It's not anything like mental content when unconscious. — Terrapin Station
It's not anything like mental content when unconscious — Terrapin Station
Mental content is phenomena such as thoughts, desires, ideas, concepts, propositional attitudes, etc — Terrapin Station
Mental content is phenomena such as thoughts, desires, ideas, concepts, propositional attitudes, etc. — Terrapin Station
You claim it isn't mental content. So I have to ask: Is it nonmental content?
If it's nonmental content, what specific kind of nonmental content is it? — ZzzoneiroCosm
I've already agreed the memory in question takes a different form in its conscious and unconscious states. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Your definition of mental content is esoteric — ZzzoneiroCosm
In fact, all I have to do to explode your definition of mental content is add - memories. — ZzzoneiroCosm
You'd have nonmental potentials, which amount to specific brain states... — Terrapin Station
You'd have nonmental potentials, which amount to specific brain states (structures and processes that can respond in specific dynamic ways), that can result in mental content — Terrapin Station
What I call "unconscious mental content" you call "brain states with the potential to create mental content." You leap from the psychological to the physical to avoid using a phrase that rings nonsensical to you. I prefer to describe the mind without referencing the physical. — ZzzoneiroCosm
You reduce this sort of memory to a brain state. You're no longer describing the mind. — ZzzoneiroCosm
I don't think anything about mind is nonphysical. — Terrapin Station
That's an extreme variety of physicalism. I suppose if you hold the image of a tree in your mind you make the attempt via the intellect to reduce this tree-thought to something physical. But, of course, the tree-thought itself is nonphysical. (I suppose you disagree.)
The tree-thought exists and the brain state giving rise to the tree-thought exists. One is psychological and one is physical. (I suppose you disagree.)
To reduce the mind to physicality is to fatally limit your scope of exploration. It's a dogmatism and hence fatally limiting. — ZzzoneiroCosm
You may think you have no set criteria for practicing kindness but in fact there is a particular concatenation and mechanism of neurons and other unspecified brainstuffs that determine when you will and when you will not practice kindness. — ZzzoneiroCosm
I am a man - a human male. — Harry Hindu
As I said, I'm a man - a human male. So there was more to my identity than my dick. My first identity was that of a human with my sex being secondary.I guess your identity comes directly from your dick. That fits. Although for most people, there's this thing called society that gets in between dangly bits and their identity-forming powers. — Baden
Is it? For example, a transwoman's belief that she is a woman is not really like a delusional belief: It is an inherent aspect of the person that believes it and it comes from a psychological/neurological difference from the others that it is a core aspect of it -it is not simply someone believing an extraordinary thing later in life (and it is also based around a more defensible claim, i.e. their gender is different).
In your example, them believing they are a special creation of some god (assuming it is not an unrelated insult at religions and it is about a person who believes they were created by god in a particularly very special fashion) is not a core aspect of the person- it would not have been that way if the culture was different, they would have believed something extraordinary instead. But the transwoman would have still believed only that and, if she was allowed to transition, would not have gone back to being a man after some consideration. If you fed into a delusional person's beliefs, they would have only grown more unstable and not more stable. That is not what we observe with trans people unless discrimination is involved.
That's mainly because you (and everyone else who identifiesthe same) equate being a man with having certain genitals and being a woman with having another set of genitals. Of course, from that perspective, that person will be a "man"-but a man that dresses like a woman, sounds like a woman, literally has boobs and the curves of a woman, has a generally feminine body and prefers to be on the girl side of things nonetheless.
I would say that a social perspective of gender ("gender as a social construct") can more accurately represent those kinds of situtations than a simple biological definition. — HereToDisscuss
Let's suppose you decide to be unkind to X. You're conscious of no special criteria underpinning your decision to be unkind. You're curious about this and devote long, painstaking hours to self-examination. After a period of introspection you realize Y is why you made the decision to be unkind. — ZzzoneiroCosm
A certain brain-state was present at the time I made my decision to be unkind. I was at that time unaware of the relationship of this brain-state to the decision to be unkind. After long hours of self-examination, I discovered brain-state-Y to be present at the moment of my decision to be unkind. At the moment I made the decision to be unkind I believed there was no special criteria, but through introspection I've learned that brain-state-Y underpinned my decision to be unkind. — ZzzoneiroCosm
1) Society mediates biological identity.
2) The subject is socially embedded.
3) What do you disagree with re 1) and 2)? And how does what I said exclude personal psychological input into identity formation? — Baden
I don't agree with 1 or 2.
Natural selection mediates biological identity and by extension, social interactions. — Harry Hindu
What do you disagree with re 1) — Baden
Society, at whatever level, is involved in forming the identity of individual humans? Yes or no? — Baden
In what way do you see society as involved in this? — Terrapin Station
You're on Chrome extension ignore now. Harry Hindu, if you're capable, answer the question. — Baden
It would have been different in another culture. — Harry Hindu
Or change how they talk, act and sound to that of a the other gender's-the subtle differences that makes someone of a gender along with the more usual ones.Just ask anyone around these parts and they will tell you that gender is a social construction. That means, that in order to change one's gender, they'd have to change their culture that they were raised in, not their clothes. In the same vein, religious people would have to change the culture that they were raised in order to have a different religion. — Harry Hindu
It is both. You have to both act and look the way of the other gender (and no, acting masculine/feminine is not what i'm talking about, but rather what makes someone recognize,in a social setting, someone else as a male or a female) and feel that way. Albeit the individual feeling comes first since it determines which way one should act.So, is "gender" a social construction, or a individual feeling? If is it an individual feeling, then how does a man know what it feels like to be a woman to claim that they are a woman? These are very basic questions that everyone should be asking, but they don't because they have an emotional attachment to their political beliefs, no different than a religious person. — Harry Hindu
Well, i apologize. Using "social construct" when i was just talking about how we use it in a social setting (which, to clarify, is what i'm asserting is more accurate) was clearly wrong on my behalf-albeit i do not get how i'm promoting sexism since i was not talking about people acting stereotypically like the other gender. (In your example, that is still a man since he, even if we grant that he can make a woman's voice and can look like a woman, does not "act that way" and does not feel that way.)You don't seem to understand what a social construction is. It is a shared assumption about others identities, which means that it comes from society, not the individual. Also, these assumptions can be wrong AND SEXIST. The assumption that a person wearing a dress is automatically a woman is wrong AND SEXIST. A man can wear dresses and still be a man. You're conflating the shared assumption of an individual with the actual physical characteristics of that individual and promoting SEXISM. — Harry Hindu
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