Or is qualia just a throwaway term for the throwaway notions of people who do not know what they're talking about? Clarity? Anyone? — tim wood
I agree with you, but no less a leading light than Galen Strawson seems to support it , so I guess there at least a few solid arguments being put forth in its behalf. — Joshs
Qualia is what a philosophical zombie doesn't have, any interior experience (likeness?) of existence. — Nils Loc
I bump into something: an experience. The experience has properties? What is the nature of the properties? Are they experienced? Are they part of the experience itself? Or part of something else not the experience itself; e.g., the experience of reflecting on the experience? And then do we reflect or experience the reflection, & etc., etc., etc.? Or I feel happy (or whatever): an emotion. Or is "emotion" simply a name for a certain kind of experience? And does one know of such things directly or mediately?If directly - immediately - then how? Or if mediately, then what actually and exactly do we know and how do we know it? — tim wood
What is gained by talk of the-qual-of-the-flower that is not found in talk of the red flower? Nothing has
first-person, qualitative aspect of an experience. If a qual is the taste of milk here, now, why not just talk of the taste of milk here, now? The additional philosophical jargon is needless.
There's a slide going on here that I would avoid. It starts with the taste of milk and ends in nonsense such as disembodied sense-data... A large part of my objection to qualia is that they have fallen into being no more than neologised sense-data.
I make coffee for us; we each take a sip. You say it is too bitter for your taste; I say it's not so much bitter as nutty. Conversations such as this are a commonplace. It's understood that the liquid can taste quite different to different folk.
Talk of qualia serves only to obscure such conversation. "You can never know what the coffee tastes like to me"...well, yes I can; I know it tastes bitter. I can surmise that another coffee, even nuttier to me, might well be more bitter to you.
I know what the coffee tastes like for you
Qualia fail in so far as they deny that we can have conversations of this sort. Qualia are supposedly ineffable - we cannot explain them to others. The taste of coffee is not ineffable. Quite the opposite - folk build careers and indeed whole industries on the basis of talking about the very sort of thing that is supposedly beyond discussion..
I curried some 'roo the other day. Used a cinnamon stick, whole coriander and whole cumin seed roasted, fresh green garlic pulled that morning, some curry leaves fresh from the tree, whole cardamon pods, garam masala; cooked the meat first then made a paste with the spices, returned the meat, then some spuds and a couple of cups of fresh broad beans. Slow cooked the result for a couple of hours.
Each mouthful had several distinct tastes, sometimes the garlic, sometimes the 'roo, sometimes the cinnamon, each time in a different combination.
To describe a qualia of curry would be a nonsense. An utter failure to recognise the complexity of the experience.
Again, talk of qualia detracts from the conversation.
Oh, and a couple of teaspoons of peanut butter - mussaman style.
From the PhilPapers Surveys
Perceptual experience: disjunctivism, qualia theory, representationalism, or sense-datum theory?
Other 393 / 931 (42.2%)
Accept or lean toward: representationalism 293 / 931 (31.5%)
Accept or lean toward: qualia theory 114 / 931 (12.2%)
Accept or lean toward: disjunctivism 102 / 931 (11.0%)
Accept or lean toward: sense-datum theory 29 / 931 (3.1%)
ing what properties qualia has is no different from asking what properties an object has. — Hanover
If that were right, then there is no point in introducing them into the discussion.
Your reason for supporting the use of qualia is your odd insistence that we only ever say things about our perceptions, and never about the everyday objects that make up our world. It is a symptom of your failure to commit to reality.
And that's my reason for rejecting talk of qualia: it leads to bad philosophy. — Banno
For good measure, here's a measure:
From the PhilPapers Surveys
Perceptual experience: disjunctivism, qualia theory, representationalism, or sense-datum theory?
Other 393 / 931 (42.2%)
Accept or lean toward: representationalism 293 / 931 (31.5%)
Accept or lean toward: qualia theory 114 / 931 (12.2%)
Accept or lean toward: disjunctivism 102 / 931 (11.0%)
Accept or lean toward: sense-datum theory 29 / 931 (3.1%) — Banno
Yes, I got this far. But what exactly is the description to the experience? If the qualia just are the description, then how are they properties of the experience?which means we now need to offer descriptions of the (1) experiences and of (2) the things. — Hanover
I have been reading Daniel C Dennet on the concept of qualia. — Jack Cummins
I don’t know that for Wittgenstein it makes sense to say that they are the same thing. What is relevant is how seeing something as a duck rather than a rabbit changes how we go on.↪Hanover Your problem is thinking that because we see the world in different ways that there must be different worlds. You would look at the duck-rabbit and see two things, not one. Like Descartes, you trap yourself in dualism. — Banno
Does the idea of qualia fuzz and blur the whole area of explaining life and the debate between materialism and idealism? — Jack Cummins
As pointed out above (re: Dennett), 'qualia' as a concept doesn't add anything informative to neuroscientific explanations (conjectures, models) of cognition such as they are.I am asking to what extent is the concept useful or not? — Jack Cummins
Are you asking about the role of subjectivity (i.e. experience) in existence (re: "explaining life")?Does the idea of qualia fuzz and blur the whole area of explaining life and the debate between materialism and idealism?
:up:I have a lot of trouble even understanding the word. Near as I can tell, it's complete nonsense. — tim wood
:100:Your reason for supporting the use of qualia is your odd insistence that we only ever say things about our perceptions, and never about the everyday objects that make up our world. It is a symptom of your failure to commit to reality.
And that's my reason for rejecting talk of qualia: it leads to bad philosophy. — Banno
:smirk: :up:↪Hanover Your problem is thinking that because we see the world in different ways that there must be different worlds. You would look at the duck-rabbit and see two things, not one. Like Descartes, you trap yourself in dualism. — Banno
I don’t know that for Wittgenstein it makes sense to say that they are the same thing. — Joshs
Dennett writes about the fantasy of a "universal acid" as a liquid that is so corrosive that it would eat through anything that it came into contact with, even a potential container. Such a powerful substance would transform everything it was applied to; leaving something very different in its wake. This is where Dennett draws parallels from the “universal acid” to Darwin's idea:
“it eats through just about every traditional concept, and leaves in its wake a revolutionized world-view, with most of the old landmarks still recognizable, but transformed in fundamental ways.”
While there are people who would like to see Darwin's idea contained within the field of biology, Dennett asserts that this dangerous idea inevitably “leaks” out to transform other fields as well.
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