Also relevant is certain empiricists, like Berkeley, claiming to be unable to visualize e.g. triangles in the abstract, and so claiming to have no general idea of them. — The Great Whatever
I wonder if men are worse visualizers than women, or tend to have more p-zombie tendencies. It wouldn't surprise me if women generally had a greater depth or subtlety of feeling than men. — The Great Whatever
I have no language-based thoughts at all. My thoughts are in pictures, like videotapes in my mind. When I recall something from my memory, I see only pictures. I used to think that everybody thought this way until I started talking to people on how they thought. I learned that there is a whole continuum of thinking styles, from totally visual thinkers like me, to the totally verbal thinkers. Artists, engineers, and good animal trainers are often highly visual thinkers, and accountants, bankers, and people who trade in the futures market tend to be highly verbal thinkers with few pictures in their minds.
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Access your memory on church steeples. Most people will see a picture in their mind of a generic "generalized" steeple. I only see specific steeples; there is no generalized one. Images of steeples flash through my mind like clicking quickly through a series of slides or pictures on a computer screen. On the other hand, highly verbal thinkers may "see" the words "church steeple," or will "see" just a simple stick-figure steeple.
http://www.grandin.com/references/thinking.animals.html — Temple Grandin
ndeed the machinery of the world seem to have little room for them. — The Great Whatever
If all you're saying is that there are great variations in phenomenological experience, I do think that's an interesting scientific fact, but I don't know how it matters to this philosophical question any more than the well accepted fact that there are great variations in how well different people's perceptions work as well as their intellect in deciphering the meaning of their experiences. — Hanover
I once read an article by a guy who claimed dreaming was a purely linguistic phenomenon – that there was nothing to dreaming but reporting that one dreamt the next morning. Pretty retarded. — The Great Whatever
The guy in the article says he doesn't dream, but self-reports of dreaming frequency are well-known to be unreliable. — The Great Whatever
omeone responded and said this was a bad way of speaking, that it's just thinking about a song, you can't actually 'hear songs in your head' and that this was a philosopher's confusion etc. etc. But the first guy was like, no, you don't get it, people literally have a quasi-auditory experience of music. — The Great Whatever
You can't get time in the abstract, you have to look to your experience. And if you actually do that (instead of mining your experience to support a thesis, examining it through a premeditated lens) its all there, very simple. The past is past, the present is present, the future is future. It's not mystical - its common sense. — csalisbury
Do any of the options (including the 'growing block') make any difference to how we act? They seem to me like unsolvable word games. — mcdoodle
On this view, there can be no fact about what would have happened to you (singular) if you had opened the Schrodinger's Cat box at an earlier time. — Andrew M
Suppose I was speaking to a crowd of people and I said, "You have a red shirt." That statement lacks a truth value unless I'm addressing a specific person. — Andrew M
suppose a consequence of my view is that the world must remain fundamentally "mysterious" or "miraculous" in the sense that it cannot be explained as a whole. — Ignignot
Actually, I was trying to say (perhaps ineloquently) that something is indeed fundamentally "brute." These are the "prime" necessary connections. They are merely descriptive. "That's just the way things are." — Ignignot
Or if this necessity is explained by other more general necessities ("laws"), then we still always have some irreducible or "prime" necessities that just are what they are for no reason at all. — Ignignot
but Kant showed that even 'bare experience' is dependent on the categories of understanding, the intuitions, and the other constituents of reason, without which there can be no experience. — Wayfarer
This is why it is necessary to understand why Kant said that Hume had 'awoken him from his dogmatic slumbers', and what he did as a result. That was central to Kant's philosophical enterprise. So only considering what Hume had to say about it, is only considering the prologue to Kant's response. — Wayfarer
So either the statement "the particle will be at position p at time t" isn't either true or false or something other than a reference to the laws of nature is required to explain its truth value. — Michael
Even though the Calvinist would claim to see some goodness, they would claim that the goodness is ultimately in God, of whom we cannot ultimately understand. — Chany
Hume's claim is that we don't see causation. We only see invariant correlation, and then infer causation – and that this inference isn't deduction. — Michael
(This is somewhat side-tracking us from the problem of counterfactuals raised in the OP) — Pierre-Normand
Many deflationary theorists may only make some minimalist formal points about the semantics of "... is true", and hence aren't committed to any sort of metaphysics or epistemology. — Pierre-Normand
I don't think you meant to say "makes the sentence white", but rather "makes the sentence true". — Pierre-Normand
But I think they do, by means of broadly Kantian accounts of (intuition dependent) conceptual abilities and theories of judgment. — Pierre-Normand
But she doesn't claim this to imply that there must exist two metaphysically distinct sorts of things -- abstract propositions on the one side, and concrete elements of reality (i.e. states of affair) on the other side -- that somehow problematically correspond to one another. — Pierre-Normand
What about a statement about some future (or hypothetical) quantum event? — Michael
We're just creatures. Inherently, and when we are wronged, or we see others wronged, part of us wishes to pay back that suffering and pain a thousand fold -- but those that hurt us are just people, that themselves were hurt, and now fear monsters. There are no monsters though, just people. — Wosret
Obviously, sex with a goat is to be preferred over child-rape. — Bitter Crank
It's really hard to get the damn dog to hold still even when I tune him, let alone when I try an arpeggio. — Brainglitch
Past experience is an excellent guide, assuming contiguity past to future. But the challenge was to support this assumption. — Mongrel
For example, only if we have an impoverished view of perception are we tempted to think that we can't see one thing causing another — The Great Whatever
Yes. To say that humans are poor at philosophy assumes some ideal way of doing philosophy that humans are not attaining. It's like saying that all humans are poor at basketball, despite players such as Michael Jordan. It presupposes some ideal philosopher (or basketball player) that no human can match. — Luke
It's like saying humans are bad at reasoning. No, we're very bloody good at it actually compared to every other life form we know of. — Baden
then say someone like Wittgenstein, who ultimately I think ended up wasting everyone's time by piling a series of retarded aphorisms on the tradition that now everyone has to write Ph.D. theses about, forever. Yet Wittgenstein is 'the genius,' and for that reason, more of an idiot. — The Great Whatever
