Your asking me to explain your own terminology — Banno
I've no idea - that's your phrasing.
Your asking me to explain your own terminology, a terminology I think doesn't work. — Banno
There's nothing in reality that is internal nor external; there's just the stuff we talk about. — Banno
Ya, they're all sensory experiences. You're not saying it's all subjective are you? — Sam26
:up:I agree with you that the most basic (pre-linguistic) ways of understanding what is experienced (I won't say "the world") cannot be linguistically articulated, and that discursive schemes are only partially shared: each individual has their own unique set of of associations, images, impressions and feelings which make up their experience, and that these give rise to our primordial hopes and fears, which themselves are impossible to adequately articulate. The partially shared nature of our discursive schemes, what I would refer to as general vagueness and/ or ambiguity ensures that there is room for as much misunderstanding as there is understanding between us...a constant process of renegotiating ideas. — Janus
So I don't understand the question. — Banno
I'm not sure we are not saying the same thing, but arguing the expressions used. — Banno
but I think a safer bet would be that I disagree with everything you say. — Srap Tasmaner
P is true is just fancy talk for P — Pie
Well them, I might be wrong...
— Banno
Heh. Saw what you did there. — Srap Tasmaner
that's an argument that we don't need concepts at all. — Srap Tasmaner
What kind of cognitive psychologist are you?Too much Quine and Wittgenstein in your diet. — Srap Tasmaner
Second, absent a concept of jabberwocky-hood, I can't treat anything as a jabberwocky, because for all I know it is a jabberwocky. I am, when it comes to jabberwockies, incapable of pretense. — Srap Tasmaner
suppose, perhaps because I was told to, I throw jelly at something, and do so with the understanding that this is how you treat a jabberwocky. I'm still incapable of inferring that I should pelt something with jelly because I believe, even erroneously, that it is a jabberwocky. And I am incapable of having a disposition to treat anything this way — Srap Tasmaner
You're determined to sound like a behaviorist philosopher of fifty years ago or more, but you know that's a non-starter, so you push some of that style of analysis "inside." I'm sure there's a way of construing this that's uncontroversial -- neuroscientists are prone to talk about your brain telling you stories and so on, but of course that's largely picturesque; there's no cocoa or blankets involved. So did you mean the word "behaviour" as literally as I thought you might? — Srap Tasmaner
If you are interested, let me know and I will make an attempt to articulate the topic more clearly in a new thread. — Banno
Yeah, so treating something as a Jabberwocky is what something's being a Jabberwocky is. Jabberwockies (or kettles, or tables, or teacups...) are not ready-made items, we construct them enactively, we interact with those hidden states and by our interaction construct those boundaries (between kettle and not-kettle). — Isaac
I also like this theory of truth quite a lot. I think that it accurately describes how we use the word "true", and avoids distinguishing between "What I think is true" and "What IS true". I don't see how we can know objectively what IS true, and I'm not even convinced that we even want to know what IS true. I also think that mindfulness and meditation can contribute to our understanding of truth. I think that meditation offers me a chance to experience the fundamental building blocks that everything else derives from, and any theory of truth must start from the meditative state of mind. — IntrospectionImplosion
You get the idea. The truth flip flops with each revision. — Banno
I'm interested in any "finessing" you may care to offer. — Janus
How do I know the world is not my experience? It is self-evident. — Janus
You'll have to join the dots. — Isaac
What we're talking about, at root, is what it is to be an entity at all. — Isaac
Not only are we nothing but soup without behaviour, but behaving (acting against the gradient of entropy) is what we are. We are units of anti-entropic behaviour. — Isaac
I was just pointing out that the absurdity of carving initials on a perception, which creative was attempting to use against what I had said, is inapt since the whole experience: carving, initials, tree and all the rest are all of the same perceptual fabric. — Janus
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