But how is the connection between the name and the thing named set up? This question is the same as: How does a human being learn the meaning of names of sensations? For example, of the word “pain”. — PI 244
Here is one possibility: words are connected with the primitive, natural, expressions of sensation and used in their place. — PI 244
A child has hurt himself and he cries; then adults talk to him and teach him exclamations and, later, sentences. They teach the child new pain-behaviour. — PI 244
“So you are saying that the word ‘pain’ really means crying?” — On the contrary: the verbal expression of pain replaces crying, it does not describe it. — PI 244
Moreover, it makes sense to claim to know based on sensory experiences, but not, to claim to know that I'm having a pain, which has been the main idea of this thread. There's no knowing one is having a private sensation, I just have them. — Sam26
If we all had a pain in your toe, then that pain would be like the tree.
We don't, so it ain't. — Banno
Adults teach the child linguistic expressions (e.g. "I have a pain in my toe") to replace the natural expressions of pain (e.g. crying). — Luke
Saying "I have a pain in my toe" is an expression of pain; a pain-behaviour, not a description of the pain-behaviour. "Pain" does not mean crying. — Luke
Well, yes - and hence drops out of the discussion. Unlike a tree.
That is rather the point. — Banno
Are you saying that you just have private sensations, but that you don't know you have them? I don't see the difference between feeling a pain in my foot and seeing a tree in my garden. neither of these experiences require any further justification. — Janus
Not happy with that sort of language. Wash your mouth out.
What about the pain in Sam26's toe, and the tree in his yard? What do you know of them? — Banno
...on Wittgenstein’s view, while chess is essentially a game for two players, this does not exclude the possibility of playing it against oneself provided such solitary games are not regarded as paradigm instances of chess.
If I went to his place I could, via the senses, directly confirm whether or not there is a tree in his backyard, but not whether or not there is a pain in his toe. — Janus
I'm finding it difficult to see a cogent difference in kind between "I feel a pain in my toe" and "I see a tree in my backyard".. — Janus
Perhaps that artilce can serve to move beyond mere explanation to critique of private language? — Banno
You don't see a difference between not being able to doubt you're in pain, as opposed to being able to doubt there is a tree over there. Of course the latter depends on context, it would be easy to imagine someone doubting that your seeing a tree. For example, maybe it's foggy and you can't see clearly. However, try doubting the pain you're having. — Sam26
Do you see it now? — Banno
But from my point of view it would make no more sense to doubt I was seeing the tree I'm looking at, than it would to doubt that I'm feeling the pain that's throbbing in my toe. — Janus
Sure. So what do you think the topic is here? — Banno
↪Sam26 Discussions of the argument usually get stuck - as this one - in explaining it. It'd be interesting to move on to critiquing it. — Banno
As I say above and have said from the start, I see the difference in the intersubjective context. But I put that down to the contingency of perspective: in some cases there is just no way you can get yourself into a position to experience what the other is experiencing. — Janus
Wittgenstein is not easy to understand. — Sam26
Both are expressions. As opposed to names. — Banno
Enlightenment does not come from seeing the duck as a rabbit, but from seeing that it can be seen as either a duck or a rabbit. — Banno
but then reneged, choosing only to see this as a difference in perspective and not of kind.If I went to his place I could, via the senses, directly confirm whether or not there is a tree in his backyard, but not whether or not there is a pain in his toe. — Janus
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.