Obviously your belief is that no solipsistic one-mind existence could ever contain the illusion of a language, communication and conversations. I think we've hit the nub of it. You see I do think it's possible for it ALL to be an illusion, and you haven't proven it impossible. — GLEN willows
And by an exception you mean a coherent example of there being a private mind behind the public expression that cannot be known? Then what left is there to say? The case is proved. — Michael
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/ryle/#EpiSemComThe ontological commitments of the Official Doctrine lead to the mind-body problem; the epistemological commitments of the Official Doctrine lead to the problem of other minds. According to the traditional view, bodily processes are external and can be witnessed by observers, but mental processes are private, “internal” as it is metaphorically described (since mental processes are not supposed to be locatable anywhere). Mental processes or events are supposed, on the official view, to be played out in a private theatre; such events are known directly by the person who has them either through the faculty of introspection or the “phosphorescence” of consciousness. The subject of the mental states is, on this view, incorrigible—her avowals of her own mental states cannot be corrected by others—and she is infallible—she cannot be wrong about which states she is in.[6] Others can know them only indirectly through “complex and frail inferences” from what the body does.
But if all that is mental is to be understood in this way, it is unclear how we are justified in believing that others have the requisite episodes or mental accompaniments. It would be possible, on this view, for others to act as if they are minded, but for them to have none of the right “conscious experiences” accompanying their actions for them to qualify as such. Perhaps we are in much the same position as Descartes who thought it made sense to wonder whether such creatures are automata instead.
The problem of other minds is compounded by even more serious difficulties given certain assumptions about the way language works. Proponents of the Official Doctrine are committed to the view that mental discourse serves to designate items that carry the metaphysical and epistemological load of that doctrine.
The verbs, nouns and adjectives, with which in ordinary life we describe the wits, characters and higher-grade performances of the people with whom we have do, are required to be construed as signifying special episodes in their secret histories, or else as signifying tendencies for such episodes to occur. (1949a, 16–17)
Ryle’s criticism of the Official Doctrine begins by pointing out an absurdity in its semantic consequences. If mental conduct verbs pick out “occult” causes then we would not be able to apply those verbs as we do; so something must be wrong with a theory of mental phenomena that renders so inadequate our everyday use of these verbs. For, according to the Official Doctrine
when someone is described as knowing, believing or guessing something, as hoping, dreading, intending or shirking something, as designing this or being amused at that, these verbs are supposed to denote the occurrence of specific modifications in his (to us) occult stream of consciousness. (1945, 17)
Ryle’s criticism of the view is that if it were correct, only privileged access to this stream of consciousness could provide authentic testimony that these mental-conduct verbs were correctly or incorrectly applied. “The onlooker, be he teacher, critic, biographer or friend, can never assure himself that his comments have any vestige of truth.” And yet,
it was just because we do in fact all know how to make such comments, make them with general correctness and correct them when they turn out to be confused or mistaken, that philosophers found it necessary to construct their theories of the nature and place of minds. Finding mental-conduct concepts being regularly and effectively used, they properly sought to fix their logical geography. But the account officially recommended would entail that there could be no regular or effective use of these mental-conduct concepts in our descriptions of, and prescriptions for, other people’s minds. (1949a, 17)
Is it not better to say that we are constituted by all we do and say ? — Pie
No, because I think and feel and see things that I never talk about or “act out”. I dream, I imagine, I lie, and so on. — Michael
:up:No I wanted to be pulled out of the fiery pit of solipsism, ha! No worries, I respect your arguments. On to other hills to die on! — GLEN willows
given that you seem to understand the conceptual difference between a genuine loving relationship and a convincing act, why wouldn’t your “semantic” contemplation lead you to agree with the sensibility of my position? — Michael
you’ve been convinced by something like Wittgenstein’s account — Michael
Pray tell how we might evaluate from the outside whether Harry loved Sally, having met her? — Pie
Or how 'love' could have a public meaning if its referent is infinitely private. — Pie
The phrases "the future" and "your private thoughts" each refer to something that is necessarily inaccessible to me. — Michael
Both play a role in inferences. Both have meaning. I don't have to know your private thoughts to reason about private thoughts in general. The norms for their application are not hidden. — Pie
So, again, what's the problem? — Michael
The phrases "the future" and "your private thoughts" each refer to something that is necessarily inaccessible to me. What's the problem? — Michael
If you leap from the boring, typical talk of private thoughts to the 'official theory' of the ghost, then the only difference between a P-Zombie and a real boy is ... nothing at all. — Pie
We must pretend to admit that possibly that Hitler actually loved the Jews. Or that the guy who beats and rapes his wife 'actually' loves her, because the truth is behind or other than any evidence we can summon for this or that judgment. — Pie
The non-solipsist says "it is possible to know that other minds and mind-independent objects exist".
The solipsist replies with "it is impossible to know that other minds and mind-independent objects exist".
The non-solipsist then says "but what does it mean to exist"? — Michael
But I dispute very much that they are the product of an individual intelligence. — Pie
Even the idea of an individual intelligence is problematic. I don't mean that a man can't write poetry in the woods. — Pie
much of my thinking in this thread..... — Pie
I'll grant that, in this tiny corner of human life, we have relatively exact concepts. — Pie
But 'self-evident' non-linguistic thoughts sounds like mysticism. — Pie
The difference is that the p-zombie doesn't have the private thoughts. You keep switching between accepting that there are such things to then not? I don't understand it. — Michael
What would you count as evidence for a private thought ?
Is a private thought just something we might quietly 'say' to ourselves ? Is it something that, in principle, could be detected and translated by a sufficiently advanced neuroscientist from Venus ?
Or is it on another 'plane' entirely, untouched and untouchable by the 'non-mental'? — Pie
Such is your prerogative. So what are they a product of, or, from where do they originate? — Mww
Is the writer using an intelligence that does not belong to him alone? — Mww
Relatively exact. Can’t be both simultaneously. Up is relative to down, but up and down are each exactly representative of their part in a logical relation. — Mww
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ImpredicativityIn mathematics, logic and philosophy of mathematics, something that is impredicative is a self-referencing definition. Roughly speaking, a definition is impredicative if it invokes (mentions or quantifies over) the set being defined, or (more commonly) another set that contains the thing being defined. There is no generally accepted precise definition of what it means to be predicative or impredicative. ...
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The greatest lower bound of a set X, glb(X), also has an impredicative definition: y = glb(X) if and only if for all elements x of X, y is less than or equal to x, and any z less than or equal to all elements of X is less than or equal to y. This definition quantifies over the set (potentially infinite, depending on the order in question) whose members are the lower bounds of X, one of which being the glb itself. Hence predicativism would reject this definition.[1]
Metaphysics carries a less pejorative implication, but, suit yourself. — Mww
I don't know, hence the hard problem of consciousness. — Michael
.....would seem to follow from your individual intelligence. Conditioned by others, maybe, but the thinking, as such, must be your own else in saying “my thinking”, you contradict yourself. — Mww
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