Beliefs about rising global temperatures only occur in brains. — ChrisH
Science has always been grounded in observation, I admit. But "the human perspective"? Science explicitly rejects the human perspective, and aims to observe impartially, in an unbiased manner. No human perspective there. — Pattern-chaser
Incidentally nobody has taken a shot at an alternative term for 'lived experience'. — Wayfarer
I dont see the distinction. — Harry Hindu
The question isn't how my mind can affect the physical world. The question is first, how does my mind affect my body? — fishfry
bodies which automatically react to their environment, no — leo
Isn't it the case that as soon as we assume there is such a thing as an objective reality, a mind-independent world we are a part of, then we are necessarily assuming the absence of free will already? — leo
Because if we assume we belong to a mind-independent world, then that world doesn't depend on our minds, so our minds don't have an influence on it, and so we don't have free will. — leo
I could have been clearer there. When I said 'no one knows', I meant that - at least to my knowledge - it cannot be proven philosophically/logically (or any other way) with absolute certainty. — EricH
Would you agree? — Banno
That question aside for the moment, if the viewer can get out of a film what the filmmaker put into it then there is shared meaning, full stop. Quibbles along the lines that the meaning in the viewer's head is not "numerically identical" to the meaning in the film, which is not numerically identical to the meaning in the filmmaker's head on account of their different spatiotemporal locations would seem to be quite irrelevant. — Janus
You've just named them, so you've answered your own question ! — fresco
No. Nowhere have I said that internal dialogue wasn't linguistic. — fresco
Now is there a 'mind-independent and language independent world'? No one knows — EricH
Jesus was not concerned with politics
Therefore, the church should stay out of politics. — marshill
I can't see it can be otherwise since all 'thinking' is done via a socially acquired language. — fresco
Wrong. "Canada" is not just a name for a piece of the world 'out there'. Your argument would be valid if I had used "Stuart Lake" or "Mount Robson" instead, because these are objects to which we have attached a name, just as we call a certain molecule "salt". - -
But "Canada" is not a piece of land . . . — Matias
All I will give you here is an analogy. "The fact that there is a thing in a box" is not the same as "the thing that is in the box". — leo
he is obviously talking about existence as a universal property of all objects. Because one property may have to be a property of all objects does not necessitate that all properties be a properties of all objects. and you already know that. — Arne
Is it not obvious that it supports my 'human relationship' comments above ? — fresco
I explained that in the second paragraph. "Lived experience" can refer to "the fact that you experience", while experience refers to "an experience you have". — leo
Sure an experience was necessarily lived. I claim that this does not imply that "lived experience" is redundant, because "lived experience" can be used to refer to something that "experience" alone cannot. — leo
Do you agree that "neglecting an experience" is not the same as "neglecting the fact that you experience"? — leo
As succinctly as I can, the physicist neglects the fact that he experiences when he builds his models of reality, while the employer neglects the experiences listed on a resume. — leo
That an experience was necessarily lived does not imply that "the neglect of experience" has only one meaning. Again, if I hire you without looking at the experience you listed in your resume, I neglect experience. — leo

Oh dear. Sorry for missing the typo! — Pattern-chaser
You really are stuck on that objective - subjective hangup. — Banno
