fooloso4
Nice sentiment but I'm afraid decades of teaching have made me much too cynical to believe it. — Isaac
Everyone reads every text looking to find support for the thing they already believe to be the case at the outset. — Isaac
As far as I am concerned there is only one way to interpret a text, any text, and that is by a careful and persistent effort to understand what the author is saying.
— Fooloso4
This seems to directly contradict the quote you placed beneath it. What Wittgenstein is really saying is far less important than what it is that you think he's saying has made you think. — Isaac
I should not like my writing to spare other people the trouble of thinking. — PI Preface
Everyone reads every text looking to find support for the thing they already believe to be the case at the outset. — Isaac
We are all in need of good teachers, ones who can teach us how to read, how to interpret, how to connect the dots and read between the lines. It is both analytic and synthetic. — Fooloso4
If I believe that an author has something to teach me then I am not looking for confirmation but open myself to disruption. — Fooloso4
But I soon found that my beliefs were not as obviously true or defensible as I had assumed. — Fooloso4
Interpretative reading is a mode of thinking. If I am to understand him I must think along with him. Again, this is not something one would learn from a reliance on secondary sources that provide ready made conclusions that spare you the trouble of thinking. It is not information gathering. It is wrestling with the text - Why would he say this? Is this what he means? What support can I find that this is what he means? Does that seem right? What has led him to say that? What support does he offer? How does this all fit together and what light does this provide for the whole? — Fooloso4
In my opinion, if an author is worth reading carefully then what he is really saying is far more important than what it is that I think he's saying. — Fooloso4
Another one of your faulty assumptions. You should take heed of what you claim is Wittgenstein's purpose, and quit with the pathetic generalizations. — Metaphysician Undercover
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.