So examining this external behaviour is adequate for examining the referent of the name. — Isaac
Instead a see the same old repetition where people get bogged down in arguments about dualism, reality, and naive realism. — I like sushi
How can examining our behaviour when describing something that exists in it's entirety prior to our naming it be adequate for examining the referent? — creativesoul
How did the people who told you they were pretending find that out? — Isaac
Ultimately because at some point primate/monkey ancestors developed mirror neurons and were able to formulate some theory of mind to understand other people's actions. — Marchesk
No, that's not how mirror neurons work, they only mirror intentions related to behaviours, they can't magically distinguish different intentions from identical behaviours. — Isaac
some animals, humans in particular, do develop a theory of mind where we can look at the context of someone's identical actions and infer their intentions. — Marchesk
It's existence makes no difference, — Isaac
I do think and would strongly argue that language is necessary.
— creativesoul
Yet all you've given thus far is...
they are further thought of as being unfair.
— creativesoul
This implies some sort of agreement
— creativesoul
it requires some measure of morality(what ought happen)
— creativesoul
I'd agree with all of those (with the same caveats as you). But you've not demonstrated any of them are necessarily dependant on language, so I don't see how they're relevant to your argument. — Isaac
When we're claiming that some non human creature has a sense of fairness/justice, we're saying something about that creature's mental ongoings(thought and belief). Thus, it behooves us to know what all thought and belief consist of, lest we have no way to know whether or not some creature or another is capable of forming/holding those kinds of thought and belief.
— creativesoul
Yes, but this just goes over the ground we've already covered with regards to terms. There isn't something which just is what thiugh/belief consists of. There are just the phenomena we observe, how we choose to group them and what we choose to call those groups is arbitrary. I've already defined what I'm referring to by belief and thought. I've not heard (or perhaps not understood) how you're using those terms. — Isaac
Our difference seems to be regarding what counts as warrant for concluding that the animal has a sense of fairness.
Franz dWaal has placed a large bowl of grapes within reach during the reward experiments, and has given grapes/cucumbers in different combinations in prior exchanges. Together these satisfy me that simple expectation frustration is not the explanation (otherwise prior priming of expectation would have made a difference), nor is it simple greed (otherwise the larger available reward would have made a difference). It does seem to be related to a social peer getting a better reward, so if there's expectation involved, it's an expectation of equal distribution of rewards. I'm happy to call that a belief in fairness. — Isaac
Our difference seems to be regarding what counts as warrant for concluding that the animal has a sense of fairness.
I suppose you don't mean each disposition and emotion has its own sense, like that of touch and smell, but is there anything actually contradicting that notion?
And how about consciousness itself is actually a sense like taste or hearing, sixth sense as they say in Buddhism. Is there anything we know that can prevent this for actually being true? — Zelebg
What's the difference between behavioural discontent as a result of the cognitive dissonance that takes place when expectations are dashed by what happens and having behavioural discontent as a result of thinking, believing, and/or 'feeling' like what happened is unfair/unjust, or ought be somehow corrected?
— creativesoul
Nothing. The expectation that rewards be distributed equally is what a belief in fairness is. — Isaac
Right, so actions in one context=pain, actions in some other context=pretending. This is still all externally identifiable. — Isaac
Consciousness - on my view - is the ability to draw correlations between different things. It begins simply and accrues in it's complexity according to the content of the correlations.
Consciousness - on my view - is the ability to draw correlations between different things. It begins simply and accrues in it's complexity according to the content of the correlations.
"Ability to draw correlations between different things", is that not the same thing as intelligence?
In any case, it's only functional description, not ontological, unless you are suggesting these "relations" somehow exist as actual, causal phenomena, and it just so happens they have this property to be conscious. — Zelebg
Could you explain the patterns of reward in these experiments? The above is too vague to know what the experiments entailed. — creativesoul
So... All behavioural discontent due to unmet expectations counts as thinking, believing like what has happened is unfair/unjust and/or ought be somehow corrected? — creativesoul
Show me an animal not under duress who receives all of the resources and voluntarily distributes them equally, and we'll have an animal that either likes the results of doing that or an animal who has shown a sense of fairness. — creativesoul
This requires thinking about one's own thought and belief(what ought to have happened) while also thinking about what did happen. Language use is necessary for that sort of division of thought content and subsequent comparison. Thus, language use is necessary for having a sense of ought/fairness/justice.
An agreement most certainly requires language, as it is to stipulate one's own acceptance of certain things(conditions). — creativesoul
But it isn't, or we'd always know whether someone was in pain. There's even medical situations where a patient will complain about a condition their doctor can't see a symptom for, resulting in the suspicion that it's psychological. Sometimes it is, and sometimes it turns out the patient was right.
But in either case, the point is the patient experiences some form of discomfort that isn't objectively identified. — Marchesk
It’s like you read what I wrote with the singular intent to disagree. Yet you agreed and didn’t realise. I plainly said it wasn’t about what exists. I then said ‘existence’ as an ‘object’ of consciousness does matter. — I like sushi
Again, I'll ask, how would you possibly know what 'pain' is (which of your many feelings is the one correctly called 'pain') if you could not identify it at all times in others? — Isaac
Pain always results in some behaviour to the effect of demonstrating the pain, — Isaac
If there was even one circumstance where the correct feeling to call 'pain' was hidden from you completely, how would you know that some other feeling you're having is actually also called 'pain', afterall, it might be the one that's been hidden from you? — Isaac
But we don't and we can't always identify what someone else is experiencing. That's just a fact of our existence. — Marchesk
People can choose to ignore minor pains. I have a headache, but if it's not severe, I don't have to say anything or hold my head. I can just ignore it and focus on something else. — Marchesk
It's not hidden from me because pain is a subjective experience that can be accompanied by behavior, but not always. — Marchesk
It's a fact I dispute, a fact I'm asking for your support of, your empirical evidence for. — Isaac
I'm talking about the time when you claim it is hidden. Again, it is not a 'fact' simply by your declaring it to be one. — Isaac
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