Agree, but beware also the profundity of "as it is":
"To make a faithful picture, come as close as possible to copying the object just as it is". This simple-minded injunction baffles me; for the object before me is a man, a swarm of atoms, a complex of cells, a fiddler, a friend, a fool and much more. If none of these constitute the object as it is, what else might? If all are ways the object is, then none is the way the object is. — bongo fury
Agree, but beware also the profundity of "as it is":
"To make a faithful picture, come as close as possible to copying the object just as it is". This simple-minded injunction baffles me; for the object before me is a man, a swarm of atoms, a complex of cells, a fiddler, a friend, a fool and much more. If none of these constitute the object as it is, what else might? If all are ways the object is, then none is the way the object is. — bongo fury
might — Banno
No. The only thing common to our use of the word red might be our use of the word red. — Banno
...and the structure is...? if it is the use of the word, then I don't see that we differ. — Banno
More acutely, there need be no experience that is common to every instance of the use of the word "red". — Banno
Or did you learn to pass the red cup by comparing the various colours to a series of swatches that show the essential colour? Did you commit these swatches to your private, subjective memory? — Banno
If there is a crimson and a blue cup before you, and someone asks for the red cup, do you say "Ah - I can't - there isn't one!" — Banno
Would you give that there is a specific range of experiences that is common to every instance of the use of the word “red”? — khaled
Would you give that there is a specific range of experiences that is common to every instance of the use of the word “red”? — khaled
At best you might call it a family resemblance.Suppose you look at an apple. The claim is that you have experience X.
You then turn the apple around. You are still experiencing the apple. But it is different. The apple is the same, not the experience. Let's call the new experience X'
When you look at the blood, you will have yet another experience - X"
But you use the same word - "red" - in talking about all three.
Here's the point: Each of your experiences of red is different. You use the same word for them all. What is it that all your experiences of red have in common? — Banno
When you see an object you’ve never seen before, and are asked what color it is, how do you guess the correct color the first time? No asking allowed. There may be no single correct color but there is certainly a fuzzy range of correct answers. How do you guess something in that range the first time? — khaled
What do you think is the problem with that? Spell it out. — Banno
That if there is absolutely nothing in common in our experiences of colors... — khaled
Now I don't see that there need be anything that each and every experience of red that you have has in common. Here, I am following Austin. Why shouldn't we use a word such as "red" for a bunch of different experiences? — Banno
But you use the same word - "red" - in talking about all three.
— Banno
Because they share something. — khaled
Because they share something.
— khaled
That's the assumption Austin pointed to. I think it is wrong. — Banno
Wouldn’t there have to be some commonality to experiences of “red”
— khaled
I say no. Why should there be? — Banno
if there is absolutely nothing in common in our experiences of colors...
— khaled
You keep atributing this to me and attacking it.
It's not what I said. — Banno
Here's the point: Each of your experiences of red is different. You use the same word for them all. What is it that all your experiences of red have in common?
Now I don't see that there need be anything that each and every experience of red that you have has in common. — Banno
...no specifiable criteria which determines when the word "red" is used correctly. — Banno
Would you give that there is a specific range of experiences that is common to every instance of the use of the word “red”?
— khaled
No. — Banno
But there is clearly a range no? If I call the sky red I'd be incorrect. Outright. Or do you think someone calling the sky red is not wrong? — khaled
But you wouldn't even give that there is a range: — khaled
I'd suppose it was sunset. — Banno
I'm saying the range does not give the definition of red; nor is the range fixed; nor is it delimited. — Banno
or do you have access to the structure of other people's experiences?
— unenlightened
I can infer it yes.
Let’s call experience you are subjectively having when looking at a red apple X. And let’s call the experience I am subjectively having when looking at a red apple Y.
We both communicate our respective experience by saying “that’s red”
If we both look at blood, you will have an experience similar to X and I will have an experience similar to Y. We will again say, that’s red.
But if you look at grass and have an experience similar to X, and so say “That’s red” then we have a different structure. You’re probably colorblind, as you can’t recognize green things.
I on the other hand properly have a sufficiently different experience from Y when looking at grass (let’s call it Z) and so I say “that’s green”
Now, importantly: Whether or not X and Y are the same experience makes absolutely no difference. What matters is the structure. If the same objects consistently produce the same experience (X or similar for you, Y or similar for me) we can talk.
X and Y do not have to be the same at all.
A public language, based on private experiences. — khaled
That's not a property of the feelings. — Isaac
Then what is it a property of? — Luke
You. The things you possess are a property of you (and the law of the country you live in, when it comes to stuff not part of your body). The feeling 'pain' doesn't have the property {belongs to Luke}. How could it? — Isaac
We haven't "shared" the feeling in that we both partake of the same feeling. I have my feeling and you have yours, even when they occur at roughly the same place and time. — Luke
then your example of reaction YYY is absolutely impossible. Everyone's structure is going to be ABC, or DEF, or GHI because no-one is going to respond in the exact same way to three separate instances of anything. — Isaac
Sure but I was simplifying by only talking about color. — khaled
The difference between AAB and GGR, constricting it only to color, could be the difference in toe shape of the participants for all we know. Even narrowing it down to color, we have no evidence that the difference is in the V4 region. — khaled
1 and 2b aren't about philosophy. 2a is, but that's just a starting point. — frank
I don't see how that gets around the problem. — Isaac
How have you done so without some relation to light waves or something? — Isaac
The moment you start saying that person 1's A and B are basically the same (XX) because they're about the same colour, you've decided on an arbitrary grouping based on some artefact of the real world (colour). — Isaac
That means you're talking about light and wavelengths etc, so the physical cause of the epiphenomena has to be triggered by those external stimuli in some way. One's toe is not. — Isaac
Going from knowing that the V4 region is responsible for structural difference in experiences of color does not lead to the conclusion that it is also responsible for the content-determining differences. — khaled
Moreover, you did not comment on this:
Wittgenstein might have pointed out that it's not actually necessary for us to agree as to what is the case in order to get by. — Banno
You are talking about the thing in itself right now, so you actually can say something about it. You just did!We might do well to avoid this trap: inventing a distinction between the thing-in-itself and the thing-as-experienced, only to find that we cannot say anything about the thing-in-itself; and thinking we have found some profound truth when all we have done is played a word game. — Banno
I have zero respect for Wittgenstein, whom I consider a fake philosopher as well as a coward. If you want me to comment on everything you say, you gona have to pay me for it. — Olivier5
And if they called it purple? Or if it was the middle of the day? — khaled
...as if there were one experience of looking at a red apple.Let’s call experience you are subjectively having when looking at a red apple X. — khaled
Does that matter? Similar enough to be called "red". — khaled
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