All we know is that the animal has come to habitually respond to the sound... — Janus
...you've just repeated the same old tired refrain. — Janus
You actually haven't... explained anything... — Janus
All we know is that the animal has come to habitually respond to the sound. Talk of "connections, "correlations' and "associations" is superfluous and anthropocentric. — Janus
How do we know that anything means anything to an animal? — Janus
We know only because we can observe that they respond to things in appropriate ways. We have no evidence that they "draw correlations, connections, and/or associations between things". Unless you can explain how you know they do that, I will remain convinced that you are indulging in anthropomorphic thinking. — Janus
As I indicated way back when this particular topic arose, there are correlations, connections, and associations which are drawn by the living being, at the subconscious level, which are prior to, and necessary for the occurrence of sense perception. So sensation is inherently meaningful. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't see any reason to believe that "all meaning is attributed". Do you have an argument to support that? — Janus
I also don't see any need to, or sense in, employing the kind of anthropomorphic language exemplified in phrases like "drawing a correlation, connection, and/or association between them".
As I see it you commit the fallacy of misplaced concreteness, by attributing the kinds of conceptualizations to animals (and not just the 'higher" animals either!) that humans are capable of due to their linguistic abilities.
Your view is thus a tissue of confusion, and therefore not helpful in any way.
So sensation is part of experience? You apparently agree with me, so is sensory experience (the sensation part of experience) not, just as with the rest of experience, interpreted? — Janus
Sensation...
Is it existentially dependent upon language?
I would argue in the negative.
— creativesoul
So, are you implying that if having sensation is not dependent on linguistic capability it therefore cannot be meaningful? — Janus
What is a sensation if not a sensory experience? I see. I hear, I taste, I smell, I feel; those are sensations, experiences. What is interpreted if not those experiences? — Janus
And of course... ...you have failed to answer the question as to what sensation is... — Janus
Sensation...
Is it existentially dependent upon language?
I would argue in the negative. — creativesoul
What is a sensation if not a sensory experience? I see. I hear, I taste, I smell, I feel; those are sensations, experiences. What is interpreted if not those experiences? — Janus
Really? Then quote where I said that experiences are meaningful. — Janus
What is a sensation if not a sensory experience? I see. I hear, I taste, I smell, I feel; those are sensations, experiences. What is interpreted if not those experiences? — Janus
I think you are just being asked to justify your sweeping statements on the issue. — apokrisis
What is usually referred to by "sensation" is sensory experiences; seeing, hearing, tasting, smelling and touching. Leaving aside the question of whether those experiences are "meaningful'; I asked you what sensation could consist in if not in those sensory experiences. — Janus
You have merely asserted that sensation is not meaningful, without any arguments, explanations or examples.. — Janus
If the one questioned thinks the question is poorly conceived or irrelevant or otherwise deficient in whatever way, then the onus is on the one questioned to demonstrate that such is the case. mere assertion is not sufficient for, and it is in fact fatal to, fruitful discussion. — Janus
All interpretation is of that which is already meaningful. — creativesoul
What is a sensation if not a sensory experience? I see. I hear, I taste, I smell, I feel; those are sensations, experiences. What is interpreted if not those experiences? — Janus
What is already meaningful? — creativesoul
NOTHING is more fatal to discussion than having questions answered by questions. — Janus
Sensations aren't meaningful. It makes no sense at all to say "the interpretations of our sensations".
— creativesoul
I really cannot understand this at all. The statement that sensations are not meaningful appears as blatantly false. So until you back this up with an explanation, or a demonstration of a sensation which is not meaningful (because sensations seem to all be meaningful to me), I'll have to dismiss what you say as nonsense. — Metaphysician Undercover
It may be that the solution lies in what's being neglected by the problem itself
— creativesoul
Two different questions are being confused here.
The OP was not intended to be about Norton's dome and its claims of Newtonian indeterminism due to a latent jounce concealed in the initial conditions. The OP was about how we would think about an initiating cause when it comes to spontaneous symmetry breaking. — apokrisis
What is a sensation if not a sensory experience? I see. I hear, I taste, I smell, I feel; those are sensations, experiences. What is interpreted if not those experiences? — Janus
If meaning is prior to language and you are using language as a means to giving direction to this premise, how is language not meaningful? — eodnhoj7
THE PURPOSE OF this discussion is to determine how philosophy is related to psychology or vice versa. The reason this is the purpose is due to the fact of psychology being a form of knowledge, and knowledge itself is a focal point of philosophy. So, in order to have a well-ordered, factual and consistent psychology, this psychology must rest upon a philosophy capable of holding it in place. — Blue Lux
Yes. Although Norton's dome isn't the only shape that allows this, many shapes, such as a spherical dome, or a paraboloid, wouldn't allow it since it would take an infinite amount of time for a perfectly balanced ball to "fall off" from the apex. (Or, equivalently, in a time-reversed scenario, it would take an infinite amount of time for a ball sent sliding up to come to rest at the apex). — Pierre-Normand
...it still doesn't address the initial problem regarding Newton's laws: namely, that they allow the ball to start moving even in the case where there is no such initial departure from symmetry. — Pierre-Normand
Not sure what molecular decay is. But if you're thinking of thermal molecular motion, yes. It would be a source of fluctuation of the net force, and then could be appealed to as the cause of the fall. But that doesn't solve the conceptual issue since, according to Newton's laws of motion, the "fall" (or initiation of the movement) is possible even if there is no initial perturbation at all. — Pierre-Normand
The radial component of the reaction force is proportional to the sine of the slope at the point of contact with the ball, and hence null when the ball is located at the apex. — Pierre-Normand
What does "the physical" refer to other than the interpretations of our sensations. — Metaphysician Undercover
Sensations aren't meaningful.
— creativesoul
Like I was born yesterday? — Metaphysician Undercover