believenothing         
         
believenothing         
         
jgill         
         
believenothing         
         Thinking need not be worded thought. — I like sushi
Paine         
         Even if you just listen to your thoughts, you are still having a one way conversation. — believenothing
believenothing         
         Are you saying (or asking if) there is a difference between the back and forth of internal dialogue? — Paine
What human being does not converse with themselves? — jgill
believenothing         
         I'm saying the only form of nonworded contemplation I can imagine would tend to be pretty shortlived. — believenothing
T Clark         
         Yes, you can. Thinking need not be worded thought. — I like sushi
Contemplation need not be worded? That had occured to me, but how are we supposed to discuss a lack of discussion? — believenothing
T Clark         
         This is all in my head but I began to wander whether anyone else can really contemplate without a discussion - not even an internal one. — believenothing
Thinking need not be worded thought. — I like sushi
the back and forth of internal dialogue — Paine
ideas generated without words and then modified and justified consciously. — T Clark
We can think in images, but that is not abstract thinking. — Janus
Janus         
         
believenothing         
         We can think in images, but that is not abstract thinking. — Janus
believenothing         
         
believenothing         
         
Janus         
         
chiknsld         
         I'm 86 and have talked, argued, debated with myself all my life. As a mathematician that internal dialogue goes on forever.
When I was a rock climber and free soloed unknown territory I was my own companion, reasoning with myself constantly. When things got dicey I imagined an invisible cord suspended from the heavens having me on "top-rope". — jgill
Nils Loc         
         "Can you really contemplate without having a conversation with yourself?" — believenothing
believenothing         
         Imagine a hypothetical simulacra of a person who has no sense of interiority at all. From the outside you might conclude they are fully capable of conversing with themselves... but would they also be contemplating? Can there be thought without interiority? If so, why does interiority exist at all? — Nils Loc
Can a computer capable of some "thought" have zero sense of interiority? — Nils Loc
Nils Loc         
         Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.