Do you, when you feel hunger, not feel the contractions of your muscles near your stomach? — Marty
How does an adult understand that hunger requires an outside source to satiate it, without feeling hungry? He can't in advance search for something that he has no understanding of. The understanding would have to come first, and then once he understands his hunger, he begins to go outside to search for what can stop it. — Marty
No, you feel hunger. Nothing about suffering a muscle contraction will let you know that you have muscles. Feelings are not information about the objects felt, nor the objects feeling. — The Great Whatever
I'm not sure how you can have no understanding of hunger if it's affecting you. Surely, it's not that type of know-how of hunger that correlates it to specific neurons in the brain, but it seems it's in a sense at least vulgar. Otherwise, I'm not sure what we're later rationalizing it into an object.It is exactly the opposite. A hungry child has no understanding whatsoever of its hunger or how to satiate it. All it has are instinctual compulsions that act in response to the hunger. It's only once these satiations take on regular patterns that 'objects' begin to come to the fore as capable of satiating that hunger. Food is itself an objectification of hunger, just as physical objects generally are a kind of objectification of felt spatial possibilities. — The Great Whatever
What do you think is particularly convincing in Henry's work that makes you think it has no directed intentionality? — Marty
I'm not sure how you can have no understanding of hunger if it's affecting you — Marty
How am I even supposed to respond to this? — The Great Whatever
First up, I thought we were speaking about animals, not about humans. — John
This is just an issue of the direction of ordering, As evident to me, my awareness, habit is first, then instinct is deeper.In any case, you say that "at the first level it is habitual", but that can't be right since otherwise newborn animals would not feed. — John
You say that "at the deeper level it's instinctual" but what could the instinct to eat be other than the felt urge to eat? — John
Yes, I agree that we can establish such a distinction, whether it is a "proper" or improper one is an open issue, but in any case I can't see the relevance to the argument of our being able to establish such a distinction. Animals cannot establish such a distinction, and I think we must imagine that they eat when they feel the pangs of hunger, if food is available, or they go in search for it if it not. Alternatively we may say that they eat when they feel the urge, but whatever way we want to express it ,it is a feeling, an awareness, within the animal that motivates it to eat. And I had thought that you were arguing against TGW's position regarding "inner affection". — John
The point was just that if you stop something from feeling hunger, it can die as a result, vitiating the (IMO absurd) claim that hunger doesn't compel eating — The Great Whatever
Hunger is not a signaling of any state of the body whatsoever to the organism, who need know nothing objective about its own body at all in order to be hungry. — The Great Whatever
I know with certainty that it is not hunger which compels me to eat. — Metaphysician Undercover
Since, as I pointed out to John, hunger only kicks in when the mechanism which compels us to eat when we should eat, fails to do so — Metaphysician Undercover
... hunger only kicks in when the mechanism which compels us to eat when we should eat, fails to do so — Metaphysician Undercover
This is insane. — The Great Whatever
Fascinating. Can we apply this to other appetites too? I mean it totally explains my sex life. — Baden
To you, it appears to be insane, because you haven't taken the time to consider the reality of these issues. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is insane. — The Great Whatever
Actually, it appears to me to be insane because it is. — The Great Whatever
Yes, I think it applies to all the appetites... — Metaphysician Undercover
Indeed, I don't have sex out of sexual hunger, I do it out of habit. My sexual hunger only kicks in when that mechanism that compels me to have sex fails. Of course, the only problem with this is that my lack of sexual hunger means I can never perform, so I never actually end up having sex. Weird. — Baden
Well, all I can say is I feel the same way. There is absolutely nothing radical or new in what you are talking about. It is old hat in the oldest sense of hat. It was in Aristotle, it was in Ryle. Ask yourself this: if what you think is so radical, why does everyone agree with you? Why is everyone tripping over themselves to say things like the title of your OP, and why is any mention of Henry in a serious context made in order to dismiss him as vociferously as possible? — The Great Whatever
Putting a cherry on MU's shit sandwich isn't going to make it any more edible. — Baden
No discussion of .... mirror neurons, etc. — StreetlightX
The 'myth of the given', to use Sellars's term, still haunts all our discourse on consciousness. — StreetlightX
It's not 'subjectivity' that's the issue - it's the matter of it's being accounted for. And yeah, any philosophy that posits subjectivity as brute immediacy or whathaveyou is immediate grounds for its dismissal. — StreetlightX
Oh look, I mentioned the words 'mirror neurons' so I'm an arch-reductionist who must disagree with everything you just said. — StreetlightX
I'd rather say instead that both self and other are derivative notions which become (roughly) sedimented into place based on a variety of developmental factors, both biological and social. — StreetlightX
The truth is that Experience is trained by both association and dissociation, and that psychology must be writ both in synthetic and in analytic terms. Our original sensible totals are, on the one hand, subdivided by discriminative attention, and, on the other, united with other totals, - either through the agency of our own movements, carrying our senses from one part of space to another, or because new objects come successively and replace those by which we were at first impressed. The 'simple impression' of Hume, the 'simple idea' of Locke are both abstractions, never realized in experience.
...
The baby, assailed by eyes, ears, nose, skin, and entrails at once, feels it all as one great blooming, buzzing confusion; and to the very end of life, our location of all things in one space is due to the fact that the original extents or bignesses of all the sensations which came to our notice at once, coalesced together into one and the same space.
William James - Principles of Psychology (1890)
For example, the child developmental psychologist Daniel Stern notes the basic 'awareness' in infants probably takes the form of what he refers to as 'vitality affects', which are kinds of 'life-feelings', or life-qualities': "These elusive qualities are better captured by dynamic, kinetic terms, such as ‘surging’, ‘fading away’, ‘fleeting’, ‘explosive’, crescendo’, ‘decrescendo’, ‘bursting’, ‘drawn out’, and so on. These qualities of experience are most certainly sensible to infants and of great daily, even momentary, importance." — StreetlightX
That aside, the crucial thing is that vitality affects become differentiated into self and other by processes of symmetry breaking, as it were. The infant learns to be a 'self' - or rather learns to 'locate' these (trans-personal) affects within a self - by means of coming to grips with the regularities of bodily coordination which break the symmetry between self and other. — StreetlightX
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