we can't say how they'd be different — Moliere
works as well if you ask "How do you, how could you, know the tree is no longer a chestnut?"How do you, how could you, know (The tree would still be a chestnut)? — Janus
You are committing the error of applying a dualistic, determinate body based logic beyond its ambit: as I said "language on holiday". — Janus
You don't recognise the many, many times this discussion has gone before, and each time your account falls apart. As it does again, here. You can't recognise a decent argument.Nice: assertion, ad hominem and aspersion, but no argument. — Janus
We are born into a world already formed by the perceptions and judgements, evolved over eons in a community of embodied perceivers, and enacted within ever-changing culture and language. — Janus
Its ineffable?
Being interpreted as a chestnut does not mean that unseen, it's no longer a chestnut.
What reason is there to suppose that unseen, it is no longer a chestnut? — Banno
How do you, how could you, know (The tree would still be a chestnut)? — Janus
works as well if you ask "How do you, how could you, know the tree is no longer a chestnut?" — Banno
Balls. You want to treat knowing and being true as the same. The are not. Knowing is a relation between an individual and a proposition. Being true is not a relation. — Banno
and each time your account falls apart. As it does again, here. You can't recognise a decent argument. — Banno
I guess to bring this back to the original question -- to what extent is the brain involved in any of that? — Moliere
My apologies for indulging Janus' off-topic confusion. — Banno
I agree with that, I think. Not eons, though -- spoken language is much sooner than biological timescales. It seems like eons. — Moliere
brains pre-date language — Moliere
So "virtual reality" isn't quite the right metaphor. — Moliere
Your wetware can't walk through walls. It's the reality of walls that counts, not the reality of "the contents of consciousness", whatever they might be. — Banno
Your wetware can't walk through walls. It's the reality of walls that counts, not the reality of "the contents of consciousness", whatever they might be.
By way of pointing out that you are first embedded in the world. You are not sitting in your mind looking out — Banno
Brain expands the repertoire of an organism's responses to the environment, particularly in cooperation with specialised organs of sense. One way a complex brain can do this is by modelling the result of various responses, in a virtual environment, and for this it can be useful to distinguish things - a chestnut tree from a monkey puzzle, for instance - (trees I can climb from trees I cannot climb).
Some brains get caught up in the modelling process to the extent that they lose the distinction between the model and reality. In particular, they mistake the 'I' of the model for the real organism. Such is the human condition and universal delusion. — unenlightened
To what extent do you believe brains are involved in the eons of judgments that've been passed down? — Moliere
But is it a real one? When you ask if it is real, what are you sugesting? No, it's a fake; it's an illusion; it's a forgery; it's a phoney, a counterfeit, a mirage... What is real and what isn't is decided in each case by contrast; there is no single criteria. — Banno
I'd just like to point out that if the brain can have dreams that are often mistaken as reality, then it doesn't seem farfetched that the brain is a virtual reality generator. — Shawn
:up: :up:Some brains get caught up in the modelling process to the extent that they lose the distinction between the model and reality. In particular, they mistake the 'I' of the model for the real organism. Such is the human condition and universal delusion. — unenlightened
"If a lion could talk, we could not understand him" — Moliere
It's more that I don't see how "contents of consciousness" might be "real or not real". — Banno
Your wetware can't walk through walls. It's the reality of walls that counts, not the reality of "the contents of consciousness", whatever they might be. — Banno
So this would suggest our language isn't necessarily a brain thing. The brain is involved, of course, so that's not where I'm going here. — Moliere
Right, is it just differences in the human brain that enables the development of language, or is it vocal chords or the opposable thumb or a combination? I don't think it makes much sense to consider the brain apart from the whole body, anyway. — Janus
As you say , some animals can recognize and respond appropriately to words and phrases,but do they have any notion that the word or phrase represents or refers to anything, or do they merely associate certain sounds with certain activities? — Janus
I'm have no definite sense of what you mean by "an understanding of language would get closer to this notion of the virtual insofar that we are thinking of language as what's virtual". Maybe you have in mind an idea that I would agree with: that the world of objects, or as the Buddhists would say "namarupa" or "name and form" is a conceptual overlay to bare perception, where the latter is just sensation; visual, auditory, tactile or whatever. In Buddhist philosophy the state of conceptual-less perception is referred to as Nirvikalpa.
* "Of or pertaining to the absence of conceptual thinking or discursive thought"
* "the state of recognizing reality which is totally freed of the distortions of discursive thought, non-discrimination"
(This ties in with the issues around ineffability).
On this view, the empirical world is not something we directly perceive, but is a conceived abstraction; a world of different kinds of objects and "states of affairs", collectively derived from associating sensory experiences.
Do animals experience such a world? It seems doubtful, since they probably don't name things and conceive of them as kinds, and yet they can function very well, arguably better than we can, although they are not so adaptable to new environments. — Janus
And, by extension, do we humans do the same while feeling like we do differently? (the epiphenomenal belief, I think, fits here) — Moliere
I don't think I have in mind what you're describing. If I did then I'd have more sympathy for Husserl than I presently do, given I don't think it's possible to attain that state, and even go so far as to say that our conceptualizations can even enhance our experience -- that language and conceptualization can, in addition to obscuring, elucidate. It just depends on how you use it. — Moliere
pretty sure I just heard some crabs (yes crabs) talking on a beach as i walked past them... — Changeling
But it's a real wall, not part of a dream, through which you cannot walk.
That is, the phenomena of a dream wall are not the same as the phenomena of a real wall. They are different, at the phenomenological level.
Hence, it is an error to suppose that what the dream wall and the real wall have in common is phenomenological. — Banno
Well, we say that we understand words and phrases to represent or refer to things, and animals don't say that, can't say that. — Janus
pretty sure I just heard some crabs (yes crabs) talking on a beach as i walked past them... — Changeling
Epiphenomenalism makes no sense — Janus
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