Behaviourist after torrid love-making session with professional colleague:
'That was wonderful for you, dear. How was it for me?' — Wayfarer
The meaning of the proposal is reduced by the transducer, but, if it argues that the information remains constant, in an ideal sense, always, without interference, then the formal objectifications could be the ones that give meaning to the meaning. Like to tell that it is not the transducer that means the idea, but rather that it can happen the other way around; that formal objectification means the transducer. — armonie
. The information, isn't it, energy? — armonie
You can communicate with me because we belong to a specific linguistic community, that is where the symbolic operates, in the specific, true, but it still has a physical support. — armonie
Because of multiple realizability, a reductionist can't capture all capturable generalizations, a tenet of scientific methodology. — frank
because the specific neural events and muscular contractions involved here will only be associated with one way of learning, — frank
Clearly we think as individuals. — softwhere
The individual - 'me' - exists like the foam on a wave on an ocean. The most recently-arrived and most ephemeral of beings. — Wayfarer
That's because language-using beings orient themselves to the world via meaning. — Wayfarer
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_language_argumentWittgenstein invites readers to imagine a community in which the individuals each have a box containing a "beetle". "No one can look into anyone else's box, and everyone says he knows what a beetle is only by looking at his beetle."[16]
If the "beetle" had a use in the language of these people, it could not be as the name of something – because it is entirely possible that each person had something completely different in their box, or even that the thing in the box constantly changed, or that each box was in fact empty. The content of the box is irrelevant to whatever language game it is used in.
By analogy, it does not matter that one cannot experience another's subjective sensations. Unless talk of such subjective experience is learned through public experience the actual content is irrelevant; all we can discuss is what is available in our public language.
By offering the "beetle" as an analogy to pains, Wittgenstein suggests that the case of pains is not really amenable to the uses philosophers would make of it. "That is to say: if we construe the grammar of the expression of sensation on the model of 'object and designation', the object drops out of consideration as irrelevant." — Wiki
I'm arguing that because the meaning of a proposition can be represented in different symbolic forms and even in different media, then the meaning or the intelligible content of the proposition, is separable from the physical representation. It's suggestive of a form of dualism. As far as I'm aware, it's a novel argument. — Wayfarer
(its immersion in nature, one might say). — softwhere
It's a 'spiritual realm,' as I see it. — softwhere
More like it's clinging to and grasping of the sensory domain (which ends up being the meaning of 'empiricism'.) — Wayfarer
I heard that Schrodinger's cat had eaten Wittgenstein's beetle, although others heard differently. — Wayfarer
It’s the ‘formal realm’, I think - the domain of laws, conventions, number, logic and the like. We ‘see’ it through the ‘eye of reason’. Whereas the spiritual realm is seen through ‘the eye of the heart’ according to mystic lore. — Wayfarer
'Multiple realisability' is a response to the flaw in brain-state reductionism: it doesn't appear to be possible to correlate a particular brain state to a psychological state (like pain). This flaw is particularly noticeable when we think about the broad range of creatures who can feel pain: their varying anatomy makes it seem impossible to make this correlation. — frank
The multiple realizability thesis about the mental is that a given psychological kind (like pain) can be realized by many distinct physical kinds: brain states in the case of earthly mammals, electronic states in the case of properly programmed digital computers, green slime states in the case of extraterrestrials, and so on.
I've always felt that there's a much stronger argument for MR than just pain, in that neuroscience can't find any objective correlation between 'brain states' and all manner of mental phenomena, including language. — Wayfarer
Jim sees an auto accident. He goes to a phone and dials 91. What will he do next? Most likely he'll dial another 1.
The explanation for this is a systemic generalization between
A. What he recognized
B. His background knowledge
C. His resulting intentions, and
D. That action
A reductionist's explanation will be too weak because the specific neural events and muscular contractions involved here will only be associated with one way of learning, coming to know, and the action of dialing (he could dial with a pencil, a toe, voice recognition, etc).
Because of multiple realizability, a reductionist can't capture all capturable generalizations, a tenet of scientific methodology. — frank
compositional fallacy — 180 Proof
I'm actually just plowing through the SEP article you posted. It's kind of like homework so I can understand various angles on the concept of emergence. — frank
Multiple Realizability is consistent with current Natural Science (inductive evidence).
Corporeal and mental events are mutually dependent, but incommensurable because:
1) While correlation can be demonstrated, causation cannot.
2) Corporeal and mental data are accessed at different levels of abstraction (i.e., Neurology and Psychology). — Galuchat
Also, neuroplasticity is a fact (ruling out the possibility of epiphenomenalism, which is consistent with psychoneural identity theories). — Galuchat
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