It is in the local library I use which is why I don't have it with me. I will re-read it and see if it still makes sense to me. I don't recommend purchasing the book.
What has occurred to me in our discussion is that a baby is not a blank slate. Now I know I mentioned that earlier, but I am just now surprised by the concept which is why I want to re-read the book. How do they know this? I was originally convinced.
This all sort of relates to the "oceanic feeling" which is a metaphor for a specific human experience which is a subjective event. The metaphor doesn't mean much to me, but it does assume that an adult and not a young child who could not speak had the experience. So language must be presumed. With language comes the possibility of delusion as well as clarity. Prior to language, I don't see how a delusion could form.
One metaphor that Thomas Nagel created was to talk about "what it is like to be" someone subjectively. That metaphor makes more sense to me. It refers to our subjective experience as distinct from an objective description of what we might be experiencing which loses the subjectivity in the act of expressing it in language. The oceanic feeling would be part of what it is like to be those of us who have that experience.


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