You can touch the desert rock, but it would be a temporary, disposable sense.
Partial simulations craft by imagination are mostly extrasensory, noi, ibrio, procip, etc. This allows for a hybrid type of sense that's half real and half unreal between the veil of reality and your own. — Varde
Basically, Plato's allegory of the cave.
— TheMadFool
The Theaetetus does not claim that. The dialogue ends without finding an adequate account of knowledge. The 'paradigmatic' role of the Forms, spoken of in the Republic, is not on display in Socrates' argument against Protagoras' measure being able to be a judge of possible future events (178b). — Valentinus
The subjectivity is not refuted. The very portion of Theaetetus I am referring to is the acceptance of personal immediate experience. In the effort to address it, Socrates inquires into perception and knowledge and on what basis they encounter other beings. It is through making a distinction between perception and knowledge that Socrates seeks to defend himself against Protagoras. — Valentinus
Socrates was not denying things change. He was saying that if nothing stayed the same, there would be no knowledge. — Valentinus
The question is how is this, what I described as a "cause", and "the fundamental capacity to anticipate the future", known to us. As explained, it cannot be observed in any way. We can call it a "mystical union" like Wayfarer did, but that does not validate it as a form of knowledge. All it is is a statement of fact, what is common to us all.
This is probably the same issue which Wittgenstein grapples with in the private language argument. What is known directly to a person, through the inner source, might actually be the highest form of knowledge; Aristotle classed intuition as the highest form of knowledge; but when it comes to validating this form of knowledge to others, through public language (justification), it does not even class as "knowledge". — Metaphysician Undercover
I am definitely making a connection between Baudrillard's idea of the 'end' of history and the civilisation that has developed in many nations. How can civilisation go on in the way it has done? Climate change seems to be a warning sign, and the question is whether it is too late or not to avert it. Perhaps we are coming to the end of consumer materialism. I wonder if the pandemic and the scale to which so many lives were turned upside down will bring a wake up call for some big changes, but it is hard to know... — Jack Cummins
An individual neuron in my brain can receive thousands of messages at once! Even so everyone seems to think their message is special, strange isn't it? — Enrique
Yep — Banno
What, too simple for you? I guess I should have translated the essence of consciousness and rationality into differential equations or something. Or too complex? Maybe I should write a children's book on quantum neuroscience! I'm amenable to suggestion... — Enrique
But you said that what is made up is subjective. Is Lord of the Rings subjective? What does that mean?
I think it pretty clear that equating made up and subjective is a long stretch.
But moreover, it is this sort of contortion that leads me to ignore the subjective/objective distinction - it causes far more issues than it solves. — Banno
Is this model of post-death coherent — Paul Michael
Really? I don't think so. — Banno
Do you have a specific argument to counter the argument from parturition? — Xanatos
There's that subjective/objective confusion again. it's not all either subjective or objective, and never the twain. Is Chess "in your head"? — Banno
? Try to think in terms of collective subjectivity, perhaps inter-subjectivity or mass hallucination if you like.Maths is made up. — Banno
In the Theaetetus, Socrates rips the Heraclitean thesis that "all things change" to shreds. — Valentinus
It's all a question of survival. — Alkis Piskas
There’s is mystical union, theosis, which is said to be non inferential. — Wayfarer
game of life — schopenhauer1
The point is "If this is X, why can it not be made more X? Therefore this is not X" is not valid at all — khaled
Depends on your standard I guess. In other words, life is not pretty because you choose to compare it to something better. — khaled
For the purposes of discussion, sure, since you seem so convinced utopias are impossible and I don't care to argue that. They serve well enough for a thought experiment. — khaled
Experience and observation of others' experience.
Also the fact that it's physiologically possible should imply that it's possible. — khaled
self-actualization — Satyesu
False. I just didn't reply to it at first because it wasn't addressed to me. — khaled
This makes as much sense as "If bikes are fast why are there cars???!?!??!?". See my full reply. — khaled
That wasn't the question. And it is an insignificant question for what I'm trying to say. — khaled
And the answer is: Obviously. — khaled
You're making it more complicated than it is. The fact that the eye can't see itself is very simple, isn't it? I can reflect on myself, I can think about what I think, but this problem of reflexivity remains, because, as I said, the subject of who thinks is not an object, except for by inference. Let's not lose sight of the wood for the trees. Have a look at the two refs I gave the paragraph starting 'It has been remarked....' — Wayfarer
The way to show that ridiculous statements are ridiculous is to show their ridiculous consequences. The point is that a utopia is just as difficult to escape as life currently (only suicide works). But I don't think anyone would be against having children in a utopia. That would mean this standard isn't sufficient to tell apart wrong and ok impositions either. — khaled
Ok, now another question, would having a child in a utopian society, where there is 0 suffering be wrong? — khaled
You have a point! If life is so pretty, why the heck is there religion, promising escape (nirvana) or a better deal (heaven)? — TheMadFool
Oh Wheatgrass, no no. You can have an unjust situation and have someone enjoy their life. Precisely why my argument is more than the simplicity you deem it as. It is hard for some people to wrap their heads around an unjust situation that people can still feel happy subjective states. Someone who feels joy despite X activity that's Y (bad/unjust) doesn't mean that X activity is a good state of affairs — schopenhauer1
The eyes, in this analagy, stands for consciousness. The eyes seeing themselves (in a reflection) would correspond to consciosuness examining itself. That's what the hard problem is about - consciousness being inaccessible. However, I can access my own consciousness and check if it's only physical.
To see the eye seeing itself = to be conscious of consciousness conscious of consciousness (itself), is a different, higher order, matter altogether, no? — TheMadFool
point still holds. You can look at a reflection of your eyes but you don't see yourself seeing. You only see. — Wayfarer