Do you also agree with this? :-}"thought and our nervous system can be directed towards both internal and external objects. However, the five senses do not include inner feeling through the nervous system. So, the five senses cannot be directed towards internal objects like the nervous system can." — Terrapin Station
Right - did you have a look at the Wiki article I posted? What is popularly known as the "sense of touch" is part of the nervous system of the body. — Agustino
The sense of touch is part of the nervous system.Yes, but a stomachache is not part of that part of the nervous system. — Thanatos Sand
that — Thanatos Sand
Yes, but the stomachache is not part of that part of the nervous system. I've said that twice now. If you don't grasp it by now, that's on you.Yes, but a stomachache is not part of that part of the nervous system.
— Thanatos Sand
The sense of touch is part of the nervous system.
The nervous system is one entire thing with multiple functions - so yes, it's not part of that part because you've just classified it into two parts because that's what you want to do, so of course it's not :sYes, but the stomachache is not part of that part of the nervous system. — Thanatos Sand
No we weren't, because the five senses are outdated and definitely not "present definitions".We weren't talking about ancient man. We were talking about present definitions. So, you sure haven't been clear in what you've been thinking. Goodbye. — Thanatos Sand
No we weren't, because the five senses are outdated and definitely not "present definitions".
This is useless..... You clearly are committed to reading everything I say uncharitably. That's not a nice thing what I just said about you, by the way. It's very closely tied with intellectual dishonesty. Here:You said we weren't talking about present definitions. I showed we clearly were. So, your complement clearly fits...;) — Thanatos Sand
So do you think I fucking meant that a stomach ache is NOT a perception, since it's not awareness/consciousness of thought or the five senses?! Clearly "five senses" and "thought" include much more than the basic understandings of the words. For example "thought" includes "emotions" in this context, CLEARLY.Perception represents the awareness/consciousness of the mind of something - and that can be via thought or via the five senses. — Agustino
Why are you cowering from answering this question:As to what you "said about" me, I get irony; you clearly do not. The rest of your post was an unhinged rant to which nobody could rationally respond. So, be well, Agustino; I won't be responding to any more of your troubled posts. — Thanatos Sand
So do you think I fucking meant that a stomach ache is NOT a perception, since it's not awareness/consciousness of thought or the five senses?! — Agustino
Since Thanatos and Terrapin are impossible to have a conversation with - or at least so it seems to me - I will address your point directly rather than indirectly as I initially was looking to do. There is no paradox, since the two situations are different - they are not at all similar. Our behaviour with regards to God isn't the same as our behaviour with regards to potentially dangerous dogs in the world. That's because God is totally different from a creature - any creature - including dogs.Isn't this a paradox? Two similar situations are handled contradictorily. — TheMadFool
I don't see the point in making the distinction between perceiving a thought internally or externally as the perception is internal and thought is the same thing as perception of thought. Whose thought it is is defined by in whose mind its origin is in. By external thought I refer to a thought of someone else but the thought itself is of course internal.
As for the stomach pain, human body is external to the human and imo there's no difference as to how it's perceived and how the world outside human is perceived.
You many not see the point in making that distinction, but many people do and have. It's a key distinction in phenomenology from Hume to Kant to Husserl. And you may personally define external thought any way you like, but you can't expect others to use or accept that definition. — Thanatos Sand
And the human body is not external to the human; it is the human itself. — Thanatos Sand
Did you really have to ask that. You perceive something externally when it is external to you. — Thanatos Sand
And of course the human body perceives; the human eye sees, the human ear hears and so on. — Thanatos Sand
I don't agree with this right off the bat. — Terrapin Station
So, it turns out that you're writing this long, rambling thing simply to present Pascal's Wager yet again. <sigh> — Terrapin Station
So I have to assume both that "TheMadFool is an only child" and "TheMadFool has at least one sibling" are false? That would be a contradiction. — Michael
Your argument suffers the same problem as Pascal's wager. It's a false dichotomy. There are more options than just "no God, and so no reward or punishment" and "God, and reward for belief and punishment for disbelief" — Michael
What are these options? — TheMadFool
Also, negative propositions don't get the same treatment as positive propositions. I've never seen anyone starting from negative propositions, e.g., God doesn't exist. — TheMadFool
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