Because we can picture having different Xs and Ys. I can imagine having different "flavors" of experience (same structure different content). Idk why I would choose a model that suggests that that cannot be done. — khaled
Feelings are intrinsically private and unshareable only in the sense that I can't have yours and you can't have mine. — Luke
But feelings are also non-intrinsically private and shareable in the sense that they can be expressed via language, body language, or otherwise. Intersubjectivity deals only with the latter. — Luke
That's not a property of the feelings. — Isaac
Say I have a feeling X. I show you, using body-language, speech etc. You now know I have feeling X, you may even have feeling X too by the action of your mirror neurons. We've shared feeling X. So is feeling X inter-subjective now? That seems to leave the distinction between subjective and inter-subjective one of arbitrary historical record. — Isaac
That's not a property of the feelings. — Isaac
Then what is it a property of? — Luke
We haven't "shared" the feeling in that we both partake of the same feeling. I have my feeling and you have yours, even when they occur at roughly the same place and time.
Perhaps it should be clarified that what is private is having the feeling and what is shareable is expressing the feeling, and that these are not the same thing. — Luke
then your example of reaction YYY is absolutely impossible. Everyone's structure is going to be ABC, or DEF, or GHI because no-one is going to respond in the exact same way to three separate instances of anything. — Isaac
but in doing that we no longer can claim to be unaware of what constitute the physical difference, we're constraining that to colour, so the physical difference is going to be somewhere in the V4 region. — Isaac
I don't believe you can. — Isaac
I get the sense you would prefer to reject subjective experience from your explanations entirely. — Luke
Actually it's a very common use of the word "look", you're just obstinate, refusing to look at anything unless it's in front of your eyes. — Metaphysician Undercover
So what? There's no structure to things? Things are whatever we want them to be? Is that what you and this guy Goodman are saying? — Olivier5
would be a fallacy of composition to say that the culture constructs the map. We also have the same type of fallacy if we try to say that the individual's perspective is the perspective of the culture. It's plainly and simply illogical. — Metaphysician Undercover
Feelings are intrinsically private and unshareable only in the sense that I can't have yours and you can't have mine.
— Luke
But as I said earlier. That's not a property of the feelings.
— Isaac
Then what is it a property of?
— Luke
You. The things you possess are a property fo you (and the law of the country you live in, when it comes to stuff not part of your body). The feeling 'pain' doesn't have the property {belongs to Luke}. How could it? — Isaac
There's a feeling 'pain' in your body when you stub your toe, there's one in my body when I stub mine. The feeling 'pain' hasn't been changed in any way by whose body it's in, it's just a conceptual collection of worldly events (nociceptor activity, yelling, cringing, defence reflex etc...). When those events are centred on your body, it's your pain, when they're centred on my body it's my pain, but the collection of events that constitute 'pain' is a cultural, linguistic fact, it's not yours or mine. What 'pain' is is determined by the loose collection of events we're collectively prepared to accept to qualify for a use of the term. The props. They belong the the language community, not any individual. — Isaac
Perhaps it should be clarified that what is private is having the feeling and what is shareable is expressing the feeling, and that these are not the same thing.
— Luke
Right. Same with noses. Having a nose is not the same as talking about a nose. But noses are not private as a consequence. Your nose is not the same as my nose. But noses are still not private as a consequence. — Isaac
I get the sense you would prefer to reject subjective experience from your explanations entirely.
— Luke
What other kinds of experience are there? — unenlightened
It's very common to be misled. I do see what you mean though. But in the context of a discussion of colour and colour experiences, Richard does not see what you mean by 'red', though I do. And this is using 'see' in its visual sense. I am obstinate about that. — unenlightened
I find this an entirely agreeable explanation, except that I take it one step further, and say that things that make absolutely no difference should be treated as non-existent. So I never speak of X or Y at all, but only of red apples and blood and green grass and colourblindness and such. Subjectivity disappears from the conversation, because there are no words for X or Y and can be none. There are apples and grass and colours, and blindness, and we agree abut that. — unenlightened
No, the PLA wasn't supposed to cover that, nor does it cover that. — Metaphysician Undercover
Right, but I think your personal objective narrative goes unexamined for bias. It's pinned as reality, right? — frank
The way I understand these words, your personal narrative is by definition subjective because your are a subject. — Olivier5
None. I just added it in to emphasise what I took you to be rejecting. — Luke
Notice your use of "absolutely" to qualify "no difference". — Metaphysician Undercover
That's interesting. It highlights the existentialist point that the objective narrative is not necessarily closer to the truth. It's apt to be further away. The only thing you know for sure is what it feels like to be alive and feel what you feel. As soon as you place yourself in an environment (locate your self on a map), you're off to the realm of objectivity. — frank
Moreover, you did not comment on this:Popper was a realist. He saw intersubjectivity as a tool, as means to an end, which is knowledge. — Olivier5
which was in reply to your:Wittgenstein might have pointed out that it's not actually necessary for us to agree as to what is the case in order to get by. — Banno
which in turn was a reply toKey words: to get by. Which a good way to put it. Our senses have been selected to help us get by, based on their utility to survive and procreate. That 's why we can taste the sugar in the bowl, and see a red apple in the tree. — Olivier5
Notice how poor @frank, above, now thinks he knows nothing? He somehow made that conclusion after you pointed out that the border between Ethiopia and Eritrea is disputed...We might do well to avoid this trap: inventing a distinction between the thing-in-itself and the thing-as-experienced, only to find that we cannot say anything about the thing-in-itself; and thinking we have found some profound truth when all we have done is played a word game. — Banno
Perhaps, there's a difference, subtle or not, you be the judge, between observation and belief. — TheMadFool
But as I said earlier. That's not a property of the feelings. It's the same with noses, I can only have my nose, because, even if it were transplanted onto you, it would become your nose in the process. — Isaac
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