...you do seem to be espousing illusionism in this paragraph. Which would be that we're being deluded by some trick of cognition into thinking sensations of color, sound, paint, etc. are something they're not, which is some form of the private, ineffable subjectivity.
— Marchesk — creativesoul
Why thanks, glad you liked it. Who said philosophy is the capacity to marvel?This is just lovely. What an excellent post. — Srap Tasmaner
With sufficient pedantry, what demarcates the steps of the "iterations" of perceptions would also vary too, no? There's no guarantee that update steps correspond 1-1 with "instants" of perception as we'd introspectively, pre-theoretically or even experientially in this case draw the line. The indexical progression of update steps within the updating procedure isn't the same thing as individuation of situated ("subjective") states. — fdrake
Regardless, it does seem important to be able to study the "perceptual moment" and to give an account of how that arises from the steps of the updating procedure. Even if that perceptual moment is still a "finite stretching along in time" — fdrake
I think one thing that prompts a use of qualia is a desire to be able to work backwards as a explanatory precess, so to be able to take the fact that I can describe how my last sip of tea tasted and explain it. The first step qualists take is to say that because I can describe how my last sip of tea tasted (or carry out any other response) there must be some way my first sip of tea tasted. This is obviously false and we can move on from this simplistic view. — Isaac
Why not just work backwards from the fact that there is some way the first sip of tea tasted, as described or reported by a subject? — Luke
It’s as though non-qualists want to pretend there are no pre-theoretic (or simply first-person) perceptions. But aren’t they precisely what is attempting to be explained? — Luke
Then what are you trying to explain? The mistaken belief that we taste tea? Or that people make reports about the taste of tea (even though they don’t)? — Luke
Trying to explain by what? — Isaac
So the real issue is whether there's some intermediary step between the subconscious parts of the brain responsible for forming models related to taste, tea, cups, misty mornings, headaches, work stresses...and the resultant formation of words, or actions which we'd like to be able to say 'resulted' from that mix. The best candidate would seem to be something like the sensory memory or the working memory, but Libet's work (and others) seems to throw the latter into question, much of what's stored in the working memory is stored after the event it's supposedly initiating has already been initiated, It's there to explain the action we just took, not determine it. — Isaac
Folk keep trying to set out the nature of the ineffable, and complaining when other folk point out that they can't. — Banno
What are you trying to account for here? — Luke
The actual idea that there's a way tea tastes to me which is stored somewhere in my brain (or mind, for any dualists out there), has, I thought, been discarded quite some way back. — Isaac
Dennet's just taken an entire paper showing this, we've just taken 13 pages of discussion showing it. I mean this in the most polite possible way, but you need to counter one or more of the specific points raised which show that there is no such fact, returning to the assertion that there is just puts us right back at the beginning again. — Isaac
Object(s) are still filtered/perceived by the subject (or by the subject's brain/body) in a way unique to that brain/body, even if colour or sweetness are labelled as objective properties. If there were no subjective aspect, then you should expect to find that we all have the same subjective (objective?) experiences. However, many of Dennett's examples demonstrate that this is not the case. For example, the case of cerebral achromatopsia in which a subject reports that "everything looked black or grey". I have never had this type of experience before. If colour is an objective property then why does the subject report seeing (e.g.) "bright blue objects as black"? — Luke
I wasn't referring to (and I thought you weren't referring to) a way tea tastes to you that is stored in your brain, but to a way tea tastes to you when you taste it — Luke
What (else) is chemosensation supposed to account for if not taste? — Luke
Why does the person report that it tastes bitter? — Luke
You are again pretending as if those qualia don't exist, yet that is what you are trying to account for by means other than introspection. — Luke
Does tea have some taste for you? — Luke
No. I have a range of responses to drinking tea, a range of words I reach for if asked to describe it...
The argument that's been fairly exhaustively presented is that our intuitive sense that there's a way tea tastes to me (at time t) is mistaken, as many intuitions turn out to be. — Isaac
Then what informs your response, or your "range of words" you reach for if asked to describe it (to describe what?) — Luke
In neurological terms... — Isaac
someone asks you "how's the tea?", you respond in neurological terms and/or strategic terms? — Luke
What if someone asks whether you can see, hear or smell something particular. "Can you smell smoke?" You either answer in neurological terms or say what they want to hear, which is presumably "no"? — Luke
More to the point, if I really didn't want to think there was smoke I would demonstrably be less likely to interpret chemosensory signals as indicating that there was. — Isaac
If saying "this tea tastes bitter" to the waiter gets more sugar put in it, then it's done its job even if there's no referent. — Isaac
Okay, so our perceptions get coloured by stuff. I'm just trying to get at whether or not you can smell smoke at all, or whether you've ever smelled smoke. — Luke
So there is a way that it tastes? Otherwise, why would you want sugar added? — Luke
I want sugar added because I've learned such an action changes my internal states in a way that seems desirable — Isaac
Again, if you want to call my entire mental state at the time 'the taste of tea' be my guest, it just seems to add unnecessary confusion. — Isaac
Maybe I want sugar added because I'm hungry or tired and the story I tell to account for that is 'the tea was bitter' do you want to be describing my state of hunger and tiredness within 'the taste of tea'? — Isaac
What internal states? How do you sense that it is desirable? How do you know that it will be again? — Luke
I don't want to call your entire mental state the taste of tea. I just want to know whether you can taste tea. It strikes me as abnormal that you can't. — Luke
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