What does he mean when he says that a feeling goes beyond what is sayable? — Harry Hindu
The "view from everywhere" is available if we accept that you and I and the humans are "embedded in language" - that is, if you accept that we (not 'you' or 'I' in isolation, but we) are making determinations regarding the nature of the real via "a conversation with other folk." A shared language (including shared notions and behaviors, e.g., trusting a map made by a stranger; performing and receiving appendectomies) provides the "view from everywhere." — ZzzoneiroCosm
Is it the language use that exercises your mind, or the things you think about before you start typing that exercises your mind? — Harry Hindu
Oh yeah, this is when you clam up because you don't have any interesting comebacks.No. I am under no obligation to you. — Banno
This relation is such that if the agent acts in some way then there is a belief and a desire that together are sufficient to explain the agent's action. Banno wants water; he believes he can pour a glass from the tap; so he goes to the tap to pour a glass of water.
--This is very behaviorist and quite outdated. Rather, I posit that propositional attitudes, such as Banno wants water, are determined by not belief or desire, but a volition.
The logical problem here, the philosophical interesting side issue, is that beliefs overdetermine our actions. There are other beliefs and desires that could explain my going to the tap.
--No, disagreement; but, this is too simple. A volition is something that determines action, and beliefs need not even be mentioned here. — Banno's profile quizzed by Wallows
If words are used, then volition must be involved.
It seems to me that it requires volition to have a belief. Beliefs are constructed from observations. — Harry Hindu
What does he mean when he says that a feeling goes beyond what is sayable? — Harry Hindu
But didn't he just use language to describe the experience? Saying it is indescribable is describing it with words, no? Is "indescribable" a description? If not, then how did it become a common saying? How did other humans learn to use the phrase?Perhaps that language can't fully capture experience, or do proper justice to how one feels on occasion. — Marchesk
That would just be a view from a lot of different places... — Terrapin Station
But didn't he just use language to describe the experience? Saying it is indescribable is describing it with words, no? Is "indescribable" a description? If not, then how did it become a common saying? How did other humans learn to use the phrase? — Harry Hindu
I don't see how this answers my questions."I finally achieved Nirvana this past Sunday."
"Oh yeah? What was that like."
"Truly Indescribable. Beyond words!"
"Ah, I see. That explains it perfectly. Thanks for sharing. So what's the meaning for life?"
"42"
"Of course! I understand fully." — Marchesk
Is "indescribable" a description? If not, then how did it become a common saying? How did other humans learn to use the phrase? — Harry Hindu
I don't see how this answers my questions. — Harry Hindu
Is "indescribable" a description? If not, then how did it become a common saying? How did other humans learn to use the phrase? — Harry Hindu
This is better.We developed the cognitive ability to point to things we can't properly express. — Marchesk
It seems that "indescribable" is a description. — Harry Hindu
Most of our words are visual - meaning that they refer to, or initiate, visuals in someone else's mind — Harry Hindu
Which is why I asked how others might learn to use the term when observing someone else use it."It's indescribable" is indeed a description. But, in its non-specificity, it's a poor one. In connection to visuals: there would be no transfer of visualized content - more a confession of the inability to transfer visualized content. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Which is why I asked how others might learn to use the term when observing someone else use it. — Harry Hindu
Unless we accept that "you and I and the humans are 'embedded in language'". That is, all the humans, all embedded. Banno's view-from-everywhere requires universal participation. — ZzzoneiroCosm
How would "being embedded in language" aid us in having a view from the spatiotemporal location of, say a particular quark near a particular star in the Andromeda Galaxy? — Terrapin Station
So first, what I was talking about was spatiotemporal situatedness. — Terrapin Station
What I'm not getting from the article is why you think the very idea that we experience reality through models is fraught. — Isaac
It would be wrong to summarize by saying we have shown how communication is possible between people who have different schemes, a way that works without need of what there cannot be, namely a neutral ground, or a common coordinate system. For we have found no intelligible basis on which it can be said that schemes are different. It would be equally wrong to announce the glorious news that all mankind -all speakers of language, at least - share a common scheme and ontology. For if we cannot intelligibly say that schemes are different, neither can we intelligibly say that they are one.
I think because the "6 or 9" example was linked to "spatiotemporal situatedness" Banno's notion of "a view from everywhere" was linked in your mind to space and time. — ZzzoneiroCosm
I doubt that 95% would be how much information is lost in communicating on these forums. Maybe when communicating with Banno you'd lose 95% of what he means, but what do you expect from someone who thinks language is a game?Perhaps there is some disagreement here. What I meant by volitions and intent, was not separate from words, otherwise, it would rather lead us to the sort of conclusions of a homunculus living in the brain of sorts. What I do think actually happens, is something creativesoul has been talking about for a great while now, about prelinguistic "content" or the 95% of communication that gets passed over on these forums because we can't see behavior or hear tonality. — Wallows
The physical example, relativistic theory, is very clear. Given your predilection and understanding of physics, Terrapin Station, I'm puzzled at your resistance here. — Banno
I doubt that 95% would be how much information is lost in communicating on these forums. Maybe when communicating with Banno you'd lose 95% of what he means, but what do you expect from someone who thinks language is a game? — Harry Hindu
So theres no beetles in our box when it comes to communicating uncommunicatible feelings?The singular feeling in common is that of an inability to communicate a portion of the content. The incommunicable content obviously varies.
The singular feeling in common (namely, "I'm having a problem communicating X") justifies applying a narrow definition to the expression. — ZzzoneiroCosm
But when it comes to communicating philosophical/metaphysical or scientific ideas on forum like this, what useful information would be missing?Yeah, I may have overestimated. But, some large percentage of communication is non-verbal, and that's something you could use as an argument for volitions or intentionality existing, just throwing that out there. — Wallows
But when it comes to communicating philosophical/metaphysical or scientific ideas on forum like this, what useful information would be missing? — Harry Hindu
On my view, I have found that all views share the same basic set of common denominators at their core. — creativesoul
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.