>>The study of exterior physical objective stuff is an actual 1st person, taking a 3rd person mode of perception, focused on a 3rd person. the study of interior psychological objective "stuff" is a 1st person, engaging a 3rd person mode of perception focused on a 1st person. I don't think you need to quarter off phenomenology but you are dealing with two differentiated points of perception, and as a result two different methodologies.>>
mmmm...but I think that the two methodologies can be fused (or rejoined) if we take the observer-observed complex itself as ontologically primary.
>>
I don't think a person has to conceptualize an experience as 1st person in order for it to be 1st person. >>
You're right, but we almost always do so.
>>Nonetheless, when dealing with children that have not developed an ego yet. What's surprising is, not that they haven't developed an ego. It's that they are all ego! For example, when you cover your face they think you have disappeared. Or when a toddler does something wrong, they automatically assume that you already know that they did it. They have not yet drawn the differentiation between a 1st and 2nd person, everything is in 1st to them. I'm not sure if this was a useful example for the direction I'm trying to take this, but my point is 1st person is pretty much straight out of the womb.( I probably should have made my argument structurally rather than by example ).>>
Mmmm...this is the sort of picture that I've encountered in my psychological training. Researchers for the most part assume that (pre)todlers experience the world in this way, with meager bits of illustrative evidence. I hesitate to put thoughts in the minds of beings who can't communicate with me. On the other hand, this assumption seems to me more likely than most other explanations of the experience of being so new to the world.
>>Ouch, that's a tough one. I'll have to answer that tomorow in the day.>>
Well, I neglected to define it too.
>>If we all simply followed a dictum that implied adherence to actions which best correspond to the most probable cause of phenomena, science itself would never advance.>>
Why? While there's a certain amount of "black boxed" spontaneity in hypothesis generation, things still usually work out better if we entertain the simplest theoretical explanation we can come up with, given the empirical data before us.
>>One step further away from reality.>>
Why? My mind's certainly plenty real to me.
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