the map will never be the territory, for a host of reasons e.g. — Olivier5
If you were to make a truly complete map or model of something, you could not help but replicate its function, and so build a replica, a simulation.
— Pfhorrest — bongo fury
Richard discovered that he couldn't see red, but he had been seeing red all his life. — unenlightened
Memory is not looking at experiences, because one can remember in the dark. I remember the last time I was in the chip shop, the smell of hot fat and vinegar, the soft shine of the stainless steel counter and the bubbly battered fish hot under the lights. But I am looking at the words appearing on the computer screen and smelling the clean washing just out from the dryer. — unenlightened
we must know something of the territory in order to determine that some maps are more accurate than others. — Janus
The question is how do we know anything of the territory if not through maps (models or representations or whatever you want to call them)? — Janus
Mustn’t my experience of red (as a non-colourblind person) and your friend’s experience of red be different, just as they would be different if your friend was blind and unable to see? — Luke
I experience, I call it the world; I don't call it having an experience. — unenlightened
If you were to make a truly complete map or model of something, you could not help but replicate its function, and so build a replica, a simulation. — bongo fury
So let's split up physical differences into two types, structural, and content-determining. — khaled
There is just as much reason to assume they are the same as to assume they are different. The model doesn't become any more or any less complex by assuming either. — khaled
the map will never be the territory, for a host of reasons e.g.
— Olivier5
Yes and your point no. 1 is great but then you get carried away, and no. 5 is silliness you probably didn't mean, like — bongo fury
That map is an objective view. So far there is no need to explain this with any interaction between humans. — frank
We could say that we each have X and nothing about the world we experience would be less well explained by that. You add that it could be X or Y you create an unnecessary bifurcation. Additional bifurcations is pretty much the definition of complexity — Isaac
The quantity of information necessary to "see the world as it is" would be infinite. — Olivier5
The notion of the structure of a work [or any object] is as specious as the notion of the structure of the world. A work, like the world, has as many different structures as there are ways of organising it, of subsuming it under categorical schemata dependent upon some or other structural affinities with and differences from other works. — Goodman, Problems and Projects
Maybe intersubjectivity also requires an element of understanding rather than mere expression (or sharing).
— Luke
Then wouldn't that be problematic for the idea that such feelings are intrinsically private? — Isaac
Of course you can continue to deny that it's possible to look at something with one's mind — Metaphysician Undercover
Your experience is the world, or is of the world? — Luke
Your experience is the world, or is of the world?
— Luke
I don't understand the distinction. I don't imagine I experience the whole world all at once, if that's what you mean. — unenlightened
I experience, I call it the world; I don't call it having an experience. — unenlightened
Likewise any object. — bongo fury
And I will. Do the test linked above, and find out how well you can hold a simple image in your mind for a few seconds. — unenlightened
Ok. It's just that real maps really are objective accounts. — frank
This is why the border between Ethiopia and Eritrea is disputed to this day, and it has led to several wars. — Olivier5
The quantity of information necessary to "see the world as it is" would be infinite. It is therefore impossible to see the world as it is: there's just too much to see. — Olivier5
"To make a faithful picture, come as close as possible to copying the object just as it is". This simple-minded injunction baffles me; for the object before me is a man, a swarm of atoms, a complex of cells, a fiddler, a friend, a fool and much more. If none of these constitute the object as it is, what else might? If all are ways the object is, then none is the way the object is. — Nelson Goodman: Languages of Art
If all are ways the object is, then none is the way the object is. — Nelson Goodman: Languages of Art
But that's not how the world really looks. — frank
. It's just a symbol that refers to that portion (and others such as its own) according to well-established rules. — bongo fury
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