There must be, that doesn't mean you can determine it beforehand, or that it's on me to determine it. — neomac
you've been saying for a few pages that the use of the word cannot give us any reified object, but now you say that there is always a feeling of pain associated with the felicitous use of the word? — Luke
Then how could we ever learn to use the word? — Luke
According to Wittgenstein, linguistic meaning is all 2), and 1) is his beetle in the box: not a something, but not a nothing either.
This is probably why you find 1) scientifically uninteresting, but I find it philosophically interesting. — Luke
it's difficult to get clear on your position. — Luke
I don't follow why there cannot be a feeling of pain associated. — Luke
Your "agreement" that people have pains seems to be no more than that people know how to use the word "pain" — Isaac
There is always a feeling of pain associated with the (felicitous use of the) word pain. — Isaac
In your previous post you said the opposite: — Luke
If you agree with Wittgenstein's statement that when you have pain you cannot doubt that you have pain, then it doesn't make any sense to be wrong (or right) about it. — Luke
If there is never any feeling of pain involved with people's expressions of pain, then in what sense do they have pain(s)? What is the difference between pain-behaviour with pain and pain-behaviour without pain? Or can there be no pretence of pain? — Luke
Yet you admit there is never any feeling of pain involved with the use of the word "pain". — Luke
why did you ignore my third question? — Mikie
Question 1 and 2 are ambiguous and rhetorical. — Mikie
If someone says they are in pain they are, if they are not lying, referring to a pain that they feel. — Janus
You agreed that people have pains. — Luke
Your "agreement" that people have pains seems to be no more than that people know how to use the word "pain"; that there is never any feeling of pain involved. — Luke
Is it not scientifically relevant to investigate mental events? — Luke
As far as I know, anomalous monism does not deny that there are mental events. — Luke
Western countries didn't give Ukraine tens of billions in aid before Russia invaded because they did not think Russia would actually invade — Count Timothy von Icarus
The Germans and French vocally disagreed with the US about the threat of war, and even top level US diplomats seemed skeptical about an actual war right up until the invasion. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Ukraine's long term survival didn't seem obvious until later in the spring of last year. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Yes, a word that is often defined as a feeling or sensation. — Luke
You have agreed that it makes no sense for one to doubt that they are in pain. Therefore, are you arguing that people don't exist? Or that they don't have pains and doubts? Or that people are only words? — Luke
you've already agreed that people have doubts and pains, and you've already agreed with Wittgenstein's statement that it makes no sense for a person to doubt they are in pain. So I don't see what your point is. — Luke
You claim either that consciousness is nothing more than a human fiction, or else it's not a fiction but there's no need to explain it. In short, that human experiences are make believe and there's nothing more to consciousness but language use and other behaviour. On the other hand, you've recently told me you do not deny that people have pains, doubts, thoughts, etc, so it's unclear. — Luke
The argument is completely nonsensical; all non-nuclear nations that might develop nuclear weapons would be for deterrence purposes, and mainly from the United States and not Russia or China or other neighbour's, they would not look at nuclear weapons as a means to expand their territory.
Thousands of nuclear weapons and the means to deliver them are required to threaten the entire planet. — boethius
the major powers will reduce their nuclear stockpiles, lower nuclear tensions and be generally more reasonable, and in exchange the non-nuclear powers will not seek nuclear weapons. — boethius
Sorry, but I see a very clear moral component between democracy and totalitarianism. — Mikie
Because I’m not in favor of unjustified power, in this case corporate tyranny. — Mikie
If everyone concerned had input into how profits were distributed, I’d have little problem with whatever was decided. — Mikie
(1) Should some of the 100 people get more of the total profit accumulated per year compared to others? If it's not equally distributed, who should get more -- and based on what criteria?
(2) If so, how much more? Should 60% of the pie go to this individual or group of individuals -- say 10 people? Or should it be more like 30%? What about 90%? — Mikie
It is a description that shows the result of only considering "groups" of individuals and their opinions to adequately represent people living together in a particular society. All the different ways people work, judge themselves, mate, educate children, and govern themselves are not simply an aggregate of their opinions. — Paine
Opinions, by themselves, do not do anything. — Paine
You present the absence of Ukrainian agency as a fact, authorizing the removal of their voice from any moral calculus. — Paine
You champion Mearsheimer's theory of International Relations as the best explanation of the events unfolding in Ukraine. You discount previous behavior by Russia as indicative of anything happening in this conflict. — Paine
All of your 'moral' arguments are made upon the basis of what you have argued to be happening. — Paine
I would not be happy with drawing any very definite conclusion from that. It looks more than a bit undergraduate to me. — unenlightened
I'm wondering, is there an (implicit) argument against democracy ("majority dictatorship") here somewhere? — jorndoe
The word 'polity' does not mean a grouping by means of a shared property. — Paine
This atomizes the participation of each individual in their location to the point that they are not in a place. It is like a theater filled with a hundred Descartes who have nothing to do with the other Descartes sitting next to them. — Paine
nothing you have presented demonstrates that people actually live like that. — Paine
Then it is not only about the use of words; it is also about actually having pain — Luke
I'm not arguing that using a word necessarily implies the existence of anything. — Luke
it follows that there are things/people which exist that can have pains and doubts (among other things). — Luke
if to have a doubt is to have a lack of certainty with regards to some proposition, then there must be someone to doubt it. — Luke
It seems to me that you also equate "consciousness" with talk of the outer behaviour of bodies. — Luke
Is there any model aside from the social that can explain this increase? — unenlightened
The difference here is just the degree to which the specifics are left to speculation. — fdrake
What do you take as the campaign objectives of Mermaids? I don't have a good sense of a unified ideology for them, over and above making things easier for trans people. — fdrake
External pressure from campaigners (including a group called Mermaids) and some parents made difficult clinical decisions more difficult, and in consequence there were staff who sometimes found detachment difficult. Accusations of transphobia and homophobia were made. — Ms. S. Appleby vs Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust
a number of GIDS staff have brought some concerns to my attention of late. Predictably, there are challenges regarding Mermaids, rogue medics and the political expectations of the national service. Perhaps more worrying are the manifestations of a number of splits within the team (not unusual) but I have been reported is quite potent: (a) team members feel they are coerced into not reporting safeguarding issues, and to do so is “trans phobic”; (b) lack of confidence in Children’s Social Care (c) an unhelpful development regarding the linking of the politics of sexuality and gender issues.
I get the impression that, because your position applies to lots of medical interventions, the best consistent response for you is to bite the bullet that recognises the inconsistent and flawed treatment in society, mandate "it ought to be the case that more medical interventions should be strongly based on data from controlled studies", and claim in absence of such data, no intervention should be taken. Whenever benefits+uncertainty = costs + uncertainty, do nothing. — fdrake
I think this would have more bite if it wasn't already granted that gender affirmation treatment is both a social and a bodily intervention. — fdrake
I agree. What is especially frustrating is that Mermaids and trans rights groups are not problematising the discussion by themselves, the arguments you're giving really are used by people "out in the wild" as means of stymying the improvements of trans rights. In our context, we can discuss them with more leeway. Out in the wild, they're often treated as weapons, so it's no surprise that such moves are seen as attacks. — fdrake
Like I asked unenlightened, how do you think trans people ought to be treated? — fdrake
That’s a great article. Thanks for sharing! :up: — Luke
For him the desire to reify the "psychological" is bound up with the view that all language is essentially referential in nature. It is linked with the idea that the primary function of words is to provide names for objects. It is also bound up with the notion that the essential aim of language is to effect a simple form of communication. The idea that when I tell you what is "going on inside me" I use words like "sharp pain" to pass on information to you. If you are acquainted with "sharp pains" yourself, if you know what kind of things those words designate, then by analogy you gain an insight into my situation. For Wittgenstein, this picture of how language operates generates (and supports) the idea of an "inner realm of mental events" which looks non-trivially like the "mental realm" conjured up by Descartes' philosophy of mind.
It is the name-object view of language and its attendant metaphysics that Wittgenstein challenges
Why is "I doubt I'm in pain" nonsensical? — Luke
If "the internal coherence of language" is about logic or logical necessity, then so is the use of the word "doubt". — Luke
Right, it's logically implied. — Luke
I agree that the use of a word does not necessarily imply the existence of something. But do you deny that people have pains, doubts, thoughts, etc? — Luke
I think this would be a good topic for a thread. Don't have time to start one. — bert1
It does not seem to be by definition that it makes no sense for me to doubt whether I am in pain. — Luke
1) a physicalist monism (therefore keeping atheism safe from woo OR 2) an ontological dualism allowing for more traditional forms of Western theism OR 3) a non-physicalist monism (idealism), mysticism and the East? 4)? — Tom Storm
Since thinking is only known to be practiced by (some) entities it is a plausible conclusion that wherever thinking is occuring there will be an entity doing it. — Janus
"Implies" as in strongly suggest the truth of.
This should not be hard to understand. — Caldwell
Where do you think doubt comes from? — Caldwell
Let's talk normal language. — Caldwell
Why? It’s like arguing there’s no answer to how we cut a pie. It depends on many things, and there’s not one ultimate answer that applies in all cases, but there are answers to be had. — Mikie
I don’t think distributing 90% of profits to shareholders is fair, and I don’t think the undemocratic decision making process that leads to that distribution is fair either. — Mikie
If one rejects any kind of "thinking alike" in forming polities — Paine
moving borders is quite rare these days in conflicts — ssu
I'm asking if you had any doubts as to what I just said, then you were already demonstrating what you purported to deny. — Caldwell
I was trying to figure out how your view of society worked. You declare the self-identification of persons as participants in a group to be meaningless in regard to the polity they find themselves within: — Paine