Importantly, these vitality effects do not find their locus in a 'self' but are simply experienced 'as such':
These coordination processes are those of if/then relationships: if 'I' move this shape like so, then such and such follows.
Nothing happens if I try and move the shape over there, however. Ipso: this shape is 'mine'. — StreetlightX
What I am arguing against, is the idea that human beings, as well as other animals, are "aware" of inner feelings, like the urge to eat. I think that the fact that we refer to these as "instincts" demonstrates that we are not aware of such things. An instinct is something which motivates us which we are not aware of. — Metaphysician Undercover
So we don't simply observe our pangs of hunger we have to construct such an attntional state by way of learnt cultural concepts — apokrisis
I understand TGW to be claiming that first awareness is of the inner milieu and I would certainly agree with that.
But if you understand self-awareness to be a linguistically mediated event then of course we must be aware of others first in order to learn language. — John
So introspection might be culturally mediated, but inner awareness certainly aint. — John
I'd say SX is correct for exactly this reason. Children don't understand themselves to be experiences before the development of theory of mind. They are not aware experience, just (their own)sensations and things around them. They are aware of others before they even catch on there are such things as experiences. Children are concious of others before they make the distinction of self/other. — TheWillowOfDarkness
there is no room for a categorical wedge between the conscious awareness of hunger and our reasons for eating. — Baden
his cannot make sense unless you assume the self is a social construction and that having a self = coming to the realization of the self-other distinction as the result of being socialized. But this is exactly what is at issue. — The Great Whatever
I don't think this can be right. The proprioceptive sense of the body comes on account of the actual sensations which belong to it, and are felt prior to any "if/then" kinds of inference. Proprioceptive and other 'inner sense": feelings as well as skin sensations would be immediately known not to belong to "shapes over there", I would say.
So of course young children have experiences, but that those experiences are 'of themselves' is precisely what's in question: It is precisely the self 'in' those experiences which are differentially engendered though development. — StreetlightX
Moreover, one you 'start' with solipsism, there's no getting 'out': you can't work from the 'inside-out' in the outside's already 'in'. — StreetlightX
Solipsism in this empirical form (as opposed to the Ayer/Wittgenstein transcendental form), if you like, just the admission that not all things are amenable to or discoverable by oneself: to complain that the gaps then can't be closed once you understand this is only to complain that there are other people. Nothing guarantees that everything is on level ground, and everything is discoverable to everything else on a single immanent playing field. The materialist might want to believe this, but their want is just that.
The appeal to magical souls and zero-dimensional beings is of course just rhetorical bluster. I think the real underlying impetus is the refusal to accept any idea of permanent closure or mystery, which must be equivalent to some deity or dualism so long as you're a materialist. But if you're not, this need not bother you, and you can indeed see the world as more complex than the materialist can ever allow, by recognizing that not even its notion as a common 'world' holds together in the first place. The insistence that we must know others in the same way as we know ourselves then just amounts to an insistence that there are not more things than are contained in our philosophy. — The Great Whatever
As for the question of why it should be that experiences amount to self-consciousness: again all feeling is a feeling of oneself. — The Great Whatever
Dancing-on-a-rooftop-with-bells-on... — StreetlightX
... all feeling is a feeling of oneself. — The Great Whatever
It seems to me that to be self-aware is to be aware of (or to make) a distinction, self/not-self in experience. In which case, to be aware but not self-aware consists of not making that distinction, rather than not having one side or the other as experiences. — unenlightened
But you see the problem: Because sexual hunger has an external physical effect that is a necessary condition for the successful completion of the sexual act (in males at least) you can't in this case put the deeper instinct cart before the conscious compulsion horse without falling into obvious absurdity. — Baden
It is not the "awareness of hunger" which is at issue here, it is how "hunger" is defined. I describe hunger as an appetite, the desire to eat. This is necessarily directed toward external objects, therefore hunger is a feeling which is based in an awareness of external objects. TGW describes hunger as a feeling resulting from an internal deficiency. TGW's description is not consistent with the evidence.But in it's basic form, it just is the latter (ask any (other) animal). None of this is to deny our obvious ability to arrange our habits around times hunger is likely to arise, but there is no room for a categorical wedge between the conscious awareness of hunger and our reasons for eating. — Baden
I am not out to deny that we are aware of feelings and emotions, what I am saying is that these feelings and emotions are themselves based in an awareness of things external.Instincts may motivate us in ways we don't understand or that we can't fully trace, but they primarily do so by means of feelings and emotions of which we are aware. You just can't cut that link and retain a coherent depiction of the human condition. — Baden
This is a good way of putting it, and I'll add to the criticism above about a feeling-based account being incapable of thought: it's only passions that can possibly provide reasons, and thus allow for thinking (reasoning). Passions compel, which doesn't move the organism in the way gravity moves a stone, since the stone can't be compelled to do anything (it just does what it does), and thus has no reasons to do anything. — The Great Whatever
I'd put it that the cultural mediation is experienced as self-conscious introspection such that the inner awareness of drives is no longer all-consuming but still prods through in a kind of a symbiotic competition with said introspection. — Baden
Short of subscribing to some myth of free-floating qualia, I simply don't see how this could be true. Proprioceptive sensing has precisely to do with our bodily asymmteries; we are weighty, fleshy bodies who have a centre of gravity which shift with our mass; — StreetlightX
We are fleshly, weighty, differentially orientated, sensitive bodies of space and time, not free-floating, 0-dimentional 'feeling beings'. — StreetlightX
I think it comes down to whether you think the primary awareness of the inner milieu counts as self-awareness, as distinct from the reflexive self-awareness brought about by cultural/ symbolic mediation. — John
The meat is to-be-acquired, the hunger is to-be-acted-upon. In that sense they are different qualities or kinds of experience, but I am not sure it would be right to say there is a "general thing that is qualia". — John
Perhaps because the hunger is a kind of 'inner prompting' that exists in itself when the body is at rest and the meat as something to be acquired is elusive and uncertain and requires the effort of bodily exertion and stealth, even animals may feel the 'outer-directedness' of the desire to get the food as feeling distinct from the 'inner-promptingness' of the hunger itself. Perhaps it is these very kinds of animal feeling that form the basis of our conceptually elaborated distinctions. — John
No, I don't see a problem here. The successful completion of eating requires an external physical object just as much as the sex act. That is the point of my argument, eating is the result of an awareness of external objects, not the result of an awareness of an internal hunger. Sex is the same.
We cannot deny the role of the external object here. When we eat there is a particular external object which is eaten, and in the sex act, there is also an external source of tactile stimulation. So, we can start from the fact that a particular object is the object of desire because it is particular objects (persons in the sex act) which end up satisfying the desire. — Metaphysician Undercover
When I said external physical effect (in males) I meant an erection, which is required to complete the act of sex. And sexual hunger is what causes the erection. — Baden
That is the point of my argument, eating is the result of an awareness of external objects, not the result of an awareness of an internal hunger. Sex is the same. — Metaphysician Undercover
MU wants to cut the link between sexual hunger and sex. But without the physical manifestation of the sexual hunger, you cannot complete the sex act. — Baden
Because I think it's utterly ridiculous - and I'm not just being polemic, I really find it completely incredulous - that when we can show the grounds for something like self-feeling, when we not only can provide accounts for, but actually test the ways in which the sense of self is a variable, differential production (which doesn't, by the way, make it artifice - all of reality is a production), that one can just throw one's hands up in the air, ignore the plethora of arguments for and evidence of, and just hearken back to some romantic ideal of the self as a free-floating affective ephemera (and really, what exactly is wrong with this characterization? How is it 'just' rhetorical bluster? Tell why you don't think this). — StreetlightX
As far as I take it, the charge that 'oh you just don't like mystery' is literally no different to what proponents of UFOs, ghosts and shamanism would say. It's the perpetual fallback of every mystic and peddler of crystal healing from time immemorial and sides with an ideology of ignorance that both ethically and politically compromised. I mean OK, this sounds harsh - it is harsh - but that's just honestly the level at which I see these sorts of claims about subjectivity and self-consciousness operating. Perhaps we're just ships in the night, perhaps you think this is incredulous, but I guess at some point the spade's just turned. — StreetlightX
Where is the hunger beyond the throbbing of your penis? Does it really make sense to say a mental event is the cause of the physical event rather than that the mental event is an awareness of that physical event? — apokrisis
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