I'm certainly open to the possibility of other kind of languages, or even cognitive processes. I also believe that we are hardwired in a way that our language has to develop in certain ways, and no others. For instance, I believe that our very known "causality" is a limitation of our cognition, there most be other ways (even when with language sometimes we try to go beyond the old "cause and effect"), to think in relations between facts. Mere speculation from my part.
That's an interesting speculation. How much (whatever that means) of the concept of causality, for instance, is merely a result of our particular cognition, and how much isn't? I'm not even sure the question is coherent.
I would suggest the development of spiritual intuition as a means of lateral though moving away from language.
You learn to think in concepts, develop a language of concepts, refine and transmute/synthesize concepts through creativity.What you mean by that?
You learn to think in concepts, develop a language of concepts, refine and transmute/synthesize concepts through creativity.
Which is an impossible task. Language limits, and in certain way, defines what we can think. We could call it a trap. My favorite philosopher, Wittgenstein, said "The limits of my language are the limits of my world", and I can't agree more. Language its a deep subject, incredible complex to deal with. So far, analytic philosophy is trying to solve some problems which would be useful for philosophy of science. At one point I plan to dig deeper there.
I don't follow. What you say seems circular to me.
“That doesn't make some of them "more real" than others”? So they are all equally real? That would make the concept of “real” rather meaningless as it could not delineate anything. While one’s "perceptions, opinions and beliefs" can be just wild speculation, elaborate fantasy or outright falsehood they don’t have to be. What would make “some of them "more real"” is a quantifiable definition of “real” as “more” implies a comparison of quantity, generally though “perceptions, opinions and beliefs” that do tend to match the facts are considered to be more “realistic” than those that don’t.Agreed. That doesn't make some of them "more real" than others, because what matters is only that they can match the facts.
Ah “the "external" component of perception”. Clearly that statement of “what that stimuli "is"” (“external” or just “something else”) isn’t irrelevant as it is specifically intended to distinguish between that and some other perhaps ‘internal’ aspect of “perception”. You may need a more objective model of perception or conversely make perception purely internal and subjective. Unfortunately once one defines everything as just subjective then that designation (like real above) loses any significance. Certainly if one is going to claim, as you do, that “facts are the relation between perceptions and stimulus” then “what that stimuli "is"” becomes critically relevant and establishes if there is any “relation” at all to what is perceived. Just How do you establish this “relation between perceptions and stimulus” you are referring to as “facts” when “it is irrelevant what that stimuli "is"?Here we disagree, but if we dig in the subject, we might be saying the same thing with different words. By definition, a model is subjective. If it correlates, or not, with facts, is what matters. But facts are not "entities on their own", facts are the relation between perceptions and stimulus. A perception involves the stimulus and several mechanisms inside the body, for example, pattern recognition mechanisms, memory, etc. The stimulus is something else, could be called the "external" component of perception. What I argue is that it is irrelevant what that stimuli "is", as "is statements" are ontological statements, and assumptions.
I'm certainly open to the possibility of other kind of languages, or even cognitive processes. I also believe that we are hardwired in a way that our language has to develop in certain ways, and no others. For instance, I believe that our very known "causality" is a limitation of our cognition, there most be other ways (even when with language sometimes we try to go beyond the old "cause and effect"), to think in relations between facts. Mere speculation from my part.
That's an interesting speculation. How much (whatever that means) of the concept of causality, for instance, is merely a result of our particular cognition, and how much isn't? I'm not even sure the question is coherent.
Sorry, I still don't get it. What is this language? does it have sintax? what do you mean by refine, transmute, etc? What is like to think in concepts?
I believe, we already think in concepts.. and that concepts are composed by emotions, beliefs, biases, memories.. all of them "orchestrated" by the language who attach labels to that complex mix and makes the logical connection between them. Like for instance, you are angry with someone, the emotion is there, the memories, your beliefs about whats fair and what is not, etc, everything coordinated by language.