We all use them to pick out white and gold and blue and black things. We just differ on which things. — creativesoul
The adjectives "red" and "painful" describe things like pens and stubbing one's toe.
The nouns "red" and "pain" refer to the mental percepts that pens and stubbing one's toe cause to occur. — Michael
Do all of the eyes that are perceiving the very same scenery at the very same time from nearly the same vantage point perceive the same light? Yup. — creativesoul
So long as a medium exists which allows us to agree on “red” then the similarity/difference between that experience of red holds no value — Mp202020
A sample of red exemplifies the colour and it's various looks — jkop
All your talk of color and pain as being mind dependent is true, but you've not found in those properties some special exception. All descriptions of all objects are mind dependent. The speed of the subatomic particles in the tree are mind dependent as are their size and shape. — Hanover
When I think about the colour red I am not thinking about light reflectances; I am thinking about the visual percep — Michael
No, I don't think it is ever accurately transferred or shared. OR worth attempting as it seems out of spite, revenge, or anger that one would want to share their pain. Make another feel what they experienced, so they KNOW. Sounds like bad news to me...If you could accurately measure neuron firings in your hand, you could also "share" that pain — Echarmion
jkop, do you think I correctly connected what you shared a few days ago in my response above to Echarmion? To me it seemed, the "shared" pain comment they meant was a physical demonstration or experience. Clearly not in the same circumstances, that may have heightened or lessened the initial pain from the start.Empathy is the ability to experience what someone else is experiencing. Since someone elses experience is not open to view, we must access it indirectly via languages, verbal, pictorial, interpretation of gestures etc — jkop
However, if someone sees and feels a round object where someone else sees and feels a square one, and the square-person told the round-person to grab the object by the edges, wouldn't the round-person be bewildered? Surely, when a square-person says corner the round-person would think of a round object, but the round-person can't think of anywhere special in that object (any given point on the surface of a sphere is the same). — Lionino
..someone who doesn't need a color sample to create a particular hue, like China red. — frank
What do you mean with "eyes perceive light"? Are we talking about the eye as an organ? And are we talking about what happens when light waves interact with the eye or what kind of signal the eye transmits? — Echarmion
We all use them to pick out white and gold and blue and black things. We just differ on which things.
— creativesoul
See what I said to Banno about the distinction between the adjective "red" and the noun "red":
The adjectives "red" and "painful" describe things like pens and stubbing one's toe.
The nouns "red" and "pain" refer to the mental percepts that pens and stubbing one's toe cause to occur.
— Michael — Michael
Colours, as ordinarily understood in everyday life, are how things look, not how things reflect light. How things reflect light determines how things look, and so determines the colour seen, but reflecting light is distinct from colour. — Michael
When I think about the colour red I am not thinking about light reflectances; I am thinking about the visual percept. — Michael
Do all of the eyes that are perceiving the very same scenery at the very same time from nearly the same vantage point perceive the same light? Yup.
— creativesoul
We see the same light but not the same colour. Therefore the light is not the colour. — Michael
The light is the cause of the colour (much like the chemicals in the food are the cause of the taste), nothing more. — Michael
Cheers. There is a famous argument called the beetle in a box, from Wittgenstein.So long as a medium exists which allows us to agree on “red” then the similarity/difference between that experience of red holds no value — Mp202020
Interesting way of putting it when it was your position being criticised for its sophism.So not sophistic enough for your taste? — Banno
Here is a kind of puzzle or paradox that several philosophers have stressed. On the one hand, existence questions seem hard. The philosophical question of whether there are abstract entities does not seem to admit of an easy or trivial answer. At the same time, there seem to be trivial arguments settling questions like this in the affirmative. Consider for instance the arguments, “2+2=4. So there is a number which, when added to 2, yields 4. This something is a number. So there are numbers”, and “Fido is a dog. So Fido has the property of being a dog. So there are properties.” How should one resolve this paradox? One response is: adopt fictionalism. The idea would be that in the philosophy room we do not speak fictionally, but ordinarily we do. So in the philosophy room, the question of the existence of abstract entities is hard; outside it, the question is easy. When, ordinarily, a speaker utters a sentence that semantically expresses a proposition that entails that there are numbers, what she says is accurate so long as according to the relevant fiction, there are numbers. But when she utters the same sentence in the philosophy room, she speaks literally and then what she asserts is something highly non-trivial.
Thanks for the effort that you put into your post but I can't connect your reply to the example I brought up in my post, I agree that subjective consistency doesn't suggest objective existence but I feel like my example wasn't really addressed. — Lionino
Either way, it makes no sense to try to use Wittgenstein to prove that colours are not a type of sensation, comparable in kind to pain. — Michael
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