if you decided to create one, you would not be able to understand any of its non-ostensive terms except by translating them into your native, public language — Janus
Ontological anti-realism is just some level of skepticism about ontology in general. — frank
If, as you say, there are intrinsically private mental phenomena — Banno
Ehhhhh.......whatever is, is whatever it is, the nature of its being given immediately to me upon my knowledge of it, which follows seemingly from my own internal reality. In general, epistemology holds the more fundamental metaphysical domain, than ontology. Doesn’t matter what the ontology of a thing is, if a valid methodology for knowledge doesn’t precede. Plus....I prefer to keep my -ologies and -isms as plain and simple and few as possible. — Mww
My point was, to give an example, you make up novel words (sounds and a script to represent them) for objects, and be able to determine their meaning by visualizing the objects, but how would you determine the meanings of your new terms for words like 'and' 'the' 'this' 'that' 'how' 'why' 'what' etc, etc without referring to those words in your native, public language? If you cannot do without referring to your native language, then your made up language does not qualify as fully private. — Janus
What's your take on reality? Is it a social construct? — frank
May I ask, what does "intrinsically private" mean in this context? Can anyone try and define it? And what is the connection with public discourse? — Olivier5
no one has "an experience of red", they merely experience things as red — unenlightened
I find this an entirely agreeable explanation, except that I take it one step further, and say that things that make absolutely no difference should be treated as non-existent. — unenlightened
...no one has "an experience of red", they merely experience things as red, or as not red... — unenlightened
My point was, to give an example, you make up novel words (sounds and a script to represent them) for objects, and be able to determine their meaning by visualizing the objects, but how would you determine the meanings of your new terms for words like 'and' 'the' 'this' 'that' 'how' 'why' 'what' etc, etc without referring to those words in your native, public language? If you cannot do without referring to your native language, then your made up language does not qualify as fully private. — Janus
Yes. I basically said this to Mww, but it's not the PLA. — frank
No, I don't think so. It's about rules that only you know about. — frank
You, of all people, may understand the schema of conceptions are entirely the product of imagination, which is sufficient reason for justifying that I can name any perception of mine, any damn thing I want. — Mww
"my experience of red" becomes intrinsically private, because there is no access whatsoever to it by anyone else. It might be 'like' your experience of green, or your experience of conservatism, or your experience of cats. and nobody could ever possibly know. — unenlightened
Problem is, we have no way of quantifying the impact of brainstates on Xs and Ys. — khaled
we have no way of detecting whether you're having XXY, ZZR or KKU — khaled
there is no practical difference between you having XXY or ZZR or KKU. — khaled
someone having XXY and someone having GGR will act the exact same way. — khaled
This is a mistake. If it can be recognized by you as a thing, then by that fact, it has made a difference, and cannot be excluded as non-existent. — Metaphysician Undercover
I believe your red is my red, because the underlying mechanism to produce those tints is biological and biology is very conservative, it change very very slowly and cannot be parametered at will like, say, a digital computer. — Olivier5
My point wasn't to define subjectivity, only to point out that it is not identical to privacy. — Luke
The dictionary offers this relevant definition: "dependent on the mind or on an individual's perception for its existence." — Luke
I cannot experience anybody else's pain and nobody else can experience my pain. — Luke
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