YOu seem to be thinking of privacy in terms of ownership — Banno
You continue in the belief that there is a meaning for each word, to be found in one's private subconscious. — Banno
My objection is not that each person does not have a sensation of the moon; it is that this sensation is private. — Banno
In so far as it is of the moon, it is public. — Banno
In so far as it is private, it is not a sensation of anything. — Banno
The Kantian analysis is outdated. — Banno
but the judge wasn't going to look at the pictures. — Banno
The common view is that pain and pleasure are representations of nervous input. We don't know how awareness and representation work. This view goes back to Descartes with the plucked strings.
There's a contradiction at the base of this view, though, so it's probably a good idea to take it with a grain of salt. — frank
So there aren't unpleasant sensations until we create words for them? That makes no evolutionary sense. — Marchesk
Conversely, it is impossible for science to distinguish the functions of reason with respect to components of the brain. That is to say, imagination is not to be found in the region containing this component, understanding in that region, moral constitution thataway, aesthetics over yonder. Cognition....aisle three right; opinion....level ten left. — Mww
does the exact same region of my brain respond to my understanding of race riots, as it does to my understanding of internal combustion engines? — Mww
Everydayman will the more readily accept that he thinks by means and ends of reason, than he will accept mathematical algorithms and natural law as necessary for how he thinks. — Mww
One does not think the pain he is in, one does not report anything whatsoever to himself — Mww
And the upshot of that is that it is improper to talk of representing our own pains and pleasures. "I have a pain in my hand" is not like "I have an iPhone in my hand"; it is more like "Ouch!" — Banno
It's not a model. I'm telling you what I haven't experienced. As far as I know, it is logically impossible to experience such a thing, because I cannot have anybody else's experiences. — Luke
Perhaps there's not such thing as 'your own' sensations at all, by your definition. — Isaac
Perhaps there's no such thing as 'your own' brain at all, by your definition. — Luke
Then please explain how you can see or experience or verify what other people's sensations feel/are like. — Luke
You can perceive someone else's behaviours, but you cannot perceive someone else's sensations. — Luke
If I tell you how I feel, all you will perceive are my behaviours, not my sensations. If you could perceive my sensations, then I wouldn't need to tell you how I feel. — Luke
How do you know that "behavioural consequence is a property of your sensations"? — Luke
Again, this is not analagous. We can verify the makes and models of our phones as easily as we can verify the phones themselves: simply by looking at them. — Luke
I don't have pains unless I am consciously aware of them, or unless they hurt. I don't see how I've equivocated on this. — Luke
If I'm not consciously introspecting and 'seeking out' pain signals, then I'm not the one doing it. — Luke
Also, does this imply that near-identical bodies produce (only) near-identical experiences? Perhaps this is what Isaac is getting at with his talk about 'sameness'. — Luke
I think so. — khaled
I'm going to have to declare victory here. :party:Moon-object-public; sensation of -representation-not public. — Mww
Fixed it. — Isaac
What would be this contradiction? — Olivier5
With the more general functions you list, it's much more difficult, but it can be done to a degree. — Isaac
One does not think the pain he is in, one does not report anything whatsoever to himself
— Mww
Exactly. There is no 'your pain' for me to know in that sense - unless we use the term technically (which I reserve the necessary right to do). — Isaac
Everydayman will the more readily accept that he thinks by means and ends of reason, than he will accept mathematical algorithms and natural law as necessary for how he thinks.
— Mww
So I'm finding... — Isaac
I think there is a language game in which pain is a thing, it's a technical game between doctors, or research scientists where pain is necessarily treated as the sum of certain activity in a particular region of the central nervous system. One might, in this game, say "I have a pain in my body" and mean exactly the same thing as "I have an iPhone in my hand". — Isaac
The problem we find here is that some want to take that technical definition to show that 'pain' is inherently private (happens inside a closed physiological system), — Isaac
sensation of the representation.....is backwards.
— Mww
Backwards? How so? — Isaac
Weird. It's what you said. You can I presume show documentation for ownership of your car. Can you show documentation for ownership of your sensations? If, as you say, the ownership follows the same principle.Yep. Ownership of the car, possession of the sensation. Same principle. — Mww
That we rely on so-called representations to learn about evidence of ID (indirect realism) when the theory itself implies that doing this is unwarranted. — frank
The theory does not say that our trust in our observations is unwarranted, only that it has to be assumed — Olivier5
We have to trust our senses, at least until proven otherwise. — Olivier5
Right. Bare assumptions are unwarranted. That's not to say you shouldn't have them. it just means you can't account for your confidence. — frank
Isaac appeared to be starting from ID and concluding that we shouldn't trust introspection. That's why I brought it up. — frank
It also invites us to examine the mediation itself and try to understand how it works, which is literally what Isaac is working on. — Olivier5
That's just a repeat of the same assertion. Why is it logically impossible for you to have another's experiences? — Isaac
You want to deny that the experiences you have are the ones in your head, you want to detach experiences from any physical origin, so you've no similar anchor. — Isaac
You can perceive someone else's behaviours, but you cannot perceive someone else's sensations.
— Luke
Then where are these 'sensations' such that I cannot see them by any means. How do you detect them, but I can't? — Isaac
How do you know that "behavioural consequence is a property of your sensations"?
— Luke
So you're now positing that sensations have no consequence? — Isaac
Yes, and we can verify the associated behaviours, speech and neural activity of sensations just by looking at them. — Isaac
I bet you if I looked at an fMRI scan of your brain I could tell you how you feel 75% of the time, and the technology is still in its infancy. Will it ever reach 100%? No, I don't believe that's possible — Isaac
I don't have pains unless I am consciously aware of them, or unless they hurt. I don't see how I've equivocated on this.
— Luke
There is no 'them' to be ware of. — Isaac
There's no 'pain' sitting somewhere in your brain fro your conscious to rummage around and find. — Isaac
You don't become aware of pain, you infer pain. — Isaac
It is a model created from the the various physiological and environmental inputs that neural cluster receives. — Isaac
If I'm not consciously introspecting and 'seeking out' pain signals, then I'm not the one doing it.
— Luke
Which is itself a contradiction. What is the 'I' in the first part. There's something you referred to as 'I' there which is not consciously introspecting. Then you say that there is no 'I' apart from that which is consciously introspecting. — Isaac
Under the first model, the more reasonable presumption about experiences is that the same external causes acting on the same basic physiology in roughly the same social environment would yield roughly the same experience. — Isaac
To assume otherwise is to either impute a completely hidden cause — Isaac
Why not? What's evolution got to do with the judgement of sensations? Evolution requires that appropriate behaviours are produced in response to environmental circumstances. It has no preference at all for how. — Isaac
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