I've been doing a lot of fiber art lately and I've had a number of episodes of a kind of paralysis where an image of something that hasn't happened yet takes me over. In some cases it has to do with a way of doing something. It doesn't seem like something I'm doing. It happens to me in pretty much exactly the same way seeing an amazing flower or arrangement of clouds would arrest me. Are those things necessary to get by? No, probably not necessary, but I can imagine the same thing happening to somebody out in the desert.. a sudden inspiration of how to find water comes and momentarily paralyzes. I'm guessing that in the old days a person who gets that a lot would be called a seer.Representing stuff to yourself is always about one of these two things, and the forms, and modes that they take effect your dispositions towards the ideas, as well as your levels of desire and aversion. — Wosret
When you're thinking, you're ignoring your senses in order to develop these projections. Thought takes the place of sense in every moment that you're thinking. — Wosret
So you don't see mental representation that's totally non-conceptual as a viable viewpoint? — Mongrel
Not all the time, in all respects if we're talking about persons.
It's viable some of the time in all respects, and all of the time in some respects. — Terrapin Station
Is it possible to eliminate the conceptual element altogether?
do you really accept qualia as a form of mental representation? — Mongrel
"what is thought.. concept or sensation?"
I think the work of the intellect is done in an imaginary space, where reason, desire & memory interact. The vehicle for this interaction is language, which already is ordered, meaningful, already valued both rationally and emotively. — Cavacava
Now let us take language. What is its characteristic use? Well, probably
99.9% of its use is internal to the mind. You can’t go a minute without talking
to yourself. It takes an incredible act of will not to talk to yourself.
I think I'll just go back through Bundle Theory. Are you familiar with that? — Mongrel
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