Maybe it’s me; I don’t see images unless I’m dreaming. My thinking process resembles an inner language as opposed to an inner picture book. — NOS4A2
to prove you have complete control over your thoughts don’t think of a white bear for the rest of your life (I think further examples are redundant at this point but just wanted to chip in anyway).
No. You’re not. The conscious you is a part of the organism that controls your thoughts. Not all of it.
I’m not much of a dualist so I think the notion of a conscious me and an unconscious me is a distinction without a difference — NOS4A2
I’m the organism, the organism controls it’s own thoughts, therefor I control my own thoughts. — NOS4A2
Sure, but I thought the whole idea was that you choose to make meanings. That someone saying 'the ape is on the loose' has no affect on you unless you choose to construct a meaning. I am disagreeing and saying that it immediately has effects on you before you can choose to make that sentence have meaning. This is going back to the blue elephant. Perhaps you do not have a visual response to language, but you have a meaning response to language.So long as thinking ( also hearing, understanding, interpreting, “telling that story” etc.) is an act performed by me, I see no reason to dispute that. Without the rules of grammar or lexicon or even a shared language, however, we would not think about apes if we heard the word “ape”. — NOS4A2
Sure, and thanks for working with what I am saying and nuancing your responses. I mean, this should be the rule, but it's actually rather rare. Like, well, we're having a conversation. Yeah, I get that. I would not want to say that what happens next is purely caused by the other person. But if we spread out their speech act to a large group, let's say kids.I see what you’re saying.
I suppose the issue I have is the so-called effect of the words, when clearly the effect—hearing, constructing meaning, decoding sounds—has only me as it’s cause. Once the sound or word enters my domain, so to speak, it is under the control of my processes whether automatic or not. — NOS4A2
Rereading some of this I came across this quote right here. I thought you kept saying that the mind is physical no? — khaled
Also your definition of free will is basically equivalent to saying that mental processes don’t have predetermined results. — khaled
So, if one could prove that hate speech makes violence more likely — khaled
Where each factor contributed to “biasing the probability” (as you said in the free will thread). — khaled
That someone saying 'the ape is on the loose' has no affect on you unless you choose to construct a meaning. — Coben
The beginning of this tangent was about someone making a choice to construct the image blue elephant if someone said it. I thought this was far fetched that one chooses to make the image, though I agree that one does that. Some part of the organism does that, in most fairly easy to make images, unconsciously. Since S said he didn't see images, I shifted to meaning. That people say sentences to us does not lead us to make the choice to discern each word and pull out a meaning from the sentence. We do that. But I wouldn't say it is a choice and certainly not a conscious choice, most of the time. Now this is a very tiny slice of interaction. So far we are a long way from hate speech causing violence. But since he was drawing a line at such a fundamental level, I decided to probe and question that.After you've done it a bit, though, you no longer need to think about it to do it. That doesn't imply that it's not something you're doing. — Terrapin Station
First, that wouldn't be possible, because empirical claims are not provable period. — Terrapin Station
Secondly, aside from proof, "X makes y more likely" isn't a statement of causality — Terrapin Station
On my view only causality matters. — Terrapin Station
Shooting someone causes them to die is an empirical claim but we can't prove that — khaled
I'm not saying anything at all about proof in any of these comments — Terrapin Station
First, that wouldn't be possible, because empirical claims are not provable period. — Terrapin Station
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