Again, that's not the question I asked you and again you can keep repeating that headaches can't be measured and studied by science but it won't make it anymore true, UE. Do not insult our intelligence
Then stop insulting mine. No scientific instrument can determine what the word "headache" means. Science studies BRAINS, Ron. It studies neurons and chemicals and electrical signals. It doesn't study
headaches. "Headache" is a word used by humans to describe some aspect of their subjective experience. Scientists then go looking for NEURAL CORRELATES or causes of the headache. They don't go looking for the headache.
This is
so simple I really do not understand why so many people apparently cannot understand what I am saying. Science studies objective, physical things, not subjective, non-physical things like "headaches" or "what red looks like to me."
(EDIT: And
please can nobody respond to that with "how do you know headaches aren't physical", because to do so is to play with words and totally miss the point of what is being said. Calling subjective things like headaches "physical" doesn't suddenly mean science can go looking for headaches.)
Again, I will ask you the question I know you refuse to answer because you know I cornered you right at the point where your argument falls flat:
Yes or No?
Don't worry. I'll keep reminding you of the question you continue to ignore as many times as necessary throughout this thread
I've already answered it, and my argument doesn't "fall down" at this point
regardless of which answer I give to the question. I have no idea why you think it does.
Human perception is often erroneous, but there are limits to the size of the error we can make. So there are certain things we can be mistaken about, and certain things we can't.
Why do you think this causes my argument to collapse??? Please explain the chain of logic by which it collapses? Even if I'd said "yes, we could be mistaken about anything at all", it
still wouldn't collapse,
because I'm not asking anybody else to take my personal experiences into account.