X is the set of experiences that are similar enough to be called "red" by me. Y is the set of experiences that are similar enough to be called "red" by you. When I say "You had X" (or Y) I mean you had an experience that belongs to that set. Better?
The argument then still stands. The contents of X and Y do not need to be the same at all for communication to happen. — khaled
So with your posited epiphenomena, by focussing on the similarity in the features relating to colour, we know that those features change in correlation mainly with changes in lightwaves hitting the retina. — Isaac
I said that there's nothing about 'experience X' which intrinsically makes it recurrent the next time you are exposed to something red. Without some categorisation, all we really have is a long continuous, experience of our entire environment (and body). To call anything 'experience X' requires us to both artificially divide our experience into chunks, artificially relate one of those chunks to one aspect of the environment at the time (in this case colour) and artificially group differing recurrent chunks on the basis of some arbitrary points of similarity (as any two experiences of red - however we determine them to be 'of red' - are going to be the same). — Isaac
To say that your X and my Y are similar (same reason for division, same relation to environmental features, same features we're focussing on to group such chunks of experience) - we have to know something about the relationship between X (or Y) and the environment. If we didn't, then on what grounds are we saying that your X and my Y are even similar? — Isaac
I'm pretty sure I understand what you're saying now, thanks. It seems an odd theory, but valid. I just disagree about one point, but I think it's more a matter of personal judgement than logic or empirical fact
There is just as much reason to assume they are the same as to assume they are different. The model doesn't become any more or any less complex by assuming either.
— khaled
I maintain that creating subdivision where there need be none, creating alternate options where one would suffice - that is making a model more complex. — Isaac
This means that it is inappropriate to ask what the experience of red is like for you or for Richard; rather one should ask what it is unlike. — unenlightened
We have to say of him, not that he has no experience of red (I am correcting myself here), but that his experience of red and his experience of green are 'the same'. — unenlightened
Gotcha. Nice smack down. So you'd agree that society is a prerequisite for individuality, that the subjective narrative is influenced by society, if only because such narratives are frequently directed at others, but the ego (I) itself can't be reduced to social interaction because that's just retarded. Is that your view? — frank
We have to say of him, not that he has no experience of red (I am correcting myself here), but that his experience of red and his experience of green are 'the same'. So what I would like to suggest, is that this is a general principle of experience, — unenlightened
Is it just me, or oughtn't everyone here (and on similar threads) to clarify which of these two related but separable questions they are addressing?
is my external red the same as your external red?
is my internal red the same as your internal red? — bongo fury
Now I know, from my own experience that I cannot feel other's pain. — Janus
questionable — Banno
I don't agree that society is a prerequisite for an individual. — Metaphysician Undercover
Cannot something be accurately described in more than one way? — creativesoul
Fair point. Cannot something be accurately described in more than one way? — creativesoul
Exactly. Although it's hardly a big deal if the different ways are in no kind of conflict or competition. (E.g. if they are, at least, all accurate.) And then each different way seems bound to shrink in significance, or degree of informativeness. The aspiration to describe or otherwise represent an object "as it is" seems to react against that impression of relativism or subjectivity.
Goodman is (I think) objecting (there) to the notion that some pictures succeed in that aspiration and are intrinsically more realistic or informative than others. — bongo fury
...your accurately describing in different ways doesn’t have anything to do with such constituency. — Mww
The inability to feel someone else's pain, in the strong sense which would be just like feeling one's own pain, and would not be mere empathy, has nothing to do with grammar. — Janus
As if the linguistic turn never happened. — Banno
Food for thought, and only addressed to you because I’m too lazy to open another post, regarding psychologically-inclined science that does absolutely nothing for Everydayman..... — Mww
All modes of activity would seem to be relational. — Janus
the source of pain in another in not resident in me. — Mww
Janus sees this as undermining the very moral fibre of humanity, to the extent that he will deny the science....the scientifically dogmatic undermining of confidence in the human experience of freedom and responsibility, — Janus
this is a direct contradiction fo the contention that another person cannot feel your pain. Salinus describes feeling the pain in the other person's chest. Further, this is not mere empathy. — Banno
...the scientifically dogmatic undermining of confidence in the human experience of freedom and responsibility, — Janus
Janus sees this as undermining the very moral fibre of humanity, to the extent that he will deny the science. — Banno
Just to be clear, the contention is not that Salinus does feel another's pain; it is that he might; that it is possible. It is enough to show that it is possible for another person to feel your pain.
If it is possible, then the notion that pain is necessarily private collapses. — Banno
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