The conclusion that seems most plausible to me is that, in order to be experience at all, experience must have logical content; a content which is not reliant on language, but which is, on the contrary, the very phenomenon that makes symbolic language possible. — John
Does what we say about our experiences correspond to those experiences? Surely it must or else we cannot be speaking about anything. — John
It may, or it may not. Depends on the experience, and depends on what one says about it. — Bitter Crank
You have perhaps heard someone describe their experience and thought, "That can't be what they experienced. What they say doesn't make sense."
I have had only a few experiences where I couldn't account for an experience logically--as it was happening or later. (It involved way-finding. I was on my way home, walking on very familiar streets, and reached a corner where it seemed like the avenues and streets had been turned 90 degrees.) I actually had this experience twice in the same vicinity. It was not at all "logical". I wasn't day-dreaming, I wasn't on drugs, wasn't hallucinating, etc. It was just that -- "This doesn't make sense." It seemed spooky, but I don't believe in spooky goings on, but I can't account for it, either.
I've had experiences like this under the influence of alcohol or drugs, but that is logical: drink and drugs in combo can lead to totally illogical perceptions of what is happening.
The world makes sense almost all of the time. It is predictable, reliable, constant, knowable (up to a point), and all animals seem to be able to exist and interact in this world. At least, that seems to be our perception. Flowers bloom, bees pollinate them. Birds lay eggs, the eggs hatch, the birds sing, then they fly away. We wake up, the world is not one vast buzzing confusion, and we get on with our day.
It's possible that we are victims of a monstrous hoax perpetrated by superior but devious beings, and actually the world IS one vast buzzing confusion. If so, the hoax works very well.
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