All you can say is that only you can have your experiences; but that says nothing. — Banno
↪Joshs One learns the grammar of "I" and "me". — Banno
If there were only one way shaping from the social unit to its bodies , there would be no need for the concept of ‘I’ in the first place, only a vast cultural we-self. — Joshs
Not until six pages in does Nagel even define what "like" means. Footnote 6, "Therefore the analogical form of the English expression "what it is like" is misleading. It does not mean "what (in our experience) it resembles," but rather "how it is for the subject himself."
This always troubled me. It seems his whole idea of "like" is vague or inchoherent. — Jackson
It was your interjection that now appears to have been without purpose.
it's not clear to me what you had to add to the discussion. — Banno
I think the idea of the self is something of a fetish. Hume's critique of identity is accurate. There are multiple selves without there being an identity of all the selves. — Jackson
The point I made was that "what is it like to be...or do...?" just means "how does it feel to be.. or do...? and has nothing to do with resemblance. — Janus
Standing alone, the phrase "what is it like" is indeed vague, in that it can apply to many different contexts. I just Googled "what is it like" and got pages of examples in return. Example : "what is it like to be in a coma?". The implication in most cases is a desire to understand how it "feels" to exist in a different place or body or condition. Or to read another person's mind.Not until six pages in does Nagel even define what "like" means. Footnote 6, "Therefore the analogical form of the English expression "what it is like" is misleading. It does not mean "what (in our experience) it resembles," but rather "how it is for the subject himself."
This always troubled me. It seems his whole idea of "like" is vague or inchoherent. — Jackson
There is an ambiguity. Consider the conversation:
"What is it like to visit Vegas?"
"It's not like anything at all." — bert1
I find something of value and interest in Whitehead's panexperientialism, but the idea that rocks have minds does not convince; nevertheless to each their own.. — Janus
You'll have to ask someone who makes the mistake of placing them "in separate categories". Like "vapor" & "ice", they are different properties of water and not different substances (categories). Like "subjectivity" and "objectivity" with respect to (meta)cognition – no need to repeat the cartesian fallacy of reifying semantic functions of subject and object into "res mensa" and res extensa" substances (inadvertantly generating the interaction pseudo-problem ...)What is it about the phenomenal and the tangible that distinguishes them so significantly that they be placed in separate categories? — Hanover
So you, I and the bat all see the moth. — Banno
It's not at all uncommon to find folk claiming that because the bat sees the moth differently, there is no moth. — Banno
What makes a subject special in this regard? Is there a way it is for any object? I'm not asking if a table or rock has a perspective or a mind. I'm asking if there is a what is the case for any object or subject? How is talking about what is the case for the environment of Earth different than talking about what is the case for your state of mind?It does not mean "what (in our experience) it resembles," but rather "how it is for the subject himself." — Jackson
I doubt Nagel was implying that there is nothing it is like to be a bat. I think Nagel was trying to get at the sensory information the bat posesses and the form this sensory information takes and not only how it is like (similar to) our sensory information we possess and the form it takes, but also how it differs.Or it could mean that when you are dead you can't experience anything.
In both examples the second interpretation is not about comparison. That's the sense that Nagel means. — bert1
I doubt Nagel was implying that there is nothing it is like to be a bat. — Harry Hindu
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