SO here's another example of tokens:
"Rose is a rose is a rose"
The first "Rose" is one of three tokens.
— Banno
You agree?
Suppose you and I are both looking at that sentence.
We both see it. I hope you will agree that there are 2 people, but one token - the first instance of "Rose".
So here we have two experiences of the very same token - the first instance of "Rose". This is a counterexample to your: If there are two of them, then they are not the same token. — Banno
I'm under the impression that you do not understand the type-token distinction. — Luke
"Experience" is being treated as a thing, a mental item of some sort, when as Isaac and @khaled's discussion showed, it is an event, or better, a sort of action. At the very least there should be concern over talk of having an experience; as if it were like having a car or an iPhone. — Banno
Well, if you think a token is an experience, one of us is wrong. — Banno
I think that far too simple.
Have a look at around §48 of Philosophical Investigations, but read "token" for "simple".
What counts as a token is dependent on the language game one is playing. — Banno
I see no reason to think this cannot be generalized to apply to any phenomenon.The word "bicycle" denotes the class; my bicycle (or any particular bicycle) is an instance of that class. This shouldn't be difficult. — Luke
on what grounds are we saying that your X and my Y are even similar? — Isaac
That we use the same words. — khaled
↪Isaac
Is there a reason you did not respond to my latest post? Oh well, never mind. — Luke
We must firstly recall the distinction between having pain and expressing pain. Having pain is your experience of the feeling that hurts; whereas expressing pain is your physical reaction to the feeling that hurts, such as screaming, wincing or saying "ouch". — Luke
Nobody else can experience your tokens of pain in any way, except via your expressions of pain. — Luke
Here we have a problem in the way you've laid this out. If expressing a pain is a physical reaction, then that requires it have a physical initiate (otherwise Newtons laws of thermodynamics have been broken). Yet with an intrinsically private experience (ie one that is not accessible even to suitably advanced neuroscience) I can't see how it could cause such an initiation. — Isaac
It seems that you could then turn around your claim above to say "people can experience your tokens of pain, via your expressions of pain" — Isaac
What's baffling to me, is how, having done so, having sieved and diced this thing, having taken it to the academy, shown it around and agreed where it should be cut and what elements belong in what category,... people then what to claim that the remaining diced and filtered sections are all-of-a-sudden ineffable again, private — Isaac
I was attempting a description which allows one to feel pain without showing it. — Luke
It seems that you could then turn around your claim above to say "people can experience your tokens of pain, via your expressions of pain" — Isaac
People don't experience the feeling that hurts when they experience my expressions of pain. — Luke
How can we know where to cut then? — Isaac
By seeing how others use the words.
Finding the commonality between every instance of someone saying "red". — khaled
How does that tell us where to cut the continuous and unfiltered 'experience'. — Isaac
then how can I know that the commonality is not our big toes (rather than the wavelengths of light)? — Isaac
The toe size is a content-determining difference, not a structure determining one. — khaled
Even to sufficiently advanced neuroscience? — Isaac
304. “But you will surely admit that there is a difference between pain behaviour with pain and pain-behaviour without pain.” — Admit it? What greater difference could there be? — “And yet you again and again reach the conclusion that the sensation itself is a Nothing.” — Not at all. It’s not a Something, but not a Nothing either! The conclusion was only that a Nothing would render the same service as a Something about which nothing could be said. — Wittgenstein
You'll argue that it's not 'your' pain because it's not taking place in your body, but that makes 'pain' into the set of physiological activities (being the only part fixed to your body). — Isaac
I have no problem with labelling it that way, but it's then not intrinsically private, any sufficiently advanced neurologist can see it. — Isaac
So (for tomorrow, as I have work today) could you explain again the difference between structure and content as you're using the terms in the context of experience? — Isaac
So what? There's no structure to things? Things are whatever we want them to be? Is that what you and this guy Goodman are saying?
— Olivier5
I think what he is saying is that good analysis of intersubjective representations on a non-cosmic scale is always hobbled by reasoning about their possible foundations on a cosmic scale. I.e. about, usually, objectivity. — bongo fury
But to be clear, there is no one understanding of the type-token distinction. It's a bit muddled. Think I mentioned that. — Banno
As a beakon or azimuth, a goal that will never be attained but nevertheless indicates a worthy direction to take, objectivity is not a problem but a solution to a problem. — Olivier5
We do see things as they are - the sugar in the bowl, the tree in the garden. — Banno
But that direction not, presumably, towards just maximum possible approximation to infinite information and complete truth? That doesn't seem to be what people are driving at — bongo fury
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