Well, no. Heat is measured in Joules. It is the flow of energy from place to place. — Banno
And there are a few eccentric posters on a pop forum who disagree with his account because it is at odds with other views they advocate. — Banno
We cannot think without language (though a human baby supposedly can). — Olivier5
So what exactly is it to be 'aware' of some data? How do we measure awareness? — Isaac
You refer to the being of a ‘we’. In what sense is it a being if there is no distinction? Isn’t pure absence of differentiation non-being? — Joshs
Interesting. How would that work? Kind of like meditative awareness? — Joshs
The fact is very clear, that these methods you propose do not adequately show us the inside of any physical objects. — Metaphysician Undercover
The fact is very clear, that these methods you propose do not adequately show us the inside of any physical objects. — Metaphysician Undercover
After all philosophy is the attempt to understand the meaning of being. — Wayfarer
No, that's the problem, breaking an object in two allows us to see the outsides of two objects, not the inside of one. Every time we take something apart, we remove the parts from their proper place as a part of a whole, such that they are no longer parts of a whole, but are each a separate object, a whole. — Metaphysician Undercover
The point was that the only way to observe the inside of an object is through the first-person conscious experience. The methods of science cannot observe the inside of objects. Then I gave the reason why I think it is important to develop an understanding of the inside of objects, in our quest for understanding reality — Metaphysician Undercover
Naturalism starts from the presumption of the separation of subject and object. — Wayfarer
Doesn't sound like you're likely to be. — frank
The "hard problem" refers to explaining the experiences that accompany function. Why is there an experience that accompanies sight? Why aren't we like computers that see, process visual data, and respond per protocols, but without any accompanying experience? — frank
Whatever you're going on about, it has nothing to do with the hard problem. — frank
I approach the "first-person nature of experience" from the perspective of the difference between "inner and outer". If we allow the fundamental empirical principle that some things are experienced to come from inside oneself, and others from outside oneself, we can understand that the third-person perspective cannot give us any observation of the inside. — Metaphysician Undercover
The hard problem is just more masturbation. — neonspectraltoast
If I am using "know" metaphorically, ironically, wryly, jokingly, humorously or sarcastically, it is not being used incorrectly. — RussellA
Either way, one must conclude that mental states are not the very same thing as brain states. — Banno
I know The Red Sox will win their next game, I know The Eiffel Tower is in Paris and I know that I am looking at the colour red. The word "know" is being metaphorically, in that it has degrees of certainty, because language is inherently metaphorical — RussellA
Yet it seems there are accounts of those things which are successful, and even methodological discussions in each type of study. So there's a salient distinction somewhere which renders those discussions meaningful. — fdrake
An account of the genesis of sense fills the hole created by successfully breaking the circle with a criticism of the given (insofar as it's propositional).
Then the account of ineffability you've given locates the ineffable precisely in the genesis of sense. Why? — fdrake
Indeed it could be said...Ahhh…another one of the cool kids. — Mww
Sorry, Frank. Dunno what that means.
I’m a virgoyankeebabyboomer with no sense of humor. — Mww
but it seems Janus (and ↪Constance
?) suppose there is something else, something ineffable, found by phenomenological introspection or some such. I think it's a beetle. — Banno
A description may be used to pick out some individual in order to give it a name. But thereafter, the name can be, and Kripke claims, is, used to pick out that individual without using the description. — Banno
And that's not something we might consider? — Banno
After all, you might not have agreed with Quine... — Banno
Well, no, since as you will have noted, he gives examples where this is not the case. — Banno
this lectern may have been in the other room, but may not have been made of ice - since it is made of wood, if we suppose that it might have been made of ice, we would better say that this lectern might have been replaced by another, made of ice. — Banno
But you know that people have been thinking about a possible link between consciousness and quantum mechanics at least since Penrose. — frank
