Suggestologist
Muse
- Joined
- Jul 26, 2003
- Messages
- 922
Mercutio said:So now, rather than trying to claim a concrete existence of qualia, you try to define concrete as a process. Forgive me if I think this has the feel of a philosophical grasping at straws. Perhaps I don't quite see it--certainly, actions are extended in time, and objects exist for extended periods of time, but to equate actions and objects in the manner you do strains credulity.
What I'm suggesting is that all "concrete" objects can be reduced to processes; just as non-concrete objects can; so you need to be more specific than just "can be reduced to process or action".
Oh, come on. Are you saying you can point to the component parts of an action like walking in a seated person? Please demonstrate.
I have said it was a useful category. I have also said it does not exist without the members of the category. I challenge you to pick out a sexy walk in a group of seated individuals. I challenge you to say which walk gets you across the room quicker, given that you don't engage in the actual action of that walk. The usefulness of a category does not mean that it has any existence whatsoever independent of its parts. [quoteWell, when a piece of concrete is demolished and turned to sand, where does the concrete go?
Yes. The way you walk, turns into the way you sit. Just like the concrete turns into the gravel. The component parts (in walking and sitting) seem to be the legs, arms, and general body posture.
Again I was merely trying to explain the specific usage of sight in one example. Any usage of any word may be unique, and so ambiguous if you try to apply another definition to it. That is why words are best defined by their usage, rather than by relationship to some ideal.
and their existence is the action/process. Just as with any other qualia. This was my point.
But see above; the same is true of any "concrete" object. "Existence" of a concrete object can always be reduced to action/process. To define the difference, you need to be more specific.
And each separate usage is a separate instance, which is why we have categories...and the redundancy is my point. seeing a sight is redundant. Remembering a memory is redundant. Experiencing a qualia is redundant.
Well, I need to disagree with myself slightly. Experiencing an experience may mean that the person has dissociated the experience; or in other words: in their minds eye -- sees themselves -- and sees how that other self experiences it. And, that agrees with your argument that usage is unique.