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PostPosted: Thu Aug 25, 2005 2:43 pm
by babu
... i meant that i wanted your opinions. i wanted to to be able to digest them. but you made it hard me. i was trying to me it easier for me. but unfortunatly i didn't help matters at all.  so for that i apologise, LPA. that's all.

PostPosted: Thu Aug 25, 2005 2:47 pm
by 76-1115222408
Ok fair enough, but when are you actually talking about?? I am still a bit lost Babu??
Im not being negative here, just trying to understand what you actually mean and when you are talking about!!

I mean are you talking about in general, or in the past, or the thread you cretaed, or even this thread... I mean I am really baffled here!!!

:D

PostPosted: Thu Aug 25, 2005 2:52 pm
by Ciggy
LIVERPOOLANYTIME wrote:I mean I am really baffled here!!!

:D

:lookaround Now you know how we feel  :D

PostPosted: Thu Aug 25, 2005 2:53 pm
by 76-1115222408
Haha...... :(

:D

PostPosted: Thu Aug 25, 2005 2:54 pm
by woof woof !
cisses_gona_get_ya wrote:
LIVERPOOLANYTIME wrote:I mean I am really baffled here!!!

:D

:lookaround Now you know how we feel  :D

:laugh:   :laugh:   :laugh:

Babu , don't worry about it mate , you provided us with hours of fun .


:D

PostPosted: Thu Aug 25, 2005 2:56 pm
by Judge
LIVERPOOLANYTIME wrote:I am still a bit lost really baffled here!!!

nowt new there

PostPosted: Thu Aug 25, 2005 2:58 pm
by 76-1115222408
Nowt new in the fact you have very little input apart from banal comments!!

:;):

:D

PostPosted: Thu Aug 25, 2005 3:00 pm
by Judge
my input is always massive mate :;):

PostPosted: Thu Aug 25, 2005 3:02 pm
by 76-1115222408
:laugh:

PostPosted: Thu Aug 25, 2005 3:33 pm
by woof woof !
LIVERPOOLANYTIME wrote:Nowt new in the fact you have very little input apart from banal comments!!

:;):

:D

:laugh: Better Banal than Anal , eh Judge .  :D  :D   :D

PostPosted: Thu Aug 25, 2005 3:38 pm
by Judge
yes woof :D  lmfao

PostPosted: Fri Aug 26, 2005 9:01 am
by woof woof !
LIVERPOOLANYTIME wrote:Nowt new in the fact you have very little input apart from banal comments!!

:;):

:D

For quite a while now psychologists have been interested in the development of the child’s capacity to attribute mental states to others. A first cross-cultural study of this capacity - often referred to as Theory of Mind, or ToM - just came out.
Traditionally, moral psychology has studied the nature of moral judgments, emotions, attitudes, and more generally morally invested psychological states. One question is what aspects of such psychological states should be investigated. Interestingly, philosophers have looked into the functional and representational aspects of moral-psychological states, but have by and large neglected the phenomenological aspects of these states.

To put it simply we have to consider Liveranytimes assement of the Judges contribution in terms of what is phenomenologically manifest in our conscious experience. There are many components/properties to any given conscious experience, but many (most) are not phenomenologically manifest in them. When you perceive a table, you are clearly aware of its visible features (brownness, rectangularity, etc.) in a phenomenologically manifest way. But are you also aware of the table itself, as an object over and above its (visible) properties in a phenomenologically manifest way .Some argue that perceiving a table involves or implies certain expectations as to how the table would appear should one walk around it, away from it, touch it, smell it, etc. Question: are these purely anticipatory components of perception phenomenologically manifest? It is commonly thought that perception has components that are not strictly sensorily given. For instance, when you see your computer, you are at some level aware that it has a backside. Yet the backside is not sensorily given, in that it does not register on your sensorium. So the question arises, Is this awareness of the computer’s backside phenomenologically manifest in your perceptual experience or not? What does all this mean I hear you ask yourself ? Perhaps the level of the Judges banality is dependent on the pespective of the commentator and not necessarily a valid measurement of the Judges creativity.

you may of course disagree with me ?

:D

PostPosted: Fri Aug 26, 2005 9:09 am
by 112-1077774096
woof woof ! wrote:
LIVERPOOLANYTIME wrote:Nowt new in the fact you have very little input apart from banal comments!!

:;):

:D

For quite a while now psychologists have been interested in the development of the child's capacity to attribute mental states to others. A first cross-cultural study of this capacity - often referred to as Theory of Mind, or ToM - just came out.
Traditionally, moral psychology has studied the nature of moral judgments, emotions, attitudes, and more generally morally invested psychological states. One question is what aspects of such psychological states should be investigated. Interestingly, philosophers have looked into the functional and representational aspects of moral-psychological states, but have by and large neglected the phenomenological aspects of these states.

To put it simply we have to consider Liveranytimes assement of the Judges contribution in terms of what is phenomenologically manifest in our conscious experience. There are many components/properties to any given conscious experience, but many (most) are not phenomenologically manifest in them. When you perceive a table, you are clearly aware of its visible features (brownness, rectangularity, etc.) in a phenomenologically manifest way. But are you also aware of the table itself, as an object over and above its (visible) properties in a phenomenologically manifest way .Some argue that perceiving a table involves or implies certain expectations as to how the table would appear should one walk around it, away from it, touch it, smell it, etc. Question: are these purely anticipatory components of perception phenomenologically manifest? It is commonly thought that perception has components that are not strictly sensorily given. For instance, when you see your computer, you are at some level aware that it has a backside. Yet the backside is not sensorily given, in that it does not register on your sensorium. So the question arises, Is this awareness of the computer's backside phenomenologically manifest in your perceptual experience or not? What does all this mean I hear you ask yourself ? Perhaps the level of the Judges banality is dependent on the pespective of the commentator and not necessarily a valid measurement of the Judges creativity.

you may of course disagree with me ?

:D

:D

PostPosted: Fri Aug 26, 2005 11:01 am
by Woollyback
so you're saying that Judge's backside resembles a dining table?  :D

PostPosted: Fri Aug 26, 2005 11:04 am
by woof woof !
And it's brown , depending on where your standing .                :D