That's funny, Salinas himself refers to it as a "heightened state of empathy". — Janus
it is possible that some people might be psychic (which would be the only way that one could truly feel another's pain) — Janus
Well, yes you have: you have said that it is not possible to feel someone else's pain. That is, it is necessary that one cannot feel the pain of anther. The strawman accusation comes too easily.In any case, this is a strawman, since I have nowhere said that pain is necessarily private, — Janus
...the evidence points to it being so, certainly in the majority of cases. — Janus
No two things are exactly alike, ever. Pain's not unique in this respect. No two phones are exactly alike either, but we still refer to them as 'the same' phone - "Oh look, you've got the same phone as me". We seem to be constructing this arbitrary wall around feelings when their intrinsic differences between people are no more than the particular scratches on your phone that are not on mine. If we share the same make and model we happily say we have 'the same' phone. — Isaac
The type–token distinction is the difference between naming a class (type) of objects and naming the individual instances (tokens) of that class...
The sentence "they drive the same car" is ambiguous. Do they drive the same type of car (the same model) or the same instance of a car type (a single vehicle)? Clarity requires us to distinguish words that represent abstract types from words that represent objects that embody or exemplify types. The type–token distinction separates types (abstract descriptive concepts) from tokens (objects that instantiate concepts).
For example: "bicycle" represents a type: the concept of a bicycle; whereas "my bicycle" represents a token of that type: an object that instantiates that type. — Wikipedia
Yes - and is at pains to differentiate empathy from synesthesia, describing how the synesthesia supports his empathy. They are not the same. — Banno
Well, yes you have: you have said that it is not possible to feel someone else's pain. That is, it is necessary that one cannot feel the pain of anther. The strawman accusation comes too easily. — Banno
The evidence is before you. — Banno
Ok. Relational in the sense of inviting description by means of many-place predicates (transitive verbs etc), or in the sense of being true relative to a point of view? — bongo fury
Why those quotes? They don't say anything relevant. — Banno
This is hilarious — Janus
. I do say it would be impossible to feel the pain of another unless one were psychic, and I'm not surprised you trotted out your oft-repeated accusation that the "no true Scotsman" fallacy has been committed. Instead of "truly" I should have said "in the strong sense" which is what I meant. — Janus
cooking breakfast. — Banno
You now introduce "in the strong sense". Needs exposition. Remember the contention is nto that Salinas indeed feels another's pain, but that it is possible. — Banno
The case has to be made that necessarily, Salinas cannot have the same token pain as the patient.
Can you make that case? — Banno
The case has to be made that necessarily, Salinas cannot have the same token pain as the patient.
Can you make that case? — Banno
HA!!! We just finished dinner, which on this fine Saturday night, consists of.....breakfast. — Mww
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. — Banno
Was that it? Was that all you’re arguing? Then I’d agree. — khaled
DO you agree with that. too? If so,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
I think we are on the same page - I'd express this as that the private experience is irrelevant; it's that the language has a use that gives the utterances meaning. — Banno
I think we are on the same page - I'd express this as that the private experience is irrelevant; it's that the language has a use that gives the utterances meaning.
— Banno
...and we are back to post 5, after an interesting journey. — Banno
Same token though? No. Identical tokens? Possible. 2 instances of the same thing. — khaled
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