Hanover
Where have I ever used the word "means"? You keep bringing it up, despite me repeatedly saying that I am only arguing that the word "headache" refers to a private sensation. — Michael
Michael
You are not addressing the claim that meaning is use at all.
You are not offering a theory of meaning
...
then we’re simply not having the same argument. — Hanover
RussellA
C1. Therefore, the word "headaches" refers to private sensations — Michael
Hanover
This matter is a matter for physicists and physiologists and neuroscientists and psychologists to resolve, not linguists. — Michael
You can't refute indirect realism or the claim that colours and smells and tastes and headaches are private sensations by saying "nuh-uh, meaning is use and so words like 'red' and 'pain' can't refer to private sensations". — Michael
You can't refute indirect realism — Michael
Michael
Of course, so what is your thesis here, that philosophy is science? — Hanover
It was that whether it's true or not leaves meaning unaffected and so it has no philosophical role. — Hanover
Esse Quam Videri
P1. Headaches are private sensations
P2. The word "headaches" refers to headaches
C1. Therefore, the word "headaches" refers to private sensations — Michael
Michael
P1: accepted
P2: rejected — Esse Quam Videri
It is used to pick out a condition people complain of — Esse Quam Videri
The sensation realizes the headache — Esse Quam Videri
How could something that you've described as being "essentially private" serve as a standard for correct and incorrect use in an essentially public practice (language)? — Esse Quam Videri
Hanover
That conclusion doesn't follow. If indirect realism is true then indirect realism is true and direct realism is false. Two competing philosophical accounts of perception have been tested, with one shown to be correct and the other incorrect. — Michael
Michael
That doesn't follow because it assumes a grammatical theory of direct realism speaks at all to the a scientific view of indirect realism. They operate in seperate categories. — Hanover
NOS4A2
The Direct Realist has the untenable position that i) John cannot possibly feel the same private sensation when sitting in “hot” water that Jane feels when sitting in “cold” water and ii) John must feel the same private sensation when sitting in “hot” water that Jane feels when sitting in “hot” water.
hypericin
How could something that you've described as being "essentially private" serve as a standard for correct and incorrect use in an essentially public practice (language)? — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
This is incoherent. If a) headaches are private sensations then b) the word "headaches" in (a) is being used to refer to things which are private sensations — those things being headaches. That's what makes (a) true. If the word "headaches" in (a) is being used to refer to something else (e.g. cats) then (a) would be false. — Michael
Why would it be a problem? I don't need to see Genghis Khan for the name "Genghis Khan" to refer to the man who lead the Mongols to conquer Asia, so why the insistence that if our experiences are private then our words cannot refer to them? — Michael
Clearly the phrase "private experiences" does, else you'd have to argue that the phrase "private experiences" is incoherent. It's really not difficult. — Michael
When I say "I have a headache" the word "headache" is being used to refer to a sensation that I claim to have and when I say "you have a headache" the word "headache" is being used to refer to a sensation that I claim you have (and which I assume is much like mine). — Michael
Esse Quam Videri
If sensation-words don't refer to private experience, then why does it seem that having the private experience oneself is necessary to understand the word? — hypericin
hypericin
Because the word "understanding" has more than one sense. Having the experience may be necessary for empathetic or imaginative grasp, but not for semantic competence. — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
But in this sense, ChatGPT understands "headache" just as well as we do, at least in the purely verbal domain. But this cannot be the relevant sense in a discussion on direct realism, can it? — hypericin
Hanover
It is you and Banno and others that are using semantic direct realism or something like it to argue that indirect realism is false. — Michael
hypericin
That commitment raises questions about how such items are individuated and talked about. At some point in the discussion it was stated that sensations do not satisfy public criteria for "objecthood"—re-identifiability, persistence conditions, or independent checkability— and, therefore, are not best understood as entities in any robustly ontological sense. — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
NOS4A2
If I can talk about my headaches, and ChatGpt cannot, there seems to be something I have that I am talking about, that ChatGpt will always lack. If that something can be discussed, and it is mine alone, this seems enough to talk of this something as an entity, if not a physical "object".
Hanover
If I can talk about my headaches, and ChatGpt cannot, there seems to be something I have that I am talking about, that ChatGpt will always lack. If that something can be discussed, and it is mine alone, this seems enough to talk of this something as an entity, if not a physical "object". — hypericin
Michael
Private sensations can act as truth-makers, not referents. — Esse Quam Videri
hypericin
The very fact I can talk about your headache is proof I am not talking about something available only to you. — Hanover
Michael
Point out where I argued indirect realism is false. I've consistently taken an a-metaphysical stance. I've argued it's irrelevant from a perspective of meaning. — Hanover
Esse Quam Videri
What exactly do you think "reference" means in this context? — Michael
Yes they can, they're doing it right here. You're using the term "private sensations" to refer to things that you say can act as truth-makers but can't act as referents. — Michael
Banno
The meaning if "headache" is not fixed only by some collective for private sensations. It is found in behaviour, avowals, characteristic causes, typical remedies, patterns of use in diagnosis, excuses, and so on. It's not private in the sense that is required.If just one word refers to private sensations then this argument that you and Hanover keep pushing that meaning is just public use, that private sensations must drop out of consideration because we can't know each other's experiences, etc. is shown to fail. — Michael
Michael
The use of the term "private sensations" in my sentence was an example of mention not reference. — Esse Quam Videri
frank
Either way, my position is that "indirect perceptual realism is broadly equivalent to the scientific view of perception that subjects do not experience the external world as it really is" — Michael
Esse Quam Videri
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