• FishFace@piefed.social
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    3 个月前

    Ask a person what sex feels like or how should a roux smell - these are not things you can explain in words, whether it’s in an article or in person.

          • FishFace@piefed.social
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            3 个月前

            Right, so you can’t explain it in words. You have to experience it yourself.

            But experiencing things yourself is not what we’re talking about; if you already have the experience, you don’t need to ask Google (or another person) to confirm it. What we’re talking about is, if you want to find about something you don’t already know about, should you go to Google or get an individual’s take on it, given that individual has experienced it themselves.

      • dream_weasel@sh.itjust.works
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        3 个月前

        You’re describing qualia which are necessarily subjective. These accounts are not helpful whether you get them from Google or anywhere else.

        Anecdotes may be interesting, but on the whole they are not as useful as objective answers.

          • dream_weasel@sh.itjust.works
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            3 个月前

            No?

            If there’s no objective, correct answer to a question then the point is moot. If you’re getting something out of some individual’s subjective answer it’s based on the want to build a relationship or gain understanding of that person which inherently has nothing to do with the question itself.

            That’s fine and all, but not really what I understand your original question to be asking. People have experiences, and those experiences are theirs: they can’t give them to you. If you like hearing about it anyway, cool, but you might as well read a poem.

            Edit: substitute “a book” for “Google” in your question and see how it’s a weird take.

              • dream_weasel@sh.itjust.works
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                3 个月前

                There is value in talking to people, but that has nothing to do with a question or situation you might Google or look up in a book. These are fundamentally different things.

                Subjective information is inherently less valuable than objective information for trying to learn something unless you are writing a survey paper. If you want to have a chat to combat loneliness or try to better understand your grandmother you’re not answering a question so you wouldn’t look it up anyway. If you’re googling what it feels like to make a roux you are probably not neurotypical.