Always a good argument> if you disagree with me you must be mad! — unenlightened
That was intended as a lighthearted remark because those are abnormal views to hold. — Luke
How can you say what is normal or abnormal without comparing subjectivities? — unenlightened
You cannot have normal and abnormal private worlds — unenlightened
Since chess is a social construct, playing chess by yourself is also a social construct... — Banno
Banno is a denier of the mental world. That's where his fear of certain words come from, and he cannot really say it out loud because he knows how ridiculous it may sound. Hence his timid questions and evasive answers. — Olivier5
You seem to be making the same conflation as Banno between "subjective" and "private". My whole point here is that these are not the same. — Luke
your thoughts would be subjective insofar as they occur individually to you and to Banno. I suppose they would remain private to each of you until or unless they were expressed in some way (not necessarily linguistically). — Luke
I consider subjectivity to be somewhat synonymous with personhood and its traits, such as conscious awareness, rational thought, sensory perception, and the ability to feel pain. — Luke
This is the problem: if awareness, senses, feelings, and thoughts are all subjective, there doesn't seem much left to be objective except some hypothetical noumenon — unenlightened
The “point of contact” is the similar structure of our experiences. — khaled
or do you have access to the structure of other people's experiences? — unenlightened
Now, importantly: Whether or not X and Y are the same experience makes absolutely no difference. What matters is the structure. — khaled
except that I take it one step further, and say that things that make absolutely no difference should be treated as non-existent. — unenlightened
So I never speak of X or Y at all — unenlightened
Subjectivity disappears from the conversation — unenlightened
Could anyone active in the thread summarize the findings so far in this thread? — Ansiktsburk
How does your view about private language flow into your ontology? I'm guessing you're a realist. — frank
So would you argue that the set of things we declare to be real is largely produced intersubjectively and has the stamp of culture on it? — frank
No - I would not use that word; nor the notion of reality that seems implicit. — Banno
I think Mww will say whether he thinks reality is a social construct. — frank
OK. You do see that the question you asked Mww is different to the question you asked me..? — Banno
Ehhhhh.......whatever is, is whatever it is, the nature of its being given immediately to me upon my knowledge of it, which follows seemingly from my own internal reality. I — Mww
I find this an entirely agreeable explanation, except that I take it one step further, and say that things that make absolutely no difference should be treated as non-existent. So I never speak of X or Y at all, but only of red apples and blood and green grass and colourblindness and such. Subjectivity disappears from the conversation, because there are no words for X or Y and can be none. There are apples and grass and colours, and blindness, and we agree abut that.
Oh look! It's the private language argument again. — unenlightened
I am authorized to think “talking to myself” is a legitimate rational exercise, which is logically the same as having a language contained in, and used by, me alone. Hence, an ontology of private language in the logical sense, is given. — Mww
The latter tend to be the 'non-selfers' ie people who don't actually agree that they are, well, people with minds (they often think of themselves as predetermined puppets instead). — Olivier5
The point at which I disagree is that these are intrinsically private. They're different brain states. They may be accessible to introspection, in which case we can (and probably have) come up with words for them that way, or they may be accessible only to neuroscience or cognitive psychology, in which case we can come up with technical terms for them. — Isaac
implicit in its use is the vague notion of intrinsically private mental goings-on of some unspecified sort. — Banno
I agree private language is entirely impractical for intelligible communication, which is language’s only purpose, but do not agree it is impossible to create. I gave two examples of it. — Mww
As I understand it the crux of the idea of the impossibility of a private language is that, if you decided to create one, you would not be able to understand any of its non-ostensive terms except by translating them into your native, public language; which means it would not really be a private language at all. — Janus
No, I don't think so. It's about rules that only you know about. — frank
...ones that we seem to be able to talk about pretty readily. So the question is, in what useful sense are they private? — Banno
By definition, private means "not shared". What is "not shared" is not "intersubjective". Intersubjectivity cannot imply it's negation. You're just obfuscating. — Olivier5
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