:grin: Good stuff. Very droll! Hope others are enjoying these jokes.It would not occur to anyone to conclude that a man is asleep from his saying "I am asleep' any more than to conclude that he is unconscious from his saying 'I am unconscious', or to conclude that he is dead from his saying 'I am dead'." — Richard B
See 's comments regarding representation and mental imagery. There's a lot of variety int he way these ideas are used in philosophical discussion. I'm not at all surprised to find some disparity even amongst those that share basic philosophical methods."If a philosopher uses the phrase 'mental phenomenon', say, in such a way that dreams are mental phenomena by definition, then obviously no argument is going to prove to him that they are not. — Richard B
what are you referring to with "contemporary criticisms and analyses on the points laid out in his works"? There's lots of critique out there. What do you have in mind? — Banno
I don’t claim anything in particular about it other than as an example of the standard, which Plato in the Theatetus and Descartes set out better than me. — Antony Nickles
Why should we expect there to be one universal account of consciousness, dreaming, cogitation and such? — Banno
Language is for expressing, describing and communicating thoughts and the contents of perception. — Corvus
The infinite regress is only avoided by stopping, which renders the capacity as still not understood, because we do not get to the bottom of it — Metaphysician Undercover
So the math does not provide us with any higher degree of certainty about the world than other language forms, because it is applied according to principles stated in other forms of language anyway. — Metaphysician Undercover
Plato may have presented math as if it was supposed to be the standard, but then exposed problems with that presupposition, and in the Parmenides, he demonstrates problems with math's basic foundational concept, "one", or "unity". — Metaphysician Undercover
While Malcolm gives a little here, there is not much left over to compare whether a conscious experience of a dream is "qualitatively" similar or different to a conscious experience of being awake. — Richard B
The quotation from Austin is:- "I may have the experience (dubbed 'delusive' presumably) of dreaming that I am being presented to the Pope. Could it be seriously suggested that having this dream is 'qualitatively indistinguishable' from actually being presented to the Pope? Quite obviously not. After all, we have the phrase 'a dream-like quality'; some waking experiences are said to have this dream-like quality, and some artists and writers occasionally try to impart it, usually with scant success, to their works." pp. 48, 49.I’m not sure where Austin put forward “this idea” of what we do in dreams. — Antony Nickles
That's what I disagreed with, that math is regarded by philosophers as the ultimate paradigm — Metaphysician Undercover
Part of philosophy’s problem (exemplified by Ayer) is that the desire for a perfect knowledge, and the subsequent resignation to an imperfect knowledge, both only allow for a fixed outcome (of knowledge, or a “perception”, or “appearance”, or “mental process”, or “meaning”). — Antony Nickles
You keep reminding me of Dewey. That's a good thing for me, but perhaps not for others. See his The Quest for Certainty. Analytic and OLP philosophers weren't the only ones seeking to cure philosophy of its various ills. — Ciceronianus
There is an additional aspect to this desire for certainty. It is the tendency to universalize. Admittedly not everything is certain (sometimes our sense deceive us), but equally not everything is uncertain (sometimes our senses do not deceive us). — Ludwig V
I don't think there are much in the way of metaphysical implications from Austin, do you? He's just pointing out the way we speak. — frank
or Dewey's belief in procedure (or something like that). — Antony Nickles
Method, more specifically, I think (the method of "inquiry"). — Ciceronianus
but the gist of it is that the things we say (or could say) in situations reflect the criteria we use in judging a thing, and the mechanics of how the world actually works. What we say when talking about "real" are an expression of what matters to us about it, what we count as applicable, how mistakes are corrected, etc. — Antony Nickles
There's an overtone in the very terms "aphantasia" and "hyperphantasia" that I think is very dangerous. They are not necessarily pathologies — Ludwig V
For me the key here was Davidson's A nice derangement of epitaphs. Any account can be actively undermined and falsified by another account. Also, formally, an account can be consistent, but only if it is incomplete; or it can be complete, but only if it is inconsistent. Perhaps this is why "not everything is certain, but equally not everything is uncertain".The theoretical uses of language are not the core... — Ludwig V
I can't avoid the suspicion that... the arc expressed here is not as explicit as you make it seem. — Banno
I’m not so sure. I cannot see the difference between the body and a bodily process. When I point to either, or both, I am pointing at the same thing. I don’t know how to distinguish between the thing that moves and the movements it makes, as if I was distinguishing between the morning and the evening star. — NOS4A2
That doesn't mean that there is no way of determining which theory is more right, or less wrong. — Ludwig V
You have put your finger on the way to determine which theory is more right or less wrong. Now, how does one establish whether a theory has any intellectual appeal? By argument, perhaps? — Ludwig V
was there something about the work or my reading that you are confused with or disagree with specifically? — Antony Nickles
So if everyone says "God created the world in six days", would that reflect the mechanics of how the world actually works? — frank
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