It might make sense to you. If I experienced pain in one area, and then pain in another area I would not say the same pain has moved, but that I now have a different pain in another area. Pain doesn't actually move; different nerves are actuated. — Janus
There is.Obviously there is no calibrated measure. — Janus
What is obvious is that you cannot feel another's pain, — Janus
indeed, In your case you can carry on believing something despite the facts. :up: — Banno
The twist is, you cannot therefore use the privacy of pain as evidence for subjectivism - at least, not without a vicious circularity. — Banno
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We should take the time to relate this back to the OP.
There, I questioned what it was to share a common understanding of supposed intersubjective phenomena. Pain is taken by some as the archetype of phenomenon understood intersubjectively. On that account pain is private, unshared, only understood intersubjective.
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.
This to show that the logic or grammar of pain is not private, unshared, only understood intersubjective.
The archetype of the intersubjective phenomena fails to meet the criteria for being intersubjective.
The conclusion is that the notion of intersubjectivity is fraught. — Banno
There, I questioned what it was to share a common understanding of supposed intersubjective phenomena. Pain is taken by some as the archetype of phenomenon understood intersubjectively. On that account pain is private, unshared, only understood intersubjective.
If that were the case then talk of shared pain would not make sense. — Banno
or do you have access to the structure of other people's experiences?
— unenlightened
I can infer it yes.
Let’s call experience you are subjectively having when looking at a red apple X. And let’s call the experience I am subjectively having when looking at a red apple Y.
We both communicate our respective experience by saying “that’s red”
If we both look at blood, again you will have X and I will have Y. We will again say, that’s red.
But if you look at grass and have X, and so say “That’s red” then we have a different structure. You’re probably colorblind, as you can’t recognize green things.
I on the other hand properly have a different experience from Y when looking at grass (let’s call it Z) and so I say “that’s green”
Now, importantly: Whether or not X and Y are the same experience makes absolutely no difference. What matters is the structure. If the same objects consistently produce the same experience (X for you Y for me) we can talk.
X and Y do not have to be the same at all.
A public language, based on private experiences. — khaled
But you use the same word - "red" - in talking about all three. — Banno
Now I don't see that there need be anything that each and every experience of red that you have has in common — Banno
That they keep using the word for the wrong thing would be a big clue. — Banno
That's the assumption Austin pointed to. I think it is wrong.
— Banno
Wrong or unnecessary? — khaled
That would be the ONLY clue in your setup. — khaled
if everyone starts to call both the sky and blood “red” tomorrow, that makes the sky red? — khaled
Wrong. If it were just unnecessary it might not have such consequences as folk thinking there are unsharable private experiences of a thing called red, despite it so clearly being shared.Wrong or unnecessary? — khaled
The sky will not have changed colour, if that is what you mean. So what. — Banno
despite it so clearly being shared. — Banno
According to you the only thing common to experiences of red is the use of the word “red”. — khaled
What is shared is the structure not the experiences. — khaled
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