It is physical. Spoken words are heard via physical vibrations. Written words are obviously written on something physical. BTW, are you intentionally leaving my post regarding emotional abuse unanswered?
But if it is not physical in nature, how can this “power” have physical consequences? — NOS4A2
What I want to know is what makes speech and words more powerful. I explicitly stated this: "Speech possesses no actual, physical power, insofar it lacks the capacity to transfer more energy than any other sound from the mouth." — NOS4A2
It's not about silencing people who think differently, — Judaka
I do not believe that we have control over our emotional reaction to words, and it should be clearly obvious that our particular emotional states are quite often strongly correlated with our actions. — Pinprick
Even if I did believe in the computational theory of mind (I don't) — NOS4A2
I rest on the sensible fact that, until she is struck by something like a billiard ball or kinetic energy, every move she makes begins and ends with her. So unless something forcers her to move against her will there could be only one cause to her actions. There are probably a vast array of external and environmental factors she may be considering, of course, but the choice and the action itself comes from only one being. — NOS4A2
...every move she makes begins and ends with her. — NOS4A2
So unless something forcers her to move against her will there could be only one cause to her actions. — NOS4A2
What theory of mind do you ascribe to? How does an intention form, and how does it then get to have physical results, and how do these then in turn again travel "into" the mind?
Feel free to give basic descriptions, I'm not expecting you to write a book here.
So, connected with what I wrote above, when does "she" begin? Does her mind rest somewhere fully formed for all eternity, or is it temporal, and if it's temporal, what causes it to change?
I believe mental states are really body states. I’m not one to say we should eliminate the concept of mind altogether, just that we should never forget the object it abstracts. Embodied cognition is somewhat appealing, but I prefer biology to philosophy when it comes to mind. — NOS4A2
What I want to know is what makes speech and words more powerful. — NOS4A2
That some people beg to differ with my view is not compelling enough to change my mind, and I could not follow the argument much further. — NOS4A2
We are emotionally affected by the words of those whose words we have allowed to emotionally affect us. Therefore, we have control over our emotional reaction to words, inasmuch as we empower those whose words can affect us emotionally. — Book273
We are emotionally affected by the words of those whose words we have allowed to emotionally affect us. Therefore, we have control over our emotional reaction to words, inasmuch as we empower those whose words can affect us emotionally.
— Book273
I don’t entirely agree with this. If that were the case, then why would we ever “allow” another’s words to upset us? — Pinprick
Even if I did believe in the computational theory of mind (I don't), we've avoided entirely how a subsection of sounds from the mouth or scribbles on paper possess more power than others. Now they have "influence", which according to the dictionary is "the capacity to have an effect on the character, development, or behavior of someone or something". It's magical thinking all the way down. — NOS4A2
"It's what's encoded and how it's processed that is important". If I try to translate this back to biological terms, I find only one type of object that encodes and processes speech: the human body. — NOS4A2
They have meaning, which unintelligible sounds/scribbles lack.
The argument was that speech does have power; hence the ability to suffer as a result of it, which victims of verbal abuse is an example of. Do you deny that these victims truly suffer? If not, then how do you explain their suffering?
There is no empirical evidence that some combinations of sounds and marks on paper have more power than others. — NOS4A2
There is no instrument that can measure it — NOS4A2
no hypothesis to account for it — NOS4A2
no formula to describe it — NOS4A2
They don't have meaning. Meaning is generated in and provided by the person who views the symbols. Meaning does not exist outside any human being. We can't understand a foreign language just by listening to it, for example. We must learn what the words mean and learn to associate them with the sounds and symbols, and forever be ready to provide meaning to them. — NOS4A2
I do not deny their suffering. — NOS4A2
It is only through training—whether through cognitive therapy or meditation, perhaps medication—that it can readjust and be undone. — NOS4A2
MLK and Winston Churchill were great orators, and so on. I'm just trying to be clear where these feelings are coming from. One doesn't need to believe speech has power to note the genius of Shakespeare's writing, simply because the feelings and ideas one gets when reading it isn't generated in the ink and pages. — NOS4A2
Only someone beholden to the superstition would try pass off evidence of the power of the brain — NOS4A2
You do have to believe in the power of speech to believe there can be great orators. It's rather confused to think you can have powerful speeches but no powerful speech. The medium isn't irrelevant, but it's not the most relevant attribute of speech, which is the power of words on human minds.
I don't know what you could possibly mean by 'the power of the brain' in this context. Are you the kind of person who insists that it's not the gun that kills you it's the bullet? Do you really go through life as if you don't understand the difference between proximate and non-proximate causes?
"The high demand for wheat's going to cause a rise in prices"
"No, actually I think you'll find, the high demand for wheat isn't going to actually cause anything, the key presses on the stock exchange computer is going to cause the price rise, anything else is one step removed and so irrelevant"
I bet you're a hoot at parties.
Oration is speech.
If you consider oration powerful then?
The oration is speech. Speech is an act. Speech is powerful.
What are you thinking here?
Oration is an action they perform and I like the way they do it. None of that means or implies that they have powerful speech. — NOS4A2
Well, not sure why you’re talking about souls, but my only point is that we can’t prevent our emotion from occurring. We will feel angry, sad, etc. no matter what. But definitely we have some control over whatever actions come next. — Pinprick
We can measure the intensity of sound and understand how that effects the body, sure, but do words come with more intensity? — NOS4A2
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