Well this inspires me to actually getting around tobrowsing empirical research, rather than simply saying, in this case: doesn't everyone experience musical "ear worms"?
Well, the wiki page says yes, everyone (98%) does. So the next question is, do we have, in your case, a syndrome as rare and curious as that of aphantasia, or a simpler misunderstanding? Or, not simpler, but par for the course in phenomenological discussion! ... E.g. I wonder what degree of clarity (reality? hallucination?) of imagery you are supposing is involved in "duplication"? — bongo fury
back to the same starting frequency — frank
I found I had to practice to even duplicate it with my voice, — frank
So I don't think that your returning
back to the same starting frequency — frank
is a problem for Witty, because you are judging the pitch-identity (vs. difference) of the earlier and later 'internals' according to a pre-existing system that (if it recognises them as internal) maps them to externals that are identified or distinguished according to frequency. — bongo fury
How do you know the early and later internals are the same? — frank
How do you know the early and later internals are the same [pitch]? — frank
The private language argument misleads us into thinking that we must recognize two things as being the same thing in order for such a recognition to be useful. But this is not the case, because we only need to recognize similarities, and hence types. — Metaphysician Undercover
Internals and externals are all part of the same game or classification system. — bongo fury
There's a genetic anomaly that's associated with perfect pitch. — frank
On the other hand, some people are tone deaf. — frank
So if there is a classification system in play, we each learn it from whom? Ourselves? — frank
The can't beat them so might as well join them [the absolute pitchers] comes partly from knowing (or failing to remedy) my limitations. Which are, mainly, losing track around modulations, some more than others obviously. — bongo fury
There's a genetic anomaly that's associated with perfect pitch. — frank
Interesting theory. — bongo fury
Likewise. (But a rather antiquated theory.) — bongo fury
So if there is a classification system in play, we each learn it from whom? Ourselves? — frank
Each other. — bongo fury
Like colors, sounds only exist in the mind. The sound you hear when you hum and the "sound" you "hear silently humming" in your mind is a memory are the same. Just as the password stored in the computer's memory is the same as the stokes on the keyboard you type, or else you won't be able to get access to your data.Silently hum a note in your mind. Now duplicate that same frequency aloud. I think some readings of the Private Language argument would say this activity is nonsense because there's no way to tell if the note you hum is the same as the note in your mind.. — frank
I meant the same frequency. — frank
I don't see that. I think it attacks the British empiricist psychology of ideas and impressions: the narrative of a private construction of mind from sense-data. His argument seems to be that identity and similarity of the internals has no basis when asserted in private. I don't see any conflating of numerical identity with similarity. — bongo fury
Like colors, sounds only exist in the mind. The sound you hear when you hum and the "sound" you "hear silently humming" in your mind is a memory are the same. — Harry Hindu
Just as the password stored in the computer's memory is the same as the stokes on the keyboard you type — Harry Hindu
The problem is that it's not really "the same". Tones of the same frequency from two different instruments are not the same tone, for example, there are overtones and all sorts of other interference patterns. If you have a sound in your mind, from an instrument, and you try to match the pitch of that sound with your mouth, you are selecting a part of the sound, (the principal pitch) and trying to replicate it. If your goal is to produce that pitch you are not necessarily trying to replicate the sound exactly. — Metaphysician Undercover
What does it mean to know the sound of internal humming when you can't check its frequency? If you need to know the frequency to know the sound and you can't check the frequency of the sound in your mind then how can you say that you know the sound in your mind?There's one big difference though. I can check the frequency I'm humming. Only I know the sound of internal humming. — frank
There are programs that can display a stored passwords. When you tell someone your password you convert memory to sound and another hears it an coverts the sound to their memory. They are then able to access your data. How did they get the correct password if the internal sound of your password is different than what is heard?I could access the computer's registers and light up a display of LEDs to show me the binary code for the password. I can't do that with an internal image of a password.
Maybe we just don't have the technology for that yet. Maybe one day. — frank
Silently hum a note in your mind. Now duplicate that same frequency aloud. I think some readings of the Private Language argument would say this activity is nonsense because there's no way to tell if the note you hum is the same as the note in your mind.. — frank
Let's start with the assumption that "there's no way to tell if the note you hum is the same as the note in your mind". Ask yourself is it necessary that the note you hum be the very same (numerical identity) as the note in your mind, i — Metaphysician Undercover
I really don't understand the nature of an internal humming. All I know is that I do it, then hum the same tone outloud. Bongo can do it too, so I'm not alone. — frank
I can check the frequency I'm humming. Only I know the sound of internal humming. — frank
Numerical identity? — frank
the relation that holds between two relata when they are the selfsame entity, that is, when the terms designating them have the same reference — Collins
I really don't understand the nature of an internal humming. — frank
But of course you probably wouldn't ever check the frequency of an external sound, as such. — bongo fury
The physics is a kind of back-story. Indeed, if we are partisan internalists, we might even aspire to "divide through and cancel it out", leaving only the internals (images both perceptual and merely imagined or recalled); just as Witty suggests we might in certain conditions eliminate the internals, and their questionable solipsistic back-story (the private language). — bongo fury
As opposed to identity in a particular (known or unknown) respect. — bongo fury
I really don't understand the nature of an internal humming. — frank
Is it different to qualia in general? — bongo fury
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