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  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    The thread has been revived, like a p-zombie at a picnic!
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪Banno
    Nagel post you responded to.
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪Banno
    I thought Davidson argued against incommensurability?
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪Banno
    I updated to include McGinn's cognitive closue and a Wity reference.
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪Banno
    I agree with Nagel the most. But McGinn's cognitive closure is a possibility.

    That of which we cannot speak ...?
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪Banno
    See directly above. Except I don't defend some form of panpyschism, because I don't know what consciousness is, other than it being strongly correlated with brain activity. It just seems like a hard problem.

    Maybe I'm a little too close to the fence.
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪Janus
    As I've repeatedly argued, regardless of whether one wishes to defend the concept of qualia, it's the colors, sounds, feels, etc. that do not fit easily with the mathematizeable explanations of science.

    Or as Chalmers puts it, the structure and function does not account for the sensations of experience without positing some extra natural law, like integrated information theory.
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪frank
    We're not getting our gold stars, being on the wrong team in this thread.
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    @Banno
    I guess this is because representation mechanisms can sit pretty uneasy with direct realism? — fdrake

    Isaac is an indirect realist.
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪Janus
    So in the context of consciousness, since we already know we're conscious, we can ask whether our physical explanations account for consciousness.
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪Janus
    What about Hume's critique of causation? What about Kant's categories of thoughts? Or Berkeley's ideas? The empirical world has a consistent structure, whatever that means.

    While I agree that a physical reality is the most compelling explanation for the empirical, it's not the only coherent one. And I don't agree that it's necessarily complete. As in, there could be more to the world than what physics, chemistry or biology posits, since those are explanations we come up with, not some God's eye view.
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪Janus
    Wait, aren't you advocating for physicalism? How is that not a metaphysical position?
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    Distaste. — frank

    The qualia Banno mixes into his morning coffee.
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪Banno
    The Trump thread is the real goal.
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪Banno
    What does that feel like? Do you experience an ineffable annoyance?
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪Mww
    Fading qualia.
  • Is Consciousness an Illusion?
    ↪Gnomon
    The problem is if we start off in the simulation/dream/vat, then we don't have the real world to compare glitching to.

    But I agree, we can't be certain. I'd say the skeptical scenarios are unlikely.
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪Mww
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪bongo fury
    All the world's a cartesian theatre?
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪Mww
    It took a rumor to make me wonder
    Now I'm convinced I'm going inner
    How about red, pain, anger, looooOOOVE?
  • Physicalism is False Or Circular
    What is the difference from "being physical" and "existing"? Aren't those two ways of saying the same thing? — EricH

    Only if everything is entirely physical. Why assume the conclusion? Are we to the point of just defining physicalism as true?

    Isn't that what the theists tried to do with God?
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪frank
    Some of us, anyway.
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪frank
    But no Rob Zombie?
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪frank
    Perfect!
  • The flaw in the Chinese Room
    If you can't tell me what pain is then how do you expect to tell me how it works? — Harry Hindu

    Don't you already know what pain is? Are you one of those rare individuals who can't feel pain? What's that like?
  • Physicalism is False Or Circular
    The whole idea of reducing all of reality to a single substance has been somewhat of a misguided quest in philosophy no doubt. — ChatteringMonkey

    Part of the problem might be that we don't have the language to name a single substance that incorporates everything without issues. Or that language is inherently limited when it comes to that sort of thing.
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    So to use the word is to play their game. — Wayfarer

    If you started a thread to debate consciousness (because we need yet another one of those), what word(s) would you use instead? I do agree qualia is a problematic term. That's why I try to talk about sensations instead.

    But It seems everyone has their own criteria for what counts as being conscious.
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    You enjoy sucking on dreams
    So I will fall asleep with a zombie other than you
    I had a thought you would take me seriously
    And keep posting on

    Serpents in my mind
    I am searching for your qualia
    Everything changes
    In time

  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪Banno

    What is pain?
    Oh baby, don't hurt me
    Don't hurt me
    No more
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    Such recognition may not threaten anyone's intuition of purely phenomenal "sound" events, even if they begin to notice that shivering at some level always accompanies them. — bongo fury

    Most people on the phenomenal side admit to the shivering accompaniment. The question is how/why it's not just shivering.

    If we have a shivering ontology, then it's strange that our experiences are more than the shivering. Thus the weird emerging from bio-physics.
  • Information, Life, Math and Strong Emergentism
    ↪Harry Hindu
    Yes, and I'm not sure whether Sara was arguing epistemology or ontology. It sounded like she wanted to expand physics to incorporate the emergent biological information.
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪frank

    tastee-wheat.jpg
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    All in one acid trip. — frank

    A simulated brain in a vat dreaming it's a bat while on acid.
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    The set of all possible qualia.
  • The flaw in the Chinese Room
    ↪Harry Hindu
    All these arguments over consciousness might as well take place inside a simulation.
  • The flaw in the Chinese Room
    ↪Harry Hindu
    It's not all perceptual. A dream of a red apple isn't information about an apple in the external environment.
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪Banno
    We agree? Damn.
  • Physicalism is False Or Circular
    ↪Kenosha Kid
    So what do you think consciousness is? If it's physical, how so? In an emergent sort of way? A non-reductive kind of physical?
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    ↪Wayfarer
    I never understood the binary choice between nature being exactly what science says it is and it being supernatural. Science is based on empiricism, and to the extent our empirical knowledge is limited, the world is more than science. It's just possible that we didn't evolve the capabilities to perfectly model the cosmos. Or that our modeling leaves something out since it's abstracting the patterns from empirical experience.

    But somehow, physicalism has come to mean the same thing as naturalism.
  • Nothing to do with Dennett's "Quining Qualia"
    Perhaps, but that doesn't explain (away) the duality of the experience. — Luke

    Agreed. The experience of red is something more than the perceptual process leading up to it. Or at least our description of it.
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Marchesk

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