Do we need to subdivide, so that neuroscience somehow gets its own dedicated branch of philosophy? — Pattern-chaser
What I originally said was that it's clear what "conscious experience" refers to. — Echarmion
Right, but uncertainties of memory aside, while we "recall" it, we are certainly consciously experiencing. — Echarmion
I am not sure we can know when we are not conscious. How would we differentiate between not having been conscious and simply not remembering? — Echarmion
But thinking is the process of thinking. We don't know where the thoughts we experience as our thoughts ultimately come from, but we do know what a thought is, when we have one, and how one thought leads to another etc. — Echarmion
But judging cases of thinking and not thinking would be a perfectly good place to start finding out what thoughts are. — bongo fury
You're making some assumptions here. That there is a "sensed world" (I take it you mean "external world"?), that there are other people, and that we have bodies.
But even granting all that, to say conscious experience is "only a tiny part" A) isn't true (it's the most foundational thing we have. It permeates our every waking moment), and B) even a tiny bit of conscious experience has to be explained, and we're back to the same problem: how does interacting matter give rise to conscious experience? — RogueAI
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