What does this mean? That philosophizing is an aberration? Like pedophilia for the moderns, or the anti-communist hysteria of the McCarthy period? Or, the bright gleam of the bowers built by the Bower bird? An animal, which, however, it seems, is not quite aware of its own work as work. — InternetStranger
(my bolding)Repetition compulsion is a psychological phenomenon in which a person repeats a traumatic event or its circumstances over and over again. This includes reenacting the event or putting oneself in situations where the event is likely to happen again [...]
' Repetitions of traumatic events for the purpose of achieving a belated mastery...seen first and most clearly in children's games',although the 'same pattern occurs in the repetitive dreams and symptoms of traumatic neurotics and in many similar little actions of normal persons who...repeat upsetting experiences a number of times before these experiences are mastered.Such traumatic repetitions could themselves appear in active or passive forms. In a passive form, one chooses his or her most familiar experiences consistently as a means to deal with problems of the past, believing that new experiences will be more painful than their present situation or too new and untested to imagine. In the active, participatory form, a person actively engages in behavior that mimics an earlier stressor, either deliberately or unconsciously, so that in particular events that are terrifying in childhood become sources of attraction in adulthood. For instance, a person who was spanked as a child may incorporate this into their adult sexual practices; or a victim of sexual abuse may attempt to seduce another person of authority in his or her life (such as their boss or therapist): an attempt at mastery of their feelings and experience, in the sense that they unconsciously want to go through the same situation but that it not result negatively as it did in the past.
— wikipedia
Fear of uncertainty, I would bet. — Wayfarer
One can't say stuff about the ineffable - but we do anyway. How does that work? Talk about the ineffable must be showing. — Banno
Nor am I.
I would point out that if someone's mental state is ineffable, then it is pointless to discuss it.
But then we do discuss mental states - with a degree of ambiguity or uncertainty.
Hence, mental states cannot be ineffable.
How does that sit with you? — Banno
So I agree, but that was my whole point. We're accustomed to think our experiences are "of" things, but there's no reason to think that's so. I take Descartes just to have noticed this.
I was just puzzled by why you thought my comments were irrelevant, since they have to do with the topic discussed in the OP exactly. Maybe you wanted to talk about something else, not the OP, and were disappointed the conversation didn't steer the way you wanted? — Snakes Alive
It's true that that's how we're accustomed to think of it by default. I don't think there's any possible way to answer transcendent questions about whether that way of seeing it is the right way.
The point is that the Cartesian turn allows one to see it the other way – a way that one initially does not even understand that one can see it. In that sense, it's not like learning a new true proposition, but being able to see where once one was blind. You get a new ability. The Cartesian is also right that in some sense this is the way it was 'all along.' You can of course choose to ignore this new ability and have faith that it is just an aberration, and the old way of seeing things is the 'right way.' But it's just that – faith.
The point is that the Cartesian turn allows one to see it the other way – a way that one initially does not even understand that one can see it. In that sense, it's not like learning a new true proposition, but being able to see where once one was blind. You get a new ability. The Cartesian is also right that in some sense this is the way it was 'all along.' You can of course choose to ignore this new ability and have faith that it is just an aberration, and the old way of seeing things is the 'right way.' But it's just that – faith. — Snakes Alive
So the best we can do is grow to be pragmatically wise. And that will be such a sediment of habits that we are exposed if circumstances are changed radically. Like happens all the time in nature. — apokrisis
I think it's the case because it just happens, in the same way that we see distances, and so on. It's in the structure of experience, if you like. — Snakes Alive
I don't think we 'come by' a sense of veridicality. It's just how we're hardwired to think about things. There can't ever be 'evidence' ultimately that a perception is veridical. — Snakes Alive
That makes sense; the fact that we can conceive infinity can only be on account of the existence of an infinite being, a fact which, if true, guarantees the existence of God, and then God's benevolence guarantees the veracity of our perceptions. So strangely, it does look like our ability to conceive infinity, according to Descartes, guarantees the veracity of our empiric (finite) perceptions. It's curious; I'd never though about it like that before! :cool: — Janus
So we've generalized an explanation of the form "seems y because is x, in circumstance z" that helps us understand/cope with particular cases of perceptual error. Even if we posit something akin to desire as a prime mover within the dynamics of experience, why take the next step and universalize the formula to all possible experiences? Is it desire pushing us to look for an explanation where none exist? Or is it just bad metaphysics? — Aaron R
So? — Snakes Alive
We need some sense of what veridicality means. Where can we come by such an understanding? — csalisbury
Sure, but who doubts this? Not Descartes. And it implies nothing about our epistemologically 'starting with' veridicality, or having had any veridical experiences. — Snakes Alive
We need some sense of what veridicality means. Where can we come by such an understanding? — csalisbury
So if I seem to see a witch, I must have seen something similar to a witch? — Snakes Alive
(bolding added)To say that the non-veridical relies on the veridical is not to say that the seeming of any particular thing must rely on a prior veridical perception of some similar thing. — csalisbury
How I could answer has nothing to do with epistemology, but again with syntax of language. It's perfectly possible that there are no veridical experiences whatsoever – that veridicality, however we are attuned to it, is a transcendental illusion of which we're doomed to make use. — Snakes Alive
Hegel pointed out the thing-in-itself to be an abstraction. What gets abstracted away is every concrete form of existence leaving the mind with an existence-operator without any predicates following. It is nonsense that this empty form of existence would make up for reality. It is a consequence of contradictions between reality and assumptions that were made. From this the mind extrapolates that any assumption could come into conflict with reality and ends with: nothing. But this extrapolation - again - is not real, it is thought. — Heiko
Not so. Compare: it can seem like there is a witch, when there isn't. Must we have veridical witch-perceptions against which to 'compare' for this to be so? No, because it can seem like there are witches (perhaps it even has), yet there are none and have not been (let us assume). — Snakes Alive
There is no 'as opposed to.' Something that seems to exist can actually exist, or it can not. — Snakes Alive
This. Yes. The mental state is exhibited, apparent in the doings of the individual. — Banno
Nothing about epistemology follows from that fact that 'seem' statements are syntactically more complex than statements not containing 'seem.' — Snakes Alive
That from this one can conclude that one must 'start' with veridical perceptions in any way, in the sense that one has to have had any, is nonsense – this would imply that any phenomenon that people say seems to exist must have been met with actually existing, which is not the case. Existence proofs would then be very easy – it something seemed to exist, it would!
this would imply that any phenomenon that people say seems to exist must have been met with actually existing
If something 'seemed' to exist, as opposed to what?Existence proofs would then be very easy – it something seemed to exist, it would!
But who would damn you for a life devoted to accumulating practical wisdom?
So why not focus on that? — apokrisis