Experience can be a vague concept too. What is your definition of experience? Can you experience experience?Ideas are both rooted in and grow from the soil of experience, as does language. The idea of equality is both the experiences of inequality that suggest it to the moral mind, and the expressions of tolerance, respect, etc., which it engenders. — Pantagruel
Experience can be a vague concept too. What is your definition of experience? Can you experience experience? — Corvus
Not sure, but it was my question to you from your earlier post.Are you talking about things like whether it rises to the level of conscious awareness, and whether it includes things reflection, etc.? — Pantagruel
Remember your earlier post?Ideas are both rooted in and grow from the soil of experience, as does language. The idea of equality is both the experiences of inequality that suggest it to the moral mind, and the expressions of tolerance, respect, etc., which it engenders. — Pantagruel
You have been using the word experience in your posts a lot, so I thought you would provide the definition, which I could investigate on.What exactly is your take on experience? — Pantagruel
You have been using the word experience in your posts a lot, so I thought you would provide the definition, which I could investigate on. — Corvus
Could we agree experience as same meaning as "perception", which supervened into knowledge or skills?Presumably, experience designates in the broadest possible sense that "contact with reality" which is universally...experienced. — Pantagruel
"a lot" can also mean significantly and notably, rather than "many". I presumed you must have a good definition of experience, when you were using the word in your sentence.I reviewed my posts, and, in fact, I only mentioned it one time prior to your initial question. So the conceptual burden on the term (concept) of experience didn't come from me, it came from you. For example. — Pantagruel
Could we agree experience as same meaning as "perception", which supervened into knowledge or skills? — Corvus
Really? Isn't perception passive or active, or both in some cases? You wake up in the morning, open your eyes, and you see all the things around you whether you wanted or not. Isn't thatI think the only problem is if there is implicit assumption that perception is passive. Perception is an activity. — Pantagruel
Well if you allow the images you see in your dreams as type of perception (which we must, I would imagine), then you would find yourself deep in the well of contradiction. Can you actively control what you see in your dreams during your sleep?Really I just wanted to emphasize that perception is not "purely" passive. There is always an active element; which is embedded in the mechanics of the perceptual (cogitive) mechanism itself. Even our most passive perceptions are pre-structured in some sense, in order to facilitate the information-processing tasks that our brains have to accomplish. — Pantagruel
Well if you allow the images you see in your dreams as type of perception (which we must, I would imagine), then you would find yourself deep in the well of contradiction. Can you actively control what you see in your dreams during your sleep?
But even if you are not dreaming, there must be things that you see, which you didn't expect or want see, when you are living in the real world, as a real person. — Corvus
I was not denying that perception is active, and it is an activity. I was suggesting that it is active, but also passive at times, and sometimes it can be both active and passive.We are the efficient causes of many organic functions over which we do not exercise voluntary control. However they are still in essence controlled by us, since that control is a key feature of organic incarnation (evolution). — Pantagruel
But think again. You keep insisting perception is active activity meaning that you can control perceiving the world and objects with your own will or desire.Just how far we are willing to go to maintain our presuppositions about reality is illustrated by cognitive biases. The most well-known of these - confirmation bias - is exemplary. But there are loads of others that accomplish basically the same thing - prejudice enforcement. — Pantagruel
But think again. You keep insisting perception is active activity meaning that you can control perceiving the world and objects with your own will or desire. — Corvus
I was not denying that perception is active, and it is an activity. I was suggesting that it is active, but also passive at times, and sometimes it can be both active and passive. — Corvus
We were talking about the case where you have not been able to avoid getting pinched or pulled out the ears :DIf I learn to anticipate that there will be cheek and ear pulling I can modify my activity patterns to avoid those circumstances. — Pantagruel
This must be some unique and rare case in the Evolution. Can't see happening in human life. Evolutionary theory has little ground for their claims anyway.Being poisoned is much more painful and deadly a perception than being pinched. But some animals develop an immunity to the poison of their chosen prey. — Pantagruel
There are passive features too.Our existence as a receptive organism is predicated on our capacities as an active organism. — Pantagruel
It sounded like you were saying that perception is purely active. It rang a bell, it can't be true.Right. And I said I just wanted to emphasize that perception is not purely passive. Upon which it seems we can agree. — Pantagruel
It sounded like you were saying that perception is purely active. It rang a bell, it can't be true. — Corvus
That is a pure nonsense. I never said perception is purely passive. It just proves that perception can be passive at times. :)And yet I explicitly offered that comment quite early that it was not "purely passive." — Pantagruel
Another wrong use of the word here - filtered can only be used for the physical entities such as a liquid, gas, light, or sound ...etc. It is not for abstract nouns such as perceptions. :DJust goes to show you how perceptions can get pre-filtered.... :) — Pantagruel
And another thing my friend. To a quibbler, everything looks like quibbles. To a philosopher, what matters most is truth. Good day :)All I have done is been accommodating to your perspective and all you have done is quibble. — Pantagruel
Thank you sir. I wish you and yours a very Happy New Year too. :grin: :pray:Well concluded. Happy New year. :) — Pantagruel
I think experience can be abstracted as ideas, but experience itself is not ideas. Ideas are the mental entities which has been abstracted in thoughts.
Yes, I agree with all of your points.In essence I’m saying that instinctive behaviour is very much thought, thinking. — Punshhh
In the case of cats and dogs, and monkeys, they seem to show the intelligent activities in their daily lives. They definitely have the clear evidence of possessing some level of intelligence, and their reasonings are mostly based on their sense perceptions and memories. They also seem to understand human words when spoken to them although they cannot make linguistic expressions uttering words and sentences.How would these people who are explaining away thinking describe what a cat, or for that matter, a spider spinning a web is doing? — Punshhh
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