Diagnosis of appendicitis relies on the fact that people with an inflamed appendix have the same pain. — Banno
No you made the unjustifiable claim that the pain experienced by appendicitis sufferers is the "same". It's not even in precisely the same locations on the various appendicitis afflicted bodies. Even if, per impossibile, it were, there would be no way to determine the intensity of the pain. So, there is nothing to suggest that it is the "same pain", At most it would qualify as the same kind of pain, and that only insofar as it is associated with appendicitis.Yep. What I said. — Banno
I was just pointing out that there is no anomaly there, regardless of whether you believe in the value of money or not. It seems we agree about that then?Yep. What I said. — Banno
you made the unjustifiable claim that the pain experienced by appendicitis sufferers is the "same". — Janus
It doesn't have to be in precisely the same place to be precisely the same - it doesn't even stay in precisely the same place in your own body. Nor does the same pain you experience always have the same intensity: one says the pain has lessened, not that he pain has been replaced with another of less intensity....precisely... — Janus
You seem to be pretending to an accuracy that isn't there. — Banno
DO we agree that money has value only because of a shared belief in that value? — Banno
You seem to be pretending to an accuracy that isn't there.
— Banno
No, I'm taking issue with your usage of "same". — Janus
It's not even in precisely the same locations on the various appendicitis afflicted bodies. Even if, per impossibile, it were, there would be no way to determine the intensity of the pain. — Janus
Pains move around and change in intensity, contrary to your:
It's not even in precisely the same locations on the various appendicitis afflicted bodies. Even if, per impossibile, it were, there would be no way to determine the intensity of the pain. — Janus — Banno
I already read that. Apart from the bit in it that I originally commented on in disagreement; I don't see any relevance.See my comments on the same nose, here — Banno
I pointed out that the same pain need not be in the saem location even in the same person. — Banno
I pointed out that the intensity of a pain at one time cannot be determined to be the same as the same pain in the same person at another time — Banno
If that were the case then talk of shared pain would not make sense.
And yet, as the very discussion here shows, we can talk of pains that are the same - both from time to time and place to place in one's own body, and also in the bodies of other people. — Banno
Well, if the pain is no longer in the same location as it was in the one person then it's no longer the same pain. — Janus
And yet: Pain assessment and measurementObviously there is no calibrated measure. — Janus
It puzzles me that you go to so much trouble in a futile attempt to deny the obvious; — Janus
What are you talking abut, Bert? Tokens or pains? If tokens, where is the token in stubbing your toe?
And if I see you stub your toe, I might indeed say "ouch!". — Banno
The toe stubbing I did on Tuesday is the same type of toe-stubbing that I did on Wednesday, but they are different tokens. — bert1
Tokens are private. — bert1
I'll just point out that there is nothing in, say, the SEP article on tokens to support your contention that they are private. — Banno
That's just not so. "The pain has moved to my back" makes sense. — Banno
And yet: Pain assessment and measurement — Banno
It puzzles me that you go to so much trouble in a futile attempt to deny the obvious; — Janus
...because it's not obvious. — Banno
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