What evidence is there that we model the world? Or better, what sort of thing is that model taken to be? It's apparent that there are philosophers of sorts that think all we have access to is our model of the world. That's not what psychology thinks, is it?
Can you commend any decent tertiary texts on this? — Banno
No donkey in this world will ever let itself die of hunger because it is faced with two equally attractive bags of barley. It would just go straight to whatever bag. Trust me on this. — Olivier5
He only refers to 'one' as a shorthand indicating the person qua physical or mental state at some point of time — SophistiCat
's an old thought experiment. What would happen to a donkey (Buridan's ass) asked to chose between two equally desirable options, such as two equal bags of barley? If your theory is correct, it should be unable to chose and die of hunger — Olivier5
What if the person has no preference? How can she possibly chose then? — Olivier5
For most of its existence, as sentient life has not had language, meaning cannot have come from semantics, but from the psychological state of mind. — RussellA
Is there any reason to believe that these influences fully explain our behaviour? — Michael
I'm not responsible for having the phobia, but I am responsible for the things I do because of it, e.g. setting fire to my house to kill the spider inside. — Michael
You would need to argue that our likes and dislikes (as well as other things like knowledge, experience, etc.) are separate to our wills. — Michael
I'm not responsible for being allergic to peanuts, or having a phobia of spiders — Michael
One pertinent question is whether semantic meaning grew out of psychological meaning, or is semantic meaning of a different kind to psychological meaning. — RussellA
in descriptions of the self in the psychology I have read and in cognitive science, the will, while it might sometimes feature, does not dominate in the way that would be expected if Schopie and the moustachioed one were right. — Banno
Well, "three people" are three points and the only shape possible with three points is a triangle. — TheMadFool
I'm only showing you what a love-triangle is. Since a triangle is a geometric concept, it's best to do it with pictures and that I've done. — TheMadFool
I would say that the first moral assumption of a free society is that every person has the right to decide freely and rationally about his actions as long as he does not inflict on others a greater evil than he is trying to avoid for himself. — David Mo
I only have to answer where they could be, right? — TheMadFool
I don't understand you. You asked where's the triangle and I obliged. — TheMadFool
Each person represents a point. The shortest distance between two points is a straight line. You have your triangle. — TheMadFool
Triangle = A three-sided geometric figure — TheMadFool
Without commenting directly on this debate - which is largely trite — StreetlightX
Why then would you think that you can replace the word 'pain' by another symbol meaning the class of all possible meanings? — Olivier5
Anything you can think of, perceive, feel, plan and do, remember, or imagine. — Olivier5
You are replacing a word by the class of meanings. — Olivier5
« Cup » and « tea » are part of the class of words. Therefore, you want a {word} of {word}? That would be the right way to substitute an instance by a set it belongs to. Words are not meaning. They are just signs, tokens for meaning. — Olivier5
The idea of ‘thoughts’ has been added. — Olivier5
A meaning is whatever thoughts are conveyed by a text. — Olivier5
You’re confusing a general category (meaning in general) with its individual instances (a specific meaning). — Olivier5
Mental events and structures: Anything you can think of, perceive, feel, plan and do, remember, or imagine. And any thought about that thought, and endless combinations thereof. — Olivier5
Language conveys meaning. — Olivier5
What they agree or disagree to is irrelevant. — Banno
Yep. And A wold be wrong. — Banno
Observer A will see a rod of length l. Observer B will see a rod of length l'. But observer A will also see that observer B will see a rod of length l'; and observer B will see that observer A will see a rod of length l. They do not disagree as to the facts. — Banno
It's just not what word means, like we know what the word table means and when and where it is applicable. — ChatteringMonkey
an advantage that only one person or group of people has, usually because of their position or because they are rich: — Cambridge
a right or immunity granted as a peculiar benefit, advantage, or favor — Merriam-Webster
What about sexism is that also based on oppression? Or specism, classism, ageism, or really any of the isms which refer to discrimination based on identity? — Judaka
Also, when you say most common, where is it the most common? Do all dictionaries define it as you do? What authority defines it only as you do that makes it a question of ignorance for me to not share yours? — Judaka
I think it is appropriate to point out that your definition of racism, which necessitates oppression is not one that I agree with and I have never used the word with that definition in mind. — Judaka
the quote says that posters here who formulated perfectly coherent criticism of the white privilege framing are just white middle class cis hetro males who beg that the word "privilege" not be used because it upsets them. — Judaka
If I can demonstrate racism towards "privileged" racial groups, would you counter that they are privileged? — Judaka
Besides the whole oppressor/victim narrative, what differences are there between the way you discriminate against people based on their whiteness and how others may discriminate against others based on their blackness? — Judaka
