Or to take it out of the realm of the body, it would be like needing to say that an arroyo or wash is always flowing with water, just sometimes the water is hidden in some other metaphysical state or something like that. — Terrapin Station
"need to urinate is a way of feeling of a conscious being in the same way as being bald or having brain/heart is a way of being a living organism, it is a property, not a substance" — Babbeus
Figuring that you'd probably read it as a reference to a feeling rather than a requirement to empty one's bladder because it's full, so that the body would automatically evacuate one's urine whether the feeling were present or not, — Terrapin Station
"What would you think it would happen to the pehonomenal experience, to the self and/or to the consciousness when there is no "awareness of consciousness"? Would it stop its existence?"— Babbeus
Yes. It's not some single object that moves around. Consciousness, sense of self, etc. only obtain when particular brain states obtain. That it only obtains sometimes is no different than saying that something like the need to urinate only obtains sometimes. It obtains when your body is in a particular state, and not otherwise. You don't need to posit that you ALWAYS have a need to urinate, just sometimes it's hidden in the background, do you?
Or to take it out of the realm of the body, it would be like needing to say that an arroyo or wash is always flowing with water, just sometimes the water is hidden in some other metaphysical state or something like that. — Terrapin Station
I'm fine with their being different "levels" of consciousness. I just don't see a good reason to buy that one level features the subject with no awareness of consciousness. — Terrapin Station
What you take to be sufficient to believe or not believe a claim can't be anything other than a personal opinion. — Terrapin Station
"Kurt Gödel's incompleteness theorem undermines logicism because it shows that no particular axiomatization of mathematics can decide all statements" Can anyone explain to me why the theorems undermine logicism? — MonfortS26
If you don't feel that reports of first-person experience matter, that's fine. That's how you feel.
Not everyone feels the same way. — Terrapin Station
The difference is that in the one case we're talking about people who are conscious and who can give us reports of their first-person experience. (While in the other case, if the person can talk to us at a later time, they often tell us that they had no first-person experience.) — Terrapin Station
You further claim that the robot cannot "experience blue", why not? It is certainly detect blue, is affected by blue, and can make decisions based on this. — tom
Furthermore you claim that "there is no point in considering the knowledge about the light radiation". Really?
Secondly, for some strange reason you're apparently completely ignoring the factor of others persons' first-person reports of their mental experience. I don't ignore that. I consider that, in conjunction with confirmation that they have brains functioning in particular ways, if their mentality is at all in doubt (for example, if we have reason to wonder if the person isn't maybe really a robot instead), to be sufficient evidence for others' mental phenomena. — Terrapin Station
Studies like this [...] only tell us about observable phenomena, while consciousness isn't actually third-person observable.
Does it make sense to assign a (universal, not personal) "meaning" to "life"? — hypericin
I don't think we experience qualities of experience at all; we experience activities involving things and those activities have qualities. So we experience the activity of drinking beer and the beer has a taste. We don't experience the quality of the taste of the beer; we experience the taste of the beer, and we assign different qualities to the different tastes of beer. — John
But studies like this:
"In the 2006 study, Owen and his colleagues used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to investigate if a 23-year-old woman in a persistent vegetative state would respond to a series of pre-recorded spoken statements. Owen and his colleagues found that the statements produced brain activation patterns that were very similar to those observed in healthy volunteers, in regions known to be important for the processing of speech."
Only tell us about observable phenomena, while consciousness isn't actually third-person observable. — Terrapin Station
Why would you believe that people are conscious while in a coma? — Terrapin Station
What would you say the difference is? Are you referring to reasoning with "high level consciousness" maybe? — Terrapin Station
The curious case of the robot and the scientist.
Consider a faulty scientist and a faulty robot. The scientist is an expert in light, but was born with a rare condition affecting her optic nerve, that makes it unable to transmit blue light signals. The robot has a loose wire, so it too is unable to transmit blue light signals from its camera. The scientist is fixed by a doctor, and the robot is fixed by an engineer.
So, what has changed? Both the robot and the scientist can now recognise blue and are able to use that recognition to perform certain tasks. Both the robot and scientist experience blue.
But, only the scientist now *knows* what it is like to experience blue, the robot does not. — Tom