One without language can have the tree in mind in any number of ways without ever having used the term "tree" simply by drawing a correlation between the tree and other things. — creativesoul
I do not appreciate the misquote. — creativesoul
One without language has no such background, and thus cannot think about a thing's "existence". — creativesoul
One without language can have the tree [or existence] in mind in any number of ways without ever having used the term "tree" [or "existence"] simply by drawing a correlation between the tree [or the existent] and other things [things that may or may not exist]. — creativesoul
'language' and 'languaging' — fresco
the command 'no' to a dog — fresco
The second, exmplified perhaps the command 'no' to a dog, merely interrupts or facilitates changes in behavior. It looks like we don't require the word 'thought' at all, unless we take an anthropomorphic view of other species. — fresco
I have no idea what 'basic thought' can mean other than a state of suspension or interruption of an S-R sequence. — fresco
Where 'language' might come in (at the crudest level) is as a facility to delay any automatici stimulus response linkage, by allowing for internal 'considering' (aka 'thinking') . — fresco
perception is 'active' not 'passive', whan can 'direct experience' mean ? — fresco
How about 'non linguistic creatures' don't 'think' ! — fresco
Nonlinguistic creatures cannot think of "existence" for it is a word. Non linguistic creatures cannot think of existence because it is not directly perceptible. — creativesoul
"Trees" is a word. Trees are not. The tree is not a "tree" in linguistic thought. It is part of a correlation which attributes meaning and as such makes the tree meaningful/significant to the creature. — creativesoul
every theory need a 'theoretician' to function... — fresco
And re Nieztsche, I am taking Rorty's 'pragmatist interpretation' of it which can be found by googling the video clip for 'Rorty on Truth' — fresco
Now it may be that starting another thread may be more appropriate. Let me know what you think. — fresco
Okay, but you did use the phrase 'non negotiable' somewhere above (I think) — fresco
Nietzsche's point that there can be no operational distinction between 'description' and 'reality'. Some descriptions are simply more useful than others in particular contexts. — fresco
He makes sense to me from a number of pov's ranging from constructivism via pragmatism to post modernism. If any of these is a no go area for you — fresco
cling to your 'absolutist stance' — fresco
that 'languaging' (Maturana) always has an 'organizational function'...there are no 'neutral descriptions' as such. — fresco
Thinking about blue as opposed to thinking blue.
See the difference? — Shamshir
Words' can be thought of as any repetitive behavioral gesture used to facilitate 'structural coupling' between individuals, or to internally resolve behavioral uncertainties within individuale. Those 'gestures' could manifest at any level, from the neural to the muscular. — fresco
Remove it - non linguistic.
Add it - linguistic. — Shamshir
linguistic thought — Shamshir
There is no logical restriction on 'words' being confined to a phonetic or graphemic domain. — fresco
What about telepaths and mutes? — Shamshir
Non linguistic animals cannot talk about thought/belief. Thus, they cannot think about thought/belief. Since entertaining a thought is to think about it, it makes no sense to say that a creature without the capability to think about thought/belief can entertain thought/belief. — creativesoul
Absolutely zero humor taboos here.
That some people have humor taboos helps the impact of some humor, though. — Terrapin Station
It makes no sense whatsoever to say that non linguistic animals can entertain thought/belief that they cannot have. Entertaining thought/belief is thinking about it. Thinking about it requires being able to talk about it. — creativesoul
Animals can entertain thoughts that they cannot hold. — creativesoul
The only way to show that you are having a specific thought is to to be able to repeat it; to be able to have it in mind again and again at will. That is what I would call holding a thought. — Janus
He denied that animals can have thoughts at all. — creativesoul
I believe animals definitely think, — Janus
That is to say that thinking is not having thoughts. That's nonsense.
We talk about our thought/belief. We have them prior to talking about them. — creativesoul
All use of the term "existence" is language use.
All language use is existentially dependent upon language acquisition. [. . .] The presupposition of existence does not require language use for it happens in autonomous fashion within non-linguistic thought/belief.
That which is prior to language use cannot be existentially dependent upon language use.
The presupposition of existence is not existentially dependent upon language use.
All notions of "existence" are. — creativesoul
I believe animals definitely think, but they do not hold or stand by their thinking such that we could say they "have thoughts". this latter comes about only with language where the thoughts can be precisely formulated and therefore "grasped" and "held". — Janus
would say that unicorns have a fictional or imagined existence. — Janus