I wonder if you're more prone to this way of thinking if you don't have an internal monologue, and I've learned recently, many people don't. But given that Ryle was a philosopher, I would assume he does?
Doesnot the example "John is thirsty" sound more like a physical statment than a mentalistic one... I think it would sound more mentalistic if restated as "John feels thirsty" or "John thinks he is thirsty"
I wonder if you're more prone to this way of thinking if you don't have an internal monologue, and I've learned recently, many people don't. But given that Ryle was a philosopher, I would assume he does?
Doesnot the example "John is thirsty" sound more like a physical statment than a mentalistic one... I think it would sound more mentalistic if restated as "John feels thirsty" or "John thinks he is thirsty"
thank you.
it looks like nothing name feelings, now philosophy begin !