I don't see how we can institute a meaning for the mysterious X that the p-zombie is supposed to lack. — Pie
we have actual examples of words and phrases referring to private sensations, the self, one's will, thinking, dreaming, the soul, God, counterfactuals, etc.And they have a meaning despite the words not referring to something which is publicly accessible. — Michael
And, again, in the context of this discussion "public" and "private" have a particular meaning that isn't analogous to your example of a private phone call. — Michael
Not knowing how something can happen doesn't entail that it doesn't happen. — Michael
A statement can be warranted but false or unwarranted but true. — Pie
A statement can be warranted but false or unwarranted but true. — Pie
And what public norm determines the meaning of "true" and "false" which distinguishes them from "warranted" and "unwarranted"? The exact kind of realism that you seem to argue for requires that there is more to meaning and reference than just what is publicly given to us in experience. The world isn't just what we see or hear or believe. — Michael
Also on this point see the opening post here. — Michael
Dummett's argument concludes that the principle of bivalence be rejected because we cannot always recognize whether or not a statement is true/false. The principle of bivalence only says that all statements are determinately true/false, not that we can recognize them as such. The criterion for being determinately true/false is remarkably different than being recognized as true/false. Dummett conflates the two. I see no reason to think/believe that Witt's writing leads to that or suffers from the same. — creativesoul
I ain't ridiculing anyone, — GLEN willows
...the whole practice of language use would go on the same even if we had got it wrong.
You are acutely aware of the reality of other minds when seen doing something embarrassing. Feeling embarrassed requires other minds. — Banno
Applies to every argument.... — GLEN willows
This assumes he doesn't talk to himself. Why would you think that?
— Tate
Then all he has done is to decide by fiat that I am a part of his self; such a solipsism loses any differentiation. — Banno
I think the challenge is to disprove it to oneself. — Tate
The Other can be manufactured. — Tate
Try this for a line of reasoning. Descartes supposed he could doubt everything, and decided that he could not doubt that he was doubting, and hence that the doubter must exist.
Have a think about what it was he was doubting. To doubt is to doubt the truth of some proposition. But a proposition is an item of language. And there are good reasons to think that language must involve other folk - that there can be no private languages.
Hence in order to make use of propositions one must be part of a language community. The very doubting that Descartes made use of seem to already involve other people.
What do you make of that? — Banno
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