The following concerns the experiment whereby you put one hand in very warm water and the other in cold. Then after 5 minutes put both in water that is lukewarm, with the result that the previously colder hand experiences warmth, and the previously cold hand experiences warmth. If we look at the sensation of temperature as the having of the same quality w/n that exists without, then the above experiment is quite a counter example. But if you think of sensation as a a registering of the process that takes place when the two interact, then it will not be such an embarrassment.
But how describe the different ways in which we might sense the same object (either the aforementioned lukewarm water or perhaps a solid object at the same lukewarm temperature)? Perhaps we can say that they are two profiles of the same object (with apologies to all bona fide phenomenologists).
But how describe the different ways in which we might sense the same object (either the aforementioned lukewarm water or perhaps a solid object at the same lukewarm temperature)? Perhaps we can say that they are two profiles of the same object (with apologies to all bona fide phenomenologists).
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