I don't see any inconsistency. — Fooloso4
The content of the experience of imagining is what is imagined. The experience itself is a picture or description that occurs in the mind. In order to answer the question of what that is I can draw a picture or describe the content. — Fooloso4
PPF 10. What is the content of the experience of imagining? The answer is a picture, or a description.
If you are saying that the mental image or imagined picture might change, then in what sense is it a "picture"?
— Luke
This shows how a picture hanging on the wall differs from a mental picture. — Fooloso4
We could think of it instead as a series of different (inner) pictures.
— Luke
How do you reconcile this with PI 389? — Fooloso4
They are at t1 and t2 my inner picture of X. My inner picture of X has changed. It should be noted that I may not even be aware that it has changed. — Fooloso4
No. Why would I need a private impression of the picture I imagined to tell me what I imagined? — Fooloso4
W's rejection here is consistent with the assertion that the content of a public picture and the content of a private picture are, or can be, the same.
— Luke
They might be but they need not be the same. — Fooloso4
No. I reject it because things are not always as we imagine them to be. — Fooloso4
Do you believe that this picture or description (at PPF 10) is relatively unstable and subject to the same change as your imagination? — Luke
Do you think he is referring to "the picture or description that occurs in the mind" or to your drawn (physical) picture or description of that content? — Luke
If you were to draw a picture of that content or describe that content, like you say in the quote above, then is the content of the physical picture/description the same as the content of the imagined picture/description at the time that you draw/describe it? — Luke
I see no reason to think that Wittgenstein is using two different meanings of "picture" here, where one is used for an internal "picture" that may contain different information from the external picture. This is just what PI 280 rejects. — Luke
His private impression of the picture tells him what he imagined ...
It is not the point of PI 280 that you don't need the picture to tell you what you imagined. — Luke
The point is that there is no information missing between the physical picture and what you imagined. — Luke
However, this is the opposite of your reading with its relatively static external pictures and relatively changing internal pictures. — Luke
The picture or description is what is imagined. — Fooloso4
The former, but to answer the question I could draw a picture or describe that content. — Fooloso4
Suppose I draw a picture of or describe a picture I saw at an art show. Is that picture or description of what I saw the same as what I saw, that is, the picture? My picture might embellish or omit certain things. It is still a picture of this, that is, the picture I saw at an art show, but the pictures will not be the same. — Fooloso4
What PI 280 rejects is that:
His private impression of the picture tells him what he imagined ... — Fooloso4
This picture [that he painted in order to show how he imagined the stage set] has a double function: it informs others, as pictures or words do —– but for the informant it is in addition a representation (or piece of information?) of another kind: for him it is the picture of his image, as it can’t be for anyone else. His private impression of the picture tells him what he imagined, in a sense in which the picture can’t do this for others. — PI 280
As you noted earlier, that mental picture might change, so how could you establish whether or not the physical painting matches it? — Luke
I would expect that in painting the picture he'd likely recognize inaccuracies to the way the painting represents the mental image and recognize that the painting is not the mental image. — wonderer1
I don’t disagree, but I think it’s a mistake to call the mental image a picture. The mental image is not a representation and it cannot inform others. — Luke
Thanks for clarifying. — Luke
Is this also how he is using “picture” at PI 389? — Luke
If not, how can you tell? — Luke
And how can you tell he means a mental picture or description at PPF 10? — Luke
So it is possible for the content of the physical picture/description to match the content of the mental picture/description? — Luke
it’s a question of whether the content of your physical picture/description matches your mental picture/description. — Luke
it informs others, as pictures or words do — Luke
has a double function: it informs others, as pictures or words do — PI 280
You are claiming that his private impression of the picture does tell him what he imagined in a sense in which the picture can’t do this for others, because you claim that there is a private mental picture that he can compare his painting to in order to see whether their content matches. — Luke
My point here is that it’s incorrect to call the mental image a “picture”, because a mental image does not inform others “as pictures or words do” (PI 280). — Luke
Why not approximately inform others? — wonderer1
I guess I wouldn't expect a painting to be anything other than an approximation of the painter's mental image. — wonderer1
Because he contrasts the mental picture to the picture. — Fooloso4
Wittgenstein poses the question: What is the content of the experience of imagining? And answer it:
The answer is a picture, or a description.
He is not asking about how that picture can be represented or communicated. — Fooloso4
How can I tell? I can't compare them unless two conditions are met: 1) I could call up the mental picture and 2) that it will remain unchanged each time I call it to mind. I do not think those conditions can be met. — Fooloso4
This:
it informs others, as pictures or words do
— Luke
and this:
has a double function: it informs others, as pictures or words do
— PI 280
are not the same. He does not reject the former but does reject the latter. It informs those who build the set. — Fooloso4
How does your mental image inform others of anything? — Luke
In PI 280 is it a painting of the painter’s mental image or of the stage set or of both? — Luke
The don't access my mental image. Their brain creates their own mental image in response to perceiving my picture. — wonderer1
A final analogy to illuminate the misguided supposition of predicates of perceptual qualities (e.g. ‘red’) having a double meaning (cf. §273). A theatrical or cinema director may sketch on paper roughly (etwa) how he imagines a scene. On the model of §273 it might seem that such a picture has two distinct representative functions. For others it represents the scene they are to create as the person envisages it. It tells them how he imagines the scene. But for him it represents his mental image of the scene which only he knows (since only he has it). Indeed, his visual impression of the picture he has painted tells him what he has imagined in a way in which, for others, it cannot. For in his case, his visual impression of what he has painted must surely coincide with the mental image he had when he imagined the scene.
This is a muddle. To paint what I imagine is not to copy a picture that is already ‘painted’ in my imagination (although I can, of course, imagine painting something, and then go on to paint what I imagined painting). The director’s sketch does indeed represent how he imagines the scene; i.e. to the question ‘How do you think it should look?’ he might produce the sketch and say ‘Like that’. This is what is called ‘representing what I imagined it should look like’. But it is erroneous to think that the picture represents to him what he imagined in any different sense, for it does not represent it in virtue of resembling his mental image, any more than the verbal expression of what he thought resembles his thought. It informs others how he imagined things should look, but it does not inform him! What makes the picture a good representation of what he imagined? Not its likeness to his mental image, but rather his avowed acknowledgement that that was what he had in mind. But that acknowledgement does not rest on an ‘inner glance’ at his mental image. ‘The image is not a picture, nor is the visual impression one. Neither “image” nor “impression” is the concept of a picture, although in both cases there is a tie‐up with a picture, and a different one in either case’ (Z §638). Hence it is a mistake to think that when I paint a picture to show you how I imagine a scene, the picture is a piece of information or a representation for me. It is an articulation or expression of how I imagine the scene, not an ‘outer’ picture of an ‘inner’ picture. Moreover, an impression of a picture is not a representation of a picture (cf. PI §366).
Similarly, although hearing the word ‘red’ may call forth a mental image of red (or of a field of poppies or a sunset), the answer to the question ‘What do you mean by “red”?’ is given by pointing to a sample. And if I ask myself ‘What do I mean by “red”?’, the answer is no different. — PMS Hacker, Wittgenstein: Meaning and Mind (Volume 3 of an Analytical Commentary on the Philosophical Investigations), Part 2: Exegesis, Section 243-427
PI 6. a picture of the object comes before the child’s mind when it hears the word.
PI 37. hearing a name calls before our mind the picture of what is named
PI 73. I get an idea of the shape of a leaf, a picture of it in my mind — Fooloso4
Could you please explain the two different uses of the term 'picture'?
— Luke
One is physical and can be made public, the other cannot. One remains relatively stable and unchanging the other may not. We can use one an item of comparison, the other only by the one whose mental image it is. — Fooloso4
Can these mental pictures not be made public (e.g. via a sketch or description)? — Luke
Do they change immediately upon hearing the word/name? — Luke
I note that Wittgenstein is using these examples to undermine the (then) common view that such mental images are necessary to the meaning of a word. — Luke
Wittgenstein makes a clear distinction between pictures (or descriptions) and mental images in the later passages we have been discussing, especially at PI 389, PI 280, etc. — Luke
Perhaps we can agree that their content is the same while maintaining this distinction between them, as I believe he does at PPF 10? — Luke
The mental picture may or may not stay relatively stable, but there is nothing to compare it to in order to determine that. One's memory of it may be more or less reliable. — Fooloso4
The sketch or description is not the mental picture. It is a representation of it. — Fooloso4
The distinction made is between an image in the mind and a physical image. But a mental image and a physical image are are both pictures. — Fooloso4
I note that Wittgenstein is using these examples to undermine the (then) common view that such mental images are necessary to the meaning of a word.
— Luke
Was that in dispute in our discussion? — Fooloso4
If the mental image is of Y instead of X, then the picture before one's mind must be of Y. — Luke
If a mental picture changes, then it's a different picture compared to the original picture. — Luke
The sketch or description is not the mental picture. It is a representation of it.
— Fooloso4
It is neither a picture of a mental picture nor a description of a mental description. — Luke
Can these mental pictures not be made public (e.g. via a sketch or description)? — Luke
Doesn't this imply that the meaning of "picture" is the same in both cases? — Luke
If a mental picture and physical picture have the same content, then what is the point of PI 389 on your view? — Luke
Do you think people often make the false assumption that an intrinsic feature of a mental image is that it's more like its object than a picture is? — Luke
Do you consider this false assumption to be unrelated to the private language argument and of no philosophical interest? — Luke
If the mental image is of Y instead of X, then the picture before one's mind must be of Y.
— Luke
If I mistake X for Y my mental image of X is a picture of Y. — Fooloso4
Yes, but even though it changes, my mental picture of Zeus is still my mental picture of Zeus. — Fooloso4
No. The word is used in various ways. If you ask me to show you the picture in one case I can but in other I can't. If I remember correctly this was why you were reluctant to call the mental picture a picture. — Fooloso4
The sketch or description is not the mental picture. It is a representation of it.
— Fooloso4
It is neither a picture of a mental picture nor a description of a mental description.
— Luke
Have you changed your mind? In the prior post you asked:
Can these mental pictures not be made public (e.g. via a sketch or description)?
— Luke
Was your answer no they cannot be made public? — Fooloso4
They are the same only is so far as they are pictures of the same thing. My mental picture of you may be very different than a photo or portrait of you. If I see that picture I might say: "You are much more handsome than I pictured". — Fooloso4
Therefore, if a mental image is of X, then the picture before one’s mind must also be of X — Luke
If you mistake your hat for a sandwich, then your mental image of a hat is a picture of a sandwich? — Luke
Yes, but even though it changes, my mental picture of Zeus is still my mental picture of Zeus.
— Fooloso4
How has it changed? — Luke
Yes, we can distinguish between a mental image (picture before the mind) and a physical picture, but how is the word “picture” being used differently here? — Luke
But none of the passages we have been discussing or have quoted uses “picture” as a verb. — Luke
If you mistake your hat for a sandwich, then your mental image of a hat is a picture of a sandwich?
— Luke
I don't know. I would say that that this raises a problem. Wouldn't we say that if someone's mental image of a hat was a sandwich she would be mistaken? — Fooloso4
It might change in various ways. Some features may become more prominent. Something left out or added. I think it might help to think of this in terms of memory. Our memory of things change. — Fooloso4
If I say: "I was this picture" you might think I mean movie or photo or painting but would it cross your mind that I meant a mental image? — Fooloso4
I don’t understand what it means for someone to mistake their mental image of a hat for a sandwich — Luke
I don’t see how we could verify whether a mistake had been made. — Luke
Who’s to say? — Luke
I don’t believe he uses the word “picture” (unqualified) to refer to a mental image. — Luke
I don’t understand what it means for someone to mistake their mental image of a hat for a sandwich
— Luke
Oliver Sacks' The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat might be of interest. — Fooloso4
I don’t see how we could verify whether a mistake had been made.
— Luke
If this person tried to eat a hat and we asked him why, we would know a mistake had been made. — Fooloso4
I don’t believe he uses the word “picture” (unqualified) to refer to a mental image.
— Luke
Do you mean he qualifies the mental picture by saying it is a mental picture? — Fooloso4
You keep wanting to change the discussion to talk about resemblance to an object — Luke
Your argument was that the meaning of "picture" is different between a mental picture and a physical picture — Luke
I responded that a mental image of X is equivalent to a picture ("before the mind") of X — Luke
My point was that the "picture" aspect of a mental picture is no different to the "picture" aspect of a physical picture, because whatever is the content of the mental image is equivalent to the content of the "picture before the mind". — Luke
I don't see what this has to do with his mental image. How do we verify that? — Luke
I don’t believe he uses the word “picture” (unqualified) to refer to a mental image.
— Luke
Do you mean he qualifies the mental picture by saying it is a mental picture?
— Fooloso4
Yes. — Luke
If I remember correctly, this discussion began with PI 389 and you have returned to it more than once. PI 389 is about the likeness of mental image vs a picture to an object. — Fooloso4
When you say a mental image of X, X is the object that a mental image is an image of. When you say a mental image of ... there is something that it is an image of. — Fooloso4
The point of PI 389 is to reject claims 1 -3 — Fooloso4
But it is an intrinsic feature of a mental image that it is the image of this and of nothing else. — PI 389, sentence 3
When you gave the example of mistaking a hat for a sandwich both a hat and a sandwich are objects. — Fooloso4
Your argument was that the meaning of "picture" is different between a mental picture and a physical picture
— Luke
Have I made that argument? — Fooloso4
Could you please explain the two different uses of the term 'picture'?
— Luke
One is physical and can be made public, the other cannot. — Fooloso4
My point was that the "picture" aspect of a mental picture is no different to the "picture" aspect of a physical picture, because whatever is the content of the mental image is equivalent to the content of the "picture before the mind".
— Luke
I can't follow this argument. — Fooloso4
One remains relatively stable and unchanging the other may not. — Fooloso4
I don't see what this has to do with his mental image. How do we verify that? — Luke
You draw or describe your mental image and what you draw or describe looks like or sounds like a sandwich. Based on this representation of your mental image they will tell you that you are mistaken, it is not a hat its a sandwich. You might protest and say "I know it's a hat because its my mental image of a hat". If you are then asked to get a hat and put it on will you put a sandwich on your head? — Fooloso4
I don’t believe he uses the word “picture” (unqualified) to refer to a mental image.
— Luke
Do you mean he qualifies the mental picture by saying it is a mental picture?
— Fooloso4
Yes.
— Luke
Isn't that because a mental picture is not a physical picture? — Fooloso4
You stated earlier:
The point of PI 389 is to reject claims 1 -3
— Fooloso4 — Luke
Your argument was that the meaning of "picture" is different between a mental picture and a physical picture
— Luke
Have I made that argument?
— Fooloso4
You have made that argument: — Luke
You stated earlier:
The point of PI 389 is to reject claims 1 -3
— Fooloso4 — Luke
As I have said, the three claims are part of the same argument. You can separate them as part of an analysis but you need to put them back together.
The claim at three is that it is an image of this. "This" is the object it is an image of. We cannot ignore the question of resemblance. — Fooloso4
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