Nick,

Thanks for the answers and the effort.  I appreciate it.  (The preamble and A/B 
viewpoint edits in the updated version were useful.)

I think the outlines of the New Realist position are gradually pulling into 
focus for me, thanks to you and Eric.  The crux of the difficulty that remains 
for me, lies here:

All the stuff about A's headache is information that some observers have and 
others do not; as such it is part of the potential experience or information 
available in the situation.   So, to "have information" means the same thing as 
to "experience".  If the information is "in" one's "field of view", one is 
experiencing it.

I'm looking for a word -- which you will be comfortable with -- that conveys 
the compelling, immersive nature/ quality/ texture of first person experience, 
the sense of immediacy, richness, and embeddedness-in-the-body that colours my 
perception of *my* headache, as opposed to awareness of the distilled, 
abstracted fact that *he* has a headache.  (I believe this is what Russ is 
after, as well.)

Hmmm.  Already I feel the New Realist propaganda seeping into my mind; it 
occurs to me that if someone very close to me suffers from a bad headache, and 
I deeply empathise with the person, it's not really fair to call the 
information/ experience distilled and abstracted.  It creeps much closer to the 
1st person experience.  But there is to my mind still a little gap.

Is there any way of thinking about that little gap, any descriptive term that 
you can comfortably apply to denote the difference?  (I'm not concerned here 
with the accuracy, or realness of the experience.  I'm happy to call it an 
illusion -- I'm after the texture of the experience.)

Regards,
Rikus

PS.  Wherever did you find a wife that'll hold still for this sort of 
discussion over dinner?  And are there more of them?


  From: Nicholas Thompson 
  Sent: Friday, June 26, 2009 4:28 AM
  To: [email protected] 
  Subject: [FRIAM] Response to Rikus: edited version.


  Here is a cleaned up version.  Not worth a second read, if you have suffered 
through a first,  but will save you some gear (and tooth) grinding, if you 
haven't.  

  Sorry to try your patience.  

  N



  Nicholas S. Thompson
  Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Ethology, 
  Clark University ([email protected])
  http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/




    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Nicholas Thompson 
    To: [email protected]
    Sent: 6/25/2009 10:25:17 AM 
    Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Direct conversation - 1st vs 3rd person


    Dear Rikus, and all, 

    I think one of the hardest things about having been an academic is that 
while we are paid to have ideas, nobody else is paid to respond to them.  And 
so, academic writing is like dropping coins down an infinitely deep wishing 
well and listening for any evidence at all that the coin ever dropped.  

    I think it is safe to say that NEVER in my 30 to 40 years of developing 
these ideas have they received as much careful attention as they have in the 
last two weeks.  There is no greater kindness  -- no rarer kindness -- a 
colleague can do for an academic.  I am deeply in your collective debt.  I am 
humbled by it, actually. 

    Rikus's questions are particularly well posed, and I will do my best with 
them below. 

    Nick 



    Nicholas S. Thompson
    Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Ethology, 
    Clark University ([email protected])
    http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/



    I wish I could say that the new realist perspective dissolves the 
idiographic mystery.. the fact that people are so DAMNED individual.  But it 
doesn't;  it merely recasts it.  From the point of view of the folk 
psychological account, the mystery is that an indivdiual's mind is locked away 
inside a vault that can never be accessed;  from the NR perspective, the 
mystery arises from the fact that an individual's mind is a point of view from 
a place that one can never stand.  I would argue that of the two perspectives, 
the NR is the more heuristic because the slope leading up to the goal is more 
gradual.  One is led, on the New Realist  view, to try to approximate another's 
point of view;  in the Folk Psychological view one is led to try and break into 
a vault.  And one is never sure whether the Vault one is breaking into is the 
vault that contains the treasure that one is trying to discover.  

     

     

    Eric (and Nick),

     

    I'm still pursuing clarity. 

     

    nst ---> As well you might!

     

     Kindly consider the following:

    Person A, a high-school student, is asked by a teacher (B) to solve a maths 
problem on the board in front of the class.  Among the other students is person 
C, a close friend of A.  A is taking an unusually long time to solve the 
problem, frequently erasing partial calculations, now and then pausing to stare 
at the board with a frown.

     

    B is a new teacher and has only interacted with A a few times.  It appears 
to him that the problem is simply too much for A, and starts forming an idea 
about A's math skills.

     

    C knows that A is good at maths and that the problem on the board should 
really not be difficult for him.  He also knows A well enough to recognise that 
the frown A exhibits means something is bothering him.  Things between A and 
his girlfriend are a bit shaky lately and he wonders if it took a turn for the 
worse.

     

    A has a really bad headache.  He very rarely gets headaches, but woke up 
this morning with a monster.  He hates giving up on math problems, though, and 
is sure he should be able to solve this one.  Also, he suspects the new teacher 
thinks he isn't very good at maths and he wants to correct that impression.  
And he just realised he forgot to do biology homework and is trying to recall 
which period biology is.

     

    nst --->  OK.  Great hypothetical.  As a "New Realist" [the philosophical 
perspective from which this all arises], I am committed to using the metaphor 
of "point of view" rather than the metaphor of "private space".  So, A, B, and 
C have different "points of view" on A's behavior.   We, also, have a point of 
view on the situation, call it "D".  All of these points of view are dynamic, 
and constantly being updated.  So, for instance, from the point of view with 
the least information about A, the Teacher's, [B], it appears that a brief 
review of A's academic records would show that he had never done well at Maths. 
 Once that prediction is disconfirmed, B's point of view on A would be 
different.   

    Can you please comment:

     

    1. I understand you to say that A is an observer of A in much the same way 
as B and C.  You're *not* saying A is not having an experience of A, only that 
A's experience is not *privileged* compared to B and C. 

     

    nst ---> Yes.  Good.  Thank you. 

     

     Does that mean you consider A's experience to be qualitatively 
indistinguishable from that of B and C, or only that the difference in the 
quality of A's experience, compared to that of B and C, is not of consequence?

     

    nst ---> I am sorry to say I don't have a good grip on what is meant by 
"quality" here.  I would strive to make a distinction between sources of 
information and the manner in which those sources are integrated into a view of 
the situation.  And I certainly believe that some sources of information are 
better (will prove out when the frame is widened) than others.  Even B, whose 
viewpoint the hypothetical invites us to disparage, might have information the 
others might profit from.  True, she has been called into the situation as a 
substitute teacher at the last moment and doesn't know these students well, but 
she has been teaching Maths for 30 years and has vast knowledge of the range of 
skills that students present and of their behavior under the stress situation 
of an exam.  

     

    2. Obvious A can think a great many things that B and C can't know anything 
about.  He can access memory about himself that B and C cannot.  He has access 
to interoceptive sensory information that B and C does not.  He has the 
experience of directly influencing the mathematical symbols in his working 
memory, outside the perception or direct influence of B and C.  On the other 
hand, B and C has access to some exteroceptive sensory information about A that 
A lacks.  Do you consider these various kinds of information and experiences to 
be entirely interchangeable?

     

    nst --->  Exactly.  You said it better than I did above.  

     

    3. Do you distinguish between "experience" and "have information about"?

     

    nst ---> Oh what a good question!   The field of psychology was influenced 
by the New Realists by two distinct routes.  One was through the "cognitive" 
psychologist, E. C. Tolman; the other was through the perceptual psychologist, 
JJ Gibson.  Eric and I are from these different traditions and he and I have 
often wrestled over this point. Eric will no doubt contradict me at this point. 
 

     

     I see my challenge here to be to come up with a way of talking that is as 
internally consistent as possible. I think I would say that "information" is 
"potential experience". It involves imagining a kind of universal point of view 
that "sees" everything that all observers have ever or might possibly see.   
All the stuff about A's headache is information that some observers have and 
others do not; as such it is part of the potential experience or information 
available in the situation.   So, to "have information" means the same thing as 
to "experience".  If the information is "in" one's "field of view", one is 
experiencing it.  

     

    4. When you say that A's point of view is not privileged, do you consider 
anything beyond the ability to identify motives and intent, gauge current 
emotional state, and identify habitual patterns of behaviour?

     

    nst --->  Well, I would have to evaluate each claim of privilege, case by 
case.  If we are talking about what is written on your side of the cup that 
sits on the table between us, I would be inclined, on theoretical grounds, to 
grant you privilege;  if, however, you are blindfolded, and I put the cup 
before you a moment ago, I would ret     ain that privilege for myself, on the 
same sorts of theoretical grounds.  Spouses are often pretty equally privileged 
with respect to one anothers' emotional states, which is why marriage is such 
an interesting human relation.    

     

    5. We can extend the example and allow A to spontaneously start 
hallucinating a swarm of hand-sized pterodactyls that are attacking him.  His 
body and mind responds to the perceived threat like it would to a real one.  In 
some sense he really is having the experience, yet, B and C would deny that it 
is taking place.  What exactly does it mean to be "wrong" about one's own 
experience?

     

    nst --->  The New Realists spent a lot of time talking about hallucination 
and what they wrote didn't help me much.  My answer would be something like 
this.  Our own point of view on the situation ... point of view D ... evolves 
as we listen to the conversation between A and the others...."Sure looks like a 
swarm of pterodactyls there"  "Pterodactyls?" "Yep.  They're attacking me from 
all sides!" "I don't see no damned pterodactyls!"  ETC.   Now, a fifth 
observer, E, watching and listening to all of this, might begin to see the 
degree to which the D point of view is shaped by D's experience of A, B, and 
C's point of view.  So E might say, "From where I stand, D sees A is  wrong and 
B as right."

     

    Thanks again.  I feel like my mind is a flock of sheep being moved around 
by some very good sheep dogs.  

     

    By the way, I think Eric is correct to try and anchor our discussion of 
First/third person to grammar.  Speech about the self is first person speech; 
speech about others is third person speech.  Our position could then be 
distilled into the statement that there is nothing special about the perceptual 
processes that lie behind first person speech.  

     

    Nick
============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org

Reply via email to