we don’t tend to consider being on Earth orbiting the Sun. We are, yet now that I’ve drawn attention to this our ‘intentionality’ shifts. As soon as the question of ‘existence’ is brought into play then our ‘intentionality’ shifts to phenomenon as existing ‘objects’. — I like sushi
The phenomenon is the subjective regard. — I like sushi
Also, you haven't tried to answer my questions. How would you know that what you're experiencing is called 'pain'? How do you know you're using the word correctly? — Isaac
Yes, but we also don't have any method that will allow us to always read the signs. — Marchesk
The sensation correlates with other human behavior enough of the time in situations that are often painful to use that word for it. — Marchesk
What reason have you got to think this? — Isaac
Even if we were to simply assume the two sensations were similar enough, you'd be positing a mental sensation which had absolutely no effect on you whatsoever.
Also, you haven't tried to answer my questions. How would you know that what you're experiencing is called 'pain'? How do you know you're using the word correctly? — Isaac
The way you know that the person had the feeling that no external behavior gave a clue to is that they tell you at some later time. — Terrapin Station
And telling you at some later time isn't a behaviour? Or, if you want to say "well we didn't know at time X", then surely that applies equally to all data. Everything has some delay, even things we observe; we see them move, say, shortly after they actually have moved. We don't start saying that external world movements are mysteriously unknowable to us because there's some period of time where the knowledge was inaccessible. We're just happy to find out when we do. — Isaac
The idea is clearly about someone feeling some way at an earlier time, where there was no behavioral clue that they felt that way at the time — Terrapin Station
Right, and I'm obviously not disputing that fact. I'm disputing the implication drawn earlier in the argument that this means we should accept 'experiences vlike pain as being subjective, inaccessible — Isaac
the mental phenomenon is not identical to any third-person observable behavior. — Terrapin Station
No, but the mental phenomenon is a disposition towards some behaviour, so it is accessible in exactly the same way all other phenomena of the world are accessible, by their effects. — Isaac
So first, the effects are phenomena. If you only access those phenomena by their effects, you'd never access any phenomena. — Terrapin Station
I didn't say that no phenomena weren't directly accessible though. I just said that all phenomena 'of the world' were accessed (in terms of us knowing about them) by other phenomena that they cause. At no point does the phenomena we imagine as being the real object (in your terminology this might be the noumena, the 'real thing'), at no point does that just enter our minds directly, it is some effect it has by which we know of it. — Isaac
Objects are processes, and we can talk about processes that are not normally thought of as objects just as well, because they're phenomena just as well. — Terrapin Station
I have no clue how this relates to what I said. — Isaac
I disagree that phenomena does not refer to imagined objects — Isaac
You don't make it so simply by declaring it is. — Isaac
for the masses of neuroscientific reasons I've been outlining in this thread. — Isaac
Again, you've simply asserted that language use is required for these things, I'd like to hear your full argument for how you link the two. At the moment, as I see it, you seem to be saying that gestures, facial expressions, arrangements of neurons in any way...none of these are capable of carrying the content you're looking for, but making a particular shape with my mouth and voice box magically carries this other world of content. I just don't see how at all. — Isaac
Right, and I'm obviously not disputing that fact. I'm disputing the implication drawn earlier in the argument that this means we should accept 'experiences like pain as being subjective, inaccessible to third parties. — Isaac
...he's basically said that he posts on here to work on his own model. — Terrapin Station
This is the bit I hit a wall with. We 'regard' a phenomena, yes? So having regarded it, we presumably then want to say something about it? Otherwise the activity is simply silent meditation. So when it comes to saying something about it, the words we use must have some effect on the community to whom we're speaking, which means they must either already know, or be able to gather by your actions, what to do with the word you've used. (more simply, what the word refers to, but I'm trying to be accurate here and words do not always refer).
So I kind of get how introspection might allow us to recognise a focus on different models (intentionality?), I get how we could conduct thought experiments on such modes to find out more about them. I'm stuck on how we could ever communicate the results to anyone without invoking community-held (objective) definitions for the words we're using, which means the referrents for those words have to be objectively verifiable to some loose extent. — Isaac
The phenomenon is the subjective regard. — I like sushi
Based upon those experiments, I am quite certain that there is some sort of sensitivity to equitable resource distribution(in some non human primates). I am quite certain that there is empathy at work(in some non human primates more-so than others). I am quite certain that there is some sort of expectation at work(in all non human primates). I'm not as certain that there is enough evidence to conclude a sense of fairness at work in the thought and belief of any particular candidate. However, it's quite interesting that some dominant individuals will voluntarily share. — creativesoul
you don't have someone else's pain. — Marchesk
we can't always know what they are, or infer the correct mental states. — Marchesk
Men can't know exactly what it's like to give birth. — Marchesk
Everyone has their own subjective experience of themselves and the world. — Marchesk
To which I say hogwash, pain without the experience is meaningless. — Marchesk
And it's something that can be faked. — Marchesk
If so, I guess he's arguing with himself — Marchesk
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