Yep.Then insofar as we talk about our colour percepts they are not private; — Michael
Nuh. If it were nothing but a percept, how do you explain our agreement? Perhaps by something like "intersubjective agreement"? Which is just to say that colour also has a public aspect.but they are nonetheless percepts and not mind-independent properties of pens. — Michael
But not only... and so on.And if we agree that stubbing one’s toe is painful and that hugs are not then we agree to something about stubbing one’s toe; but pain is still a mental percept. — Michael
Yep; no more than we are talking about neurological phenomena when we talk about colour. Again, the neurological phenomena in my mind is not the neurological phenomena in yours. Yet we both see the red in the pen.Pens may have atoms that reflect light, but this physical phenomenon simply isn’t what we think or talk about when we think and talk about colours. — Michael
And yet we agree that the pen is red. So it's not an "internal" red either. The problem then is the demand that it must be one of the other.There is no external red. — Hanover
Folk would be in error to insist that colours are not properties of pens, too. There are red pens. "The pen is red" is sometimes true. "Property" is itself a problematic term, especially since some folk think all properties are physical.We may mistakenly believe that colours are properties of pens, and talk about them as if they are, but we would simply be wrong. The science is clear on this, and no deferment to Wittgenstein can show otherwise. — Michael
And yet we agree that the pen is red. — Banno
So for Hanover, "the pen is red" is not true. I think it is. — Banno
I guess it has to be pointed out that "internal" and "external" are not the very same as "subjective" and "objective", and neither is the same as "private" and "public". — Banno
But the pen looks red to me, too. And given the right filter we might make the red pen look blue... which pen? The red pen. The red pen looks blue. Not Hanover's "The pen that looks red to me looks blue to me".If "the pen is red" means the pen looks red to me, I agree with that. — Hanover
But the pen looks red to me, too. And given the right filter we might make the red pen look blue... which pen? The red pen. The red pen looks blue. Not Hanover's "The pen that looks red to me looks blue to me". — Banno
Ah - define... so what, setting out essence-of-pen? "Comprised" of redness? Nothing so sophisticated. Just one red pen amongst others, red and not so red.If by "red pen" you mean to define a pen as comprised of redness, whatever that means, then sure, your red pen can look blue if you filter it. — Hanover
Then if you also think that there is no such thing as internal red, we might well agree.My point is there no such thing as external red — Hanover
If by "red pen" you mean to define a pen as comprised of redness, whatever that means, then sure, your red pen can look blue if you filter it. — Hanover
Just one red pen amongst others, red and not so red. — Banno
One possibility would be to recreate the neural pattern in the hand of the victim in your hand. But that could be described as copying the pain from one hand to another - making a new pain. Another possibility might be to connect your nervous system to that of the victim in such a way that you felt the pain in their hand. But consider this carefully. How would you know that you had connected the neurones correctly, so that the level of pain you felt was the same as the level of pain felt by the victim? How could you know you had dialled the pain up or down sufficiently to match their pain? Even if you exactly matched the "neural firings", how could you be sure that the "subjective" result was the same? — Banno
What I think salient is that the way we talk about pain (pleasure, joy...) is different to the way we talk about colour. You can buy a chair of a particular colour but not a chair of a particular pleasure. — Banno
Yet we both see the red in the pen. — Banno
How did the planets move before Adam looked up and saw it go from evening to the morning? — Hanover
The human viewpoint is that gravity did it. The view beyond human ideas is not available to me. — frank
Assuming it possible the planets moved differently prior to human perspective, it does not follow they moved differently prior to human language. — Hanover
I can accept that language offers us a tool to understand the world and that it shapes some of our understanding, but the idea that non-liguistic organisms have no understanding of the world or that all that I touch and all that I feel and all that I know is language mediated is a concocted theory to sustain a Wittgensteinian model that is likely based upon a misunderstanding of Wittgenstein. — Hanover
I say "likely" because Wittgenstein's communication skills were lacking. Ironically. — Hanover
That we can't know everything doesn't mean we can't know anything.
We still landed a man on the moon even if we've not figured out Xeno's paradox. — Hanover
- define... so what, setting out essence-of-pen? "Comprised" of redness? Nothing so sophisticated. Just one red pen amongst others, red and not so red. — Banno
Then if you also think that there is no such thing as internal red, we might well agree. — Banno
There is no red "in" the pen. The pen just has a surface layer of atoms that reflects light with a wavelength of ~700nm. When light stimulates the eyes it causes the neurological activity responsible for colour percepts, and we name the colour percept ordinarily caused by 700nm light "red".
The constitution of the pen is disputed, not the appearance. — Hanover
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