That's what I meant and I would guess that as a consensus, we are. If we jump to certain metaphysical issues this might seem wrong, but when one realizes that we deal with millions of much smaller beliefs - how to use spoons, what happens if you run out in the road without looking enough times, how to put on socks, how to turn on the cold water....and so on, most people have, via parenting and school grown up accepting a vast number of consensus beliefs without ever looking into the justifications - though often gaining justification for many as one works from that belief.although hopefully we are more likely to believe what is true — Banno
Sure, nothing I said goes against this.But truth and belief are quite different things — Banno
Nor this. My question was whether true statements, when we think of the vast array of them we send around each day are more likely to be convincing and thus become consensus. Given that a true statement is true, it ought to fit reality better and while many will be counterintuitive, many will not be, perhaps more of the latter. That being true is more likely to make a statement sticky.Believing something does not, except in specific circumstances, render it true — Banno
Yes, this also can be true.You might do well to believe the consensus, if only for the sake of a quiet life. — Banno
Why would one think we never have access to the truth, direct or otherwise? We have access to lots of truths. — Banno
SO you are saying something like that the more "perceived potential information of a subject" there is, the more true it is? — Banno
Now that seems a bit odd. You and I agree that this thread is in English, I presume; and we do this as a result of having read the thread - that is, as a result of having made certain observations. Why balk at the claim that, that this thread is in English is an objective fact? IT's not, after ll, based on some individual preference in the way subjective facts are... — Banno
So back to the keys. You agree, I assume, that getting the keys out of the car does not consist in getting everyone to believe that the keys are out of the car... It's not the consensus that makes the fact true? So some how knowledge is consensus-based, but truth isn't? — Banno
Again, it's not the consensus that leads to a statement's being true, though, is it? Although it might lead to our believing it to be true. — Banno
My position is that insofar as our knowledge about reality is based on experience, it's not objective.....
.....It stands to reason that the common elements in the experiences of different subjects are the result of objective reality asserting itself.....
......so the conclusion I arrive at (...) is that our knowledge about phenomenal, physical reality is indeed consensus-based. — Echarmion
So, a subject is a view? Are you saying that is all that you are - a view of the world? The "internal vs. external" is a product of the same problem as the "physical vs. non-physical" - dualism. I am not just my view of the world. I am a human being - an organism of which my view is only one part.Yep, you don't have a concept of a subject. It figures. So what is your internal perspective then? If you're not a subject, what are you? — Echarmion
That' because you keep thinking in terms of physical vs. non-physical. You don't seem to be paying attention to what I'm saying. You seem to want to only promote your view as if it is objective - as if it is the case for not only you, but everyone else. Why do you think you keep trying to get me to agree and see things how you see them? What is the purpose of that?Actually the problem is just as bad because no causal process to explain qualia has been discovered. If everything is objects, there'd have to be some physical process that converts, say, electric charge into feelings. You talk as if this process was common knowledge, but it's not, and you haven't provided any. — Echarmion
The concept, "existence" is implied by the concept of "property".Are you at all familiar with the whole "existence is not a predicate" argument? — Echarmion
It seems to me that you can only talk about what you think and in talking about what you think, you are talking about part of the world. Subjectivity comes about by confusing what your mind is with what the rest of the world is.First, anything I say wouldn’t be purely subjective, that being reserved for what I think. Second, for whatever I say, the use of it by others is up to them. — Mww
Other minds are outside of my mind, and my mind is outside of their minds. So how do you reconcile the facts that you are a subject from your perspective but an object from other's perspective when we all share the same world?Generally, in philosophy the concept of objective is reserved for knowledge that refers to what is outside the mind of the subject. It can be forced to mean that in introspection the mind is both subject and object, but this is an exception to the rule that should be emphasized so as not to create confusion. — David Mo
How can it be true that ice cream tastes good, if it doesn't taste good to others? It can only be true if it tastes good to you. There is no such thing as a subjective truth. A subjective truth is a category error.You're talking about truth, right? Subjective truth versus intersubjective truth versus objective truth? If that's the case, then it's subjectively true that ice-cream tastes good, but objectively true that ice-cream tastes good to me. — Hanover
How can it be true that ice cream tastes good, if it doesn't taste good to others? It can only be true if it tastes good to you. There is no such thing as a subjective truth. A subjective truth is a category error.You're talking about truth, right? Subjective truth versus intersubjective truth versus objective truth? If that's the case, then it's subjectively true that ice-cream tastes good, but objectively true that ice-cream tastes good to me. — Hanover
Think about how shit smells to dung beetles.The shift is towards that which results in greater survivability. The bee sees the world in a way that leads to his survival. Those who smell garbage as sweet probably don't survive well, regardless of what garbage really smells like, whatever that means. — Hanover
How can it be true that ice cream tastes good, if it doesn't taste good to others? It can only be true if it tastes good to you. There is no such thing as a subjective truth. A subjective truth is a category error. — Harry Hindu
So how do you reconcile the facts that you are a subject from your perspective but an object from other's perspective when we all share the same world? — Harry Hindu
If you refer to yourself as a "subject", and others refer to you as an "object", are we both talking about the same thing, or are we talking past each other?Reconcile? It's a fact that I'm an object for others.
Two points:
The perception of the other as someone who looks at me implies that I perceive them as another consciousness in the same world.
And we can feel that we have a common existence in the fact that we can share the same project. That is, in practice.
Therefore, intersubjectivity is not a feature of consciousness alone, but of human existence as a whole. It begins with language and continues in acts. Or vice versa. — David Mo
It seems to me that you can only talk about what you think — Harry Hindu
Subjectivity comes about by confusing what your mind is with what the rest of the world is. — Harry Hindu
If the use of what you say is up to others, what is the use of you saying it, for you? — Harry Hindu
Mind is a human construct given from pure reason, subjectivity being nothing but the consequence of such construction. It is hardly a confusion, insofar as the rest of the world cannot be blamed for human intellectual error, so theoretical subjectivity was invented to take the fall, and speculative epistemological philosophy was invented to, if not correct the fall, at least to make the fall less painful. — Mww
So, then we are not to take your previous quote seriously, as if it bears some truth, or is representative of of some state-of-affairs independent of you thinking it? Your words aren't about the world, but are about your ego?Your subtlety is well-noted. Irreducibly? For me? To assuage the ego, of course. What else? Not the blatant uncontrolled “I’m right, you’re a farging moron” ego, just the half-assed reclusive, take it or leave it, I don’t really care ego. Transcendental rather than Freudian. — Mww
I guess "intersubjective reality" is a metaphor. — David Mo
Yes, there could be countless intersubjective realities. The reason I used the singular so far is that I was concerned with the idealised "human" intersubjective reality, i.e. what would result if there were no bias, mistakes etc. While that will never practically be the case, it serves as my baseline for what could be called "practical reality". — Echarmion
It'd be more a question of what you think the order is: do the objects develop subjectivity, or do the subjects develop objects? — Echarmion
So, then we are not to take your previous quote seriously, — Harry Hindu
Your words aren't about the world, but are about your ego? — Harry Hindu
The major: agreed, all empirical knowledge is grounded in experience, which is always subjective;
The minor: agreed, there is no reason to think, and it is counterproductive to suggest, that which appears to the sensibility of a plurality of perceiving subjects is not the same for each of them;
The conclusion: does not follow from the premises, in that consensus-based becomes the condition for the premises, rather than consensus alone being a valid judgement given from them.
A plurality of congruent individual knowledges is merely an agreement, and such commonality in itself cannot be sufficient reason for the knowledge, for it then becomes possible for agreement to be the ground of knowledge, which contradicts the major. — Mww
So, a subject is a view? Are you saying that is all that you are - a view of the world? The "internal vs. external" is a product of the same problem as the "physical vs. non-physical" - dualism. I am not just my view of the world. I am a human being - an organism of which my view is only one part. — Harry Hindu
Why do you think you keep trying to get me to agree and see things how you see them? What is the purpose of that? — Harry Hindu
I asked you how you move your "physical" arm with your "non-physical" mind? You need to show me the same respect that I have shown you and answer my questions. Do you agree or disagree that there is a causal relationship there? — Harry Hindu
Do you disagree that there is a causal relationship between imagining flying to the Moon and the existence of "physical" rockets that fly human beings to the Moon? Could human beings travel to the Moon without first having imagined it and then imagined the plans for the design of a rocket ship to get them to the Moon? — Harry Hindu
we deal with millions of much smaller beliefs — Coben
My question was whether true statements, when we think of the vast array of them we send around each day are more likely to be convincing and thus become consensus. — Coben
My point that true statement don't glow green or something, thus showing their truth. You have to dig. And what you dig into is justification. — Coben
One might suppose so. The confusion, which we have apparently avoided, is to think that it is the consensus that makes some utterance true. — Banno
It could also hold for value judgments. If everyone thinks it's rude to put your elbows on the table, well, it is.Of course there are trivial exceptions: "Most folk think Trump is dangerous" will be true if and only if most folk think Trump is dangerous; in such cases the consensus is what makes the utterance true. — Banno
theoretically we can obtain a more accurate view of truth — Possibility
It is in the information which specifically differs from our own perspective that we obtain a more accurate view of truth. — Possibility
Why call it objective? It seems fairly obvious that there is no "thread" as an object "out there". — Echarmion
If you want to ask "where (physically) are my (physical) keys", then the answer is whatever you conclude based on the available evidence. — Echarmion
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