You would just need to stimulate the appropriate are of the brain to recreate an experience which would be indistinguishable from one in ordinary life. — Manuel
suspect some philosophers think that by sticking to externalism, they're putting aside spooky stuff like experience (looking at the blue of the sky, or explicitly thinking about a beach, etc.) and then stick to things that are publicly observable and hence be "scientific". It's hard to say. — Manuel
The thought experiment suggests that we don't need the world to have representations that we have — Manuel
As you said, this topic is now removed from the OP. — Manuel
Maybe. It seems related to me - externalism, stimuli (as in stimuli-response)... — Isaac
Well that's why I asked where the stimulation comes from. Because if it comes from 'the world', then the thought experiment doesn't suggest we don't need the world, does it? — Isaac
I think the view you're advocating is internalism: that the world stimulates the brain to form representations. — frank
The stimulation could come from the world or it could come from a brain in a vat. — Manuel
What I think happens in these cases is that the stimulus gets interpreted as belonging to something in the world (another dog, the moon, etc.). — Manuel
These errors of modelling (the dog's, the moth's) don't make the sources of the data internal, they're about generating appropriate responses. If the model generates an appropriate response, then in what way is it an error of interpretation? — Isaac
My aim was to inquire rather than advocate — Isaac
That's kind of rare on this forum. — frank
I don't believe I said it was an error of interpretation. We would say that the moth made a mistake, on the assumption that living creatures generally speaking, don't commit suicide. — Manuel
Yes, "the model generates an appropriate response...". I agree here. — Manuel
Isn't the model internal? — Manuel
A mistake in behaviour though, no? It ought not have flown into the lamp (to its death), the result of any modal of lamp/world should have had it remain alive at the very least. Soft behaviourism?
How could we understand such an error, in a functionalist sense, without an external world being one way such that some model of it can be another? — Isaac
So stimuli-response then...? — Isaac
If that were the case, there'd be no errors, the moth would have meant to fly into the lamp. Since talk of 'errors' and 'intentions' seems so useful, I can't see the utility of a system which would exclude them.
But to be fair, I've never fully understood externalism, — Isaac
But to be fair, I've never fully understood externalism,
— Isaac
There are several versions of it, linguistic, perceptual, etc. — Manuel
what this individual means by a sign on any given occasion depends, at least in part, on this external practice. — SEP
Loosely speaking, in a model in which all sensations (stimulus, sense data, etc.) of the type X are interpreted as the moon, things that resemble X close enough, would lead the moth to act as if the X is the moon.
Of course, the moon could not be out that night due to cloudy weather or it could cease to exist. The moth would still interpret anything that causes X as the moon. Something like that. — Manuel
the OP quotes discussion of a "social version" in which
what this individual means by a sign on any given occasion depends, at least in part, on this external practice. — SEP
I.e., cutting out, at least in part, the middle man in this too-universally-accepted picture: — bongo fury
All of that seems to require an external world. The stimulus or sense data of type X must come from outside of the model. — Isaac
But to be fair, the OP quotes discussion of a "social version" in which
what this individual means by a sign on any given occasion depends, at least in part, on this external practice. — bongo fury
I think the impact of the BIV depends on how you think about this distinction. — Manuel
the sign is modelled by the brain so as to be attached to a referent. — Isaac
The mid-stage is there — Isaac
Attached directly? Sure. So,
The mid-stage is there — Isaac
Apparently not. — bongo fury
later perhaps — Isaac
Why people have to reply within five minutes I never understand. The result is rarely worth it. — bongo fury
I think Chomsky avers (somewhere on youtube) that Hume and Heraclitus were privy to the same insight [the inscrutability of reference]. Of course he draws a different lesson from it than Quine. But he doesn't say the doctrine itself is mistaken, or even that it is behaviouristic. And it isn't. It points out that you can't objectively ground reference in behaviour. — bongo fury
In psychology one may or may not be a behaviourist, but in linguistics one has no choice … There is nothing in linguistic meaning beyond what is to be gleaned from overt behaviour in observable circumstances. — Quine, Pursuit of Truth
Given Quine's own formulation of his theses, it appears open to a non-behaviorist to regard his arguments, if he accepts them, as demonstrations that any behavioristic account of meaning must be inadequate - it cannot even distinguish between a word meaning rabbit and one meaning rabbit-stage. — Kripke p57
But if Wittgenstein is right, and no amount of access to my mind can reveal whether I mean plus or quus, may the same not hold for rabbit and rabbit-stage? So perhaps Quine's problem arises for non-behaviorists. This is not the place to explore the matter. — Kripke p57
the possibility of meaning something by a sign is dependent on the existence of a practice external to the individual meaner, and that what this individual means by a sign on any given occasion depends, at least in part, on this external practice. — frank
I think this brand of externalism leads to behaviorism and a pending collapse in meaning of any kind anywhere. How can this be avoided? — frank
this methodological challenge to the scientific bona fides of consciousness (on behalf of empiricism) — frank
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