Nevertheless Beetles do matter when it comes to the perspectival and idiosyncratic aspects of language that are relative to each individual who must individually adapt their mother tongue in a bespoke inferential fashion to match their own worlds; such beetles are necessary, but lie beyond the aperspectival limitations of social norms and communication. — sime
How have (or could) you establish “my private experience of apple is different to yours”? — Richard B
We all pass out our lives in private perceptual worlds. The differences in our sensory and perceptual experiences often go unnoticed until there emerges a variation (such as ‘The Dress’) that is large enough to generate different descriptions in the coarse coinage of our shared language. In this essay, we illustrate how individual differences contribute to a richer understanding of visual perception, but we also indicate some potential pitfalls that face the investigator who ventures into the field.
But why do you believe in the apple in the first place ? — plaque flag
How can the illusion, trapped in the brain, be of something red at a distance ? — plaque flag
Even if that redness is causally connected to the brain, I don't see why you need to put it in the brain.. — plaque flag
There's something iffy here. What is this illusion of conscious experience ? — plaque flag
Why is conscious experience not real ? — plaque flag
I would still say that the apple is red. — plaque flag
But the concept red tends to be applied to the objects — plaque flag
I don't see a problem with reference, but the reference is not the meaning. — plaque flag
The key thing is that concepts of internal entities are still public norms. — plaque flag
I think we can include an entity like synesthesia, but its meaning will be the role it plays in claims in inferences. — plaque flag
How does a heretic decide that God is love or tolerates incest ? We can postulate causes, and we'll need premises and inferences to do so. — plaque flag
I think Wittgenstein has already made a good case against that kind of representationism. — plaque flag
Yes !
So it's no single inference that gives 'disgusting' its meaning. It's all possible inferences involving claims involving 'disgusting.' — plaque flag
I say instead that it gets its meaning inferentially. 'Suzy thought the apple tasted disgusting, so she threw it out of the car.' — plaque flag
Saying the apples look red sounds to me like dualism, as if one peels off the redness and leaves the real apple behind. — plaque flag
I don't think of words like 'sweet' getting their meaning from this or that quale. Instead concepts are norms — plaque flag
But it's the world that's seen and not an image of the world. — plaque flag
I think it's much safer to claim that we could not induce seeing red for the first time with someone who was in the complete dark, had never seen red before, using only the means you're suggesting are required. — creativesoul
Okay. Then seeing red does require things outside the head. — creativesoul
The position you're arguing for seems to completely neglect all the events that lead up to the ability to reactivate the biological machinery. — creativesoul
I'm just baffled by the claim that seeing colours and shapes does not require anything outside the head. — creativesoul
So, the very first time someone sees red, it does not require anything not in the head? — creativesoul
Does it require having seen red before? — creativesoul
You are willing to project strings on all of reality but not color. — plaque flag
Presumably the concept of a sting occurs when the brain is tickled just right. — plaque flag
So what was so wacky about me saying that roses are red ? — plaque flag
Is consciousness strings ? (If string theory is correct?) — plaque flag
So pain is strings ? — plaque flag
I'm not seeing how you get around dualism exactly. — plaque flag
If images are just brain activity, and brain activity is strings... ? — plaque flag
Indirect realism has (1) images and (2) reality itself, right ? — plaque flag
Indirect realism is committed to a dualist picture within which there is an ontology of non-physical objects alongside that of the physical. — plaque flag
Indirect realism is committed to a dualist picture within which there is an ontology of non-physical objects alongside that of the physical. — plaque flag
Which is basically dualism, it seems to me. — plaque flag
Isn't indirect realism about a mediating image or consciousness which is not the Real itself ? Presumably created by the nervous system ? — plaque flag
The issue is that you call everything brain activity — plaque flag
But what can the scientific realist mean — plaque flag
You think color is just in our head, right ? — plaque flag
